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August 22, 1996
Hollywood shifts into Grier
By LOUIS B. HOBSON
BEVERLY HILLS -- The '70s have come and gone but Pam Grier is still one foxy lady. From 1974 through 1978, Grier was the queen of black exploitation films. She was Coffy, Foxy Brown, Sheba Baby and Friday Foster. She was the woman men feared as much as they desired. "It was quite a transformation for a little country girl from Colorado," admits Grier who stars as the alluring but sexually ambiguous Hershe in Escape From Los Angeles. "I moved to L.A. when I was 18 to become a film production assistant. I was an angry thing. I really personified what was going on in the heads of women and particularly black women. Then came Grier's big break. Roger Corman, the king of B-grade movies offered her a role in his 1971 prison sexploitation movie The Big Dollhouse. "Roger said he liked my in-your-face attitude and wanted to put it on camera. I told him I didn't want to be an actress. "He offered me $500 a week for six weeks. I was pulling in $30 so I decided maybe the acting thing wasn't so bad." Except for appearances on African American TV sitcoms, Grier all but vanished. The '90s coaxed her back with roles in Posse, Original Gangstas and Escape From Los Angeles. "(Director) John Carpenter called to ask if I'd be interested in playing a transsexual. I thought if Wesley Snipes can play a woman (in To Wong Foo), I can play a woman playing a man playing a woman." After the role was hers, Grier began renting as many macho action movies as she could. "I watched everything Wesley, Arnold (Schwarzenegger) and Bruce (Willis) did. I wanted to learn how they swagger and how they talk. "I kept a punching bag in my dressing trailer and I went around the set slapping everybody on the back or punching them in the arm." Grier supplied all her own dialogue, which Carpenter than altered electronically to make it sound even deeper. "All my early years of playing macho paid off," says Grier, who adds there was another reason she felt perfect for the role of Hershe. "I escaped from L.A. in 1981 and have never looked back. I was living in Westwood at the time in a beautiful home I'd bought myself. "Two cops tried to arrest me one day. They said I fit the description of a black woman burglarizing the neighborhood. They treated me like dirt so I knew it was time to get out of town and quick." Grier went back to a ranch in Colorado. "I drive a truck and have dog hair all over my jeans. At heart I'm still the country girl that my grandfather taught to hunt and fish." Grier's career is in high gear. Morgan Freeman, Jim Brown and Ernie Hudson all want her by their movie side. "I passed on the Tina Turner role in What's Love Got To Do With It? "I told Laurence Fishburn he'd thank me for the rest of his career for passing on the movie. It saved him from having to toss my big butt around for months. I'm almost as big as he is." |
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