
Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times
DETECTIVE WORK: The complexity of the character is what attracted Hunter to the role. “Grace lives fully,” the veteran actress says.
Holly Hunter keeps it professional
The veteran actress gladly searches the soul of her complex character on her TNT show, 'Saving Grace.' Just don't ask Hunter anything personal.
AT 50, Holly Hunter had the athletic confidence of a movie star enjoying her prime recently as she strode across the patio of a Los Feliz cafe in a sundress and heeled pumps so high they appeared almost vertical.
She raised a small arm with an impressive biceps to shake hands. While other patrons stood in line to order, the waiters, notified in advance of her arrival, brought a menu to her table.
FOR THE RECORD:
Holly Hunter: An article in Sunday's Calendar section about actress Holly Hunter said that she and actor Gordon MacDonald will appear in a 2009 film called "Frost Flowers." The film's producers say that Hunter had accepted a role but her publicist said she is not attached to the project. The producers add that they have had no formal discussions with MacDonald. —
Like many Hollywood stars whose biggest parts once seemed behind them, Hunter might have been doomed to the standard mom or spurned wife roles. But riding the crest of actresses leading television series, she has revitalized her career on the small screen as Grace -- a hard-drinking, promiscuous Southern detective monitored by a crusty angel named Earl.
Unlike, say, Kyra Sedgwick in "The Closer" or Glenn Close in "Damages," Hunter's "Saving Grace" role has veered into new territory as that rarely seen character: an explicitly sexual 40-year-old woman. In a titillating mix of pleasure and religion, Grace, a driven detective and kindly aunt, is often shown having sex, sometimes with married men, and then debating her behavior with Earl.
Although some critics complained that her rebel-hero character was "tiresome," others also allowed that TNT pushed boundaries with her coarse language and semi-nude sexuality.
"Grace is a study of human nature first and foremost," Hunter said. "The allure of Grace is her complexity. She can often entice conflicts, and she surrenders to her desires, what she feels could be the most fun, intoxicating, seductive, tantalizing, what could be the most cool. So many people slog through the moments to, say, get to Friday. Grace lives fully."
The Oscar-winning actress was nominated for a Golden Globe for "Saving Grace" and this year received a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. Now shooting its second season, "Saving Grace" will launch Monday on TNT.
Hunter said she leaped at the chance to play Grace, because "I wanted to have that conversation with myself, with other characters and with an audience. Movies aren't made about a woman's whole life."
Working in television is, in a way, returning to her roots. In the 1980s, Hunter appeared in several TV movies and more recently in "When Billie Beat Bobby" (2001), a TV movie about Billie Jean King; and in "American Experience: Abraham and Mary Lincoln -- A House Divided" (2001) as the voice of Mary Lincoln.
She has won two Emmys for "The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom" (1993) and "Roe vs. Wade" (1989).
What she didn't want to have a conversation about on that particular afternoon was herself. Serious and earnest, Hunter spoke eagerly about the arc of her career, her professional friendships and her intense involvement in the show but turned curt when it came to her own life -- a six-year marriage to cinematographer Janusz Kaminski and her 2-year-old twins fathered by partner and actor Gordon MacDonald, who has also appeared in "Saving Grace."
With a fleeting smile, Hunter said she would neither "confirm or deny" the twins' existence. She suggested MacDonald not be mentioned at all in the article.
"The world is chock-full of actors and actresses who want to talk about their personal lives. I don't," she said. "And I really want that respected."
Making friends
AS AN actress, Hunter is often described as ferocious, fearless, feisty and focused. Her movie roles have varied from funny and offbeat ("Raising Arizona") to strong and quirky ("Broadcast News") and intense and dramatic ("The Piano.")
The youngest of seven children raised on a Georgia farm, she studied at Carnegie Mellon University and later moved to New York, making several auspicious connections by sheer chance.
Hunter had a boyfriend, for instance, who wanted her to join him on a visit to Yale to meet his best friend and his girlfriend -- who turned out to be Frances McDormand. "It was a very dramatic night," said Hunter, who was unwilling to tell much more of the story. ("It's a secret.") "Fran and I bonded over it. We saw each other in the midst of this chaos and we became friends right then." McDormand eventually moved in with Hunter in New York.
