Rachel Weisz: Jews Run Hollywood

Rachel Weisz: Enemy at the Gates

In an interview Weisz gave back in 2001, she tells us Jews do indeed run Hollywood and Jewish women were not allowed to be actresses because Jewish men thought it was a form of prostitution.

EMMA: When we were at the drugstore you innocently opened up Talk Magazine and I heard a shriek of dismay.
RACHEL: Yeah, I literally saw not only the most disgusting, but the most ridiculous photograph I’ve ever seen of any woman.
EMMA: And who was it of?
RACHEL: It was me. [laughs] It was me photographed by David Bailey, who had some kind of concept that because it was for a Russian film, I would be wearing a Russian hat. But you can’t really see the hat, just fur everywhere. And my nose looks like it’s … just a really outsized nose, you know.
EMMA: But, you see, you’re holding back from saying what you said at the store, which was that you thought you looked too Jewish. Is it limiting as an actress to be perceived as being too ethnic in any way?
RACHEL: Well, I think you and I have always felt the same way — that we’re Jewish but we can get away with just being exotic. We’re kind of Jews in disguise. Those cultural stereotypes about the Jew with the big hooky nose and the fleshy face rub off on you. That’s terrible to admit, isn’t it.
EMMA: Well, it’s that Jackie Mason joke about how no Jewish woman wants to look Jewish: “‘You think I look maybe a little Italian, I look a little Russian, perhaps I can be Spanish?’ … ‘You look Jewish!'”
RACHEL: Hollywood’s run by Jews. I was advised by an American agent when I was about 19 to change my surname. And I said “Why? Jews run Hollywood.” He said “Exactly.” He had a theory that all the executives think acting’s a job for shiksas.
EMMA: Of all the self-loathing Jews in the world, the most self-loathing are the Hollywood Jews. They don’t want to see images of themselves on screen. That’s why Lauren Bacall had to hide her identity, and Winona Ryder changed her name from Horowitz.
RACHEL: In some way acting is prostitution, and Hollywood Jews don’t want their own women to participate. Also, there’s an element of Portnoy’s Complaint — they all fancy Aryan blondes.
EMMA: For Beautiful Creatures, in which you play a battered woman and trophy girlfriend, you had to go blonde. You’re such an über-brunette; did you find you lost your sense of self?
RACHEL: Completely. The last day of shooting, I went home to see my father and stepmother. She rang me the next day and said, “I never want to see that girl ever again. The girl who came to our house was like a horrendous, vulgar Spice Girl.”
EMMA: Who are you a big fan of?
RACHEL: Denis Leary.
EMMA: Why are comedians so sexy?
RACHEL: They just are.
EMMA: I think it’s because laughing is an allegory for orgasms. It’s something you can’t help doing.
RACHEL: You can’t stop yourself coming. Not once you start. It’s also that comedians don’t have the kind of narcissism that actors have. They’re writers who perform their own material. It’s more interesting. And they’re sexy because they risk more. Stand-up comedians risk more than anyone.
EMMA: When you were at Cambridge, you started your own theater company. How was that?
RACHEL: Amazing. We went to the Edinburgh Festival three times. Just me and another girl, Sasha Hales were the performers. We wrote about eight plays together, we went through the whole gamut of what two people can do onstage with each other. That was the happiest time of my life creatively. The best one we did was called Slight Possession.
EMMA: I remember it. I remember being … I have to say, very intimidated by how you look. Are you aware that you intimidate women sometimes?
RACHEL: If I’m just in dungarees, I don’t think I would intimidate anyone. If I went out in killer heels and full makeup, blow dry, the whole thing — anyone dressed up like that could be intimidating to men and women, really. It’s so, look at me. Do you know what I mean? But I love women.
EMMA: What is it? The sound of their voice, how they look?
RACHEL: I like their heads, I like the way they think.
EMMA: Women think like jazz.
RACHEL: They’re stream-of-consciousness. They’ll improvise, and they’re happy if someone brings in a new beat. Whereas men are very point-A-to-point-B. They just want to get there.
EMMA: I think that’s the reason you never survived in Los Angeles, why you had to go home. The driving thing. You’d never have an adventure along the way. If you were going to point B …
RACHEL: Yeah.
EMMA: You had to leave from point A, and nothing could happen in between. Whereas in New York or in London, you’re walking somewhere and crazy shit happens on the way. Tell me about those months in L.A.
RACHEL: I went into quite a major depression. I was watching so many daytime TV shows. And then I would get in my car and drive to these auditions listening to the radio. I feel sick now when I listen to the radio, all these commercials for different car dealers. I just felt like the world was so desperate and lonely and sad and people were trying to sell cars and no one wanted to buy them.
EMMA: [question about LA]
RACHEL: My friend was saying that no one flirts there. Like at the traffic light when you’re stopped. People are very focused on their own thing. I don’t mean just sexual flirting, but verbal flirting. In L.A., unless you’ve just won an Oscar or you’re Mr. Studio Head, no one talks to you. Even at parties. I was at this big Hollywood party; no one looked. Everyone is blinkered and they just kind of scan the room for anyone important. L.A. makes you feel ugly.
EMMA: Really?
RACHEL: Because if you’re an actress, no one pays you any attention. And you immediately start thinking, God, I must have a nose job. [laughs] Or, I must get that boob job, or I must get that lipo … whatever it is.
