Interview: Lillete Dubey of “The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel”

Interview: Lillete Dubey of “The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel”

Posted on July 23, 2015 at 3:36 pm

Copyright DNA 2015
Copyright DNA 2015

Lillete Dubey stars with Maggie Smith, Judi Dench, and Richard Gere in The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, available now on DVD, Blu-Ray, and streaming video. Dubey plays the formidable Mrs. Kapoor, the disapproving mother of the eternally optimistic proprietor of the hotel in the title. Dubey is one of India’s most distinguished directors and actors and it was a very great pleasure to talk to her about the movie.

In the first film, your character was mostly there to disapprove. In this one, she has to respond to romantic overtures from an American played by Richard Gere. Was that a surprise?

Well, yes it was. In the first one she was quite a tough little biddy. And I joked when I heard that there is a second one that I hoped there is going to be more dimension and maybe hopefully a little romance for Mrs. Kapoor. So I was so pleased that he sort of took me up on that. Everybody is having a romance so I felt really left out. All the older people in the film are all having this lovely autumn romance or winter romance or whatever and I was the only one who was feeling very left out. If you see more of a character you want to see a little more dimension. I felt in the first one it was a nice little part but it was really to do with the son and her relationship with him and how it took that part of his story forward. She didn’t have much to do with the rest of the cast. She didn’t interact too much with them. So I just thought it would be fun to have something else to do as Mrs. Kapoor.

It’s one of my favorite parts of the film. Had you met Richard Gere before?

No, no. You know I had run theater company, I also directed and occasionally act also on my own shows, so I was mentally casting when I was reading the script and I said, “Who would I pick if I had my choice?” When I put on my director’s cap, not so much who would be nice as a romantic character but who would work really well in this role and I thought of two or three American names who could be a charming man who could break the ice which Mrs. Kapoor had surrounded herself with. and had to have a certain sort of personality. When John Madden called, he said, “I think you will be quite happy, he’s adorable in a very pristine English way, I think you’ll be quite pleased with the lad, it’s Richard Gere.” And Richard always said, “Are there any more scenes with us together?” because it was a very cute little part of the story and he felt there should’ve been more. It’s nice because it was the older romance and a lot of bits could be sub-textual and unsaid which was nice because I think at that age we don’t need to say a lot and it was all there. I wish we had more scenes. At the premiere, people were already asking if there was going to be a third one, so maybe we will.

Is there a difference in technique or process between the British, American, and Indian actors?

Oh yes, Indians are very emotional and carried away with feelings so the whole style is very strong; it’s a very strong style. What you see in “Monsoon Wedding” iss extreme Indian acting.  I don’t have a problem with it because that’s the way Indians are as a race. So it is a cultural context in which they are a little bit like Italians, they are volatile, they are riding high all the time and feelings come out on the surface and everything is out there and it’s a little loud so their acting reflects that.  It always reflects the ethos and the culture from which you’ve come. And the English are very pristine and dry and so their style of acting very much reflects that. It’s quieter, very internalized, very restrained, very contained and they are looking forward to lots of internal truth rather than external.  And Americans… I mean there is Richard and there was David Strathairn, David of course had a quieter style of acting. It’s not like it is Indian acting at all but it’s a little more spontaneous, it’s not that pulled back, you let yourself go a little bit. I’m not saying you go over the top or you are melodramatic but you are certainly, you let go a lot more. You can see it, you can see the styles in the movie. So I was sort of trying to be between the tones by my own sort of rhythm. You just have to keep feeling the rhythm of both the movie as a whole and that scene as it is being played out with your co-actor.

That’s what’s nice about working in international film because I was talking with Judy and Maggie.  Of course they have their own league but they also come from the theatre like me, and they got into film late. I got into films in my early 40’s so it was very late and I have done about 40 films.  I’ve always hugely admired them as actresses really and it was such a thrill to work with them. I want to grow up to be Judi Dench.

The best thing about the movie I think, Nell, is that these guys really exemplify the film for me.  They have such a zest for life, they are all still working, they are all still looking forward to this might happen professionally or otherwise. I think why it appeals to people, young old, it’s the sense of optimism that it has about life, that you could just turn a corner and anything is possible I mean yes, it could be negative also but if you are up for it, and up for life many things are possible, if you just open yourself to the possibilities and I think that’s a very appealing quality about the film.

What else are you working on?

A series called “Indian Summers.” It’s channel 4’s biggest hit in the last 20 years drama series, and it’s actually a PBS Masterpiece and Channel 4 co-production. It’s already on in Australia and New Zealand and we’re shooting season 2. It’s beautifully shot in India and it will be on “Masterpiece” in the US.

Here is more from Ms. Dubey.