While appearing in "Crimes of the Heart," a play by Beth Henley (whom she had met in an elevator), Hunter was spotted by Joel and Ethan Coen, who wanted to cast her in "Blood Simple." Since Hunter was committed to another Henley play, she suggested McDormand, who got the role -- and was married to Joel within a year.
She raised a small arm with an impressive biceps to shake hands. While other patrons stood in line to order, the waiters, notified in advance of her arrival, brought a menu to her table.
FOR THE RECORD:
Like many Hollywood stars whose biggest parts once seemed behind them, Hunter might have been doomed to the standard mom or spurned wife roles. But riding the crest of actresses leading television series, she has revitalized her career on the small screen as Grace -- a hard-drinking, promiscuous Southern detective monitored by a crusty angel named Earl.
Unlike, say, Kyra Sedgwick in "The Closer" or Glenn Close in "Damages," Hunter's "Saving Grace" role has veered into new territory as that rarely seen character: an explicitly sexual 40-year-old woman. In a titillating mix of pleasure and religion, Grace, a driven detective and kindly aunt, is often shown having sex, sometimes with married men, and then debating her behavior with Earl.
Although some critics complained that her rebel-hero character was "tiresome," others also allowed that TNT pushed boundaries with her coarse language and semi-nude sexuality.
"Grace is a study of human nature first and foremost," Hunter said. "The allure of Grace is her complexity. She can often entice conflicts, and she surrenders to her desires, what she feels could be the most fun, intoxicating, seductive, tantalizing, what could be the most cool. So many people slog through the moments to, say, get to Friday. Grace lives fully."
The Oscar-winning actress was nominated for a Golden Globe for "Saving Grace" and this year received a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. Now shooting its second season, "Saving Grace" will launch Monday on TNT.
Hunter said she leaped at the chance to play Grace, because "I wanted to have that conversation with myself, with other characters and with an audience. Movies aren't made about a woman's whole life."
Working in television is, in a way, returning to her roots. In the 1980s, Hunter appeared in several TV movies and more recently in "When Billie Beat Bobby" (2001), a TV movie about Billie Jean King; and in "American Experience: Abraham and Mary Lincoln -- A House Divided" (2001) as the voice of Mary Lincoln.
She has won two Emmys for "The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom" (1993) and "Roe vs. Wade" (1989).
What she didn't want to have a conversation about on that particular afternoon was herself. Serious and earnest, Hunter spoke eagerly about the arc of her career, her professional friendships and her intense involvement in the show but turned curt when it came to her own life -- a six-year marriage to cinematographer Janusz Kaminski and her 2-year-old twins fathered by partner and actor Gordon MacDonald, who has also appeared in "Saving Grace."
With a fleeting smile, Hunter said she would neither "confirm or deny" the twins' existence. She suggested MacDonald not be mentioned at all in the article.
"The world is chock-full of actors and actresses who want to talk about their personal lives. I don't," she said. "And I really want that respected."
Making friends
AS AN actress, Hunter is often described as ferocious, fearless, feisty and focused. Her movie roles have varied from funny and offbeat ("Raising Arizona") to strong and quirky ("Broadcast News") and intense and dramatic ("The Piano.")
The youngest of seven children raised on a Georgia farm, she studied at Carnegie Mellon University and later moved to New York, making several auspicious connections by sheer chance.
Hunter had a boyfriend, for instance, who wanted her to join him on a visit to Yale to meet his best friend and his girlfriend -- who turned out to be Frances McDormand. "It was a very dramatic night," said Hunter, who was unwilling to tell much more of the story. ("It's a secret.") "Fran and I bonded over it. We saw each other in the midst of this chaos and we became friends right then." McDormand eventually moved in with Hunter in New York.
While appearing in "Crimes of the Heart," a play by Beth Henley (whom she had met in an elevator), Hunter was spotted by Joel and Ethan Coen, who wanted to cast her in "Blood Simple." Since Hunter was committed to another Henley play, she suggested McDormand, who got the role -- and was married to Joel within a year.
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"Lipstick" is smeared and "Do Not Disturb" is closed. The ax hovers as TV schedules tighten.