EMMA: You have these two parallel careers going on where you do these strange, wonderful, bizarre art films and then you have this big breakout with The Mummy.
RACHEL: Breakout sounds like coming out with acne. [laughs]
EMMA: When I was in London, I went to visit you on the set of The Mummy II.
RACHEL: In my Fleetwood Mac outfit.
EMMA: You looked like Stevie Nicks. And I remember you were having a hard time caring about the person who played your character’s child.
RACHEL: Yeah, I didn’t feel emotionally connected to him.
EMMA: You were trying to method-act your way into giving a damn whether he lived or died. [laughs]
RACHEL: It was very hard because we were up against that blue screen.
EMMA: There’s a lot of jiggery-pokery and special effects. Is working with all those effects a little de-humanizing?
RACHEL: It can certainly feel quite mechanical. You have to talk into thin air and imagine that there are 10,000 Pygmies running at you. But you have to remember how you used your imagination as a child.
EMMA: You told me that you think the best you’ve ever been was when you did Suddenly, Last Summer on stage in London, which was last year?
RACHEL: Yeah. That’s the best acting I’ve ever done.
EMMA: Why?
RACHEL: Because I completely connected with the character. This is really terrible to say, because Catherine is a woman who’s a little bit unstable and hysterical. She’s been pimping for her cousin Sebastian, attracting boys on the beach in Tunisia.
EMMA: Tennessee Williams had to hide any hints whatsoever of homosexuality.
RACHEL: It’s not explicit because it was written in the ’30s. No one ever says he was homosexual. It’s completely obvious, but no one actually spells it out. She’s kind of in love with him actually. That’s the real tragedy of it. I’ve been in love with gay men.
EMMA: Is that because you get to be admired without having sex?
RACHEL: Definitely. You develop this incredible intimacy that isn’t going to lead to sex, but can be very sexual. That’s something I find liberating. Also, because gay men don’t fit into any received notions of family, they have to rethink everything. I find that they are often completely original.
EMMA: Isn’t it funny that the currency of Hollywood is sex, but the people there are mostly so unsexy?
RACHEL: Right. False tits, collagen lips, people dressing very sexually, but it’s a completely sanitized sexuality. It’s boring and unreal. There’s not much room for eccentricity in Hollywood, and eccentricity is what’s sexy in people. I think London’s sexy because it’s so full of eccentrics.
EMMA: Brendan Fraser, who stars with you in The Mummy, seemed very nice. And you said a really funny thing. You said, “He’s just like pornography.”
RACHEL: He’s got a pornographic body. He’s so massive — he doesn’t look that big on screen. I don’t mean fat, I mean muscular. He’s six-foot-three and his thighs …
EMMA: Tell me about Brendan Fraser’s thighs. [laughs]
RACHEL: They’re enormous. He wears tight, jodphur-y trousers with big boots and his costumes are all really sexy. And that big back rippling under the shirt.
EMMA: It was just before I saw you that you filmed Enemy at the Gates, the new Jean-Jacques Annaud movie. What’s it about?
RACHEL: The seizure of Stalingrad. The civilians and soldiers got together and defended the city against the Nazis, against all odds. Jude Law and Joe Fiennes play two Russians who both fall in love with me. I pick Jude, and we end up together.
EMMA: Good choice. Who did you click with the most on that film?
RACHEL: I really clicked as an actor with Jude. We both come from theater, and in theater you have to give as much as you take. Movie actors get used to close-ups and it all becomes monologue. But Jude is right there with you every second of the way.
EMMA: Can we say — just because it’s bizarre — where we’re doing this interview?
RACHEL: Yeah, I think we should.
EMMA: Okay. We’re in Los Angeles. Last time you were having such an awful time here. Now you’re with Sam. Is it weird? I mean, he is the fucking daddy at the moment. Do people get on bended knee at his feet?
RACHEL: Well, I don’t know, because he works all day. The other night we were at a bar and these people were turned around staring at him, whispering and pointing, really going overboard. Then as we were leaving, we looked back at the table behind us, and it was Michelle Pfeiffer and her husband David E. Kelley.
EMMA: (Question….)
RACHEL: Yeah, and we were like, “that’s L.A.” They weren’t looking at Sam at all, they were looking at Michelle Pfeiffer at the table behind us.
EMMA: (Question….)
RACHEL: The thing that happens is, if Sam pays, the waiters will see his name on the card and they’ll just say, “I loved that movie.” It’s quite earnest and nice. He doesn’t go in for that big Hollywood scene.
EMMA: So what kind of cowboy boots are you gonna buy on Monday?
RACHEL: I like the idea of the short ones because they’re so unusual, like ankle length. And either black with red tips or the camel color with brown tips.
EMMA: They’re very Angelina Jolie.
RACHEL:She’s gorgeous. They wanted me to go and meet her to play her sister.
EMMA: What does your family think of all this? Are they disappointed you haven’t had a more academic career?
RACHEL: No. Although my mother would have liked it if I was a doctor and a movie star at the same time because mum’s greedy. Dad always says that my personality has been irrevocably malformed by acting, so that I’m now unsuitable to anything else. He’s sort of joking and sort of not.
EMMA: Your dad’s an inventor?
RACHEL:Yeah.
EMMA: And your stepmum’s a psychiatrist?
RACHEL: And my mum’s a psychiatrist.
EMMA: Do you think you’re more or less well-adjusted for having grown up around all this psychoanalysis?
RACHEL: The thing is, I feel like I’m more well-adjusted, but I think that’s an illusion.

