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When you meet her, you wonder if a
theatrical presence is something she was born with or
something that came into the world with the popularity of
Lestat. Whatever the case, she embodies theater, from the
mane of silver-streaked hair that cascades over her
shoulders, to the eloquent gestures she makes with her hands
when she talks, to the seemingly inborn ability to scope and
stroke a venue: modulating her southern-touched voice so
that it ambles into the corners of even a well-packed room.
Even the clothes she chooses speak of persona: they fit into
our expectations of Anne Rice the author. The literary diva
of darkness knows how to play a room.
She knows how to fill a room, as well. She
is at a press conference promoting her latest book,
Pandora: New Tales of the Vampires. The book is
the first of the vampire novellas we can expect once yearly
from now until, presumably, she doesn't feel like doing them
anymore. It's a press conference all right, and the press is
here en masse. However, the press corps hasn't been told
that tickets to the event have been sold and her fans have
come in droves: filling the theater to capacity and -- after
her oration -- forming a patient but seemingly-never-ending
line from the dais where Rice signs, through the theater and
out into the foyer.
While she signs she continues to play her crowd: and they
love her. She finds an extra word for everyone, a few more
for those who have gone to obvious trouble in honor of this
occasion. Those who have come in vampirish costume for
instance: and there are more than a couple of these. Or
those who have brought special books for her to sign.
"A first edition," she croons delightedly to the fan who has
brought this treasured copy of one of her early books. "You
know, we have to be careful how we sign it," she goes on to
tell him that addressing it to him directly might decrease
the book's value, while her signature alone might increase
it. They confer briefly but carefully and she ends up
signing her name only: no personal greeting. The entire
encounter lasts perhaps two minutes, but it is carefully
done. Skillfully, even. Of the type that will create a
lifetime impression. There is no element of rush about her.
No peering towards the end of the endless line. And her calm
seems to inspire patience: her fans don't doubt that she'll
somehow make the time to sign all of their books. She does
it, too.
If fans love Anne Rice, so -- these days -- must her
publishers. Pandora came out in March of 1998.
It hit the charts that first week: making the #1 spot at
Barnes and Noble and Waldenbooks within days of its debut.
At the time of writing, the book shows every sign of
thundering into the summer season on all the lists that
matter.
Pandora is slated to fill a void that perhaps
no one but Rice knew existed. "The vampires are always
there," she says. "They never leave me alone. They're like a
world of people that I've created. I'm no longer writing
just books about Lestat, I'm writing novels that thrill me
because of their metaphysical content, their horror content,
their philosophical content, their sexual content and the
vampires are my main characters. They're my people, they're
my gang." More, says Rice, she both can't and doesn't want
to ignore them because she enjoys the experience of writing
about them. The challenge was in working them in to a pretty
full dance card.
"Quite a few years ago the idea had occurred to me of
writing novels about what they call the 'backstory'
characters in Hollywood. The people in the background like
Pandora or David Talbot or other vampires who appear only
briefly," the obstacle was not in the stories, says Rice.
But rather in finding a way to make it work in the bottom
line world of publishing.
"Finally I persuaded the publisher [Knopf] to give
me a chance to do a small novel in the spring and continue
to do my regular large novels for the fall. And we agreed
that the small novels in the spring would be these new
stories of vampires and they would be these stories of
characters that had not had a chance to come forward and
tell their tales."
Which is entirely what Pandora is about. Rice
herself calls the book a novella, and at just 353 pages in a
hard cover the size of an overgrown paperback, it's a pretty
tight package. It must be said, though, that it's a gorgeous
small package. Beautifully designed, printed and bound
Pandora in hard cover is the kind of book you
want to hang on to: maybe forever. It is, perhaps, the
prettiest book I've seen this season.
The novel itself lives up to that early promise of style and
elegance. Not a lengthy read, but one that Rice fans will
find deeply satisfying. The story is told by Pandora, a
minor character that followers of The Vampire
Chronicles will remember. It's her own story: or
rather, the story of her life and -- later -- her un-death.
The setting is mainly the Roman Empire and Rice's attention
to historical and character detail is unflagging.
"That's really it," Rice says of the book as well as the
other spring novellas that will follow it. "It's just like
an overflow -- a violent, volcanic overflow -- of brain
energy. I want to write more about the Mayfair witches too.
I guess I can't push all of this into one or two or three
books is really it."
While Rice isn't new to the bestseller circuit, her books
haven't always been greeted with this type of enthusiasm. In
fact, some of her earliest and best known works were barely
greeted at all. Interview with the Vampire was
written in five weeks in 1973 when Rice was 32 years old. It
was published three years later to an almost astounding lack
of fanfare. Astounding, that is, in light of what the book
would become: an international bestseller and -- more
recently -- a feature film starring Tom Cruise and Brad
Pitt.
