VIDEO: Sasha Grey on the politics of porn.
Sasha Grey is barely 21, but already she has 150 feature films to her credit, and — four years younger than Orson Welles was when he made his first film, Citizen Kane — she's about to make her directorial debut. True, her films have titles like Cum Fart Cocktails 5, Gang Bang My Face, and Grand Theft Anal 11, but she doesn't believe that diminishes her
accomplishments. She's an award-winning porn actress and proud of it, and now she's making her mainstream screen debut in Steven Soderbergh's
The Girlfriend Experience, in which she plays "Chelsea," a $10,000-a-night call girl who along with the usual services provides her clients with quality time that includes discussions of movies and politics and relationships. As it turns out, in real life, Grey has a lot to say on these subjects as well.
I heard that Steven Soderbergh got in touch with you like a fan, by contacting your MySpace site.
One of his writers, Brian Koppelman, actually wrote me through MySpace, of all places. I didn't have a manager then, I didn't have an agent, so that was the only place you could really contact me at the time. He and Steven had read an article about me in Los Angeles magazine that profiled me for the first three months of being in the business, and they were interested. It was a really unorthodox way of casting, but I met up with Steven after that, maybe for about 45 minutes, and that was it. And he went off to film Che and The Informant, and now here we are with The Girlfriend Experience.
So what was the Soderbergh experience like — easier or more difficult than your other movies?
I would say this was a lot more intimidating, just because it's not something I do every day. I do have acting experience, but I was trained in theater, and aside from one film called Smashcut that I did in May right before this, I didn't have a whole lot of [mainstream] film experience. So going into this was a lot different, and you're working with someone you really respect and admire, so you always want to do good in those situations. I'd go back to my hotel at the end of the night and think about a scene we did and think, "Oh, I wish I'd done this differently," or, you know, "Maybe I shouldn't have done that." But the preparation, I mean, the whole nature of this film was to bring part of my personality into this character while at the same time building a character. That I found to be really challenging.
How does this character's profession differ from your own?
We don't have the emotional or fake emotional quality that Chelsea has to bring and give to her clients. In adult films, everybody knows why they're there. Yes, you are getting paid to have sex on camera, but the situations and the way they work are quite different. You don't have to get on set and pretend like you're somebody's girlfriend and care about them and love them and call them when you're done and ask to go on another date.