When Lola Kirke was cast as Hailey Rutledge in Amazon's Golden-Globe winning series Mozart in the Jungle,she knew almost nothing about classical music. "I have this dentist who likes to listen to it really loud while he's drilling and then talk to me ... while he has tools in my mouth," she recalled to host Ophira Eisenberg. "That was my association."
Playing an oboist gave Kirke a crash course in classical music: she now knows how to pretend to play the oboe with the best of them. Doing so convincingly requires "high self-esteem ... because it is not pretty." Kirke demonstrated onstage for the Bell House audience, turning her lips inside out and puffing her cheeks until they turned red. A teacher once told her that those skills make oboists the best kissers, but Kirke is skeptical. "I would never make that connection. ... I never kissed anyone like that."
The youngest of four siblings, Kirke often finds herself cast as characters caught in the orbit of larger personalities. "I don't know what that is," the actress lamented, "because I feel kind of powerful in my life." But, in Season 3 of Mozart in the Jungle,Hailey Rutledge becomes a conductor— an exciting development for both Kirke and her character. "It's a very beautiful thing to pretend that you're telling a room of 150 people what to do and that they're all listening to you," she explained.
Indeed, this is a major development for the representation of female conductors in popular culture at large. According to Kirke, "of the world's 150 major orchestras, only four of them are led by women."
Season 3 also features an original opera-within-a-show based on the 1992 tabloid story of Amy Fisher, a high schooler who shot the wife of her 36-year-old lover. For Kirke's Ask Me Anotherchallenge, we described equally improbable-sounding operas, and Kirke had to guess whether they were real or fake.
HIGHLIGHTS
On her own musical career as a rock and country artist
I don't know why I connect to that kind of music. I guess cause, like, as my dad said, ... "It's three chords and the truth." ... I like that honesty in music.
On oboe representation in popular culture
My boyfriend still thinks I play the clarinet on TV
On her classical oboe skills
I can play three bars of Mahler's Eighth. And that is one note. [...] there's rests for three bars of the four bars. So yeah, I can play one note.
On having older siblings
Older siblings have this unique experience of having spent many years of their life being wretchedto somebody. As a younger child, you don't have that experience.
Heard On Lola Kirke: Mozart In The Puzzle
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