INTERVIEW: Diego Luna of "Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights"
26 February 2004
Diego Luna has what many consider to be a boyish and humble image. He first made a splash in his career with his breakthrough performance in "Y Tu Mama Tambien" directed by Alfonso Cuarón. It is through this role that Diego caught the attention of audiences in the United States, as well as the hearts of teenage girls worldwide. Diego will once again woo the hearts of young females everywhere with his performance in "Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights." He stars as Javier, a Cuban boy who completely changes the life of a young American woman (Katey Miller) during the 1958 Cuban revolution.
Diego was in New York City recently to talk about the movie and below is what he had to say about the movie.
Q: Are you shocked by all the
fanfare and work you have received since “Y Tu Mama
Tambien” brought you international acclaim?
DIEGO: Not shocked. I'm proud. I'm
happy. I'm excited about it, but not shocked because
that would be terrible and I'd lose everything. It's
really fun to be doing what I've been doing and
having the chance to work with the people that I've
been working with and having the attention also, you
know, to show my work. I remember when we did 'Y tu
mama tambien', tables had one or two people and they
were on the phone talking to their kids [Laughs] and
now, I have some attention. I have a lot of things
to do and a lot of stories to tell and I'm glad that
there's been some attention in the world.
Q: What led you to take on this
film? Did you secretly want the world to know how
good of a dancer you are?
DIEGO: No, no. That was a challenge
because I had never done that. I'm a terrible
dancer. I need to be really drunk and see a
beautiful girl over there. It was a way of getting
close to a girl without having to speak because
always, whenever I opened my mouth, they would
leave. So, dancing was a chance to keep them close.
I wasn't a good dancer and I had to train for two
months, and I think that I did this movie because,
first, it was a good chance to have a lead in
another language and I wanted to have that and make
that step. I think that it was important for me.
Also, it was a chance to do a movie about smart,
young people. I don't think that there's too many
movies about teenagers, or for teenagers, I mean,
that they don't do stereotypes, that they do real
people, and I kind of liked that. My character is a
very political guy and I hope that young people get
to be more political and more active about where
they live and how to change the reality that they're
living if they don't like it or at least analyze
where they are and my character is that kind of guy
and I liked that. I also liked the bands that play
in this movie. When I was talking to one of the
producers, I said to him, 'What's going to be the
music? There's too much Latin, pop crap on the
radio. What's the music for this movie? I'd love to
have a listen.' He said, 'Really? What about this
song,' and he played that song, and I said, 'You
have that song?' 'Yeah, of course, they're going to
play for the movie,' and so, it was a chance to do a
commercial movie with good music and good people.
The two producers, you see the movie that they've
done, one did 'Pulp Fiction' which is one of my
favorite movies and the other made 'Frida' and 'Girlfight'
and so, it was a chance to work with good people.
Q: The original came out over 10
years ago. Did you watch it then or more recently?
DIEGO: Two weeks before we started
shooting.
Q: What were your thoughts after
seeing it?
DIEGO: It's not the kind of movie
when you're eight years old. You want to go see
'Star Wars' or a football match, or to a soccer
match, sorry, but you don't want to go and see two
people dancing. It's not what you're looking for,
but I had to see it, and it was great. I saw the
movie two weeks before we started shooting and I'd
already made my choices about how my character was
going to dance, who he was going to be and so, that
made my character unique in a way. I wasn't thinking
about someone else's decisions. I made my own
decisions and then, I got to see that, and in a way,
it was a good because I didn't have the other movie
as a reference. I didn't say, 'Okay, the character
should do this or react this way.'
Q: Are you good enough of a
dancer now to enter a ballroom and woo the crowd?
DIEGO: No, no. We shot that on the
day that we shot the contest because we were in the
middle of nine couples who were professional
dancers, and we felt so good and we won the contest.
