âPhoebeâ sâ Felicity Huffman, working mom
Felicity Huffman has no idea how she has become the patron saint of mothers -- at least screen mothers, as in her television alter ego Lynette Scavo on âDesperate Housewives.â There was also her Oscar-nominated role as a transsexual reconnecting with a son in âTransamerica.â And now in her latest film, âPhoebe in Wonderland,â Huffman plays a blocked writer turned ambivalent full-time mom to two girls -- one a very troubled child, played by the angelic-looking Elle Fanning.
âI was thinking about it this morning,â says Huffman, referring to her recent spate of mom roles. âI thought that maybe itâs my age [sheâs 46] -- or maybe itâs a little gift or joke from God: âThat thing that you struggle with so mightily, well, I want you to do it in your professional career as well,â â says the real-life mother of two daughters, Sofia, 8, and Georgia, 6.
âI did not enter into motherhood with any sense of equanimity or grace,â she adds with a laugh. âIâm surrounded by women who are much better mothers than I am, and they come to it much more naturally.â
Self-deprecation does seem to be Huffmanâs metier, as does unpretentiousness. On a rainy day in Los Angeles, the actress is huddled over a bowl of soup in a Valley cafe not far from her Hollywood Hills home. She wears her black trench coat pulled tight around her slight frame, her hair definitively uncoiffed, and her face free of makeup except for the jet black mascara around her eyes. The black outline looks like an afterthought, like a kind of quick-fix that busy moms do when they suddenly must leave the house, which it turns out Huffman has in fact just done, leaving her girls at home with the baby sitter. (Her husband, William H. Macy, is in New York, having replaced the mercury-inflicted Jeremy Piven in the Broadway revival of âSpeed-the-Plow.â)
In âPhoebe,â which premiered at Sundance in 2008 and opens Friday, 9-year-old Phoebe begins exhibiting obsessive-compulsive tics, unexplained spitting, unconscious rudeness and extreme anxiety in almost all situations except when sheâs acting in the school play, âAlice in Wonderland,â or lost in her own imagination, where characters from âAliceâ seem to come to life. Her mother is a frustrated academic with writerâs block, a larger-than-healthy dose of narcissism and burbling feminist rage at the personality deterioration that stay-at-home motherhood has wrought.
Huffman describes her characterâs despair as âthat feeling which Iâve heard and felt and other mothers have said so to me also -- not all mothers -- but you sort of become a mother and you look back and you kind of go, âWhere did I go? I disappeared somewhere.â She is lost in motherhood and is lost in her writing -- she canât write anymore. So there is that conundrum of you feel imprisoned by motherhood and at the same time you love and cherish motherhood. And you canât seem to marry all the conflicting components of it.â
âOne of the things that is amazing about Felicity is that she speaks very publicly and candidly about the incredible highs and lows of parenting,â says âPhoebeâ writer-director Daniel Barnz, who not only is a close friend of the actress but is also father to Zelda, the best friend of Huffmanâs 8-year-old. âPeople really crave that voice. Itâs sometimes considered taboo about how difficult it can be to be a parent.â In fact, her characterâs monologue -- in which she charts the highs and lows of motherhood -- comes directly out of conversations Barnz had with Huffman.
The actress certainly doesnât pretend to be able to do it all. Huffman rarely takes her daughters to the âDesperate Housewivesâ set because, she says, âIâm not good at that multi-tasking thing: kids, conversation, kids, work. I find that very difficult. Also there is sort of a rarefied air around a set, which is weird.â
And her launch into motherhood, which she loves, she nonetheless describes as complicated and overwhelming. âYou feel your heart break open,â she says. âIt was scary. I felt unequal to the task. I felt like I was moving from mistake to mistake, sleep-deprived forever.â She adds: âIâm not sure happiness is anything like finding the perfect pair of black pants and breakfast in bed.â
Her best parenting advice: âKnow your story, the story you have told yourself about your past . . . the decisions you have made. I think itâs essentially self-knowledge. So at least when you are inflicting your unconscious or your views, you are a little bit aware of it.â
She declines to elaborate on her specific story, though she does offer an anecdote that sheds light on what kind of mother Felicity Huffman is.
âOne of my daughters turned to me last night and said, âAm I adopted?â And I said, âNo, you are not adopted,â â Huffman relates. âAnd she said, âWell, sometimes I feel so different.â So I said, âI think itâs part of human nature that you would feel different and that you would feel like you donât belong. You feel like you are the odd one out. It just feels like that -- even if you are the center of everything.â â
Thatâs the message of âPhoebe in Wonderland,â adds the actress. âThat sort of innate alienation that goes along with being human.â
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-- Rachel Abramowitz
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Where youâve seen her
Felicity Huffmanâs first break came as the replacement for Madonna in the original Broadway version of David Mametâs âSpeed-the-Plow.â She went on to become a television presence in Aaron Sorkinâs âSports Nightâ and guest starred on âFrasier,â âThe X-Filesâ and âThe West Wingâ before landing her Emmy Award-winning role as Lynette Scavo on âDesperate Housewives.â In 2005, she won a Golden Globe and was nominated for an Oscar for her role in âTransamericaâ as Bree, a preoperative transsexual on a road trip with the long-lost son she fathered. She was also Lindsay Lohanâs mother in âGeorgia Rule.â
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-- Rachel Abramowitz