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Actors Interview

The Real Winner At the Box Office This Week: The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

Posted on March 9, 2015 at 11:05 am

Copyright Magnolia 2015
Copyright Magnolia 2015

The headlines about the box office over the weekend are misleading. “Chappie” was number one in overall revenue, but still disappointing. The top box office winner in a given week is usually in the $20-40 million range, with special-effects films like “Chappie” often going up as high as $60 million or more. Last week, “Focus” was at the top with a weak $19 million. “Chappie” only made $13 million. And “The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” was listed as third with just $8.6 million. But the much more important number is how much it made per theater. In that category, “Marigold Hotel 2” was substantially ahead of “Chappie,” and that, in my opinion, makes it the real #1 for the week. Maggie Smith and Judi Dench did better than the big budget robots and Hugh Jackman. Dev Patel, who was in both movies, must have mixed feelings.

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This Week at the Box Office

The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

Posted on March 5, 2015 at 5:55 pm

A documentary called “Young @ Heart” had a choir of singers in their 80’s performing contemporary rock songs.  The very fact of their age and experience gave an unexpectedly profound meaning to the words.  And in “The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel,” a plot that ranges from silly to very silly still resonates, because the people in the silly situations are running out of time.  And because they are played by actors of such superb skill that they give power even to fortune-cookie aphorisms like “There is no present like the time.”  The characters in this film have more romantic complications and far more opportunities than the average teen sex comedy — and a lot more sex, too.  But their situation gives it all grace and poignance.

You could give Maggie Smith “Mary Had a Little Lamb” and she would make it sound like repartee written by Oscar Wilde. Here, she has a couple of very good insults and delivers them with wit as dry as a martini made of gin over which the word “vermouth” has just been whispered.  Just listen to her crisply explain that tea is an HERB requiring boiling water to release its flavor.  No tea bags limply dipped in lukewarm temperatures for her.  “How was America?” she is asked on her return.  “It made death more tempting.  I went with low expectations and came back disappointed.”

In the original The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, a group of expatriate Brits came to India, mostly because they could no longer afford to live in the UK.  The energetic and eternally optimistic young owner of a dilapidated hotel decided to “outsource old age.”  Just as he saw the beauty of the ancient, crumbling building, he saw the grace, and the revenue stream, of people no longer valued in the place they had lived their lives.

This sequel, with all of the surviving main characters returning, takes us from Sonny’s engagement party to the family party, and then the wedding.  

As it begins, Sonny (Dev Patel) and Mrs. Donnelly (Smith) are driving through California (in a convertible!) to make a pitch for financing to Ty Burley (David Strathairn), so the hotel can expand. Burley promises to send an undercover inspector to check out the hotel. When an American named Guy Chambers (Richard Gere) arrives, Sonny assumes that he is the inspector and lavishes attention on him, ignoring another recent arrival, Lavinia Beech (Tamsin Greig of “Episodes”), who says she is checking out the place for her mother.

Meanwhile, Sonny is frothing with jealousy over another arrival, a friend of his fiancee’s brother who is handsome, wealthy, and very attentive to Sunaina (Tina Desai). Evelyn (Judi Dench), who has not quite managed to move things ahead with Douglas (Bill Nighy), is so successful in her free-lance work as a scout for textiles that she is offered a big promotion. Madge (Celia Imbrie, whose lush figure prompted Helen Mirren’s call for “bigger buns” in “Calendar Girls”), is happily “dating” two wealthy men and having trouble deciding between them. And in the silliest of all of these flyweight storylines, Norman (Ronald Pickup), who is trying out monogamy for the first time, thinks he may have accidentally put out a hit on his lady friend Carol (Diana Hardcastle).  There are some nice, quiet touches, though, as we see our friends more at home in India, including interacting more with the locals for friendship, business, and romance.

The movie gently disrupts all of the happy endings of the first film just enough to allow for some minor misunderstandings, some pithy and pointed commentary, and another round of even happier endings, leaving, I hope, the possibility of a third chapter.  Fans of the first film will arrive with high expectations and come home happy.

Parents should know that this film include brief mild language and many sexual references including infidelity and multiple partners.

Family discussion: Why was it difficult for Evelyn and Douglas to reach an understanding about their relationship? What was Sonny’s biggest mistake?

If you like this, try: the original “Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” and “The Lunchbox”

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Based on a book Comedy Date movie Drama Family Issues Romance Series/Sequel

Clip: Richard Gere in “The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel”

Posted on February 22, 2015 at 3:38 pm

Now that The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is full up with its long-term residents, co-managers Muriel Donnelly (Maggie Smith) and Sonny Kapoor (Dev Patel) have a dream of expansion, and they’ve found just the place: The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. With plans underway, Evelyn and Douglas (Judi Dench and Bill Nighy) venture into the Jaipur workforce, wondering where their regular breakfast dates will lead. Meanwhile, Norman and Carol (Ronald Pickup and Diana Hardcastle) navigate the swirling waters of an exclusive relationship, as Madge (Celia Imrie) juggles two very eligible suitors, and recent arrival Guy Chambers (Richard Gere) finds a muse in Sonny’s mother, Mrs. Kapoor (Lillete Dubey) for his next novel. As his marriage to Sunaina (Tina Desai), the love of his life, quickly approaches, Sonny finds his plans for the new hotel making more claims on his time than he has available. Perhaps the only one who may know the answers is Muriel, the keeper of everyone’s secrets. As the big day nears, family and guests alike find themselves swept up in the irresistible intoxication of an Indian wedding.

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