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ABC’s Nightline Features McFadden Interview With Best Actress Nominee Meryl Streep

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Meryl Streep, Cynthia McFaddenWith the 2009 Academy Awards upon us, “Nightline” co-anchor Cynthia McFadden sat down for an interview with legendary actress Meryl Streep, recipient of a record 15 Academy Award Nominations. Nominated once again for Best Actress for her performance as Sister Aloysius in “Doubt”, Streep discussed her role with McFadden as the iron-willed nun, why she prefers to play difficult women, her true feelings about losing the Oscar in the past, and what her future holds.Here are excerpts from the interview with Meryl Streep:

On her nomination:

MCFADDEN: It’s award season. Good time of the year for you or bad time of the year for you? I mean do you still get the little nervous feelings?

STREEP: Oh yeah, very very much so. It’s very nerve-wracking. But you know there’s so much more chatter about it. There’s so much more writing about, blogging about it and everybody sort of decides way ahead of when things are decided. You know by the voting thing so that it all gets very hyperbolic.

MCFADDEN: Do you get your feelings hurt if you don’t win?

STREEP: I feel honestly that I’ve won my Oscar, you know. I feel validated. But yeah, there’s a part of you that thinks every time you do the work as well as you hope you can do it, you get caught up in the thing… Here’s what you get caught up in. when you lose you think my work wasn’t any good. But it’s an honor to be nominated and it is! It is. But you just feel worse when you lose than you did before you got nominated. Ok? I’ll say that.

MCFADDEN: The truth!

MCFADDEN CONTINUED: How does the world’s greatest living actress’ mantel sit?

STREEP: It’s completely honestly, Cynthia, it is meaningless…

MCFADDEN: Meaningless?

STREEP: Yeah because there is no such thing, there is no such thing. There is no such entity.

On Playing Powerful Women:

MCFADDEN: You said you like to play difficult women?

STREEP: Yeah I do.

MCFADDEN: Why?

STREEP: Because their contradictions are so vivid and we’re all so good at hiding ours. So in the course of a normal day, we all suppress what’s hideous and the people that are interesting and sort of the one who just let it hang out.

MCFADDEN: You know watching the film, I looked at Sister Aloysius and I wondered if she was the Miranda Priestley of the convent. They have a lot in common, these two women. Women in power, women with authority, women that other people are sort of pushed back by a bit. What do you think?

STREEP: Well I see sort of a parallel in that women in power are still kind of terrifying to us and so Sister Aloysius is terrifying because of her demeanor and so is Miranda Priestley. But we are uncomfortable still with women in power and we don’t really know, still, I think it’s a complicated negotiation on the part of the person who has the authority and the people that she’s bossing around.

STREEP CONTINUED: So sometimes it’s easier for people who are in authority to be authoritarian, because people know where you stand. The nicer the boss, the more mushy it gets and the more the female needs to ingratiate and be loved as it comes into it. With Miranda and Sister Aloysius that’s all sort of jettisoned.

MCFADDEN: Let me ask you about this last year about women in power. How did women do in the last year with Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin do you think? Are women in power seen in a more positive light do you think, or not?

STREEP: Well, we’re on our way. We’re on our way to understanding all of it. I think we are just getting closer and closer as an evolving species to being able to accept this. But look around but look around the world this is – women are living as we were in this country but in the 19th century in many, many, many parts of the world. They’re bartered, they are property, they don’t have the rights we have – it’s very difficult for us to understand all those things. But we do have a sense that for us, that is in the past.

STREEP continued: But all those vestigial things are in every negotiation I have with people in my business. And it’s still, it’s informing, it’s coloring, it’s coloring.

On Whether “Doubt” is Really About Religion…

MCFADDEN: You know, so many people think it’s about the priest and the nun and in fact—in some ways of course it is. Is it about religion?

STREEP: No I think it’s about dogmatism of all sorts. I think John [Patrick Shanley] has talked about how he wrote it, when we wrote it at a time when in our country there was a lot of posturing about the certainty of our course of how to go ahead. I think it’s about fundamentalism of every sort. And yeah, that’s what I would say.

On her future:

MCFADDEN: You’re far from being an old lady, but do you have a vision of who you want to be when you are one?

STREEP: Well, my mother was a pretty good role model. But I’m just never going to measure up, she was just something. But that’s my goal. Part of the thing is she didn’t work full time. And part of her gifts were the richness of her friendships and that’s really hard. It’s not texting each other, it’s face to face. You have to be in your friends’ faces and in their lives. That’s something that I think I’ve missed by working so hard and having so many thousands of kids.

“Nightline” is anchored by Cynthia McFadden, Terry Moran, and Martin Bashir. James Goldston is the executive producer. “Nightline airs at 11:35 p.m. (ET/PT) weeknights on the ABC Television Network.

Meryl Streep’s nominations to date:

Actress in a Leading Role

1. Sophie’s Choice (1982) (win)
2. The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1981)
3. Silkwood (1983)
4. Out of Africa (1985)
5. Ironweed (1987)
6. A Cry in the Dark (1988)
7. Postcards From the Edge (1990)
8. The Bridges of Madison County (1995)
9. One True Thing (1998)
10. Music of the Heart (1999)
11. The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
12. Doubt (2008)

Actress in a Supporting Role

13. Kramer vs. Kramer (1979) (win)
14. The Deer Hunter (1978)
15. Adaptation (2002)

“Nightline” is anchored by Cynthia McFadden, Terry Moran, and Martin Bashir. James Goldston is the executive producer. “Nightline airs at 11:35 p.m. (ET/PT) weeknights on the ABC Television Network.

Excerpts courtesy of ABC News “Nightline”.

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Gianna Brighton