We didn't win the contest, but we got to the
semi-finals and it was like, 'Yeah, we did it.' We
had a whole routine and we just kept repeating the
whole thing. We never just did one move and then
another one, and then, the editor would create the
whole thing. No, we knew the dance as you see it and
it's all the time us, and yeah, you feel great, but
then, you realize that professional dancers are
taking care of you and making space for your
mistakes. So, it was nice. No, though, I'm not a
dancer. I'm a one routine dancer. I can do what you
see in the movie, but if you ask me to do something
else, it'd take me another two months.
Q: How was it working with Romola
Garai?
DIEGO: It was great. We needed, I
mean, I think that everyone was really scared about
the chemistry between us because to dance you have
to really trust the other person. You have to. It's
not the same dancing by yourself and having a
partner. It's about communication between two bodies
and two bodies have to make one in a way. So, that
was the most important thing in the movie and it
happened. We went through the same things; we
watched ourselves the first time and we said, 'Oh my
God, this is never going to happen,' and then, we
started to see changes, and we did everything
together and it was great because at the end, I
guess we were a pain in the ass. We thought that we
were choreographers. We were like, 'No, that move is
not going to work,' because we felt like we got
there by ourselves.
Q: You were recently seen with
Kevin Costner in “Open Range” and now you are doing
“Terminal” with Steven Spielberg. Is Hollywood the
place to be for you now?
DIEGO: The next movie is going to be
a Spanish speaking film. I don't want to come and
conquer American films or the American market. I
just want to do movies, movies that I care about,
stories that I like to hear even if I wasn't in the
movie. I didn't go to university, and so, every time
that I work, I'm looking for a teacher in a way. I'm
looking for people that I can learn from and to have
the chance to work with people that I admire, and
it's been happening, but I want to always keep going
with my career in Spanish because it's my first
language and it's where I decided that I wanted to
be an actor, and I also want, there's something that
is really sad, but it happens; before I did 'Y tu
mama', I did sixteen movies that no one went to see
and then, suddenly, they like your work outside of
Mexico and then, you become big in your country, and
in a way, that's really sad because it's like,
'Guys, all the talent that you have here and you
don't take care of your own talent. You have to wait
for others to say, "Oh, that guys is good."' In a
way, it's also good because now, I can make things
happen in Mexico, projects that I like and that I
care about or directors that I want to work with. I
might have more of a chance to make things happen
and produce things. So, that's good and I just want
to do movies. I don't know where. There are a lot of
people that I admire here, directors that I really
want to work with, but also in Spain and in England
and France and Mexico and South America.
Q: What’s it like working with
Steven Spielberg?
DIEGO: It was great. He was great.
He's so generous. If you ask me to describe a good
director, it's the guy that is really clear about
what he wants and lets everyone know what he wants
and what he needs to tell the story that he wants to
tell because you're always just helping someone to
tell their stories. So, he's so clear about what he
wants and he goes straight for what he needs and he
lets you know what he needs and that's great because
you feel like part of the process. He's amazing.
It's great. I'm looking to learn in movies and that
was a perfect place. I would love to just see them
and watch them work. It was great. You can tell how
people on set are all telling the same story, and
that's fantastic.
Q: What’s your role in
“Terminal”?
DIEGO: I play one of the friends
that he makes while he's in the terminal, Tom Hanks.
I work with food in the terminal. I have a food
cart, and I take food from the kitchen to the
people.
Q: Your father is a famous set
designer. Is he proud of your work?
DIEGO: [Laughs] Yeah. He always
says, 'Damn it, I chose the wrong career.' It's
weird, I admire him so much and he admires me too, a
lot, and it's a lovely thing when you can share so
much and yeah, we did a play in homage of my mother
who died when I was two and he did the set design
and I was acting there, and we brought all her
friends from all over the world to do this play. It
was great, and I did another two plays with him. We
were really careful though. The first ten things I
did, he wasn't involved because then people would
say, 'Oh yeah, he opened the doors for everything,'
but not, we want to work together. It's just weird
because he does theater and opera, and so, I
remember when we were on tour, he never got to
travel in first class or business class, and it's
kind of sad that you can be the biggest set designer
in Latin America and you still have to drive
yourself, and you do one movie that has a bit of
success and everyone treats you like a king. It's
pathetic. It makes me how stupid we are. We think
that it's so important and it's just movies, and
that's it.
