Up in the Air star Anna Kendrick sits down exclusively with SheKnows about the Oscar-buzzing film starring George Clooney.
Kendrick is no stranger to acting. The actress, 24, earned a Tony Award nomination at just 12 for A Little Night Music.
Besides starring opposite Clooney in Jason Reitman’s Up in the Air — one of the year’s most lauded films– Kendrick is causing quite a stir for her scene-stealing turn as Jessica in Twilight Saga: New Moon.
The New England-born Kendrick may have known early on in her her life that she wanted to star under Broadway’s lights. But who knew Kendrick would be starring alongside the world’s biggest star in Clooney and directed by one of Hollywood’s finest in Reitman (Juno and Thank You For Smoking)?
She is refreshingly joyous about the double-barreled thrill she has experienced in 2009 — spending months with George Clooney filming Up in the Air and also being caught in hurricane Twilight.
Anna’s a Broadway baby
SheKnows: How do you think coming up through the theater ranks as you have has enhanced not necessarily your career, but your craft?
Anna Kendrick: Even when you’re 12 years old, you’re expected to be a pro. You’re expected to deliver and to always exhibit a degree of professionalism. In films, you get coddled so much, and it was nice to start from a place where, you know, you were expected to take everything really seriously. You’re expected to be very independent. It’s nice to come into film and know that, just because everybody around you is asking if you need anything and telling you how wonderful you are [doesn’t mean they don’t] say that to everybody and it doesn’t mean that it’s true.
SheKnows: The actual “act” of acting on stage — how does that translate for you, or help/enhance as you’re working on a film set? I would think that, in front of a live audience, you would really learn quickly to roll with the punches.
Anna Kendrick: Certainly, it’s a very different energy, but it helped in learning to ignore an audience, so it helped me learn to ignore a film crew.
Anna’s tray table is up and ready for take-off!
SheKnows: What first appealed to you about working on Up in the Air?
Anna Kendrick: The script. It’s absolutely gorgeous. I love the way that it doesn’t underestimate people. It’s so intelligent and it’s unpredictable, and it’s never formulaic. This character is so unique. It’s an incredibly difficult thing to find for a young woman — where she’s got her own story and her own journey. It’s not just the man’s journey.
SheKnows: Did any aspect of your character surprise you when you started wrapping your head around portraying her?
Anna Kendrick: Once she has this kind of meltdown, there was a part of me that instinctually wanted to make her hide a little bit more and didn’t want to turn to the one person who’s been giving her a hard time about her life’s philosophy. To let her really seek solace in Ryan and the degree to which she lets herself melt down was kind of surprising.
Anna goes Up with George and Vera
SheKnows: And the chance to work with Vera Farmiga and George Clooney — I suspect wasn’t a negative?
Anna Kendrick: No, not at all. That was a really exciting thing. I was so scared of meeting them! I was more intimidated by Vera than I was by George. No matter where you go in LA, there’s at least somebody telling you, “Oh, he’s [George Clooney] fantastic, he’s wonderful.” Vera was more of a mystery to me and she plays these incredibly strong women and she didn’t seem like one who would suffer fools. She couldn’t have been warmer or more playful.
Juno’s Jason directs
SheKnows: What about Jason Reitman? He’s such a talented director.
Anna Kendrick: Yes. The scary thing about him is that he’s such a tough read and, at the same time, he’s so intuitive. He reads people instantaneously. You’re never really sure if he’s being sarcastic or not. He definitely keeps you on your toes. He’s so brilliant that it’s nice to be challenged like that every day.
SheKnows: When you do a film, a stage production or something based on a book, when you’re actually molding your mind around the character, do you turn to the book at all, or would you rather focus more on the words on the page because that’s more where you’re at?
Anna Kendrick: In the adaptations that I’ve done, the character is either not in the book, or is kind of different in the book, so I haven’t yet relied very heavily on novels. If it were truer to the book, I’d probably be one of those people who carry it everywhere I went.
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