Meryl Streep Movies Can Save the Economy!
Filed under: Classics, Fandom, Newsstand, Summer Movies
We know that Meryl Streep can rock any role she's given, and save any movie that she graces with her legendary talent. Accents, ABBA songs, and aspics, she does it all with shocking ease. But here's something I bet you didn't know: she's an economic powerhouse. While Hollywood wrings their hands and wonders how to market "to women," and is convinced all ladies want is The Ugly Truth, Streep has been single-handedly turning everyone a profit. The Independent calls it "The Streep Effect" and notes that she has a Midas touch not only at the box office, but for book sales and tourism. Julie and Julia has single-handledly sent Mastering the Art of French Cooking back onto bestseller lists. (Though the Independent doesn't mention it, Child's My Life in France is selling just as briskly, as is Julie Powell's Julie and Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerously.) There's also been a boom in French cooking classes and cookware sales as people set out to cook their way to a perky hybrid of Streep, Amy Adams, and Julia Child.
And that's only the most recent example! Mamma Mia! resulted in hundreds of couples flocking to marry on the Greek island of Skopelos, with flights up 13% after the movie's release. Lest you think that was just due to the jaw-dropping seaside scenery, a similar effect happened with Out of Africa. Kenya received 152,000 overseas visitors in 1985, a number that climbed to 176,000 in 1986.
Women & Hollywood broke it down even further, noting that sales of ABBA albums soared after Mamma Mia!, and that Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway hit the bestseller list for the first time in history thanks to The Hours. If the readers there are any indication, a similar surge will soon follow Roald Dahl's books thanks to her voice in The Fantastic Mr. Fox, and continues to keep Karen von Blixen-Finecke's work in print.
No one seems to have looked up The Bridges of Madison County, probably because it had so much following prior to the Streep and Eastwood adaptation. But a little Googling uncovers a rather horrifying cottage industry of spin-offs and collectibles associated with the book and film, and the sales surge in 1995 was what caused it to outsell Gone with the Wind. Normally, I would be horrified by the thought of faux postcards and tie-in diaries, but now I find it a weirdly awesome example of Streep's power.
So powerful is she that she can even teach us to moderate our spending, and think twice about buying that Bridges picture book at Barnes and Noble. Reuters reported that every company featured in The Devil Wears Prada saw their stocks fall after the film came out. While analysts said it had more to do with the credit crunch than the movie, I think it's very possible that the film worked as a medieval morality tale. The 13th century had troupes of players telling them that money weighed down the soul, but we just needed Streep's Miranda. Too bad it didn't play a little earlier, eh?
That she's accomplished all of this with quiet and characteristic elegance is wonderful and remarkable, particularly since we live in a world where we're drowned out by entertainment marketing. In fact, I think people see her as a kind of refuge, and buy whatever she's touched in order to keep that moment of zen. The fact that it's such classy, smart stuff -- literature, cooking, world travel, music -- speaks to people longing for depth and complexity in their lives. Summer blockbusters have their place, but people clearly want something more than Slurpee cups and fast food toys. Let's hope Hollywood and Streep go onto develop a stronger and richer relationship of movie roles, because the world would clearly be a poorer place (yes, even if you didn't like Mamma Mia!) without her.
[via Jezebel]










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-19-2009 @ 12:00PM
Christopher Campbell said...
I can't say she's turned me onto ABBA, Greece, cookbooks, Africa or anything else you've mentioned. But I have wanted to visit Ayers Rock ever since seeing A Cry in the Dark. I bet that movie sparked interest in the location, too, in spite of fears of baby-eating dingoes.
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8-19-2009 @ 3:41PM
Christian M. Howell said...
She's number one in Hollywood in female actors, just beating out Laura Linney so it's not surprising.
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8-19-2009 @ 5:24PM
Livi said...
This article says it all...
Meryl is a fantastic actress and I'm glad she's got some clout in Hollywood now (she proved the critcs wrong with Mamma Mia!).. Fastest selling DVD so far in the UK alone, now that's 'The Streep Effect'!
Down to earth, intelligent, funny and talented, she's a role model for any young actress to aspire to. It's refreshing not to see pictures of her kids falling out of clubs or scandal writen about her in the Enquirer...
Whoever said that Meryl Streep, is 'the greatest living actress', got it oh so right!
I think we can all consider ourselves, well and truly 'Streeped'!
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9-06-2009 @ 4:38PM
Cheryl said...
Yes, Meryl Streep has the golden touch! She touches it and it's gold! She can play any role she is delt to perfection! You don't see Meryl in the role you see who she is portraying. She is that good!!!! This woman should have received more then 2 Oscars so far in her life...she is unstoppable and the greatest!
To be so real and such a people person...she is one of us! Somebody we can all relate to!
She is "The Queen of Hollywood"!
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8-20-2009 @ 5:50AM
Catty said...
God, Love ths article! she is phenomenon. what an honor that I live in same generation with her.
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8-20-2009 @ 8:49PM
JEREMY said...
Meryl Streep is the closest thing we have to Katherine Hepburn in our generation. While going over her recent work,it's worthy to note she could probably pull of a good action movie,and in fact she DID (check out "THE RIVER WILD"). She even did a romance film with CLINT EASTWOOD,and IT ROCKED. Julia Roberts & Sharon Stone could learn something from watching Meryl. Next I'd like to see Meryl do a project with Angela Bassett or Halle Berry.
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8-21-2009 @ 6:31PM
laura said...
Streep may not have portrayed Julia Child exactly as she was, but whatever she was, was beautiful. It's like she aged backwards during the film; with each scene, her performance peeled back the years. By the end, I was in love with Julia myself. Or maybe I was in love with her relationship with Paul, played by Stanley Tucci, an actor who gave Streep lots to work with.
They were the poster couple for growing older and still rocking it -- and you can't market that idea enough.
Laura
www.cookingforcock.com
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