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LA TIMES - Calendar Weekend
July 1998
BAD TO THE ROOTS
As scheming troublemaker Meredith in the new ‘Parent Trap,’
Elaine Hendrix fills the role of Hollywood’s prototypical evil blond.
By Marshall Fine
Special to the Times
Who’s afraid of the big bad blond? Lot’s
of people, apparently. The sun goddess in all her flaxen glory –
acquisitive, seductive, with a heart of ice – has become a virtual
stock villain of late, particularly in kids’ films but in other
kinds of movies as well.
As the most recent example, the Disney remake of “The Parent Trap,”
which opened Wednesday, shows, there’s usaully a simple antidote
to vicious Sister Golden-hair: the ingenuity of children. The twins in
“Parent Trap,” after all, foil the best-laid plans of the
film’s central antagonist, a publicist named Meredith who plans
to marry their father. Adorability (kids) trumps ambition (the blond)
every time.
Meredith (played with a delightful, cunning charm by Elaine Hendrix) is
the prototype for the conniving blond, who views all of life as an offshoot
of her own existence and love as a chance to better her position in the
world.
But even as she tries to lure vineyard owner Nick Parker (Dennis Quaid)
into nuptial bondage, Meredith is foiled by Nick’s adoring twin
daughters, both played by Lindsay Lohan.
Hendrix says she can understand her character’s motivation, even
if it’s somewhat twisted.
“Really, Meredith starts with the intention of trying to win the
little girl over,” Hendrix says. “Little by little, she learns
that she’s got her work cut out for her, in the form of an 11-year-old
girl – or girls.
“When I was 11, my dad did get remarried,” Hendrix adds. “I
remember jealous feelings, not wanting Dad to get married. But I was lucky:
He didn’t marry Cruella DeVil and I didn’t have to resort
to pranks.”
Hendrix bristles at the notion that blonds have become synonymous with
cartoonish villainy, though she doesn’t deny that it’s not
uncommon in movies. Part of the reason, she says, is that it has become
more acceptable for women to play villains.
“It’s almost as if we’re going back to the Adam and
Eve story,” says Hendrix, show was also seen as a snooty blond (though
one who later revealed actual niceness) in “Romy and Michele’s
High School Reunion.” “When you look at the collective consciousness
and the various personas that story is identified with, you often wind
up with Eve as the seductress who lured Adam into eating the apple.
“Throughout history, women have been categorized into either Eve
roles or Virgin Mary roles. They’re the extremities of the stereotypes.
I don’t know if people feel safer believing those things, but these
are the roles women have had to fit into. Certainly it’s time for
a change.”
Not that Hendrix minded playing those negative traits a s the blond Meredith:
“T thin she’s the shadow aspect of us all,” she says.
“I know I don’t get too many chances to go around being so
relentlessly mean and detestable. Or if I get them, I don’t take
them. When I played her, I thought of her as someone who knows what she
wants and how to get it. And she has no thoughts about the possible problems
of doing so. She just wants what she wants.”
The image of the blond has shifted drastically since the beginning of
movies. In the days of Mary Pickford, the blond was virginal, upright,
resourceful. Mae West and Jean Harlow pushed it to the opposite extreme:
sexy, brassy, aggressive. Marilyn Monroe came down somewhere in the middle:
seductive but vulnerable, the little girl in the woman’s body, a
role that’s been used in one form or another by actresses ranging
from Jayne Mansfield to Madonna.
It’s all been refined, Hendrix says, to two basic roles for blonds:
“You’re either stereotyped into the ditsy role or the role
of the seductress. I lean toward the seductress. But ditsy roles are fun
too.
“I don’t know if it’s the hair color or what. There
are so many types of roles women do that it’s a shame to try to
stereotype women based on their looks. I certainly don’t want to
perpetuate the stereotype. Ten years down the road, I want to see a whole
array of things available to me.”
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