Cooper Hoffman, Alana Haim, and Milo Herschlag in “Licorice Pizza” Backstage Live
On Her Terms
Alana Haim shares the advice she’s lived by as an actor and Grammy-nominated musician By Madison Mora
The following audience Q&A for our on-camera series Backstage Live was compiled in part by Backstage readers just like you! Follow us on Twitter (@Backstage) and Instagram (@backstagecast) to stay in the loop on upcoming takeovers and to submit your questions.
FILM
Spike Lee + Netflix Make It Official MELINDA SUE GORDON
MARGAUX QUAYLE CANNON
By Casey Mink
backstage.com
HERE TO MAKE HER FEAture film debut, it’s Alana Haim! Best known as one of the three sisters that form the band HAIM, she’s now breaking into 2022 awards chatter thanks to her leading performance opposite Cooper Hoffman in Paul Thomas
ADD SPIKE LEE TO THE GROWING list of creatives who have inked partnerships with Netflix. The Oscar-winning filmmaker has signed a multiyear deal with the streamer. The partnership follows Lee and Netflix’s collaborations on the film “Da 5 Bloods” and the series “She’s Gotta Have It.” “There is no better way for me and my company, 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks, to begin the new year than [to] renew our partnership with…da fearless leaders of Netflix,” Lee wrote in a statement.
Anderson’s “Licorice Pizza.” Reflecting on her unlikely journey to the big screen, the 29-year-old multihyphenate offers her hard-won advice for pursuing a life in the performing arts, no matter the medium. Acting used to scare her. “I always wanted to try acting, because what a fun adventure that would be! But fear always held me back. I mean, Paul, when he offered me this movie—one of the first things I asked him was, ‘Are you sure? Because I have no acting experience.’ What a legacy of films he has; and I just wanted him to succeed with this project, because it was such a beautiful script. And he was like, ‘No, I got you. Don’t worry about it. You can do it.’ And to have someone say, ‘You can do it’ like Paul Thomas Anderson— it really did give me a lot of confidence.” Forge your own path. “I would be lying to you if I said that I was confident, even
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in music. Every day, you ask yourself: How is this happening? Can I do this? And really, I’m very lucky that I have my siblings with me 90% of the time—starting in this business and having a wolf pack behind me that cheered me on. And [we] were always there for each other. When I think about music, I think about me and my siblings, and us starting out as a band. The one thing we promised each other was: No matter what, we’re going to carve our own path. And I think a lot of people were trying to impose their opinions on how we should dress, what songs we should play. You know: ‘Oh, maybe you should do this! This is the right path.’ Me and my siblings never took any of that advice. We wanted to make sure that if we were going to succeed in this business, it was on our terms.” Haim sees more movies in her future. “The fact that I can even talk about maybe doing another project is a dream. I loved it so much; it was such an incredible experience. If I get to do this again, I would be so grateful and so excited. But if this was it, and it was just me and Paul and Cooper—again, it was the best experience of my life, and I’ll think about it until the day I die. But I’m crossing my fingers that I get to work again, because that would be great.” Want to hear more from Haim? Watch our full interview at backstage.com/ magazine, and follow us on Instagram: @backstagecast.
12.30.21 BACKSTAGE