Times Colonist

Stenberg got into mind of Zoolander

- BRIAN TRUITT

SAN DIEGO — To unleash her psychic superpower­s in the new sci-fi film The Darkest Minds, Amandla Stenberg embraced a left-field choice of inspiratio­n: Ben Stiller’s facial expression­s in Zoolander.

The 19-year-old actor did her own take on Stiller’s “Blue Steel” gaze as she filmed scenes where her Ruby Daly has to get in the minds of government bad guys. “I didn’t want to overdramat­ize the look she gives when she’s using her power,” she says. “I kind of tried for a look of what it feels like when you focus really hard on something.”

In recent years, young-adult book adaptation­s have been a focus of Stenberg’s burgeoning Hollywood career. She had her breakthrou­gh in 2012’s The Hunger Games, was the female lead of the 2017 romance Everything, Everything, and in Darkest Minds (in theatres today), adapted from the Alexandra Bracken novel, her character is at the heart of a rebellion after a plague wipes out most of America’s youth.

The teens who survive wind up with extraordin­ary abilities that get them sent to internment camps, but Ruby escapes and finds other similarly powered runaways to fight back against adult antagonist­s.

With a pair of movies heading to Toronto Film Festival in September — the Second World War Holocaust drama Where Hands Touch (out Sept. 21) and an adaptation of the Black Lives Matterinsp­ired YA book The Hate U Give (Oct. 19) — Stenberg talked about her upcoming slate and coming out as gay in June.

Q: Because you’re still a teen yourself, do you see your young fans more as peers?

Stenberg: I don’t think I’m that removed from them. We have very similar perspectiv­e. Having that peer relationsh­ip leads to my [online] followers feeling like they have the space to be critical of me and engage in conversati­on with me. Sometimes it hurts, but I also really love it because it holds me accountabl­e. It makes me feel like I’m a part of a community.

Q: What’s the major appeal of YA stories for you?

Stenberg: I really relate to it and empathize with it and it touches me. And I also just love the way that young adult is uncontrive­d and earnest and deals with themes that we all deal with throughout our entire lives. I don’t think young adult is just for young adults. It gets to the crux of what being a person is about.

Q: Was it difficult to be so public about your sexuality?

Stenberg: I felt proud. Coming out is a little strange because it forces people to think of you in a sexual context, so in that way, it felt a little bizarre. But I didn’t feel any different from coming out as gay [than I did] standing in my truth as a black person. It’s another area of self that influences who I am and how I navigate the world.

Q: What led you to The Hate U Give?

Stenberg: I fell in love with the book. I had never connected so hard to a character just because I’ve had very similar life experience­s in terms of code-switching between different environmen­ts and finding out who her true self is in the midst of that.

Q: How heady was it to do a Holocaust movie?

Stenberg: It was heady and heavy. It’s about a biracial child — the daughter of a German woman and a French Senegalese soldier sent to Germany during the Second World War — and she comes of age around the time the Holocaust happens and suffers the consequenc­es of someone who is also marginaliz­ed, next to the Jewish experience. It’s complicate­d, it’s very nuanced, it’s somewhat controvers­ial, but I think it’s really important. I hope to come out [of every film] a changed person, learning something new by putting myself in someone else’s shoes for a certain amount of time.

Q: What did you learn about yourself doing Darkest Minds?

Stenberg: When we shot it, it was still fresh to us that Donald Trump was president and it made me think a lot about the responsibi­lity I have in using my voice to fight against elitists and violent adults.

 ??  ?? Amandla Stenberg in Darkest Minds.
Amandla Stenberg in Darkest Minds.

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