Q: Were you conscious about your
body and bulking up for this movie?
DIEGO: It's just that we talked
about having a real guy. I want to see movies where
I can relate to the guy. If I see the Governor of
California, I never relate to his characters because
I would never spend four hours in the gym. I don't
think that's human. So, I wanted to do a real
character which is a guy who works at two different
jobs a day and uses his body for his work, but he
doesn't go to the gym and they allowed me to do
that, and it was great. I had to stand more straight
which was hard because I'm always like this. They
always think that I'm 5'6'' and I'm 5'10''. This
character is a bit straighter than me…well, not
straighter [Laughs].
Q: How do your think that your
character would look back on his decision to stay in
Cuba?
DIEGO: Oh, well, I just think that
revolutions always happen because people need the
change, but what they have now is not what the
revolution was fighting for. They won a lot of
things. It's amazing to see how well educated they
are. You're in the cab and the cab driver will be a
doctor or a dentist, but it's also really sad to
have a dentist driving a car. So, it's a weird
feeling. For my character, I don't know if he'd be
in or out. The only thing that I love about Cuba,
not the only thing, but one of the things that I
love about Cubans is that no matter where they live,
they love their island and they think that that
island is the best place to live and they're very
political and they all have a point of view. They're
very political. All, even the people in Miami, they
talk about that everyday and I just want to make
clear that my character wants a revolution and wants
a change to happen. I think that there's a
difference between saying Pro-Castro and
Pro-revolutionary. Revolutions happen because people
wanted to take control of their island and they
wanted to enjoy their island and I don’t know if
they can enjoy what they have now. I've been there
twice and you see these amazing, beautiful people
that want to give so much and are so open and share
everything, and they have great things, and they
don't have what they deserve, I think. It's weird
what Cuba is now.
Q: How come there aren’t more
Mexican filmmakers in Mexico?
DIEGO: Because they tend to leave Mexican movies.
It's weird, you do a good movie and it takes you
another five years to make another one in Mexico
because suddenly, they make things really easy here.
Guillermo Del Toro, a good Mexican director that did
'Blade', and he said once, I read this, 'Spain is
the best place to shoot a movie. It's like paradise
to shoot a movie.' It was something like that. I'm
not using his words, but he said, 'Spain is the
place to be a filmmaker,' and it's really sad
because here's a Mexican guy that can't say that
about his country. It's like, it's sad, but that's
reality, and you have to keep going and you can't be
waiting over there. Nothing is going to change until
the government really understands that culture has
to be a necessity and not a luxury as it is now, but
that's not changing. The party we just changed in
Mexico, it was after seventy years of one party and
the power we changed, and the reality is that it's
the same. They don't think that people have to know
things. They don't think that education is important
and that's the thing that when you go to Cuba, you
say, 'Wow, all of these people, they read.' If you
see how many people read a book a year in Mexico,
it's sad.
Q: Can you talk about one of your
upcoming films, "Criminal"?
DIEGO: It's a con movie and my
character is a guy that lives in L.A., a Mexican guy
that lives there, and he's pulling a con with the
character that John C. Reilly plays. It's a very fun
movie and a very smart script.
Q: Are you afraid of being
stereotyped in traditional Latin roles for futures
films?
DIEGO: I'm always going to be working on my English
and I'm always going to work on my English so that I
can do different characters from different
nationalities. I think that I see it as a problem.
There are all the American actors that are my age
that can't do a Latin accent and I can. So, it's not
a problem, it's great. Everyone is different, and
so, I don't want to repeat anyone else's career. I
want to do mine. If I have an accent now, and I can
work with that, I'm going to work because I want to
open my range of possibilities, but just because I
want to do that, and not because I want to…I have to
be proud of what I am and I am.