Prior to the film's release in 1994, Rice was adamant that
Tom Cruise was a bad choice for the hero -- or perhaps
anti hero --for Interview with the
Vampire 's Lestat.
She had, she explains, sold the rights to the film to
Lorimar. "Lorimar went bust and Warner Brothers and David
Geffen picked up the property. I wrote a script for
Interview with the Vampire for David Geffen, but we
had a falling out when the contract expired. David Geffen
nevertheless renewed the contract and he cast Tom Cruise
without telling me. I was quite shocked to open the paper
and discover that Tom Cruise had been cast as Lestat."
Rice was vocal in her shock, telling anyone who would listen
that she felt that Cruise had been badly miscast. It was an
error in judgment Rice would come to regret: for several
reasons. But she learned a lesson. "I will never come out in
the press again as strongly against anybody as I did against
Tom Cruise because I felt that in the long run what I had to
say was very distorted. I like Tom Cruise. I always thought
he was a wonderful actor. I still do. I never disliked him.
I didn't think he was the type [to play Lestat].
That got so lost in the press that I learned a lesson and
the lesson was: best to have said nothing. Best to have
waited and just let it take its course. Cried in quiet and
just let it go. Not lied, though. Not come out and say,
'this is wonderful.' But just don't say anything."
It's a lesson she intends to remember should the occasion
arise. "I think that's what I might do in the future. I
think that if I like what they do I'm going to say so and
I'm going to say so very loudly. And if I don't
like what they do I'm likely not going to say anything."
One of the reasons Rice recanted publicly about Cruise being
miscast was actually seeing the finished film. "If I'd have
been asked I probably would have advised Tom Cruise himself
not to do it because I didn't think he was the type for the
part. And I still think that's true. But I think what
happened was Tom Cruise overcame the impediments he had with
regard to the role of the vampire Lestat. He did a fabulous
job in the film. Absolutely fabulous," it was an opinion
many of her fans would share when Interview with the
Vampire went on to be one of the more memorable
films of the year.
"And when I saw the finished film I thought -- and still
think -- that Tom Cruise made the film work. That he
understood the role of the vampire Lestat and he understood
something very dark and very central to the film and he
brought that out. That was the mixture of good and evil in
each character. He really got that and in a sense became the
driving force behind the film. So I came out in favor of the
film. I never apologized to him or said I was sorry or
anything. He never asked me to. He just called me and said
how glad he was that I liked the film and -- you know -- we
went from there."
As much as Rice may have made her peace with Cruise as
Lestat in the first Vampire movie, she has her
sights fully set on who should play the Lestat role in a
much whispered about sequel: Leonardo DiCaprio. "I do think
the kid is absolutely terrific. I think that in The
Titanic he didn't get the chance to show the full
range of his incredible talent. You really have to see
The Basketball Diaries, you have to see
Romeo + Juliet and you have to see What's
Eating Gilbert Grape. He is terrific and I want him
badly to be Lestat. Badly, badly, badly. I fell in love with
this idea that he could be the vampire Lestat. And I began a
sort of one woman campaign to see that that would
happen."
Her campaign has started at the top, though she's not sure
how much success she's having in this regard. "I called
Warner Brothers. I called the president at Warner. I said,
'Look, look: you've got to do this. You've got to get this
kid. This is Lestat.' And the president calmed
me down and we don't even know if Tom Cruise is still
interested because it's been four years. So anyway I thought
the field was open for Leonardo. Well they listened to me at
Warner Brothers as they always do and they patted me on the
head and nothing happened. And then I called Leondardo's
managers and they listened to me. But beyond that I haven't
been able to do anything besides campaign and campaign and
campaign and campaign..."
While some shake their head in dismay at the choice of
DiCaprio, the author knows what she's about: she created
Lestat, after all. "Lestat is only 20 when he's made a
vampire and Leonardo is now 23. Some people still think he
looks too young. I don't. I think Lestat can easily look
that young."
Closer at hand, however, is the feature film version of
The Mummy, slated to be made into a feature
film by Canadian director James Cameron whose most visible
work to date has been on The Titanic with --
coincidentally enough -- Leonardo DiCaprio. Rice, however,
has so far stated no strong preferences for the casting of
that film. Which may be a good thing, as she doesn't have
much faith in her influence in that direction.
"When it comes to The Mummy, if I'm on good
terms with James Cameron he may ask me. But that doesn't
always do it. Hollywood people are the nicest people in the
world and they can stand right in front of you and smile and
tell you all the reasons why they're not going to do any of
the things you want or any of the things you're
suggesting."
Rice continues to live and work in New Orleans with her
husband, the poet and painter Stan Rice and their son
Christopher. -- 1998
Linda L. Richards is the editor of January Magazine. Her fourth novel, Death was the Other Woman, will be published early in 2008 by St. Martin's Minotaur.
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