Interview - Amy Adams (on Doubt, Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian,
Sunshine Cleaning and Julie and Julia)
 
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian Poster
 
     
 
Currently one of Hollywood’s most sought-after actresses, Amy Adams first came to international attention after her role in 2005’s Junebug as a good-natured southern belle afforded her a Best Supporting Actress nomination. Since then, her star has risen inexorably, featuring as a Disney princess in Enchanted, a flighty actress in Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day and Tom Hanks’ secretary in Mike Nichols’ prestige drama Charlie Wilson’s War. She’s also appeared in comedies Talladega Nights and Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny – a trick she will repeat in 2009 in the Ben Stiller sequel Night at the Museum 2.

For the moment, Adams, 34, takes on her most dramatic role to date, in Miramax Films’ Doubt. She plays Sister James, the sweetly innocent nun who gets caught up in a scandal at a Brooklyn Catholic school in 1964, when she shares with her colleague, the dragon-like Sister Aloysius (Meryl Streep), her concerns that a priest, Father Flynn (Philip Seymour Hoffman), has behaved inappropriately with a pupil. Her second film with Hoffman, following Charlie Wilson’s War, Adams will reunite with Streep in 2009 on Nora Ephron’s Julie & Julia.

 

 

 

Q: How did you prepare for Doubt?

A: How did I prepare? Panic! No, I’m kidding…we had three weeks of rehearsal. John didn’t get on my case but he said, ‘You should really talk about it more because you came in really prepared!’ I was so like the girl who wanted to make a good impression on the first day of school. I knew all my lines and knew everything about the play. I knew other people’s lines! I’m usually pretty prepared but I think I’m über-prepared. I spent weeks with this material. I knew there was going to be no hiding and I better bring something to the table. So I prepared.

Q: Had you seen the play before?

A: Yes. I felt a great responsibility to the play but at the same time, the script is different and opening it up, provides a different feeling. My character in the film and the play are similar, but because of the way the scenes are broken down, it’s a different path. I had to really let the play go. I was like, ‘Yes but in the play…’

Doubt - Amy Adams

Q: You were recently on the cover of Vanity Fair. How did that feel?

A: It’s great, and I don’t mean to in any way diminish it, but when I started acting, I never really imagined doing any covers. So I don’t judge the success of myself with how many covers I’ve done or what covers. Although, that was an amazing thing. And Vanity Fair, they’ve grown with me. For me, it was really special. They did the first piece on me, for Catch Me If You Can – I was in Vanities. Then I was inside the Hollywood issue when Junebug came out, then I was on the Hollywood issue when Enchanted came out, and now, with Doubt, they put me on the cover. So it feels like I’ve grown up with them a little bit.

Amy Adams - Vanity Fair

Q: How was your Spielberg experience on Catch Me If You Can?

A: It was great. I loved it. I’d love to work with him again. It was extremely intimidating, though. I do have this way of when I’m intimidated or challenged, I tend to get tunnel vision and very focused. I try not to pay attention to all of the external voices. I have to shut myself to an extent and really focus on the task at hand. But, sure, I was intimidated. But I’d made my mind up that I was there to work, I was there to be Brenda, and anything else that happened was fine. If he liked me or he didn’t like, I didn’t expect to be friends with Leo, I didn’t expect to work with Steven again, I was there to be Brenda – I was not there to do anything else. And I had a great experience and they were wonderful. They turned out to be so easy to work with. I was scared - ‘Are they going to be easy to work with?’ It was a big mystery to me. It always is when you go in. Like going into this with Meryl.

Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian

Q: How was working with her?

A: The idea is terrifying. The actual execution is actually a lot of fun. Meryl is a fantastic scene partner, and it’s not as if she saves it all for when the camera is on her. She really gives you a lot to work with. So any intimidation on the set is purely brought on by my own insecurities and has nothing to do with her person.

