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Carlson Erin - Queen Meryl: the iconic roles, heroic deeds, and legendary life of Meryl Streep

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    Queen Meryl: the iconic roles, heroic deeds, and legendary life of Meryl Streep
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Queen Meryl: the iconic roles, heroic deeds, and legendary life of Meryl Streep: summary, description and annotation

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Streep came of age during the womens movement of the seventies, and has worn her activism on her sleeve even when it was unfashionable. At an age when many leading ladies fade away, Streep plunged forward, leaping into roles that interested her and winning a pile of awards along the way. She never tackles the same character twice, but leverages her rarified platform to channel a range of dynamic, complicated women rather than play second fiddle to the male lead. Carlson provides a captivating portrait of an artist and trailblazer still at the top of her game. -- adapted from back cover.;This is the story of how an awkward, ambitious suburban teen from humble beginnings transformed herself into a high school homecoming queen, and later, the most celebrated actress of our time. Meryl Streep came of age during the womens movement of the seventies, and has worn her activism on her sleeve even when it was unfashionable. As she reached forty, the age when many leading ladies fade away, Streep plunged forward, leaping into roles that interested her and winning a pile of awards along the way. Meanwhile, she remained an unlikely box-office draw, steering The Devil Wears Prada to blockbuster success and critical acclaim. She never tackles the same character twice. Instead, she leverages her rarified platform to channel a range of dynamic, complicated women--Joanna Kramer, Karen Silkwood, Julia Child, Margaret Thatcher, and Katherine Graham, to name a few--rather than play second fiddle to the male lead. Her Streepness will have none of that. Journalist and author Erin Carlson documents all of Meryls Oscars, accents, causes, memes, friendships, and feuds. Curated with illustrations by artist Justin Teodoro, along with unexpected sidebars, lists, and intermissions, Queen Meryl is a captivating and inspiring portrait of an artist and trailblazer still at the top of her game--Page 4 of cover.

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Copyright 2019 by Erin Carlson Cover design by Headcase Design Cover photo - photo 1

Copyright 2019 by Erin Carlson

Cover design by Headcase Design

Cover photo Rainer Hosch / Trunk Archive

Cover copyright 2019 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the authors intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the authors rights.

Hachette Books

Hachette Book Group

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New York, NY 10104

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First Edition: September 2019

Hachette Books is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

The Hachette Books name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

The Hachette Speakers Bureau provides a wide range of authors for speaking events. To find out more, go to www.hachettespeakersbureau.com or call (866) 376-6591.

Illustrations copyright 2019 by Justin Teodoro

Photo Credits: : Photo Marc Ausset-Lacroix / Getty.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data has been applied for.

ISBNs: 978-0-316-48527-2 (paper over board), 978-0-316-48528-9 (ebook)

E3-20190820-JV-NF-ORI

To Jennifer Atchison, Caroline Olinger, and Kerry Olinger

Take your heart to work, and ask the most and best of everybody else too. Dont let your special character and values, the secret that you know and no one else does, the truthdont let that get swallowed up by the great chewing complacency.

Meryl Streeps commencement speech to the Vassar College Class of 1983

I am a pain in the ass! How can I hide it?

Streep to NPRs Terry Gross on February 6, 2012

This is a true story verging on legend and I would be remiss not to tell it - photo 2

This is a true story verging on legend, and I would be remiss not to tell it again:

A young actress auditions for producer Dino De Laurentiiss 1976 remake of King Kong. Virtually unknown outside New York theater circles, she has zero experience working in film. Her long, blonde hair, porcelain skin, high cheekbones, and aquiline nose combine to form otherworldly beauty: the equivalent of the mysterious muse in a Renaissance painting, a Mona Lisa for the 70s. People who witnessed the actresss extraordinary performances onstage could vouch for her talent. But all De Laurentiis sees is her face.

This is so ugly. Why do you bring me this? he complains in Italian to son Federico.

Well, this had a name: Meryl Streep. And, unfortunately for De Laurentiis, she studied Italian at Vassar College and understands what hes saying.

Im very sorry that Im not as beautiful as I should be but, you know, this is it. This is what you get, she retorts in his native tongue, showing herself the door.

