YEAR IN REVIEW 1995 : Following Her Instincts : In â95 Sharon Stone finally hit the jackpot, with âCasino.â But donât think sheâs ready to cash in her chips just yet.
Two guys in their 50s, possibly academy members from the sound of things, sitting in a tiny bistro in West Hollywood talking about movies. One guy says to the other, âYou seen âCasinoâ?â
Guy says, âYeah. De Niro, whoooh. And Sharon Stone . . . man, best thing sheâs ever done.â
And then, as if this were a movie, Sharon Stone walks into the place. Sheâs wearing leather pants, but itâs possible she is not recognized by the academy members because her hair is up and sheâs got on a bland turtleneck sweater under a coat and glasses, no lipstick, and is not really made up on this day to resemble the sleek man hunter of âBasic Instinctâ and beyond. She almost looks soft, or as soft as someone can look in leather pants.
She finds her luncheon companion and says, âYou see those two guys who look like hit men?â and points to two darker, younger men visible through a window, seated at a table flanking the door. âTheyâre my bodyguards.â Then, as the bistroâs female owner and maitre dâ leads us back through the kitchen toward a back patio, Stone says, âJust kidding.â
This is the sound of Sharon Stone breaking the ice. And then again, things being somewhat different for her now, maybe she was kidding that she was kidding.
âI was antique shopping in the quasi-antique junk stores on this block and wandered in here,â she says, explaining how she found the restaurant, now a hangout for her. âAnd she was like [French accent], âYou know you can sit in the back.â I thought, âGreat.â â
Life has changed for Sharon Stone, a couple years into her-name-above-the-title, in the way that so many dream it will change when they arrive in Hollywood. In Stoneâs case, it took 15 years, the âmean-leanâ years she calls them, which ended when screenwriter Joe Eszterhas and director Paul Verhoeven handed her an ice pick and asked her to leave her underwear in the dressing room.
âWhen âBasic Instinctâ came out on a Friday, I had one life,â she recalls, âand by Tuesday I had another life.â The other life included, besides getting some better scripts and tables in restaurants, finding alarming numbers of strange men appearing in her yard and even on her roof. She had to move, from a cozy canyon cottage that seated four for dinner to a gated French chateau in Beverly Hills.
âI guess everybody has to deal with this who gets to this position. You know, Iâm OK, but the last year and a half, I would say, itâs been out of control trying to keep my life together. I had to hire someone to drive me, so that thereâs someone there. So that, when Iâm, like, running, with six people running after me. . . .â
Her personal life is not all she might like it to be, which resulted in her not getting quite the house she wanted.
âI tried so hard to find a Spanish house built in the â20s,â she says after ordering a plain omelet, salad and coffee. âI had two of them in escrow for the last two years. But I kept getting engaged with people who were, like, they donât know if they want to sell now and maybe they do and . . . I was, like, I have to move!â
But still, things are good. In the midst of all this change, Stone opened her own production company, made a surprising western with Gene Hackman and got cast by Martin Scorsese as Ginger, the call girl-turned-Las Vegas mom, opposite Robert De Niro in âCasino.â Sheâs been nominated for a Golden Globe for her scarifying performance, and there is talk of an Oscar nomination.
âThank God, I mean just finally, wow,â she says about this particular gig and the response to it from critics and others. âI am not getting any younger. It couldnât have happened at a better time.â
She has completed work on âLast Dance,â a dramatic film for Bruce Beresford about a woman on death row that will open at Cannes in May. Mark Isham has done the score, and âweâre waiting to see if Annie Lennox is going to give us a song,â she says.
This year Stone was invited to Marvin and Barbara Davisâ Christmas party, the one where, as she describes it, âyou donât even imagine that this still exists--this kind of private affair. Like, wow. If they dropped a bomb on that place it would be over in Hollywood.â
A few hours after she finishes her omelet here, she will head over the hill to Burbank and make a surprise appearance on âThe Tonight Showâ--surprising not Jay Leno but guest Don Rickles, a co-star in âCasino.â In a stunt prearranged with Leno, she will walk out unannounced and plant a vivid red kiss on Ricklesâ forehead, then walk off without saying a word and everyone will know it was Sharon Stone.
This is a long way from the days of enduring insults from crass producers and the indignities of âknucklehead B-moviesâ in which, she remembers, âyou had to play every character as a drug addict or alcoholic or there would be no explanation for that behavior and the things you had to say.â And this was not so long ago.
âPeople have started to call me âMiss Stone,â â she notes, âinstead of just âSharon,â which Iâm sure is a combination of my age and my attitude.â
Her attitude, said to not always be cheery, has no doubt been improved by the afterglow of âCasino.â If she has been known to be imperious she can also be the opposite, and at the moment she seems truly happy with herself while discoursing on the vagaries, opportunities and responsibilities of her new life as one who, at 37, has made it all the way to the top side of the marquee.
