Manawatu Standard

Rising star draws on a mother’s wisdom

Jane Campion and her daughter, Alice Englert, talk to Andrew Taylor about working together on set in Sydney.

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Director Jane Campion has turned her daughter into a monster. In the second season of Campion’s Top of the Lake television series, Alice Englert – Campion’s 22-year-old daughter with former husband, Australian film-maker Colin Englert – plays Mary, a 17-year-old at war with her parents and the world.

Mary is angry, rebellious and precocious. She is furious with her adoptive mother, Julia (played by Nicole Kidman) and casually manipulati­ve of her father, Pyke (Ewen Leslie). Her boyfriend is every parent’s worst nightmare – an unkempt middle-aged German who lives above a brothel and is prone to bouts of aggression. As Englert points out, Mary is not always easy to like. ‘‘You’re challenged to root for her,’’ she says.

‘‘What we do have is a motherdaug­hter relationsh­ip that’s full of all that love and complexity.’’

Campion sees aspects of herself in the story’s various mothers; in Kidman’s fierce, intellectu­al feminist, and in Mary’s birth mother Robin Griffin, the talented but troubled detective played by Elisabeth Moss in a return performanc­e from season one.

In the first series, Moss’ character busted open a paedophile ring operating in New Zealand’s scenic South Island. Season two shifts the action to Sydney, where Griffin is investigat­ing the death of a young woman whose body is found in a suitcase washed up on Bondi Beach. The six-part mystery moves between a brothel staffed by Asian sex workers and the well-heeled suburbs where Griffin finds the daughter she gave up as a baby.

When Campion and co-writer Gerard Lee started thinking about the second season, they talked about the things that mattered most in their lives. ‘‘I think those relationsh­ips with our children are really vital,’’ Campion says.

‘‘The idea of your daughter falling in love with a much, much older person – and passionate­ly and innocently in love [when] he’s clearly a complicate­d and probably not a very good guy – intrigued us.’’

Campion and her daughter previously worked together when Englert was 12, on the 2006 short film, The Water Diary. Englert speaks of her mother with admiration and affection, referring to her as both ‘‘Mum’’ and ‘‘Jane’’.

‘‘We have a kind of friendship as well as a mother and daughtersh­ip, and we like working with each other,’’ Englert says. ‘‘I’ve watched her work for so long and I always loved it because she has this energy and direction and oh ... such a discerning eye.’’

Though Campion is not an actor, Englert has said she has been a key influence. ‘‘She inspired the way I think about film and the way I like to work,’’ she told Vanity Fair in 2013.

In making Top of the Lake: China Girl, Campion reportedly asked fellow director Ariel Kleiman to take charge of Englert’s more distressin­g scenes. As for Englert, she focused on behaving as one of the cast on set, rather than as a daughter. During the filming, she turned to other family members where she might ordinarily have sought her mother’s counsel.

‘‘I didn’t want to have to talk to Mum about anything she might worry too greatly about,’’ she says. ‘‘I didn’t want her to think about things she couldn’t fix.’’

She chatted instead to the other actors on set: Moss, Kidman, and Game of Thrones‘ Gwendoline Christie, who plays Griffin’s partner on the police investigat­ion. ‘‘I really found the girls, the ladies in this ... very encouragin­g and inspiring because I could see how they took the focus and the consequenc­es of that focus and hard work seriously,’’ Englert says.

Playing Mary, a character in turmoil who Englert describes as a ‘‘mystery on the page’’, took an emotional toll. ‘‘By the end of it, I was ready to leave Mary and have my own problems again,’’ Englert says. ‘‘I liked her and disliked her as well. I felt I could really play her once I figured out that she is a person who doesn’t always make sense and wasn’t even making sense to herself ... She is aware of what a monster she can become.’’

Thanks to her mother, Englert has been immersed in the world of movies from an early age. She apparently had lunch with Johnny Depp when she was just three months old. Kidman, an old friend of Campion’s, is Englert’s godmother.

Before Top of the Lake, Campion was famous as a director for films including Sweetie, An Angel at My Table and the Oscarwinni­ng The Piano. Englert has said that her parents discourage­d her from seeking a career in the limelight. Regardless, she dropped out of school to pursue acting, signing with an agent rather than taking on formal training.

‘‘I’m really happy she chose her own path,’’ says Campion. ‘‘I did feel pretty scared, I remember, when she was 13 and said, ‘I think I want to be an actor’.’’

Neverthele­ss, she helped her daughter prepare for auditions. ‘‘[It was] one of the ways we kind of bonded, really,’’ she says. ‘‘With a teenaged kid, to be able to work on something in-depth and seriously, it was kind of a special connection for us.

‘‘We worked a lot together over about two or three years and she really didn’t get any of the roles. Obviously she did quite well in that they kept giving her calls – and suddenly she started to get everything.’’

Englert’s work has included the arthouse movie Ginger & Rosa, for which she was nominated as best supporting actress at the 2012 British Independen­t Film Awards. She has appeared in the lowbudget horror Infear, the television series Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell, and received critical praise for her role in bigbudget fantasy Beautiful Creatures, despite the 2013 film’s mixed reviews and poor performanc­e at the box office.

She is also a writer and musician, and can be seen on Youtube performing her selfpenned songs, Necessary Pains and Needle and Thread.

Following her mother’s example, she has written and directed short films, Family Happiness – which screened at this year’s Melbourne Internatio­nal Film Festival – and The Boyfriend Game.

A burgeoning acting career comes with its share of glamour: interviews, sessions with stylists and makeup artists, photo shoots with the likes of Vanity Fair. Today’s shoot, in a quiet suburban street of North Sydney, is a lower key affair.

It’s all in a day’s work for a young actor on the rise. The family connection­s don’t hurt, but she is determined to put in the time and effort it takes to cement a career.

‘‘I’m finishing writing my first feature and then I’m just gonna audition,’’ she says. ‘‘I really want jobs. I wanna try and do some kickass acting.’’ - Fairfax

Top of the Lake: China Girl

9.30pm, Tuesdays, UKTV.

 ??  ?? In Top of the Lake: China Girl, Alice Englert plays Mary, a 17-year-old at war with her parents and the world.
In Top of the Lake: China Girl, Alice Englert plays Mary, a 17-year-old at war with her parents and the world.

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