Its pretty safe to assume that De Laurentiis thought twice before repeating the faux pas in an audition room again. He was hardly the last critic to underestimate Meryl, but the moment serves to underline just a few of her character strengths: deep intelligence, grace under pressure, and, when insulted, a steely refusal to humor another Hollywood misogynist. Through ups, downs, more than sixty feature films, dozens of accents, one husband, and four children, Meryl has defied ageism to become the most celebrated actress of the past four decades and counting. She immerses herself in each role, from learning Polish for Sophies Choice to bringing Julia Child back to joyous life in Julie & Julia. She never tackles the same character twice. Instead, she leverages her rarified platform to channel a range of unusual, complicated womenMargaret Thatcher, Karen Silkwood, Florence Foster Jenkinsrather than accept the unfulfilling parts for which other actresses must settle: Supportive Wife. Supportive Mother. Supportive (and Mostly Nonspeaking) Love Interest to the Leading Man.

Meryl will have none of that.

Born and raised in New Jersey, she came of age during the second-wave feminist movement and has worn her activism on her sleeve even when it was unfashionable. For instance, in an episode that caused Meryl to be briefly labeled difficult and angry, she skewered Pretty Woman and other popular films of the time while delivering a speech at the Screen Actors Guilds first National Womens Conference in 1990: Theres very little work for women, she protested. And when we do work, we get paid much less than our male counterparts. And what work there is lately is odd.

Given the options available, she joked, one might assume the chief occupation of women on Earth was hooking, and I dont mean rugs.

That remark likely did not endear her to Pretty Woman fans. But Meryl, more interested in humanizing unlikable characters that revealed truths about women than in conforming to two-dimensional stereotypes that appealed to men, had been seriously alarmed: As studios devoted more resources to male stars, pushing them front and center, would she have a harder time finding work that mattered to her? Since turning forty in 1989, a time when leading ladies transitioned to Supportive Mother (see Sally Field in Forrest Gump), were her days numbered as a movie star? At one point, Meryl fielded offers for three different witch roles in the same year. It was almost like the world was saying or the studios were saying, We dont know what to do with you, she said.

Rather than go quietly into the next phase of her career, the Yale Drama gradfor whom acting was a higher calling, not a hobbyplunged forward, choosing material that interested her and winning a pile of awards along the way. Shes earned a record number of Oscar nominations, winning Best Actress twice for Sophies Choice and The Iron Lady and Best Supporting Actress for Kramer vs. Kramer.

Remarkably, Meryls box-office clout managed to grow with age. The Devil Wears Prada, starring the fifty-six-year-old as an indomitable magazine editor, earned $326 million worldwide. Her wildly popular Mamma Mia! movies nearly tripled that. The irony, of course, is that Meryl risked a lot by refusing to compromise her artistic ideals, and nowat seventyshes as bankable as Jennifer Lawrence.

Unlike many artists who lose inspiration over time, Meryl has retained a childlike delight in assuming new identities; she approaches each film as though it were her first. From a distance, shes imperious and queenly, an untouchableunknowablestateswoman. Move in closer, and youll discover the mischievous personality that Streepers love to love and haters love to lament: her refined, aristocratic presence hinting at the playful, fun-loving troublemaker underneath; her creative ambition and risk-taking; her moral authority as a vocal critic of Donald Trump, who called her one of the most overrated actresses in Hollywood in an apparent 4 a.m. toilet tweet.

Like the bully in the Oval Office, she courts controversyand seems to revel in politicizing her pulpit and making her opinions known. Meryl, however, advocates for empathy and equality where Trump emboldens bigots to follow in his path of division and hatred. In these coarsening times, shes embodied an uptown, twenty-first-century equivalent of Rosie the Riveter, increasingly compelled to roll up her sleeves and fight the good fight. Though Meryl speaks her mind, she often prefers to let her movies do the talking. She blazed the trail for younger thespians, including her daughters, to land the kinds of wide-ranging roles that Robert De Niro got to play. Most of all, she represents a meaningful goal for women: the courage to shed fear and inhibition and live a big, bold, authentic life.

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