The Hamilton Spectator

Keira Knightley on finding strong women in historical dramas

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO - The director of Keira Knightley’s latest historical drama says he was keen to secure a diverse cast, despite the genre’s reputation for a lack of onscreen diversity.

Knightley stars in “Colette” as the eponymous French novelist whose provocativ­e stories become a sensation in France, but were falsely credited to her husband.

The film traces her battle for recognitio­n and equality while challengin­g social and gender norms, and sexual taboos.

“It’s interestin­g that the strongest characters that I’ve found have been in the period roles. I’m not saying that’s throughout the industry, obviously it’s not, but just for me, that has been the case,” Knightley told a news conference at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival on Monday. “And you can never discount your own taste. The idea of breathing life into what is dead and done, it’s kind of resurrecti­ng the dead in a funny way, doing a period film. And I find that, as far as the imaginatio­n goes, I find my imaginatio­n just goes wild going, ‘God, let’s bring them back, this is amazing.’”

In keeping with the spirit of his revolution­ary protagonis­t, director Wash Westmorela­nd says it was important the film break “a lot of the rules of traditiona­l period pieces.”

“A lot of period pieces they spend two hours waiting to get engaged ... with this, they’re in the barn on the haystack within five minutes and it’s kind of like: ‘No, this is a much more sort of direct sexual period piece,” said Westmorela­nd, last at the festival with “Still Alice,” which he cowrote and co-directed with his late husband, Richard Glatzer. “And then also with the casting, we tried an approach I don’t believe has really been tried before of just having a very inclusive cast.

“We have trans men playing cis-gendered characters, we have trans women playing cis-gendered women, we have an out lesbian actor playing a heterosexu­al, we have a gay actor playing someone who said he was heterosexu­al, we’re not quite sure,” Westmorela­nd said to chuckles from the assembled media. “We have Asian-British actors playing characters who have been historical­ly white, we have a black actor playing someone who in history was white and guess what? It all works. It all completely works for the audience.”

 ?? 1996-98 ACCUSOFT INC. COURTESY OF TIFF ?? Keira Knightley stars in the Belle Époque drama with Dominic West about the life of French writer Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, whose racy, somewhat autobiogra­phical Claudine novels became a hit among young Parisienne women.
1996-98 ACCUSOFT INC. COURTESY OF TIFF Keira Knightley stars in the Belle Époque drama with Dominic West about the life of French writer Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, whose racy, somewhat autobiogra­phical Claudine novels became a hit among young Parisienne women.

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