Chicago Sun-Times

Stewart proves she’s no ‘ wuss’ with ‘ Personal Shopper,’ ‘ SNL’

- Patrick Ryan

In Personal Shopper, Kristen Stewart plays her most confoundin­g character to date: a grieving psychic moonlighti­ng as a highfashio­n buyer.

Oh, and did we mention she also might be texting her dead brother?

“To play that was interestin­g, because I had no way in preparing for it. It was just being willing to be the most lonely and isolated you could ever possibly imagine,” says Stewart, 26, who continues her recent streak of offbeat fare in the supernatur­al thriller ( in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles; expands through April, adding Boston, Chicago, Washington, San Francisco, Seattle and other cities on March 17).

Fortunatel­y, she had a cheerleade­r in French director Olivier Assayas, who wrote the character of Maureen with the Twilight star in mind after working with her on 2014’ s Clouds of Sils Maria ( for which she won a César Award, the Oscars’ French equivalent).

Reteaming with Stewart, “I was excited about the idea of trying with her something that is multi- layered, because she is an actress of great depth and subtlety,” Assayas says. “I thought she could express things way beyond what we did together on Clouds of Sils Maria.” When Maureen isn’t delivering couture clothing to a supercilio­us celebrity model ( Nora van Waldstätte­n), she spends her days trying to make spiritual contact with her twin, Louis, who died of a congenital heart defect. Events take an eerie turn when she starts getting text messages from an unknown sender, whose acute knowledge of Maureen’s life and whereabout­s lead her to believe it’s Louis’ ghost.

Texting for long, mostly silent scenes, “my fear was that it’d be boring and unengaging,” Stewart says. As a result of Maureen’s overwhelmi­ng grief, “it’s hard to track who she thought she was dealing with at any given moment, whether she was battling herself or the memory of her brother or this anonymous presence that’s a threat. ... It’s like, ‘ Is she just making it up? Is she talking to herself ?’ If you go through this insane loss and trauma, it’s a catalyst for stuff that you never really had before.” Shopper’s release caps off a momentous year for the indemand actress, who recently worked with Woody Allen ( Café Society) and Ang Lee ( Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk). In January, her directoria­l debut, a short film titled Come Swim, premiered at Sundance Film Festival, and she hosted

Saturday Night Live for the first time last month.

“This year has felt so good,” Stewart says. “I had been avoiding the idea of doing SNL for years because it felt so intimidati­ng and I didn’t think it was necessaril­y in my realm. But I couldn’t avoid it anymore because I couldn’t think of a good reason not to, other than just being a wuss.”

The unassuming star delivered one of the most memorable monologues of the season, even if her jabs at President Trump were overshadow­ed when she dropped the F- bomb.

“It was funny, because I got through every single dress rehearsal without ( swearing),” Stewart remembers. “Before we actually went live, every single person was like, ‘ You’re going to do great, it’ll be over in an hour, and please, please, please don’t say ( the F- word).’ I was like, ‘ I won’t, trust me, there’s no way.’

“And, of course, ( I did) in the first five minutes.”

 ?? WILL HEATH, NBC CAROLE BETHUEL, IFC FILMS CAROLE BETHUEL, IFC FILMS ??
WILL HEATH, NBC CAROLE BETHUEL, IFC FILMS CAROLE BETHUEL, IFC FILMS
 ??  ?? Maureen ( Kristen Stewart) grieves for her twin brother in Olivier Assayas’ ghost story Personal Shopper.
Maureen ( Kristen Stewart) grieves for her twin brother in Olivier Assayas’ ghost story Personal Shopper.
 ??  ?? Maureen, who works as a highfashio­n buyer, becomes increasing­ly obsessed with the messages she’s receiving.
Maureen, who works as a highfashio­n buyer, becomes increasing­ly obsessed with the messages she’s receiving.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States