Tanna Frederick is Jaglom's "Queen of the Lot"

Actress Tanna Frederick, Henry Jaglom's latest muse, shares her thoughts and experiences on Queen of the Lot, Hollywood Dreams and more. Recently Frederick got on the phone, and went into the process of making this and other Jaglom films. This vivacious red-head could not have been more gracious, charming and clear-headed.

JV: There’s a scene in Queen of the Desert in which Noah [Wyle] says that your character seems needy and sweet, etc., but that you are really very competent, strong and clear-headed (something like that).

TF: Yep, that's pretty much what he says.

JV: And then, in the faux-dead body scene, we see this exhibited in spades. It reminded me somewhat of how Naomi Watts handled that wonderful scene in Mulholland Drive. It’s a side of you we haven’t seen before (I haven’t anyway). How did that scene play for you?

TF: Wow -- Naomi Watts and Mulholland Drive! Thank you!

JV: Well, I know Queen of the Lot and that scene are not up to David Lynch-level, but there is a resemblance -- and a good one.

TF: I thought this scene was really great, and I wanted the color of that particular kind of strength represented in this film. And so did Henry.


In my earlier two films with him -- this is true of a lot of his leading ladies – we are very vulnerable. But I think we all really have that inner strength. We have a solid inner core. I have tried to play them that way, but never really got a chance to show this. I wanted a switch in this movie.

So you must use the ferocity -- not in a threatening way. Any woman in this industry is ferocious at her core. We must use this for self-preservation. It's the only thing that can really get you through. You have to use that to stay afloat.

I liked being able to reveal that side of her. The audience needs to see this and know, "Oh, she is strong. She can become grounded when she needs to be."

You know, growing up in Iowa, I did a lot of drama. I didn’t do much comedy. I didn’t discover I was funny until Henry.  I was used to playing in things like Jean Genet’s The Maids, and the like.

JV: You grew up in Iowa? Is that why there was a film festival there at which Queen of the Lot was recently shown?

TF: They started a film festival my home town, so we brought people like Karen Black, David Proval and Zack Norman to the festival.

We also went to the Wild Rose Film Festival in Des Moines. I had nothing to do with this fest, so it was particularly nice to win awards there.

You know, it's funny because in the film, we make some good fun of Iowa, but the audience didn't seem to mind at all. They were all very jovial about the film, and we ended up getting the Audience Award.

JV: That's great! Is Tanna Frederick your real name?

TF: Yep, it’s my real Iowa name. I’m Czech and Irish and Danish, and it is thanks to my great-great-aunt in Iowa that I have it. She was an au pair who saved two children of a local dentist from a fire when she was 16. Unfortunately, in the process of saving them, she died in the fire, but she did save the children.

When my mother was pregnant, my great-grandfather asked my mom before she even knew if she was having a girl, to please name her after this great-aunt.

JV: Will there be more of these characters in yet another Jaglom movie? The characters all seem to be quite similar from Hollywood Dreams to Queen of the Lot.

TF: Yes. Henry calls Queen a kind of sequel to Hollywood Dreams. We are getting ready now to start on the third part of this trilogy.

We shot another film called Just 45 Minutes from Broadway -- based on Henry’s play that ran out here for one year. You New Yorkers are used to long runs of plays, but not here in L.A. This was so unusual, to run this long.

And, you might know that Henry does not allow understudies. He says if any of the actors can’t be in the show, we close it down. If someone gets sick, we don’t do that performance.

But we all just stuck it out and performed through sickness and crises, and we kept getting full houses and standing ovations. The title is from the George M. Cohan song. We did a nine-day shoot for the movie, and Judd Nelson replaced one of the actors. Otherwise, the whole original cast is in it.

JV: It took only nine days in total to film?

TF: Yes, and Henry is very intense on set. He gets his reputation as tough on the set from this. But who isn’t, particularly when you have a low budget and must work fast. We all loved this shoot and the play.

In fact, we took the play up north to Cambria for a fund-raiser project. We raised money and got the theater in Cambria a sprinkler system. They were suspended from doing any shows because of no sprinklers. So we made this road trip up there, and put it on and raised the money. We did four performances with a big waiting list for every one!

JV: Can we talk about another project of yours, Katie Q?