Joe’s note:

Only recently we’ve started to see Jewish women as sex symbols in Hymiewood and Jewish women starting to marry outside of the tribe. Usually a Jewess is forced to marry a Jewish man even though he has a dozen shiksas on the side. As every Jewish male prays every single morning: “Thank God I’m not a Goy, a slave or a woman!”

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (2)
  • Interesting (2)
  • Useful (1)
  • Sucks (1)
  • Boring (0)

Marlon Brando on Jews Running Hollywood

Godfather Marlon Brando

Film star Marlon Brando’s remarks about Jewish influence in Hollywood made in the course of a long April 5 interview on CNN’s Larry King Live have been the subject of heated comment in the weekly Jewish press and some confusing subsequent remarks by Brando himself. Following are all remarks on the subject by both Brando and King excerpted from a CNN-supplied transcript of the interview. In his introductory remarks, King told the television audience that Brando had asked to appear on the program to talk about a videotaped beating of two Mexican migrant workers by Riverside County sheriff’s deputies, racism, and violence in Hollywood.

Larry King: …Our guest is Marlon Brando. We will be including your calls in a little while. Two other areas we want to discuss. I know you have been an admirer of Judaism, right?…And you told—and we have discussed this off the air as well—that you’ve always admired the culture—the Jewish culture.

Marlon Brando: Oh, the Jews are amazing people. They are truly amazing. I think that per capita, people generally don’t realize that per capita that Jews have contributed more to American—the best of American culture than any other single group. If it weren’t for the Jews we wouldn’t have art, we wouldn’t have much theater. We wouldn’t have, oddly enough, Broadway—and Tin Pan Alley—and all the standards that were written by Jews—all the—the songs that you love to sing. You remember—

King: Yeah, we sang them.

Brando:—when we sat around and sang all those songs.

