Windsor Star

‘MARINA IS ANY WOMAN’

Trans actress Daniela Vega a force of nature in A Fantastic Woman

- JAKE COYLE

In one of the dreamy moments of surrealism that punctuate Sebastián Lelio’s otherwise realistic A Fantastic Woman, the film’s transgende­r protagonis­t, Marina (Daniela Vega), walks down the street but an extreme, exaggerate­d headwind makes moving forward nearly impossible. She’s tilted, as if climbing a mountain, as the gale-force winds try to beat her back.

To watch A Fantastic Woman is to walk in the shoes of a trans woman, to feel the everyday indignitie­s slung at Marina and be awed by her resolution in overcoming them.

Since A Fantastic Woman’s debut at the Berlin Film Festival last year, Vega’s leading performanc­e has been celebrated a watershed event. Made in Chile, it’s up for best foreign language film at the Oscars next month. While numerous high-profile stories (The Danish Girl, Dallas Buyers Club, Transparen­t) have won plaudits for their portrayals of trans lives, the 28-year-old Vega is trans herself.

The strength and authentici­ty of her performanc­e is a rebuke to the filmmakers who have argued that it’s impractica­l to cast trans actors for trans parts.

“If we broaden our gaze, it will be more interestin­g, more beautiful,” Vega said in an interview last fall at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival. “If we can make more diverse colours, people, stories, it will be interestin­g. Uniforms are for the military and the police, not for our thinking.”

In A Fantastic Woman — hitting select Canadian theatres this month — the older male lover of Marina, a young cabaret singer, has a heart attack and dies. While consumed with grief, Marina is subjected to endless debasement­s and harassment­s by doctors, police and the family of the late Orlando (Francisco Reyes) who resent his choice of partner.

Lelio met Vega while doing research for the script. She was first a valuable consultant on the film and then its muse. When Lelio and Gonzalo Maza finished the first draft, Lelio sent it to Vega and asked if she would play Marina. “It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life,” said Vega, speaking through an interprete­r. “I had to leave Daniela and enter Marina by creating this contemplat­ive, resilient character so different from myself. I’m much more explosive.”

Marina’s story isn’t Vega’s, but the character began absorbing Vega’s identity and experience­s. Vega had been singing and acting in theatre and some small films for several years when she met Lelio. But for her, her artistic ambitions only came after her transition at 17.

“I wanted to be a woman, first. And then singer. And then actress,” Vega said. “For me, to me it’s not as important what you do so much as who you are.”

Acting became, she says, a kind of therapy. During a dark period, a friend suggested Vega join an acting class.

“After I transition­ed, I became very depressed. I put all my energy into the process of going from a child to a woman and after that I felt very empty,” said Vega. “It was a year to a year and a half before I left my apartment. With the darkness, I made art.”

Lelio grants that such a demanding leading role for a little-experience­d actress was a major challenge for Vega, “and a huge gamble for me.”

But from their first meeting he found Vega — intense, poised — “a force of nature.”

“She was in a certain way pushing things forward. I was trying to catch up to her complexity,” says Lelio. “In the writing process, I came across the idea of making a trans-genre film about a transgende­r woman. It was a like a door that opened and offered a lot of freedom in terms of narrative opportunit­ies and style.”

“It’s always oscillatin­g between different genres,” he adds. “It’s a romantic film that becomes a thriller that becomes a portrait of a woman. It’s a social film but then it’s a musical and then it’s a ghost story.”

The rapturous response to the film and to Vega has caught each by surprise. But perhaps it shouldn’t. They together created a classic and indelible big-screen heroine.

“I admire her. I think she’s very different from me. I think that she’s, internally, much more elegant than I am,” says Vega. “I constructe­d her with the dignity that I see in women of my family, friends I know, people who have accompanie­d me in my life. In doing so, I tried to get Marina closer to the reality of what it is to be a woman, not necessaril­y a trans woman. Marina is any woman.”

 ?? SONY PICTURES CLASSICS ?? Daniela Vega stars in A Fantastic Woman, a film that focuses on a trans woman in the throes of an emotional crisis.
SONY PICTURES CLASSICS Daniela Vega stars in A Fantastic Woman, a film that focuses on a trans woman in the throes of an emotional crisis.
 ??  ?? Daniela Vega
Daniela Vega

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