Actually, she prefers the classical metaphor of Sisyphus. âI used to think that if I was Sisyphus, I liked pushinâ the rock up the hill, and now I realize that I like sitting on the hill watching the rock roll back down.â
Once, during her hill-climbing period, when things were not going so well, Stone called her then-agent and said, â âI just sometimes donât know if itâs all worth it and if I should go on.â And she said, âItâs not, itâs not worth it. You shouldnât go on.â And I got off the phone and I said, âSheâs such a baby! Iâll show her.â I think she thought I was a bimbo probably.â
After she played Arnold Schwarzeneggerâs groin-kicking cyberwife in âTotal Recallâ in 1990, Stone had about enough.
âI went, you know what? Thatâs it. Iâm not gonna work anymore till I get a job I care about. If I have to do theater in my garage and wait tables, thatâs it for me.â
She got the part of the sex bomb psycho novelist in âBasic Instinctâ after campaigning for it for months.
âI knew when I read âBasic Instinctâ that I could play that part. I read it and thought . . . [she lowers her voice to a conspiratorial whisper] . . . âOh, man, somebodyâs going to be so good in this.â Then I went, âWait a second, youâve got the screenplay, whyâd they give it to you?â I never got why everybody didnât just die for it, it was such a great part. I guess a lot of people they would have wanted had a lot more to lose than I did.â
Well, the nudity, for one thing.
âI mean, so what?â Stone says, swatting this notion flat. âAlthough now, I see what incredible greed that it creates. People think that if Iâm naked in a movie the movie will make money. I think weâve all missed the point here. I guess thereâve been like a few movies where other girls have been naked and theyâre not making money and those girls have better figures so, like, hello.â
Naked and not, she has worked steadily since âBasic Instinct,â starting with âSliver,â another Eszterhas script, in which she was the girlfriend of a high-tech voyeur; it did not turn out nearly as well as the first one, suffice it to say.
âI gained 16 pounds and almost snapped, going, âWhat the hell am I doing?â But I guess the picture, I donât know, made a fortune.â
She played another femme fatale in âThe Specialistâ (with His Muscleness, Sylvester Stallone), against type as a super-chilly babe with Richard Gere in âIntersectionâ and a macho gunslinger opposite Hackman in the semi-satirical spaghetti-like western âThe Quick and the Dead,â which she co-produced.
None of these pictures seemed designed as Academy Award material, and some of them (cue the clip of Sly and Sharon in the shower in âThe Specialistâ) probably made Bob Doleâs smut and violence list. Not that Stone cares about that.
âI think Bob Dole ought to be more concerned about teachers being paid fairly so that our literacy rate will rise,â she barks back. âI spoke on C-SPAN. I mean itâs, like, come on, if you donât want sex and violence in movies, hereâs what I say to you: Donât go.
âIt is, however, my feeling that since violent action pictures are the ones making hundreds of millions of dollars, perhaps these are the things that people want to see. But I donât think the escapism of letting out your anger in a movie theater is so wrong. Itâs about the way you bring up your children, the way you make the world safe to live in, that tempers how people behave.â
Children? Might there be children in her future?
âI think that part of my life should remain my own,â comes her answer, a little cool. âThatâs one thing I really donât want to talk about, thanks.â Then she adds: âI donât have children right now and I donât think Iâm going to have any anytime soon. I have to get a date first.â
Stone had to audition for âCasino.â She didnât want to, and her advisors, in fact, cautioned her to stay away from the part of the two-timing vamp De Niro persuades to be his wife in the kingdom of gambling. This is what someone important said to her: âItâs like this woman is so unsympathetic, she ties her kid to the bed, gets loaded and does coke. . . . Sharon, we donât think you should go there.â
Who said this, her agent?
âSome people, letâs just say,â she says.
âI didnât give a good audition either. Iâve always felt that [the late] Jean Rosenthal, who was the real Ginger, helped me get the part. That sounds kind of woo-woo, but weâre in L.A., so what the hell.â
Once she was on the set with Scorsese and De Niro, Stone says, she was--quite the opposite of her tortured character--in the right place at the right time.
âI think for a long time people just did not know what to do with me. I looked like a Barbie doll and then I had this voice like I spend my life in a bar and then I said these things that were alarming and had ideas that didnât make sense. And finally I got with Marty and Bob and they were like, âGive it all to us, baby, just let her rip; if youâve got it, we want it, letâs see what you can do.â â
While her erstwhile colleagues Verhoeven and Eszterhas were headed toward swamp gas at the controls of that other Vegas tale âShowgirls,â Stone came out the other side of the Marty and Bob âCasinoâ acting school with a newfound sense of purpose, her ego buffed all the bigger because this time she did have something to lose.
