The Star Early Edition

Reese’s Wild soul-baring ride

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ONCE she’d decided to take on her gritty new role in Wild, there were a few things Reese Witherspoo­n knew she didn’t want to hear from movie studio executives:

“We want her to be more likable.”

“We don’t want her to use drugs.”

“We don’t want her to be profane.”

And so, Witherspoo­n says, she didn’t give them the chance.

She developed the film, which follows a hard-living woman’s path to solace and redemption via a long trek in the wilderness, outside the studio system under the auspices of her own production company, with private financing.

“And then I took it to the studios and said: ‘I’m not changing a word,’” Witherspoo­n recounts in an interview. “And I had three bids on it that day. And I think it’s important, you know?” she adds.

“You grow up, you change – I’m a 38-year old woman now, I have three kids, and I’ve lived a lot. It’s really important to me that the things I put out into the world are meaningful and thought-provoking. Otherwise, what am I doing?”

Wild, based on the memoir by Cheryl Strayed, is a story of personal catharsis, and listening to Witherspoo­n, one gets the sense she was seeking a sort of profession­al catharsis by choosing it. The role, which has garnered significan­t Oscar buzz, includes difficult scenes depicting rough sex and heroin use. Witherspoo­n wore no makeup and spent days lugging a heavy backpack up and down hills.

“By far, it’s the hardest thing I’ve done in my life,” she says. “The physical aspects were really challengin­g – the elements, the heat, the cold, the water, the rain, 55 locations in 35 days, and carrying that backpack. And there was nothing else to cut to – just me.”

Emotionall­y, it was even harder: “One day I’d be getting divorced. Another, my mother would be dying. The next day I’d be using heroin. It was just non-stop – not even a roller-coaster, just a continual descent downward! There are always scenes that I dread, that I say: ‘That day’s going to be miserable’. And here, it was three weeks of that.”

Witherspoo­n’s director, Jean-Marc Vallee, calls her “a trouper”. As well he should: he noticed that the backpack looked too light and forced her to carry a much heavier one. “Then he just walked away, and I was like: ‘Okay…’” Witherspoo­n laughs. “You can see it digging into my skin. Because it really was digging into my skin!”

Vallee says that Witherspoo­n “went out there with no makeup, looking like nothing, on the trail for 65 percent of the film, looking like a hiker, with a heavy backpack on her back. I removed the mirrors in the makeup trailer and she didn’t look at herself.”

Witherspoo­n, who won an Oscar for 2005’s Walk the Line, says it was no accident that she chose such a film at this point in her career, a time that finds her veering away from trademark sunny, bright roles and romantic comedies.

“It’s something I consciousl­y did for myself,” she says. Her production company, Pacific Standard, is specifical­ly geared toward projects with complex roles for women.

“I was seeing sort of a deficit in leading roles for women,” she says. “It was just sort of the lack of complex characters, of interestin­g, dynamic women onscreen. I have a 15-year old daughter and it’s very important to me what she sees, in movies and television.”

Wild was an easy choice: “I read the manuscript in 24 hours,” she says, after receiving it from Strayed. “And I immediatel­y called my agent and said: ‘I don’t know who this woman is, but I need to talk to her.’ It is absolutely one of the most important books I’ve read in my life.”

It’s important to note, Witherspoo­n adds, that Wild isn’t a “chick movie”.

“It’s (screenplay) written by a man and it’s directed by a man,” she says. “If it was a man’s story, I don’t think we’d be remarking that it’s a man’s movie. It’s a movie about humanity. About love and loss, sex and drugs, and how to find your way out of the woods. I think we all have this moment in our lives when we realise, no one’s coming along to save us. We have to save ourselves.” – Sapa-AP

 ??  ?? ROUGHING IT: Reese Witherspoo­n in Wild. Below, her usual glamorous look.
ROUGHING IT: Reese Witherspoo­n in Wild. Below, her usual glamorous look.
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