Q: You worked with Philip Seymour Hoffman on Charlie Wilson’s War, so you knew what to expect with him, I guess…

A: I had the wisdom to be terrified! I love him. I think we’d be really great together as foils to one another. He’s a lot of fun and he’s got a big heart. He’s just a great guy. And a frickin’ fantastic actor.

Q: So how was working with him?

A: He’s intense and he definitely puts himself through it. I knew with Philip that he wasn’t…he was going to be taking care of himself and going to be a consummate professional and an amazing scene partner. He trusts the other actors he’s working with to do the same. He put that faith in me and that’s fantastic. I hadn’t worked with Meryl before so I was always like…I just wanted to make sure I was a good scene partner. That I was in my character and in the story and really giving them something.

Julie and Julia - Amy Adams

Q: You’re in another film with Meryl Streep soon, Julie & Julia. Who do you play?

A: I play Julie. Julie Powell, who wrote the book Julie & Julia. She is approaching her thirtieth birthday and questioning her life, when she decides to cook her way through the art of French cooking by Julia Child, and write a book about it. And it follows her journey and growth through that year and it parallels Julia Child’s experience in France as she’s composing the cookbook. It parallels these two women’s lives.

Q: What made you choose this?

A: A lot of things. I loved the script. I was really curious to work with Nora Ephron. I love her writing. I was just really excited to do it. I also really identified with being thirty and being lost. That was something I identified with very much.

Q: How did you cope with turning thirty?

A: It’s an interesting experience. You really start to take inventory of what you’ve done, or what you’re going to do. You can’t really pretend to be a kid anymore. You don’t really have the same excuses. You have to be accountable now. So whatever damage your parents did, or whatever damage you did, it’s now time to own it all and get on with it, so to speak.

Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian - Amy Adams

Q: You’re also in Night of the Museum 2. Who do you play?

A: I’m a new character. All of the same guys return, and additionally we have Hank Azaria and Christopher Guest…and I’m playing the pilot Amelia Earheart.

Q: Did you do any research to play her?

A: I absolutely did learn about her. They had a clear idea what was needed to serve this story and plot. But I definitely went and did research. There was a lot written about why she said she flew. And she would quote ‘For the fun of it!’ In Night of the Museum 2, she’s definitely an adventurer and a risk-taker and someone who really makes the most of each moment.

Q: How did you feel being around comedians like Ben Stiller and Robin Williams on set?

A: I’m glad I don’t have to compete! That’s not what I do! For me, it was good fun. I got to watch and figure out where to put my line! Like Ben Stiller and Robin Williams are doing improv, and I just need to say my line and make it make sense. So that’s my biggest goal in those scenes. But I get über-focused. Ben Stiller and Robin Williams were making each other laugh and I was very serious. I think that made Robin laugh even harder, as I came in completely earnest with my line.

Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian - Amy Adams

Q: So you’re the straight man to them?

A: I enjoy that! But I think I’m much funnier than Ben off screen! I think Ben would concur. I think I actually am! I love Ben. I had a great time working with him…but I’m definitely funnier off screen! Or I definitely think I’m funnier off-screen. And I’m certain I’m not funnier on screen.

Q: You also have Sunshine Cleaning…

A: Yes, with Emily Blunt. I play a single mother who is somewhat skill-less unfortunately and looking to improve herself and gets into a crime-scene clean-up business with her sister. But it’s the story of their family and how they’re all struggling to get over the death of their mother.

Q: What is a crime-scene clean-up business?

A: It’s a legitimate business. Let’s say somebody shot themselves in this hotel room. That would create a blast and a splatter, and you would have to cut out the affected areas and put it into a biohazard container and take it to a biohazard dump. You have to clean it very specifically.

Sunshine Cleaning - Amy Adams

Q: It seems you’re finding a nice balance between indies and studio movies right now?

A: I’m working at it. It’s important to me to keep things loose. The actors and actresses that I admire the most are not defined by genre. Like Frances McDormand, Meryl Streep and Susan Sarandon…these were women who were a great positive influence on me and my choices.

 

- Gone With The Twins

 

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Ivy

YOU R COOL AMY

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