Hunt
finds calm in the Windy City
Dallas
She's been called the hands-down best talk show guest in America.
But smart, funny Bonnie Hunt, 35, is much more than a gabfest mouth.
The Chicago native, who began her acting career while working as
an oncology nurse and Second City comic, is a warm-hearted talent
in touch with her roots.
Most filmmakers don't get a chance to go back and shoot in their
old haunts. But Wes Anderson filmed Rushmore at his prep school
in Houston and Peter and Bobby Farrelly returned to their Rhode
Island stomping grounds for There's Something About Mary. For Return
to Me, the first-time film director went back to her old Windy City
neighbourhood.
Her romantic comedy, named for the Dean Martin song, stars The X-Files
David Duchovny as an architect still grieving two years later for
his dead wife (Joely Richardson) and Minnie Driver as a heart transplant
patient eager for a second chance at life.
In the script she co-wrote with partner Don Lake, Hunt plays Driver's
best friend, advising her not to shave her legs so she won't be
tempted into sex - spoken like a real-life graduate of St Ferdinand's
elementary and Notre Dame High School.
As for acting in a film that she's also directing, the first woman
to create, write, executive produce and star in her own TV series
(The Building) says, 'It's one less person I had to discuss the
scene with.'
Her first movie role was as the waitress who spills toothpicks before
a counting Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man. She shared billing with a
St Bernard in Beethoven, played Renee Zellweger's bitter older sister
in Jerry Maguire and voiced Rosie the black widow spider in A Bug's
Life. While in preproduction for her own film, she starred as Tom
Hanks' plain-talking wife in The Green Mile. In the city, where
everybody seems to know her, doors opened for the homegirl. 'Chicago
to me is a giant Mayberry,' she says. 'I love that. I had it as
a kid. People lived above their stores. They still do in some areas.'
The malls have cut into those family-run stores, she says, but in
Chicago that neighbourhood feeling survives. 'They're forced into
it by the weather. Every year there's a huge snowstorm and everybody's
reminded they need each other. You've got to dig those cars out
and there's something bigger than us out there,' she said.
Reminders that they need each other give neighbours a sense of community,
she says. 'It's still alive in Chicago because it has to be,' she
says. 'There's some kind of goodness in that which you're so nostalgic
for. I know I am.'
It's the fuzzy, uncynical feeling that informs her love story set
in an Irish-Italian restaurant where Grace Briggs (Driver) waits
on Bob Rueland (an endearing Duchovny) and his rude, noisy blind
date.
She says: 'I told the studio, 'I'm going to write you a movie that
you'll want to move into.' Because those are the movies that helped
me get through my life. When I was a nerd and hanging out in the
A/V room in high school and watching movies, I just got lost in
them and they became my friends.'
She is nothing if not loyal. Ten Second City actors are in Return
to Me. And when the network asked her to get rid of three actors
on her acclaimed CBS series The Building, she refused.
'They said, 'We want to replace them because we have actors on hold
to keep them off other shows that we're paying a lot of money to.'
I said, 'These people are my friends. I've known them 15 years and
you know what the executive said, "I could call them for you".
When the executives threatened to cancel the show if she didn't
change actors, she said, 'Let's just shake hands today and it's
over. ... I went home and told my husband we'd lost a ton of money
and I'm not doing a show. But he always says, "Keep it small,
enjoy it all." '
It was, she says, the best thing she ever did, and tapes of The
Building helped convince MGM to present Return to Me. But the story
is old-fashioned schmaltz, and she worries about its reception.
She says: 'I wonder if it's not cool to like it. Critics might think
it's smart and it's funny, but maybe it's just too nice for them
to like it. The trend has been mean, blunt, angry humour. It's so
easy to write obnoxious characters and be funny. This was much more
of a challenge creatively.'
Before she moved to LA to start up a Second City off-shoot, Hunt
juggled a career nursing cancer patients with working as a comic.
'I was always doing both. It was a great outlet. To me it was my
energy, my fuel. The patients got so involved in it. I was working
at this place across from Wrigley Field called Bob's Bar (where
she founded the improvisational group An Impulsive Thing) and you'd
know my tables because there were all these bald people with bandanas
on, god love 'em, drinking their water because they couldn't have
alcohol ...'
Besides, she says, 'It gave us something else to talk about besides
the dreaded cancer. People don't want to be identified by their
disease. That's how I felt about the character Minnie Driver plays
in this movie. That's why I had her say, "I don't want somebody
to know (about her organ transplant) because they'll think I'm broken."
'
While nursing, she used to bring the whole Second City cast to Northwestern
University Hospital. 'We'd do the show and bring the beds into the
hall. I'm really very, very lucky because my dad wanted me to be
a nurse. I loved being a nurse, but I was only in nursing school
a couple months when he died.'
Seeing life and death up close has ordered her priorities, she says.
It makes the ups and downs of showbiz more bearable.
'I'm lucky because I was a nurse first. I forget 'em like we all
do, but in those moments when I need 'em, they come in very handy,'she
said. -KRT
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