The Phnom Penh Post

UK’s Emily Beecham in A-list with best actress win at Cannes film fest

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BRITAIN’S Emily Beecham has been catapulted into the movie big time by winning best actress at the Cannes film festival for playing an enigmatic scientist in Little Joe.

Beecham, who has spent most of her career in supporting roles, was a surprise choice for the award for her performanc­e as a botanist working on a flower that gives off a scent so ambrosial it makes people euphoric just to sniff it.

Indeed she admitted that she was so shocked that “I forgot to pack my toothbrush” when she received a call, after she’d left Cannes, telling her to come back and pick up the prize.

But while Beecham’s rise has hardly been meteoric, the 35-year-old has been marked out as a talent to watch for a decade, winning best actress awards at both the Edinburgh and London independen­t film festivals for one of her first films, The Calling, in 2009.

Her big break came two years ago playing what Variety called “one of the more unpleasant characters i n recent memory”, a misanthrop­ic young woman who witnesses a stabbing in Peter Mackie Burns’ arthouse gem, Daphne.

That helped consolidat­e the reputation the Manchester­born actress had won for a stream of British television roles including in the awardwinni­ng series The Unforgiven, and the even more acclaimed The Village, where she played opposite Maxine Peake and John Simm in the gritty historical rural drama.

Martial arts queen

Doors really began to open up for her in the US, her mother’s homeland, after she landed a small part in the Coen brothers 2016 sword and sandals send-up, Hail, Caesar!

By then she had landed the role of The Widow in the US martial arts action series, Into the Badland.

Although her father is a pilot, she caught the acting bug at her school, the elite Hurtwood House in Surrey, which bills itself as “the most exciting school in England”.

It is also the alma mater of the Mary Poppins star Emily Blunt and Princess Sarah Zeid of Jordan.

Beecham said she jumped at the chance to work with the highly-rated Little Joe director Jessica Hausner.

“She’s one of the only female directors I’ve worked with so far. She’s extraordin­ary,” Beecham said of the Austrian, who was vying for Cannes top prize, the Palme d’Or.

“But I’m noticing more scr ipts and things come through with female directors attached. It’s brilliant.”

Smart women

The actress, who played opposite fellow Briton and Mar y Po p p i n s s t a r Be n Whishaw and New Zealander Kerry Fox in the movie, said she was “profoundly inspired” by the French microbiolo­gist Emmanuelle Charpentie­r and the naturalist Jane Goodall as she researched her role.

“One thing they both talked about – Ja ne Gooda l l d i scussed it specif ica lly – is t hat her r el at ionsh ip w it h her fa mi ly i nter fered w it h her research. She k ind of had to put [her family] on the back burner and put the chimpanzee­s in t he forefront.”

Beecham said that she tried to work the pain of that into her character, a senior researcher in a biotech firm in the UK of the near future.

Hausner said she wanted to explore how “crazy” becomes a label used to keep women down.

“I was always fascinated by the films about crazy women. I felt that male perspectiv­e and I thought ‘Yeah, but what’s so crazy about them?’” she said.

“The ‘craziness’ of women is actually the very interestin­g point about them because I think it’s also about being sensitive and intelligen­t.”

Beecham said after she won the prize that she was drawn to Hausner after seeing her previous film Lourdes, set in the French town where some Catholics believe the Virgin Mary appeared.

“So I loved her work already. Ben Whishaw was attached a nd I read t he scr ipt a nd it was unquest ionably a g reat project to be involved in and I rea lly wanted to do it,” she said.

 ?? AFP ?? British actress Emily Beecham poses with her trophy after she won the Best Actress Prize for her part in LittleJoe during the closing ceremony of the 72nd edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes.
AFP British actress Emily Beecham poses with her trophy after she won the Best Actress Prize for her part in LittleJoe during the closing ceremony of the 72nd edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes.

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