TF: Yes, that is a film that Ron Vignone has directed. We filmed with Paul Sand, Karen Black, David Proval and Zack Norman. We got a great ensemble. It’s a very twisted black comedy. We have a bit left to shoot, and that is our 2011 goal -- to get this out in film festivals and maybe theatrically in 2011. It’s a dark comedic mystery which should be a lot of fun.

JV: I am thinking there will be certain similarities to Henry’s work, since Ron has worked a lot with Henry.

TF: Yes, his and Henry's aesthetics are very similar. Henry has edited every one of his films for 17 movies. But Ron edited Queen of the Lot. He’s an amazing editor.

You know, it’s more fun, especially in movie-making, when you have wonderful collaborators. We’re kind of like the 3 Musketeers, working on various project in various stages of development.

JV: Your career and image at this point are rather joined to Henry’s in the minds of most of us fans. Will Katie Q maybe change that a bit? Although Ron is also joined with Henry, and the cast looks pretty similar,


TF: I think Katie Q will maybe be a little like Henry’s films.

JV: Anything new in the offing that does not include Henry or Ron?

TF: I am asked this question a lot: Do you work exclusively with Henry? And no. But it is what I want to do now. Go after the quality versus the quantity.

Henry has been basically my Selznick, fostering and creating my career. Henry’s movies are becoming more mainstream, and I think we are both getting noticed more.

I would like to work with other directors, and Henry wants me to work with other directors as much as I want to. It’s just the matter of the right property coming along at the right time.

I’ve been offered some other films with other directors, but at this point I have not felt the need to do other work that I am not really passionate about. There are a lot of things that I am looking at and that are in development with other directors.

When I feel the time is right, I will make a film with someone else. I’m sure that time will come very soon.

There have been little parts in large budget films that I’ve been offered. But I also have promised myself that if I am going after this dream, something I’ve always wanted, that I will not compromise.

I am a stubborn girl, and when my heart isn’t completely into something, I don’t want to do it. And I am certainly not hurting for work, not right now. So I am sort of putzing along at my own pace and enjoying every minute of it.

JV: What was it like working in India [on Rising Shores]?

TF: [laughs] I had this friend who was a DP on that movie, and he called me up to say "I have five lines for you, if you can play a real estate agent."  This was actually the first movie I really had a part in. But I never met any of the other actors, I don’t even think I met the director.

I get credited for this movie and it’s kind of funny. I guess this was like doing a Bollywood movie, but my part was all filmed in Santa Monica back in 2001 or 2002. The 2nd unit director shot it, I think, and I don’t remember much about it at all.

JV: Any thoughts about your first films: Inescapable or First Impressions?

TF: First Impressions I loved making. That was actually part of the material from which Henry cast me for Hollywood Dreams. This wonderful kid, Barton Caplan, filmed it, and he was so sweet.

It’s a sweet male dating story about this young man who goes through a series of dates that don’t work out. Then he meets the woman of his dreams -- who then suddenly lets out a big fart. I know it sounds awful, but it is kind of charming.

I was also appearing in the legitimate theater version of A Safe Place, the play made from Henry's movie, and Henry came to see me in that. And together with the footage from First Impressions, he wanted to cast me in Hollywood Dreams.

Inescapable was my first big role in a movie, but it was not a great film or a great representation of my work. It was one of those films I was really excited about because it was the first film I got paid for. I made $2,000 making that movie, and it was the most I had ever been offered. But it did not turn out to be a great film.

JV: Is there anything else you’d like to say, something that you’ve always wanted to talk about but journalists never seem to ask?

TF: Wow, that’s a really sweet question. Let me think.

Well, I feel really lucky -- being the sort of being a golden-age-of-Hollywood-phile that I am, being able to work with Henry and with Noah Wyle, who is an exceptionally gallant and accommodating actor and partner to work with. He and I found a really special connection with our 40s-type banter and relationship.

Henry was really smart in the casting of this because Noah is amazing. He is an incredibly intelligent guy, with such a sharp wit!   

There is nothing better than this kind of funny, wonderful romantic comedy from the '40s -- like Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, or anything with Jimmy Stewart or Cary Grant, with all that very jaunty, back-and-forth, witty banter.

That is something that I think is hard to find nowadays in most films. In the '40s they captured this a lot in dialog and relationships. But not so much now. I think this will be fun for audiences, too.

For more by James Van Maanen, go to www.TrustMovies.com.