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    Meryl Streep says playing Thatcher was daunting

    U.S actress Meryl Streep arrives for the European premiere of The Iron Lady, at a central London venue, Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Jonathan Short)

    LONDON (AP) — She's a double Oscar winner with a knack for accents, but Meryl Streep says playing Margaret Thatcher was a challenge — although her own experience helped her understand the struggles faced by Britain's first female prime minister.

    Streep is transformed into the divisive politician who reshaped Britain in "The Iron Lady," which had its European premiere in London on Wednesday, just across the River Thames from the Houses of Parliament.

    "It was extremely daunting, because I'm from New Jersey," Streep said in an interview ahead of the event. "And yet as an outsider, I felt something of what she might have felt."

    Streep, who won Academy Awards for "Kramer Vs. Kramer" and "Sophie's Choice," said her youthful experience as one of a handful of women at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire helped her understand Thatcher's isolation. In 1970, Streep spent a term as an exchange student at the men-only college, which became coeducational in 1972.

    "There were 60 of us and 6,000 men, and I had a little flashback to that moment," Streep said. "And so a little bit of my emotional work was done for me."

    Streep, 62, has been nominated for a Golden Globe and looks likely to get a 17th Oscar nomination for her spookily accurate performance as Thatcher, who led Britain from 1979 until 1990.

    As prime minister, Thatcher fought a war with Argentina over the Falkland Islands, saw the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall and the implosion of communism and was branded the Iron Lady by Soviet journalists for her steely resolve.

    She presided over the decline of Britain's industrial might and trade union power and the birth of a free-market culture with new winners and many new losers.

    That historical drama is only glimpsed in "The Iron Lady," which depicts the now 86-year-old Thatcher, widowed after the death of husband Denis (Jim Broadbent), looking back on her life as a provincial grocer's daughter rising to the top of a Conservative Party dominated by wealthy men.

    Streep said while the film has been called a political biopic, "I was interested in it precisely because it wasn't really that."

    "It's a subjective imagining," she said. "It's not the God's-eye-view chronicling this side, that side, the politics of it. It's a very deep look at a whole life — from the end of it."

    "The Iron Lady" is more a domestic drama than a political one, but Thatcher remains a polarizing figure and the film has been criticized by her enemies and allies alike. Foes feel it is too sympathetic, while supporters and friends dislike its depiction of the former leader as a frail old woman with dementia.

    Former Conservative Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd said the film "has a rather ghoulish quality about it."

    "All the flashback scenes show a woman suffering from a form of dementia, but that lady is very much alive," he told the Evening Standard newspaper. "That should have given them pause to wait."

    Director Phyllida Lloyd ("Mamma Mia!") has defended the film's approach. The script by Abi Morgan ("Shame") was partly inspired by a book by the politician's daughter Carol Thatcher in which she described her mother's mental decline.

    Streep said the criticisms were misguided.

    "If Margaret Thatcher suffered from a lung problem and I coughed, or if she had something wrong with her legs and I limped, no one would scream," she said. "The particular stigma attached to mental frailty in our culture speaks more about the person who's saying it's shameful.

    "Is it shameful? I don't think it is. I don't think things need to be hidden away."

    Streep is also fascinated by the venom Thatcher provoked — she's still either loved or loathed by most Britons — and the film gently asks viewers to consider whether the fact that she is a woman played a part in the strong responses.

    "She was called the most hated woman in Britain because of policies that lots of people who are still in the political world helped her construct, and they don't endure the same hatred," Streep said. "She was hated for her hair and her handbag and her clothes and her manner and the fact that she changed her voice.

    "It was really outsized, the bloodlust, and that's interesting."

    Streep said the film's most provocative idea is that it asks audiences to regard this iconic political figure as human — just like ourselves.

    "I do think we have historically looked at our own lives through the bodies of kings and queens and important people," she said. "Is 'Hamlet' really about the prince and his princeliness, or is it about his existence? Is 'King Lear' really about a grumpy old man who used to be a despot, or is it about existence?

    "That's certainly how I went into it, to find me in this story. And my friends, and my mother — women of that generation who lived through a change in the way women were regarded and their place in society."