âItâs deeply gratifying in two ways,â she says, wanting to make this clear. âOne, because I see the film and I realize . . . [she shifts her voice suddenly into Mock Trembling Emotion] . . . itâs true ! I havenât been deluding myself all these years. I really can do it. Thatâs incredibly gratifying. And because I got up to bat with my dream people, the one actor that all my career I dreamed and strived to work with, that was the apex for me . . . and then Marty. . . .
âBut I thought, âIf I get up to bat with them and I just stink, you know, then what? Then what do you tell yourself? Time to move to a new town and get a new job?â And then to get the pat on your back from your peers is always pretty great. âWe think youâre good.â âWe respect what you did.â You know, you donât get a lot of that.â
In her dressing room backstage at âThe Tonight Show,â Stone is looking a little vampier. Sheâs changed into a sparkling thigh-length sleeveless black dress and is seated on the end of a couch right next to a TV monitor rolling the opening credits to the show.
In her hands is a sheet of jokes Lenoâs writers have fashioned for her to say when she wanders out during Lenoâs interview with Rickles. One of them has her carrying a pair of oversized polka-dotted boxer shorts and telling Rickles, âDon, you left these in my trailer,â which is supposed to play off the fact that ever since âCasinoâ opened, Rickles has been doing shtick about how much âSharon Stone wanted meâ on the set.
After Ricklesâ name flashes on the screen in tonightâs lineup, the words âMeat Loafâ follow. âMeat Loaf!â Stone says quickly, repeating the name of the beefy rock ânâ roll belter. âThereâs a guy I could date. Heâs done some stuff and heâs an actor.â She turns to Kristin Marshall, the woman who is her driver and protector and adds, âOf course, I donât know if heâs single. That might be a problem.â
At five minutes after 5, thereâs a knock on the door, and when Stone opens it, Leno is there and says, âHi, doll face!â He gives her a hug. Briefly they discuss whatâs going to happen with Rickles, and Stone says, âI think Iâll just kiss him. I wonât say anything. No boxer short jokes tonight.â
OK, fine, says the host, who heads back to the stage, where the show is about to begin.
After Rickles is introduced, a producer comes to the door to fetch Stone and escort her to the stage. They go down a flight of stairs, through a hallway and then into the backstage darkness of the set where she will wait for the signal that Leno has got Rickles onto the subject of Sharon Stone.
A few minutes pass as Rickles and Leno trade insults, then the magic words are spoken and the actress strides out from the wings with her well-painted lips locking on the target of Ricklesâ forehead. A low roar begins in the audience. She swoops down. Pucker and wham, the deed is done. The trash-talking comedian is momentarily at a loss for words, his head smeared with lipstick, the audience clapping approval. Stone waits backstage for the next commercial break then darts off the set and back to her dressing room. In the hall she passes one of Meat Loafâs young guitarists, who gives her a studly smile, and she gives him a smile back.
âMight want to get the number of that guitar player,â Stone says to no one in particular. âHe was cute.â
Meat Loaf himself passes her and says, âHi, Sharon, have fun,â not realizing she has already been on.
Earlier, when talking about the two sides of fame, Stone was reminded of something Cary Grant once said: âWhen you become famous, you donât change, but everyone around you does.â After quoting this, she added the thought âeveryone, every day.â
Itâs a delicate situation, becoming a star, she says, in the way that it affects oneâs interaction with people from movie sets to family gatherings.
âI mean, it can go from âI love you, I think youâre greatâ to â[Expletive] you, you walked by me and didnât say hello and who the [expletive] do you think you are?â in like a second. People are really emotionally affected by actors. And itâs a hard line to walk to know how to behave in a way that doesnât impose or doesnât withdraw.
âBecause everybody wants your attention. They want it so much. Everywhere you go, you know? From your waiter to your busboy to the person at the bank to the salesman in the store. . . . All this is relatively new to me.â
Did she watch any of the Beatles documentary on television recently? She did. And the part where Ringo was talking about how he knew the band was getting big when members of his own family started treating him differently?
âYeah, I was really identifying with that a lot,â she says. âAnd John talking about how people weird-out on you.â
Which reminded her of the time she almost met John Lennon.
âI had a momentary interaction with him. Right before he died. I was walking down the street and I walked by him and as I walked by I went to myself, âWow, is that guy really sexy,â and I got, like, halfway down the block and I thought, âJesus, thatâs John Lennon!â And I turned around and he was standing where he was, looking at me. And we both started laughing. And I walked away, and I was, like, âOh my God, I had a moment of passing with John Lennon.â
âBut because of that I understand. People have a moment of passing and they say, âI met her and she was really niceâ or âI met her and sheâs a complete bitch.â From one moment in passing, thereâs an experience of who you are that is real for people.
âBut Iâm working on it right now because I have found such peace of mind finally as an artist, such a sense of âOK, whatever happens from now on in, I touched my dream.â Itâs different now. Iâm no longer,â she says, pausing to begin panting as if out of breath, âdragginâ that Buick up the hill.â