Anjelica Huston Reflects on Her 'Tough' Acting Debut with Her Father: 'He Was Hard on Me'

Anjelica Huston Reflects on Her 'Tough' Acting Debut with Her Father: 'He Was Hard on Me'New Foto - Anjelica Huston Reflects on Her 'Tough' Acting Debut with Her Father: 'He Was Hard on Me'

Nancy R. Schiff/Hulton Archive/Getty Anjelica Huston reflected on her relationship with her Oscar-winning director father John Huston She made her acting debut in 1969'sA Walk With Love and Death, which he directed "He realized early on that I didn't really want to do it, because I didn't think the part was for me, and I wasn't comfortable in my skin," Anjelica toldInterviewmagazine Anjelica Hustonis reflecting on her relationship with her late father John Huston. For a new feature inInterviewmagazine, theFrom the World of John Wick: Ballerinaactress, 73, looked back on her first of four cover stories for the outlet. For the 1972 profile, Anjelica discussed her acting debut in 1969'sA Walk With Love and Death,which her father directed. "I was 15 and going through all sorts of adolescent problems. It's really hard to make a movie on another person's territory, especially when that person is your own father, therefore too close to the situation," Anjelica toldInterviewin 1972 of her experience making the film. Asked to respond to her comments today, the actress said, "That was very tough. He was hard on me because he realized early on that I didn't really want to do it, because I didn't think the part was for me, and I wasn't comfortable in my skin." "You ask any actress if she's right for something, she feels good. If she doesn't, she feels bad," she added. "So I still don't think it was my fault." Bettmann/Getty A Walk With Love and Deathwas one of 47 movies Anjelica's father John directed in his decades-long film career. John, who died in 1987 at 81, was a two-timeAcademy Awardwinner for his work directing and writing the screenplay for the 1948 movieThe Treasure of the Sierra Madre. The actress has admitted publicly before that her first time acting for the screen was fraught, in part due to the fact that she was being directed by her father. In 2019, Anjelica told theLos Angeles Timesthat John "miscast me [the] first time out and I think he realized that." As she told the outlet at that time, she originally wanted to make her big screen debut in 1968'sRomeo and Juliet, which ultimately starred the lateOlivia Hussey. "I was ready to act, but I wasn't ready to act for him," she said. "I was difficult. I didn't want to act with no makeup, although I'd have done it for [Romeo and Juliet director Franco Zeffirelli]." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Anjelica, of course, later won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in her father's 1985 moviePrizzi's Honor, which was John's penultimate film as a director. "He wasn't like the other fathers. He was larger than life, and quite extravagant as a person," Anjelica toldInterviewof her father, in response to a 1972 quote of hers in which she described his A-list circle of friends as "part of my everyday life" growing up. "He lived in extremes," she added. "And it was an ordinary fact of life that famous people would come to stay, so I was exposed to a certain amount of drama. People like Peter O'Toole and Marlon Brando." Ballerinais in theaters June 6. Read the original article onPeople

 

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