• Give a Gift
  • Customer Service
  • Promotions
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Win
  • Games

May 5, 2007

Q&A with Alexandra Kerry

The daughter of the man who might have been president on politics, her burgeoning career, and, of course, that dress.

Share

Alexandra Kerry on the campaign trail with her father.

Photo Credit: P. Le Segretain/Getty Image

Special Offer

Q: I hate to begin this way, but when I Googled you, all these sites came up devoted to the incident on the red carpet at Cannes in 2004, when your gown became transparent.
A: I know -- 73 pages of the dress. It's such a shame. I saw the heads of Google last summer, and I joked with them: "How do I get this off your site?"

Q: Did you know as soon as the flashbulbs went off what was happening?
A: No! I walked through the whole thing and nobody said a word. It wasn't until the next morning when my press person said, "We have a little problem..." Then my stepbrother checked the Internet, and he was like, "Don't look!" It was a complete shock and surprise. Even more of a surprise was that people made it as much of an issue as they did.

Q: What did your dad think?
A: I made my sister tell him because I couldn't deal with it. He went through the stages of grief, basically. First, he wanted to know how that could happen. Then, he wanted to make sure I was all right. Finally, he started making jokes about it. I knew when we got to the joking part that everything would be OK.

Q: Were you relieved when your dad chose not to run in '08?
A: I think he would make an incredible president, and it would be great if he'd run again. But personally, for our family, part of me is glad that he didn't. We lost our mother recently, and we need to focus on ourselves. [Kerry's mother died of cancer in April 2006.]

Q: Your charming hamster speech at the Democratic convention helped humanize your father. Why did the press stereotype him as aloof?
A: I think the press gets lazy once a certain kind of image is out there. It just adheres, rather than the press trying to break that down. That stereotype was completely wrong. As his daughter, I felt like he wasn't being understood. I'd challenge the press this time to try and give accurate portrayals of people.

Q: You recently signed on to direct an adaptation of The Hazards of Good Breeding, a novel about an Ivy League grad from a Waspy Boston family who wants to be a filmmaker and has a powerful father. Sound familiar?
A: Yeah, it's pretty familiar. I tried to move away and do something different, but you always come back to what you know. This certainly isn't my own story, but there are pieces of it I relate to. It's a world that hasn't been looked at in an astute way in a very long time.

Q: Meaning?
A: I haven't seen anything that deals with that rarefied world in a way we can recognize. Just because you're in that world doesn't mean you don't have the same problems as everyone else.

Q: From senator's daughter to movie director-that's a bit of a leap.
A: I didn't grow up in public life. I lived with my mother in Boston, not in Washington, DC, so I was somewhat sheltered from that.

Q: It's Mother's Day this month. How did your mother, the late Julia Thorne, influence you?
A: Most of my strength comes from her. She taught us to keep the private and public worlds in different places. I miss her profoundly. I dedicated my book about the campaign to her: "To my mom, who is always on a landline."


Share
Connect with Marie Claire:
Advertisement
daily giveaway
Win One Hearts on Fire Diamond Shooting Star Pendant!

Win One Hearts on Fire Diamond Shooting Star Pendant!

enter now
Latest blog entries
Marie Claire On The Go
  • Start receiving the day's headlines from topics you choose and get the latest posts from our bloggers. Sign up for RSS feeds now.

  • Take Marie Claire with you everywhere you go. Our mobile site has the latest 'it' items of the season. Including: Blogs, Hair & Beauty, Nutrition, Health & Fitness, Horoscopes and so much more!

    Here's how:

    1. Start a mobile session on your phone
    2. type m.marieclaire.com into your browser
    3. that's it!

  • In Every Issue:
    The one-stop shop
    for the very best in
    fashion & beauty


    Give a Gift
    Customer Service
    Marie Claire Magazine
horoscopes
  • Sponsored Links
More From World News on Women
My Life in a Cult

Author Lauren Drain speaks out about picketing U.S. solders' funerals and praising the terrorist attacks of September 11 as a teen member of the notorious Westboro Baptist Church — and about how her parents disowned her for questioning the group's shocking tactics.

Green Queens: The Leading Ladies of Marijuana

Marijuana is going mainstream, and now women are active in all areas of the industry, too. They're lobbyists and pols working to reform drug laws; growers and dispensary owners; and consultants, accountants, and attorneys for the industry. Here's the scoop on four of the most influential women in cannabis.

Where the Boys Are

In China, a cultural preference for boys has created such a severe gender imbalance that unmarried men will soon outnumber unmarried women by an estimated 40 million. Abigail Haworth reports on the country's looming marriage crisis from the lonely hearts ground zero — a village full of bachelors who may never find wives.

post a comment

Special Offer
Link Your Marie Claire Account to Facebook
Welcome!

Marie Claire already has an account with this email address. Link your account to use Facebook to sign in to Marie Claire. To insure we protect your account, please fill in your password below.

Forgot Password?

Thanks for Joining

Your information has been saved and an account has been created for you giving you full access to everything marieclaire.com and Hearst Digital Media Network have to offer. To change your username and/or password or complete your profile, click here.

Continue
Your accounts are now linked

You now have full access to everything Marie Claire and Hearst Digital Media Network have to offer. To change your settings or profile, click here.

Continue