Not yet a member?Join now!|Lost password
07/13/2012 | Press release
distributed by noodls on 07/13/2012 12:35
WEAVER: One of the reasons I wanted to do this show was to show a woman politician who is so herself and so direct and who brings the kind of female energy to politics that I've seen as a mother. … So I wanted to sort of demonstrate that, because I do think it might actually encourage more women to run. We'd be very good. We'd certainly do as good a job if not better.
SIGOURNEY WEAVER: I think that would be amazing. In four years maybe we'll be ready for her. She's certainly ready for us.
DAVID GREGORY: What about President Obama? You've been
supportive of him. You say you'll be supportive again.
And I noted that you told Politico that once a president gets
a second term, the gloves come off, and that a lot of us have
sort of been waiting for that.
SIGOURNEY WEAVER: Yes. It's interesting because we were
talking today about the importance of being a political
animal as a politician, and how much of a political animal
Obama is. Because a lot of that is relishing the game of
politics, and it's been a very difficult game in the last
four years, and I don't know how much one could relish
it. But I do think that we need - I do think that if he gets
four more years, it's been so frustrating for him and for
a lot of his supporters that I think he'll just go for
it. That's my hope.
DAVID GREGORY: To what do you attribute what has become a
voracious appetite, among television viewers and others, for
sort of political drama? You know, it's what your
character represents, it's the drama of political life,
but it's also this window into how politics operates and
how poorly political institutions operate today.
SIGOURNEY WEAVER: Well, I'd like to know your answer to
that question, frankly, because I do think that's --
especially this summer, during an election year, we seem to
have so many.
DAVID GREGORY: Well, it seems to me people have so much
invested in politics, and there's interest in it, the
sport of it. But then you have this personal dimension that
seems to creep into everything, and there's such the
entertainment value of the dramas of these families that take
over.
SIGOURNEY WEAVER: And certainly in the case of our show,
Political Animals, it's quite heady to go from the
situation room into Elaine's kitchen, where there's
even more fur flying. Because, like every family in America,
it's actually much easier to be effective and lucid, and
clear, and in control at work than it is at home, because
things in the family seem to spiral out of control.