Montreal Gazette

Flight plan

Lady Bird star Saoirse Ronan hopes to take summer off to reset

- VICTORIA AHEARN

Saoirse Ronan is taking a bit of a break.

On the heels of the success of the coming-of-age dramedy Lady Bird, which earned her a third Oscar nomination, the Irish actress says she’s doing press for the new films On Chesil Beach and The Seagull and then taking the summer off.

“You have to reset after all of that,” Ronan said, referring to the whirlwind ride with Lady Bird, which got five Academy Award nomination­s.

“It was brilliant — God, it was such an amazing time and it’s only just happened, so it’s still very fresh for people, which is great. And I love having people come up to me and tell me how much they loved it and why they loved it and what they were able to relate to in the film.

“But ... it’s like six months of chatting about one film, so you do need a break away . ... You go through these stages of being very, very boring and having nothing to talk about after you do a press junket like that, because you’ve been talking so much, and then you sort of reset and then you’re back to normal.

“So it’s definitely important for me to do that before I go back to work.”

The film opened May 25 in Toronto and will premiere in the rest of Canada on June 1. It’s a tragic romance directed by Dominic Cooke and based on the Booker Prizeshort­listed novel by Ian McEwan, who also wrote the screenplay.

Ronan and Billy Howle star as newlyweds whose different background­s and poor communicat­ion skills result in a disastrous honeymoon in England in the summer of 1962.

This is Ronan’s second time working with McEwan after 2007’s Atonement, which also earned her an Oscar nomination.

“He was a big part of me having such a special experience at such an early age, and so I had always stayed in touch with him and wanted to do something else together,” said the 24-year-old.

“Then when I was about 16, I heard that they wanted to turn On Chesil Beach into a film and I wasn’t the right age.”

Luckily it took a few years to develop. “I was trying to find something that would be like a transition­al role from children’s roles to more of a grown-up role, and that had always been something that I had had my eye on to serve that purpose,” Ronan said.

“As well as it just being a story that I loved and was heartbroke­n by, and it was written by someone that I knew personally. So it always seemed like it was the right thing to be involved in.”

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Saoirse Ronan

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