King: So you’re very affectionate for—right? Well, you—you’ve hung around with many—

Brando: The Jews—the secret of the Jews is their worship for the word sechel. That doesn’t mean that they are superior people it just means that they are culturally advantaged in the same way that the Chinese and Japanese are.

King: But they’re not better than that Mexican across the line—

Brando: Of course—of course not.

King: —or that Black in Mississippi.

Brando: Absolutely not. As a matter of fact you find an extraordinary contrast between the Jews that left Israel and the—who—

King: You mean who left Europe?

Brando: No, they left Israel and left behind the Sephardic Jews and when they came back—not the—you know, the—you know, the—what is the name of the group of Jews that came back?

King: Levis?

Brando: No, no, no. There was the—the [unintelligible] the split in Europe.

King: All right.

Brando: But the Jews that left Israel were called the—

King: I forget.

Brando: Okay.

King: The gist of it is?

Brando: The gist of it is, when they came back, they got in dutch with the Sephardic Jews, who never had any trouble with anybody, they lived there with the Arabs, they were perfectly happy living there with the Arabs for thousands, 1,300 years or so—

King: So there is a lot about modern Judaism you don’t like?

Brando: Oh, it has nothing to do with that. It has nothing to do with that. We’re talking about the Jews just in general—

King: But in this—in this—

Brando: But their regard for knowledge, their regard for information. They saved all of their money in the days when they were pressured—pressured in Europe and the days when they had pogroms and the days when they—see, you are rushing me, I can’t—I can’t think—

King: I’m not rushing you.

Brando: But you are pointing your finger at me like this. It’s very—it’s battery to do that.

King: Ha, ha, ha. No, I’m trying to focus in on—because I know you are a great admirer, yet, at the same time, you feel badly about what Hollywood has [crosstalk]

Brando: Feel bad—badly is—you can’t say badly. You feel bad. Okay, I’m—I’m slightly rattled here, because I’m having trouble—

King: I don’t mean to rattle you.

Brando: No, it’s not that. It’s the time and the pressure and the nature of this—the nature of these circumstances.

King: Let me get a break and we will [crosstalk]…

King: You told me you are sending your children to Jewish schools?

Brando: Yeah, my kids go to a Jewish school.

King: Because?

Brando: Because I think that the Jewish schools, one, are the safest and the best.

King: You are also critical, though, are you not, of many of the Jewish people who run a lot of important studios in Hollywood and who you feel—

Brando: Yes. Generally—you—

King: —do violent films.

Brando: You have to understand something: that generally people do not understand that people who hate Black people, the people who hate Jews, the people who hate anybody who is not free, white and 21 and Protestant, are carrying around in their children, are carrying around in their bodies, and have had visited on their children, this extraordinary magic that was created by a Jew—called the—the uh—the Salk vaccine, which prevents polio.

King: So?

Brando: It’s just a matter of just ordinary things. And if they knew that would they refuse to have the Salk vaccine?

King: Oh, if they knew that a Jew had invented it? They knew a Jew invented it.

Brando: Of course. And there has been a lot of anti-Jewish feeling, which is—is—you have to understand that Max—people like Max Youngstein, who was head of United Artists—founded, or was a financial backer of SNCC, which was a very militant Black group…

King: Are you—are you critical—

Brando: That’s—

King:—of the Hollywood that makes violent movies?

Brando: I think that—I—am very angry with some of the Jews. I am very goddamned angry—

King: At some of the Jews?

Brando: —at some of the Jews who have known—who have suffered terribly at the hands of the Russians, of the Germans and the Poles and all of the anti-Semitic elements in Europe and it was a godsend to come to America where they could be free—and they could—they could do whatever they wanted.

King: Then what are you angry at?

Brando: And then Sam Goldwyn and all of the rest of them. Metro Goldwyn Mayer, they—Hollywood is run by Jews. It is owned by Jews—and they should have a greater sensitivity about the issue of—of people who are suffering. Because they’ve exploited—we have seen the—we have seen the [deleted] and greaseball, we’ve seen the Chink, we’ve seen the slit-eyed dangerous Jap, we have seen the wily Filipino, we’ve seen everything but we never saw the kike. Because they knew perfectly well, that that is where you draw the—wagons around—

King: When you 7¸when you say something like that you are playing right in, though, to anti-Semitic people who say the Jews are—

Brando: No, no, because I will be the first one who will appraise the Jews honestly and say “Thank God for the Jews.” If it weren’t for the Jews, we wouldn’t have any—

King: All right. But they anger you when they pander—

Brando: Yes.

