Five questions for ‘Call My Agent’ star Liliane Rovère
Liliane Rovère prefers to stay home.
The French actress, 88, racked up dozens of credits before finding international fame with “Call My Agent,” in which she plays the fast-talking, reefer-smoking talent agent Arlette. In a world where older women rarely get any screentime, much less the chance to take center stage, the actress has become a phenomenon, with viewers flocking to the unaffected confidence she radiates.
“I don’t have my youth anymore,” Rovère told me in a recent Skype call. “I don’t have my beauty. But I feel more united, I feel better in my own skin.”
You could say the same of many of her characters. The success of “Call My Agent” has allowed Rovère to take that gruff persona on the road — in the last year, she’s played irreverent (and Jewish, and reefer-smoking) matriarchs in the Netflix series “Family Business” and the thriller “Mama Weed,” which is set to debut in American theaters on July 16. She’s also published a memoir (not yet available in English) that details her childhood experience of hiding from the Nazis in occupied France and her youthful love affair with jazz music and jazz stars like Chet Baker.
But, Rovère said, newfound fame hasn’t changed her daily life. “I don’t get into the feeling of self-importance or anything like that,” she said, adding that she prefers to spend time with her daughter, her friends and her cats. And above all, she likes to stay in her light-filled Paris apartment.
I asked Rovère about quarantine hobbies and octogenarian fame. Here’s what she had to say. The following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
On quarantine: For me it was OK because I like my place. I like to be home. I have everything I need. The silence outside was miraculous, because there were no cars, no noise, no nothing. I read a lot, I listened to music, I went to YouTube and listened to interesting things. I have two cats.
On finding fame in her 80s: Women work less than men. Older women work less than younger women. I’ve worked all my life, and I’m an exception, because I got some kind of fame at my age. Inside, I’m the same. I don’t change. I never expected anything special; I never thought in terms of making a career. I just thought in terms of making a living.
On playing a fierce older woman in “Call My Agent:” Arlette is very much like me. I chose to play her very close to myself. The real agent I’m impersonating in the show is a very different woman from me. She was a little lady. I’m not a lady, I’m a woman. I’m a feminist — not a woman who hates men, I just want equality.
On writing her memoir: I didn’t want to write about myself. I didn’t think it was proper. But I didn’t know anything from my parents, and my daughter wanted to know everything about me, so I started to write. It’s very difficult explaining about yourself and then hoping that everybody is going to be interested in you.
On advice for young actors: Try to be unconventional. Try to seek the truth. Try to be natural. Don’t fall into the trap of your own importance.
A message from our CEO & publisher Rachel Fishman Feddersen
I hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning, nonprofit journalism during this critical time.
We’ve set a goal to raise $260,000 by December 31. That’s an ambitious goal, but one that will give us the resources we need to invest in the high quality news, opinion, analysis and cultural coverage that isn’t available anywhere else.
If you feel inspired to make an impact, now is the time to give something back. Join us as a member at your most generous level.
— Rachel Fishman Feddersen, Publisher and CEO