Molly Parker fends not to go unnoticed. Sipping
beer in a trendy bistro on the Main, she draws the attention of hot Quebec
film and TV star David LaHaye, who saunters over to remind her they met
last year at a Canadian film party on the beach during the Cannes Film
Festival.
Parker, 25, was hanging out on the Croisette last
May thanks to her starring role in Kissed, which was screening at
the world's most famous film fest. Former Montrealer Lynne Stopkewich's
evocative, poetic film about a young woman obsessed with cadavers turned
Parker into a sensation.
Kissed had it's world premiere at the Toronto
festival in the fall of 1996 and, within days of its first showings, the
young Vancouver-born actress was fielding offers from scads of Hollywood
agents.
Early last year, she signed with the powerful William
Morris Agency in Los Angeles, just days after her highly photogenic mug
appeared smack in the middle of a full-page ad for Kissed on the
cover of Hollywood bible Variety. Then in December, Parker won the
Genie Award as best actress for Kissed.
Parker's luminous performance in Kissed also
attracted the attention of Egg Pictures, Jodie Foster's L.A.-based production
outfit, and it's thanks to Foster's company that Parker is working here
in Montreal. She is one of the leads in Waking the Dead, which
Foster is executive-producing. The dramatic love story from writer-director
Keith Gordon (Mother Night) is currently shooting in Montreal with
co-stars Billy Crudup, Jennifer Connelly and Janet McTeer.
In Waking the Dead, Parker plays the girlfriend
of a congressional candidate (Crudup) who begins seeing visions of his
former lover Sarah (Connelly), who was killed a decade earlier.
Parker is well aware of the irony of going from
the necrophilia of Kissed to a film called Waking the Dead,
and she's hoping she doesn't end up typecast playing characters obsessed
with dead people.
"I certainly got a lot of scripts when (Kissed)
first came out, either from people who didn't see the movie or didn't quite
get it," said Parker. "It was like - 'Come be naked in my horror
film.' That's obviously not what I want to do, But anybody that actually
watched Kissed and understood it at all or even stayed awake, hopefully
saw something beyond that."
These days, Parker is just well-known for Twitch
City, the quirky sitcom spoof that just wrapped its six-episode run
on the CBC. The satirical show, created by hip Toronto writer-actor
Don McKellar, has generated a tremendous amount of buzz. Parker plays
Hope, an oddly endearing figure who has to come to grips with a boyfriend
arrested for murder and a roommate, played by McKellar, who is neurotic,
with gusts up to stark raving mad.
The mature-beyond-her-years Parker is wise enough
to say she wouldn't turn down a mega-budget Hollywood blockbuster on principle,
but she wants to focus on smaller, script-driven material like Waking
the Dead. Last year, she starred in Under Heaven, a U.S.
indie flick from writer-director Meg Richmond that premiered at the Sundance
festival in January.
"The majority of things I'm interested in are independent
films," said Parker. "That's really where I think the roles for women
are. More and more, women are writing and directing films, but most
of them are working in an independent situation. I'm committed to
trying to play interesting women and not so much the girlfriend or daughter
or wife. It just feels like those parts are more available in the
independent world.
"But I'm also trying not to be the knee-jerk reactionary
indie kid, because that's ridiculous. You close yourself off to some
good stuff."
Parker's next two projects are both being made by
femme directors. The first, to shoot next month in Montreal, is a
Quebec production titled Ladies Room, a feature comprised of three
short films.
Her segment, directed by Nadine Schwartz, is the
tale of three actresses about to go onstage for the premiere of an off-Broadway
show. Parker said "it's very much about women aging and not trusting
each other."
Parker then heads back to Toronto to appear in Jesus
Freaks, the first feature from Lori Lansens. It is the story
of a devout young Catholic woman who mistakes a squeegee punk for Jesus.
Like every other actor in Canada, Parker is under
pressure to desert her homeland and high-tail it down to Los Angeles.
But she doesn't see why she has to spend all her time schmoozing in Beverly
Hills.
"My hope is that if you do enough good work and
have enough people working for you there, then people will hire you for
your body of work..and not for your body."