Born in
Florence,
Italy, Rose McGowan moved to the
United
States as a teenager to pursue a career in
acting. A role in ENCINO MAN (1992) paved the way for McGowan’s first starring
role in THE DOOM GENERATION, a nihilistic teen movie from New Queer Cinema
director Greg Araki, for which she was nominated at the 1996 Independent Spirit
Awards for a Best Debut Performance award. McGowan’s raven hair and striking, pale
hued good looks have led to comparisons with European horror queen Barbara
Steele, and her roles have taken a similarly dark turn. Appearing in Wes
Craven’s SCREAM (1996) and nominated for a Best Villain award for her
performance in 1999’s macabre teen comedy JAWBREAKER, McGowan is perhaps best
known for her five-year stint on supernatural sitcom CHARMED, in which she
played the long-lost Halliwell sister Paige. Along with Michael Parks, Josh
Brolin, Marley Shelton and Quentin Tarantino, McGowan appears in Robert
Rodriguez’s horror film PLANET TERROR, as a brunette go-go dancer named Cherry…

Q: Were you apprehensive about making a movie in the grindhouse
tradition?
I’ve had people say, “Oh, are
they intentionally going to make a bad film?” I know why they’d say that,
because those films weren’t always the best. But I was like, “No, the homage is
really to the directors, who were the mavericks working outside the
studio system and breaking all the cardinal sins of movie-making, i.e. killing
kids, killing dogs, doing all the things you’re not supposed to do in films. Robert
is doing it within the system, and that’s pretty badass.” That’s my take,
anyway, and I think he’s thrilled to be doing that.
How was it shooting for TV during the day and shooting a film by night?
I shot the first two months of
PLANET TERROR at night while finishing the last two months of CHARMED during
the day, in LA and
Texas. It’s a
pretty brutal schedule. I must have done between 80 and 100 hours a week on
CHARMED for five years. It did drive me nuts, but I knew it was going to be
hard. And it was. I would wrap around 6am Sunday morning in
Texas
and get on a 7am flight to LA, then work till 11pm on Charmed to make up the
time and then start again at 5am and work till 9pm. On Thursdays I’d get off at
3pm, fly to
Texas, shoot all
night and then go back. I started the movie at 104lb and went down to 98 and a
half. And unlike some actresses out there who get very excited when they look
like bobble-heads, I thought I looked disgusting. I was not thrilled.

How was it to shoot the scene in PLANET TERROR, where Quentin tries to
rape you with his melting penis?
That was really gross, I’m not
gonna lie. It was actually worse on the set! There was a still photographer
trying to get a shot of me between his legs. I was like, “Oh hell, no!”
Robert kept saying, “Turn your
head back!” Cos I kept turning away. But Quentin was very good in that scene.
Robert directed him very well and he was pretty menacing. In the scene, I’m
crying while he’s making me dance, and then I kind of go nuts and smack him.
He’s a very big guy. And I did
that about three or four times, where I knocked him across the room, and every
time I did it I was like, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry. I won’t hit you next time!” He
was like, “That’s OK.” But then I’d do it again. (Laughs)
What’s Robert like as a director?
Robert’s sets are very quiet,
very focused. He’s behind the camera, then he goes home at night and edits it,
so I think his brain is doing so many different things. I’d never been on such
a quiet set. It was strange, especially going back and forth to CHARMED, where
everybody was really funny and warm and loud, shooting spitballs at my head during
scenes.

For PLANET TERROR, did you need go-go dancing lessons to play Cherry?
No, I did not, actually. I’ve
always kinda grown up dancing. I can do back-bends in five inch heels, so it
all worked out. The back-bend I had to hold for a long time because
Robert had this huge camera and
wanted to shoot the first scene sort of through my back.
He actually wrote the music
while he was writing the film, and he wanted the opening sequence to be a dance
sequence. I love that music, it’s fantastic. And I have to say, I think it’s a
pretty great sequence!
What’s the story with Cherry and El Wray?
Cherry and El Wray were about
to get married, or they were engaged at some point, and I think she’s pretty
angry with him. That’s why she’s like, “Fuck you!” I think he hurt her pretty
badly. As for their back story, I’d say they were together probably at least a
couple of years, but they butted heads, so to speak. I think they both had
distinct personalities that clashed.
You spend most of the film with a wooden leg, but you’re also wearing a
very short skirt. Was it difficult to protect your modesty?
To tell you the truth, I was so
much more concerned with not messing up the shot.
It’s such an ingrained thing in
me to not mess anything, so I was much more concerned with not messing anything
up or wasting time. Plus it was about 105 degrees there. I was there for six
months and it never broke that. It was so humid, I could take a script at three
in the morning, squeeze it and water came out. It was really disgusting. So I
think, for once, I was happy to be not wearing a lot.
When did you first have to shoot a scene with the false leg?
Day one. The first scene I did
in the movie was walking down the hall of the hospital with Freddy Rodriguez.
What’s funny about that is that Quentin, when he read Robert’s script, thought
that was hilarious and he was doing a kind of Three Stooges impression, acting
out the scene. So Robert came to me and said, “This is what Quentin really
liked,” and so he acted out the scene for me. And then I had to imitate Robert
imitating
Quentin…

It’s very convincing. How did you do the effect?
I had to keep my leg completely
straight. It wasn’t like, say, Lieutenant Dan in FORREST GUMP. That’s a green
sock, where they just take his leg away and replace it with something else. But
when Robert wrote it, the technology wasn’t there to do it. I think that’s
what’s so cool about him. He’ll write something and go, “I don’t know how to do
this, we’re just gonna have to figure it out.” And that’s kinda what happened.
It was a green sock with LED lights on it so the special effects people could
manage the tracking shots. But if it wiped across anything else, like my good
leg, they’d have to rebuild it.
Everywhere I’d go, they had to
digitally rebuild everything I passed. But I think it just looks badass, and I
think that supersedes and overrides any discomfort. Who cares? As
Robert always says, “Film is
forever.” Well, he said that after I lost feeling in two fingers after doing
one of my back-bends. I was like, “Easy for you to say, dickhead!” (Laughs)
But he’s completely right. Yes
it was uncomfortable and yes it hurt, but it looks fantastic,
it looks kick-ass, and I don’t
think anything about it looks fake – which is odd!
PLANET TERROR is released on region two DVD on March 10th
2008