There may be ways you can cram it down a little more just by configuring, but not much more.
Also, the actual interactive-mode code is pretty trivial, so I doubt you're going to save much there.
I'm sure there are more substantial features you're not using that you could hack out of the interpreter to get the size down. For example, you can probably throw out a big chunk of the parser and compiler and just deal with nothing but bytecode. The problem is that the only way to do that is to hack the interpreter source. (And it's not the most beautiful code in the world, so you're going to have to dedicate a good amount of time to learning your way around.) And you'll have to know what features you can actually hack out.
The only other real alternative would be to write a smaller interpreter for a Python-like language—e.g., by picking up the tinypy project. But from your comments, it doesn't sound as if "Python-like" is sufficient for you unless it's very close.
Well, I suppose there's one more alternative: Hack up a different, nicer Python implementation than CPython. The problem is that Jython and IronPython aren't native code (although maybe you can use a JVM->native compiler, or possibly cram enough of Jython into a J2ME JVM?), and PyPy really isn't ready for prime time on embedded systems. (Can you wait a couple years?) So, you're probably stuck with CPython.