CARPE DIEM DOMINIQUE SWAIN IS MAKING HAY WHILE THE SPOTLIGHT OF FAME SHINES.Byline: Evan Henerson Staff Writer ``Whoo-HOO!!'' A few heads turn to witness Dominique Swain whooping whoop n. 1. a. A loud cry of exultation or excitement. b. A shout uttered by a hunter or warrior. 2. A hooting cry, as of a bird. 3. The paroxysmal gasp characteristic of whooping cough. over the recollection of an 8-year-old memory. Swain is recalling how she felt upon learning she had been tabbed for a ``Lolita'' audition (she ultimately won the role). Forget the audition, said Swain. It was the beginning of summer and the then 14-year-old Malibu resident was getting a free trip to New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . Swain isn't one to hold back, whether among friends or during an interview at a still-crowded Woodland Hills food court. She lives, she laughs, she whoops Whoops Slang for the Washington Public Power Supply System (WPPSS), which made the record books with the largest municipal bond default in history. Notes: During the 1970s and 80s, the WPPSS financed the construction of five nuclear power plants through the issuance of , and she goes for it, whether the target is Lolita, a soul-searching sorority sorority: see fraternity. sister, or an abused Appalachian wife in search of her true love (in the upcoming ``Briar briar: see brier. Patch''). ``I'm very enthusiastic about things,'' she says. Whoo-hoo indeed. 'It's the system!' ``We loved Dominique; she's so much fun,'' says Adam Larson Broder, the writer and co-director of the recently released film ``Pumpkin,'' in which Swain has a featured role. ``She was so interested in the role, and we did some fun things with her.'' Playing Jeanine Kryszinsky, the misfit mis·fit n. 1. Something of the wrong size or shape for its purpose. 2. One who is unable to adjust to one's environment or circumstances or is considered to be disturbingly different from others. roommate of Christina Ricci's Carolyn McDuffy, Swain is dark-haired and dumpy (Documentation User's MalPractice + Y) An award from InfoWorld magazine for the worst online documentation. See RTFM. , badly dressed and seemingly caught in an endless bad-hair-day cycle. It's Swain who gets arguably the film's funniest line. Faced with a challenged athlete that she's supposed to be helping, a wigging-out Jeanine breaks down and bolts, but not before telling the bewildered student, ``It's not you. It's the system!'' Swain is not, she hastens to point out, the film's lead. ``Pumpkin'' is the story of sorority belle Carolyn's transformation as she falls in love with Pumpkin Romanoff (played by Hank Harris), another physically and developmentally challenged Noun 1. developmentally challenged - people collectively who are mentally retarded; "he started a school for the retarded" mentally retarded, retarded athlete. Jeanine helps Carolyn's process along, and she undergoes a kind of metamorphosis of her own. ``Basically, she's on the verge On the Verge (or The Geography of Yearning) is a play written by Eric Overmyer. It makes extensive use of esoteric language and pop culture references from the late nineteenth century to 1955. of combusting at any moment,'' says Swain, 21, utterly unrecognizable from her on-screen on·screen or on-screen adj. & adv. 1. As shown on a movie, television, or display screen. 2. Within public view; in public. presence in jeans and newly died reddish hair. ``You just feel like her face is twitching with rage at things that would not make a normal person upset. ``I really copied her body language from my sister, who was having a complete tantrum tan·trum n. A fit of bad temper. tantrum, n a sudden outburst or violent display of rage, frustration, and bad temper, usually occurring in a maladjusted child or immature or disturbed adult. right before we were shooting. I was, like, 'Oh, my God, she's Jeanine. I'm not Jeanine. She's Jeanine, but I can use that.' '' Swain first got hold of the ``Pumpkin'' script when she was 17 and too young for any of the roles. But the film's ``Beauty and the Beast'' premise intrigued her. A few years later, with Christina Ricci on board (as star and producer) and financing secured by by Francis Ford Coppola's film company, American Zoetrope Zo´e`trope n. 1. An optical toy, in which figures made to revolve on the inside of a cylinder, and viewed through slits in its circumference, appear like a single figure passing through a series of natural motions as if animated or mechanically moved. , ``Pumpkin'' dropped back into Swain's lap. Those who remember her in ``Lolita'' and ``Face/Off'' may not even recognize Swain in ``Pumpkin.'' Swain hopes they don't. ``That was a big part of my taking it on,'' she says. ``I was considering whether I wanted to be billed as myself, but I think contractually, I didn't have a choice.'' 