Miranda WritesArthouse queen Miranda July gets literary
ME AND YOU AND MIRANDA JULY Miranda July is cheery and bright-eyed, and in general she does not look the sort who spends her time pondering the sexual proclivities of small children. Still, most people know her best as the writer, director, and star of her 2005 breakout indie film, Me and You and Everyone We Know, which, among its other eccentricities, just happened to investigate such neglected topics as winsome romance between a six-year-old boy and a 30-something woman. You'd think one might wish to dispel such a reputation, but July's first collection of short fiction, No One Belongs Here More Than You, arriving mid-May from Scribner, proves otherwise. "If the sexuality of a 6-year-old could be something we can acknowledge exists, that would be a really great achievement of the movie"After a recent string of shows at the Kitchen in New York, Radar caught up with the performance artist-cum-filmmaker-cum-debut fiction writer, to probe the inspirations behind her oddball genius, and to clear up a few rumors being disseminated on the Internet. RADAR: Have you read your Wikipedia entry? Why not change it? I could, but I'll have to get some Wiki-like facts from you first. Why did you actually change your last name to July? Let's talk about your new collection of short fiction. It has a lot of interesting sex in it: there's a senior citizen having his first gay encounter, a teacher who seduces a 14-year-old boy in her special-needs class, and a young girl living as her father's lover. I'm assuming your own love life is a bit more conventional.
FIRST OF JULY Miranda's fiction debut I'd just come back from the Sundance Labs where I had predominantly male mentors—it's a workshop. They were sort of powerful Hollywood men, kind of offering me help of all kinds. I was fascinated: Who are these people's wives? And then thinking what if the wife was even more powerful? What if I arrived and his wife was Madeleine L'Engle! See, that part is autobiographical in a way. You have a recurring character type, something you call the "New Man." Carl, for example, in the story "Mon Plaisir," is "nursed" by his girlfriend in bed. He's also a Buddhist. Is this a good progression for masculinity? George Saunders coined the term "July-esque," which I'm sure is both flattering and uncomfortable. He described it as "infused with wonder at the things of the world." There's a number of kids in the book. You don't have kids yourself—I don't know if you want to—but you seem to have this connection with children. |
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