Despite
bringing new opportunities in the short-term, the sheen of an Oscar
victory can sometimes only go so far. Just ask two-time winner Dianne
Wiest.
The
66-year-old actress, who begins previews Tuesday for off-Broadway
production Rasheeda Speaking, told the New York Times she is facing
money issues due to a lack of high-paying work.
"I have to move out of my apartment soon," Wiest said of her struggle to cover her rent.
She
earned Oscars for best supporting actress for 1986's Hannah and Her
Sisters and 1994's Bullets Over Broadway, both directed by Woody Allen.
But after that, she found she was only getting offered roles to play "a
nice mom, and that's it. That's all that ever came, except in theater."
Wiest,
who was the focus of one of the vignettes in 2007's David Wain-directed
comedy The Ten, added that she doesn't plan to try writing her own
roles. "I think that if it's meant to happen, it will happen,” she said.
“Which is I guess a real sign of stupidity."
She has recently been seen on screen in the Al Pacino-starring The Humbling, released Friday, and in 2012's The Odd Life of Timothy Green, along with a 2014 episode of NBC's The Blacklist.
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