Shanghai Daily

Julia Roberts channeling her inner parent

- Jake Coyle

Julia Roberts is sitting on a couch in a Soho hotel when Lucas Hedges bursts in and begins franticall­y searching for his phone, sending pillows flying.

“This is what I say to Finn,” Roberts said, referencin­g one of her three children as she instructs her 21-year-old co-star. “Where did you go from here, honey?”

Roberts’ motherly instincts play a big part of her latest film, “Ben Is Back.” Written and directed by Peter Hedges (“Dan in Real Life,” and the father of Lucas), “Ben Is Back” is about a son (Lucas) home from rehab for Christmas. The short visit resurrects past demons and present temptation­s for Ben, testing his mother’s anxious balance of trust and suspicion.

It’s a more dramatic chapter for Roberts, the most quintessen­tial of movie stars, who at 51 is stretching in new directions that are increasing­ly further afield from the frothier romantic comedies she built her career on.

“With age comes more complexity of possible parts,” Roberts said. “You know, I’m happy and I have fun at home, so it would take a lot for someone to say: ‘Look, you can play this part where you’re happy and have fun.’ I do that at home!”

It can take a lot to get Roberts away from home. Hedges at one point jokingly suggested shooting “Ben Is Back” in her backyard. She’s notoriousl­y picky, generally acting in one film a year, and that’s become iffier considerin­g, as she says, there’s “a whole lot of math” that needs to factor her kids’ school schedule and that of her husband, cinematogr­apher Danny Moder. Roberts has, quite contentedl­y, largely withdrawn from the limelight. She knits. She plays Mahjong with girlfriend­s once a week. She will watch “Point Break” anytime it’s on TV. But she still wears the role of movie star comfortabl­y.

She remains breezily unaffected, a quality that makes fans believe they know her. Roberts grants that the public’s impression of her is “probably relatively accurate.”

“I mean, I’m not interested in trying to seem cooler than I am or something,” she said.

Still, Roberts, a four-time Oscar nominee and one-time winner (“Erin Brockovich”), is also indelibly linked to the 1990s and 2000s pre-digital movie era when stars, not superheroe­s, still ruled the box office. Times have changed; her breakthrou­gh film, 1990’s “Pretty Woman,” is now a Broadway musical. Roberts recently had the out-of-body experience attending it alongside Barbara Marshall, wife of the film’s late director Garry Marshall.

“I wasn’t prepared for how profoundly it made me miss Garry,” she said, choking up. “I wasn’t prepared for how all of the improvs that I created are in a Broadway book now. People are saying things that I was just making up, just vamping.”

And long before pay equality became an industry-wide concern, Roberts was among Hollywood’s highest paid stars. Asked about the #MeToo movement and Hollywood gender parity, Roberts replied, “You can never rest. You think that’s sorted and you come around a corner and then how is it not sorted suddenly? How is it not fair?

“Things like this give me hope that our business can keep making strides, because every year that it’s ‘the year of the woman,’ you kind of go: Again? Let’s just have it always be the year of the artists. If we have to keep spotlighti­ng the gender of this and the gender of that, we’re kind of blowing it.”

“Homecoming” is her first foray into a TV series. Roberts insisted Sam Esmail (“Mr Robot”) direct all the episodes and that all the scripts be completed before shooting began. She similarly helped shape “Ben Is Back,” pushing for Peter Hedges to cast his son, the in-demand breakout star of “Manchester by the Sea,” a tall task because Lucas has deliberate­ly sought to establish himself outside of his father’s shadow.

“When Julia read the script and met with me, I came with a list of actors that I thought would be good for the part, and Lucas wasn’t on that list,” Hedges said. “Before I could even share that list with her she said: ‘Lucas needs to play this part.’ I said, ‘One, I don’t think he’s available, and, two, I don’t think he would ever want to do a film with me.’ Once she signed on, she began a very persuasive and I think classy campaign. She made effort to let him know that she thought he should do the film with her.”

It is, alas, hard to say no to Julia Roberts. The actress later invited Lucas to her Malibu home where she says he became part of the family, hanging out and taking her kids to the beach. Making “Ben Is Back” was for her less about channeling her own parental nightmares than fostering a relationsh­ip with her fictional son.

“Spending time with Lucas meant that I had heart-space with him, and that is what I called upon and relied upon for the movie,” said Roberts.

“Separation is important. Especially in the middle of the night when you’re playing a scene over and over again, you just have to have so much clarity about that jumping off point. I think that helps it be super clear and fair. I don’t want to drag my kids through this crap.”

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