Jennifer Beals & The Final Season of The L Word
Posted on 10. Feb, 2009 by Administrator in Profiles, hCovers
by Jason Dean, photos by Robert Todd Williamson
Jennifer Beals is, by her own admission, fascinated by mythology. âWhat is it about vampires? There are so many metaphors,â she says, considering her own question. âItâs incredibly alluring, especially to young girls.â She has a point. Look no further than the âTwilightâ books and movie and HBOâs new series True Blood, and one will notice that vampires are in vogue once again. âThereâs that sensation of coming into your authenticity and being introduced to your own mythic power.â Beals is still talking vampires, but her words could easily apply to the phenomenon of the Showtime series The L Word, now in its sixth and final season. Since its debut in 2004, the show has been a beacon of empowerment for young women while dispelling myths about lesbianism and gender roles. The storylines have never ceased being provocative. In the current season, pre-op transsexual Moira/Max (Daniela Sea), finds out sheâs pregnant as she prepares to undergo gender transition. Â
Itâs been 25 years since Beals lit up the screen in Flashdance, as she helped to popularize leg warmers, loose-neck sweatshirts, and to a lesser extent, barely legal steel-mill welders. Sheâs stayed busy over the years, populating her resumĂŠ with interesting roles in eclectic films (The Bride, Vampireâs Kiss, Devil in the Blue Dress, Runaway Jury, Twilight of the Golds), but her turn as Bette Porter on The L Word has solidified her standing with a new generation of fans.Â
After taking some time to decompress following her h photo shoot, Beals emerges from her dressing room to meet me. She looks stunning: Her smooth, flawless features seem impervious to the passage of time. Soft-spoken and verbally precise, she projects a cultured elegance befitting a museum curator. Itâs a testament to how thoroughly Beals embodies her character, who has been portraying a dean of arts at a California university in the series. Picking up on the parallel, I ask her if she catches herself doing or saying things that are decidedly Bette Porter-esque. âDefinitely,â she responds. âThere are certain words that I donât normally say. Intractable. Six years ago, I wouldnât have used that word, but itâs found its way into my vocabulary.âÂ
Beals says she did not consider her characterâs sexual orientation in her initial research of the role. Instead, she delved into Betteâs professional identity, âbecause work is paramount to her.â The L Wordâs fairly graphic portrayal of its charactersâ relationships did not faze Beals. âI didnât really think about it,â she insists. âI imagined it would be as graphic as a heterosexual show would be.â As for preparing for a gay love scene as opposed to a straight one, she says, âThereâs no difference at all, other than just trying to figure which position technically works. For me, when Iâve done love scenes or intimate scenes – however you want to characterize them, because theyâre not always about love and theyâre not always intimate – itâs just about the story. I didnât think about it until the time came that I had to do the love scene. Then I thought, âLetâs just hope I donât
come off as a total chump.ââ
At the outset of Season One, Bette Porter seems to posses the most even-keeled presence in the cast, even though itâs perpetually career-absorbed. Sheâs in a committed, seven-year relationship with girlfriend Tina Kennard (Laurel Holloman), a driven Hollywood professional with a high-profile job; she and Tina are preparing to start a family. But over the next few seasons, their well-manicured façade begins to crumble, culminating with Bette kidnapping her and Tinaâs child in the midst of a bitter custody dispute. This season, after a few ups and downs, Betteâs life has stabilized: She and Tina are a couple again and are trying to adopt their second child.Â
Working on The L Word has been a gratifying, collaborative process, says Beals. Because the show uses different directors during the season, the actors bear some responsibility for maintaining character consistency. âObviously, [series creator Ilene Chaiken] does that, but sheâs taking care of lots and lots of different characters. Youâre sort of the keeper of the flameâthe heart and truth of the character,â she says.
One of the greatest triumphs of the show is the fluid interaction of its ensemble cast: a collection of vivid personalities, not drenched in stereotypes, that are authentic and believable. Whether itâs a delicate balance of female energy or just guilty-pleasure frenemy drama, the chemistry is still there. Five of the core actresses â Mia Kirschner, Katherine Moennig, Leisha Hailey, Holloman, and Beals â have been with the show from the beginning. Another central figure in the show, around which intrigue and occasional controversy revolves, is âThe Chartâ. Created by quirky journalist Alice (Hailey), The Chart is a massive âhook-up mapâ that diagrams relationships and connects people like a series of gigantic constellations. The idea is that there are traceable degrees of separation within the lesbian community among commonly shared sex partners. One of the main hubs on The Chart is the androgynous Shane (Moennig), whose reputation as a serial heartbreaker has only fueled her legendary status.
Then, of course, thereâs Jenny (Kirschner). She comes to L.A. a naĂŻve â if not completely innocent â heterosexual waif who discovers her inner lesbian early on. In the fifth season, her thinly-veiled memoir of her life with the rest of the seriesâ cast, Lez Girls, is developed into a movie. All the while she has fluctuated from being a sympathetic figure to being a cold, calculating manipulator. And so, no huge surprise, in the final season opener, Jenny has turned up dead. The answer to who offed her and why (there is a veritable tool shed of axes to grind)Â will be ostensibly revealed in the remaining episodes. Plans are already in place for a spin-off series, The Farm, which is centered on Alice and set in a prison. (Whether this is a plot giveaway or coy misdirection is anyoneâs guess.)
