“This is not my swan song,” insists iconic character actor Udo Kier, chatting by phone about what many are calling the best performance of his career– playing a flamboyant hairdresser in Todd Stephens’ sublime indie portrait called Swan Song. “Also they are saying ‘comeback,’ but in my case it’s wrong because I never went away. “
Even so, Kier –who starts our interview telling us that he graced the cover of LA Weekly decades ago for a special German Fashion issue (he was interviewed by performance artist and former Weekly staffer Ron Athey)– finds himself a hot commodity again thanks to the role. The former Echo Park/current Palm Springs resident obviously stays very aware of the media and the buzz from his latest role (playing real life hairdresser “Mr.” Pat, a local legend and queer figure in Stephens’ hometown of Sandusky, Ohio) is no exception. Though he has a mind-blowing volume and variation of films on his resume, Kier hopes the attention might even help him transcend the quirky supporting roles that have been his bread and butter for over 5 decades.
(Courtesy Magnolia Pictures)
“The critics are saying ‘after 50 years Udo Kier is finally the leading man,’” he boasts, his alluring German accent infusing his thoughts with an endearing and well-earned arrogance. “So now journalists like you make me want to look only for leading parts. If you all think Swan Song is my best role and it’s a leading man part, then that’s what I want and what I need more of now. I cannot disappoint the critics!”
Kier did get his start as a leading man after all, first in Germany, then in the U.S. The actor’s piercing blue eyes and ominous charisma made him a standout from the start, from his early starring role as the mad doctor in Andy Warhol’s Frankenstein to the collection of horror cult classics that followed (Blood for Dracula, Suspiria). He went on to appear in countless acclaimed films from there, from auteur classics such as Gus Van Zantz’s My Own Private Idaho to pretty much everything Danish director Lars von Trier has made, to mainstream hits such as Ace Ventura Pet Detective, Blade and Armageddon.
He’s a great villain and a provocative pan-sexual presence (Madonna cast him in both her infamous SEX book and the video for her Erotica single “Deeper and Deeper”), but the subtly and sadness he conveys in Swan Song is relatively new for him and lead billing or no, it’s something he’d be smart to tap into again. His celebrated gaze, now older, is also wiser, and it conveys so much in this film– loss, pain and contemplation of past and present. Kier says this was no accident and his immersive approach to the role made all the difference.
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