King: Or they make films that—

Brando: They don’t anger me. That’s the nature of human beings. That is the nature of human beings. I would like that they were more sensitive. And through the years, I think we’ve gained a certain sensitivity here in Hollywood—“here in Hollywood”—as though I—I am not a standing—welcome member of the community here, but, nevertheless I feel that we—we have now sensitized so that we can’t treat Blacks that way—because Blacks are not going to stand for it. These people—if you see these people down in front of the federal building—the brown people, they are not going to stand for it…

King: There is a good friend of mine that Marlon wants to discuss a second before we take calls and that is Lew Wasserman, the Chairman Emeritus of Universal.

Brando: Yeah, I wanted to say that I was on a picture that I thought was funnier than hell—it turned out to not make very much money—it was me and David Niven trying to be funny. But he made me scream. However, they had a scene—it was in the ’80s. And I said “How come there are no Black people in this film?” And no—there was just pure white people. Anyway, I said—I said, “I can’t—I can’t do it, if you are not going to hire any Black people I am not going to be in the scene.” And he said, “Marlon, come on, it’s not that kind of a picture.” I said, “What kind of a picture?” What kind of a picture is it that you have to have to show Black people, to show Brown people, to show yellow—so I said, “You have to cut me out, I’m walking out of the picture.” I went to Lew—Lew Wasserman’s office and I said, “Lewand he doesn’t like publicity and forgive me Lew if I am embarrassing you, but the fact is that I went to his office and said, “Lew—” and he was—Lew Wasserman is Mr. Hollywood. He is the head of Universal, and he is an extraordinary man, he came from—well, never mind him—

King: Poverty. And he what?

Brando: Worked his way up to be a big macha as they say in Yiddish. And he said, “Marlon, do me a favor,” he says. “Go back to work,” and he said, “I promise you—,” it touches me even now because he did it.

King: What did he say?

Brando: He said, “Marlon, if you go back to work, I promise you we will settle this thing.” And he got everybody by the lapels, and he says “Hey—” he got all the big machas—that’s Jewish for big shots, and he got all the Jews and he said, “Listen, this is going to be the way it has to be.” He was the Godfather. And—

King: We’re back with Marlon Brando. He does want to clear up that his criticism of Jewish people who are in positions of power in Hollywood—

Brando: I don’t want to clear it up. No, I think—

King: You don’t want people to think that you’re—

Brando: No, the Jews have—they understand, they know perfectly well, what their responsibilities are and more and more you see among younger Jews a sense—I mean we wouldn’t have the extraordinary films that come out of Hollywood that are so sensitive really—these are the old time Jews—that ran Hollywood. I think more and more that you see that. However, all those old films like John Wayne and Charlton Heston and all of those Indian killers, they killed—they did more harm to the American Indians than Custer did.

King: They didn’t know, though, did they?

Brando: They—knew very well…

King: So what’s the perspective?

Brando: So my—my—as far as the Jews are concerned—in the early days when I was supporting the [unintelligible] they blew up the King David Hotel, they killed an awful lot of Englishmen, some Arabs and also some Jews. They—

King: They were persecuted.

Brando: Of course, coming off that you—

King: By the way—

Brando: —you would do the same thing.

King: —you look terrific. Thank you my friend.

Brando: Thank you. So do you.

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (2)
  • Interesting (1)
  • Useful (1)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)

Hollywood’s Babylon Gate

Hollywood's Babylon Gate

The rear entrance to the theatre is a massive recreation of the Babylon Gate from D.W. Griffiths’s Intolerance (Griffith was yet another Hollywood Freemason). On its facade are reliefs of the Ashur and the eagle-headed god Nisroch, both representing different aspects of Horus. Near the top rim of the gate is a border design made of 17 keyhole-shaped objects. It seems only appropriate that behind the Babylon Gate stands the Renaissance Hotel, located on the 1700 block of Highland Ave.

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)