Over the years, Beals has been taking various photos on the set of the show. Sheâs planning on putting a book together for the cast and crew to commemorate six seasons of memories. While attending an L Word convention recently, she got the idea that making such a book available to fans could be a good vehicle for raising money for various organizations. Sheâs since gotten other cast members to contribute text commentary for the book as well.Â
Beals has become much more informed on LGBT issues due to her association with The L Word. âI had no idea â no idea â that the gay and lesbian community wasnât included in hate-crime law,â she says. (Legislation that added gays and lesbians to federal hate-crimes law finally passed in May 2007.) On a broader spectrum, Beals believes ensuring the rights of any minority has an overall positive effect on the majority. âOnce one part of the collective sees themselves represented and is given permission to celebrate their own authenticity, then it helps the rest of the collective to see how everyone is connected,â she reasons. âIt behooves all of us to have everyone experience their deepest, most beautiful, most profound and powerful self, because those people are more apt to give their gift to everyone else rather than shudder in fear.âÂ
I ask Beals if her experience on the show has caused her to reevaluate what a modern âbirds and beesâ talk should entail. (She has a three-year-old daughter, so the subject is still a few years off.) âItâs more inclusive,â she says. âThere used to be whole realms of people who werenât talked aboutâwhose very existence didnât seem worthy subject matter for pop culture. Now thatâs starting to change a little bit. And so those conversations we have at home with our children about love and about sexuality will then therefore change. The first question of sexuality comes from loveâwho loves whomâand you realize that is the unifying principle.âÂ
Beals is clearly energized by the new direction the country is taking, and the positive impact the Obama administration can make on the world stage. âI think we hit the breaking point and the paradigm needed to shift or we all would have perished. I know that sounds so dramatic,â she acknowledges. âThe biggest shift was for people to understand that they are all agents of change.âÂ
Beals volunteered for the Obama campaign early on in the primaries. She went to Ohio and Pennsylvania twice, working phone banks and knocking on doors. âAs much of a hermit as I am, I realized after the first time I heard Obama speak that I had to become involved. He was the only candidate I saw that could bring everybody back to their most powerful self.âÂ
A Chicago native, Beals got pegged for the career-launching role of aspiring dancer Alex Owens in Flashdance while she was studying American literature at Yale. After allowing herself a moment to recall frat house floors coated with the sticky residue of keg beer, she says, âThat girl â who I was â is very dear to me,â she says. âIn some ways, I was older than I am now.â An admitted perfectionist, the actress rarely watches her own work. Sheâs seen Flashdance âmaybe one-and-a-half times.â During filming, she likes watching the dailies, because the creative process is in full swing. âI like working with the director and carving out a communal point of view,â she says. âBut when itâs all put together, thereâs nothing left for me to doâŚ. Iâm too harsh on myself.âÂ
 As for what comes after The L Word, Beals replies that she would consider another series if the writing measures up. Beyond that, sheâs not sure. âI donât know what the next thing is for me, what way I can be useful and creative. Iâm sure it will be revealed to meâsooner rather than later.â (Sooner, indeed. Just a few days after our interview, Beals signed on to star in The Book of Eli, an action/thriller that reunites her with Devil in the Blue Dress costar Denzel Washington.)Â
I ask the former American lit student to name some of her favorite works. Sheâs a huge fan of F. Scott Fitzgerald and deems âThe Great Gatsbyâ one of the greatest books ever written. When sheâs traveling, sheâll usually have with her Walt Whitmanâs âThe Leaves of Grassâ or Sylvia Plathâs âThe Bell Jar.â Lately, her shelves have become populated with child psychology books. Then thereâs the âTwilightâ series. Sheâs read them all. âIâll take that to read in the trailer during shooting,â she says.Â
So the question remains: What is it about vampires that makes them so intriguing?
âWhen I was a little girl, I was afraid of the vampire, but I still didnât understand why Lucy didnât want to let him in.â she recalls, referring to Bram Stokerâs âDraculaâ. âItâs like, heâs so much more interesting than the fiancĂŠ.
SoâŚwhatâs the problem?âÂ
While the myth of the vampire will always be cloaked in mystery, The L Word has done more than its share to bring lesbian issues and discussions of sexual identity into the light of day. And thatâs a good thingâfor the gay community and for society.Â
Â
(to see all the photographs of Jennifer subscribe to h)











pennie
10. Feb, 2009
“Beals has become much more informed on LGBT issues due to her association with The L Word. ââŹĹI had no idea ââŹâ no idea ââŹâ that the gay and lesbian community wasnââŹâ˘t included in hate-crime law,ââŹÂ she says. (Legislation that added gays and lesbians to federal hate-crimes law finally passed in May 2007.)”
Excellent article but about that last “fact”–gays and lesbians were not included in an amendment to the existing federal hate crime legislation, called “The Mathew Shepard Bill”. It was passed by one house but allowed to die without passage in the ensuing furor over inclusion of transgender people in the bill.
zippy
11. Feb, 2009
It is amazing that Beals looks much better now than when I happened to meet her 7 years ago. Great article.
Rory
11. Feb, 2009
Jennifer and Denzel reteaming up is terrific…. And I am gald to see how much she came to seee about the GLTB community from her show even if it wasn’t always the best
Brinda J Kuhlman
16. Feb, 2009
Jennifer and Denzel will do a great movie together
and they are great actors and I have seen all of their different movies. I wish them both the best.
sold
26. Feb, 2009
I have heard that they are auctioning off all the L-Word Set and Production items…check it out at ableauctions.ca and get a piece of tv history!
Michelle
07. Mar, 2009
I can't wait to see this movie. It was surprising to me she loves Buffy I have all 7 seasons and other than the L word was the first show I was addicted to. I have no clue what to do with my Sunday nights now
I would love to meet her, especially now that she signs. Would be awesome
Todd
07. Mar, 2009
[polldaddy 1433670 http://answers.polldaddy.com/poll/1433670/ polldaddy]