    Theatrical Trailer

    ____

    Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

    U.S actress Meryl Streep, arrives for the European premiere of The Iron Lady, at a central London venue, Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Jonathan Short)
     
    • James  •  Avenel, New Jersey  •  1 month 19 days ago
      I think Thatcher had more balls than every man in congress today.
    • Whatever  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  1 month 19 days ago
      Is this an editorial or what? Why do we need Lawless' personal politics inserted throughout this piece? Why can't we be trusted to watch this movie and come to our own conclusions? As much as I dislike Hannity, he is correct: "Journalism is dead".
    • Devere  •  Jersey City, New Jersey  •  1 month 19 days ago
      The only thing Meryl Streep and Margaret Thatcher have in common is they are both the very best at their chosen work.
    • Dan  •  1 month 19 days ago
      I chuckle at the writer's obvious political bent
    • Cal  •  Richardson, Texas  •  1 month 18 days ago
      According to one of UK's top CEO's, she saved UK from being a banana republic, transforming it into a world's financial godzilla! Good for Thatch!
    • downbutnotout  •  Sacramento, California  •  1 month 18 days ago
      If you've seen one Streep movie you've seen them all. She's an extremely over rated actor and this movie is indeed over hyped. I was wondering how many people commenting here actually lived in England during MRS. Thatchers reign? How many of these comments are being made by British citizens?
    • Robert Mustarde  •  Middletown, New Jersey  •  1 month 18 days ago
      I am a Brit and lived in England during the Thatcher years - tough times need tough medicine (listen up Obama) and thank goodness for Margaret Thatcher...somebody who had the strength of her convictions to get what so desperately needed to be done. In the late 1970s the country (under the Labour Party) was going to rack and ruin, inflation was dreadful (peaked at something like 25%) and the trade unions were striking at the drop of a hat demanding more and more (sound familiar ?). It led to the so-called "Winter of Discontent" in 1979 (look it up) which resulted in the election of Margaret Thatcher to replace the previous 5 years of labour government. Maggie oversaw the downfall of Red Robbo (Derek Robinson), communist and Agitator-in-Chief at British Leyland (Britain's leading car manufacturer at the time - now defunct) and also Artheur Scargill, another communist and leader of the National Union of Mineworkers.......Red Robbo and Scargill (look 'em both up) led 2 of the largest unions in the UK and their interest was not in making the UK a better place but instead doing or threatening as much economic damage as possible to help bring their socialistic nirvana to the workers.........Maggie stood up to them like no other ever had, and thank goodness for it.
    • Slobby  •  1 month 19 days ago
      Wait until they butcher Reagan by casting Senn Penn as the lead.
    • Devere  •  Jersey City, New Jersey  •  1 month 19 days ago
      "She presided over the decline of Britain's industrial might"

      More Associated Press left-wing drivel!

      Thatcher was great, and at least temporarily rescued the UK from the trash-heap of history.
    • Jack  •  Sparta, New Jersey  •  1 month 19 days ago
      Thatcher's British free-market reforms did not create "many new losers." Pre-Thatcher, the whole island was full of losers.
    • Wyndal  •  Durham, North Carolina  •  1 month 19 days ago
      By the way, Thatcher was not devisive, she was decisive. This story was written by an ignorant (female) reporter who doesn't know how to use the correct words. Thatcher led over a time of great coming together and unity. It was also very profitable for the world. Long live the conservative memory of Reagan / Thacher, a memory we expect to be hated by liberal hacks in the media.
    • JustAGuy  •  1 month 18 days ago
      I think Meryl Streep is a tremendous actress, I just don't trust Hollywood to depict conservatives in a fair and accurate light.
    • memmudog  •  1 month 18 days ago
      "It's a subjective imaging." Meaning it's all bulls*#^.
    • LIBERALS ARE PATHETIC  •  1 month 18 days ago
      A lowlife liberal hammering a hardcore conservative.....how sad.
    • Joe D  •  1 month 19 days ago
      "she's still either loved or loathed" So who makes a movie about her? The ones who loathe her.
    • lathrupman  •  Grand Rapids, Michigan  •  1 month 19 days ago
      Look around, people. There's enough real life to be lived and people to watch without seeing things filtered through the cross-eyed lenses of Hollywood scriptwriters, actors and actresses.
    • JapesMacfarland  •  San Diego, California  •  1 month 19 days ago
      She's only called "the iron lady" by the Left. Most people are to stupid or ignorant to realize what a decent, gentle and strong woman she was at that time. Exactly what it took to take on the leftist unions there. She kicked arse! lol ;)
    • Deepsix  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  1 month 19 days ago
      Thatcher was the best. One of the last leaders of the Responsibility Based Democracy rather than an Obama Entitlement Based Democracy. When everybody pulls their own weight opportunities abounds and everybody wins!
    • James  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  1 month 18 days ago
      This movie is way over-hyped...
    • AK  •  1 month 19 days ago
      Streep refers to the 'bloodlust' hatred of Thatcher. Kind of makes you think of the bloodlust hatred of Palin by the usual suspects.

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