'This town is tough' Melanie Griffith, who played Lolita Haze's mother, Charlotte, opposite Swain in Adrian Lyne's film, recalls the ``fabulous gawky 15-year-old.'' Herself an actress from her teen years, Griffith also recalls a studio system that isn't exactly friendly to young performers. ``This town is tough,'' said Griffith. ``I don't think anything has to do with when you're making the movie. It's afterward. It's the press and how the studio takes care of you or doesn't take care of you. These days, I don't think anybody takes care of anybody very much.'' Swain never really had the chance to find out. ``Lolita,'' which might have become her early career-defining role, got tied up in controversy over its edgy subject matter and had difficulty finding distribution. The adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's tale of a middle-age professor in love with a 12-year-old nymphette, ``Lolita'' eventually had a limited theatrical release and ended up on Showtime. By the time viewers finally saw ``Lolita,'' Swain was a high school senior who no longer resembled the character she was playing. And it was back to the audition pool for the still largely unknown actress. ``All in all, it was sort of lame,'' Swain says. ``I really enjoyed 'Lolita,' and it was an amazing experience, but it also totally impassioned me to acting, and it would have been convenient if people could have seen my movie when I was the age that I was playing in the movie. ``Maybe I would not have been ready for any kind of stardom, if that would have even happened had it had a normal release. I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. ,'' she continues. ``I don't regret it, but I don't know what would have happened otherwise. It's just an interesting course to think about, even though totally futile.'' After ``Lolita'' and ``Face/Off,'' Swain took roles in several smaller independent movies, including ``Tart,'' ``Girl'' and ``The Intern.'' She enrolled in college, but immediately landed the Daniel Waters
Daniel Waters was an officer in the Continental Navy and in the United States Navy. film ``Happy Campers Happy Campers are a punk/rock band, from Las Vegas. The band consists of three members: Isaac Campa (Vox & Guitar), Master Jay (Drums & Vox) and MeanGene (Bass & Vox). The band is featured heavily on the Bumfights series and this has helped to ensure their popularity. .'' If she's ever hard up for work again, she figures she'll just sign up for classes again ``because I'm sure I'll get something I can't pass up.'' ``Education has been really important in my family, and I'm sure that I will go back, but I feel like you only have one time when you are a certain age and have a certain experience level and are appropriate for telling a certain kind of story,'' she says. Between the dark-edged ``Briar Patch,'' ``Pumpkin'' and ``Lolita,'' Swain would seem to have a knack for projects that won't have an easy road to the multiplexes. ``In the '60s,'' she says, ``they called it 'the curse of Lolita,' '' she says. What would Swain call it? ``Uncommercial un·com·mer·cial adj. 1. Not engaged in or involving trade or commerce. 2. Not in accord with the spirit or methods of commerce. 3. Uneconomical. Adj. 1. sensibilities,'' she says. ``I just feel like it's totally arbitrary who gets financed, and some people just don't know what they're doing. I think if you love the script, you should give it a shot, but you never really know.'' CAPTION(S): 2 photos Photo: (1) Dominique Swain says making ``Lolita'' ``was an amazing experience, but it also totally impassioned me to acting, and it would have been convenient if people could have seen my movie when I was the age that I was playing in the movie.'' Evan Yee/Staff Photographer (2) Swain, left, and actress-producer Christina Ricci, third from left, share a peppy scene from the quirky comedy ``Pumpkin.'' |
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