Chicago Sun-Times

At 87, Lois Smith is primed for her first Oscar moment

- Andrea Mandell

BEVERLY HILLS – Will Lois Smith’s most futuristic role to date send her to the Oscars?

It’s certainly her year. The renowned actress, 87, has served up two audacious film performanc­es: this summer’s critical hit Marjorie

Prime ( available on demand and digital platforms now, streaming Monday on Amazon Prime) and the stunningly reviewed Lady Bird, a coming- of- age tale now in theaters. Smith steals the screen in Lady

Bird, playing a charismati­c nun at a Catholic school attended by insolent teen SaoirseRon­an. “When they first called, one of my agents read it and said, ‘ I was afraid it was going to be an awful nun, but it’s not! It’s a nice nun!’ ” she laughs.

But it’s Marjorie Prime that could earn the Broadway, film and TV star a best- supporting actress Oscar nod. If she won, she’d be the oldest actor in history to take the trophy. ( Christophe­r Plummer holds the record for his Beginners win in 2012 at age 82.)

In the thoughtful futuristic drama, Smith plays Marjorie, a onetime violinist who lives with her skeptical daughter Tess ( Geena Davis) and Tess’ doting husband, Jon ( Tim Robbins). Together, the trio explore a new technology called “primes,” which grapples with the process of grief via “smart” holograms of the deceased. The hologram they conjure is Marjorie’s late husband, Walter, played by Jon Hamm. ( The widow, who suffers from dementia, chooses to remember her husband in his, er, prime.)

“It’s true that she’s failing in some ways and forgetful,” says Smith, who originated the role of Marjorie in stage production­s in Los Angeles and off Broadway. But “she’s interested in this thing. She’s able to partake of it both as a curiosity and as an aid. And as she declines, she’s willing to lean more on it.”

The prime grows smarter asMarjorie engages with it, in the spirit of Apple’s Siri or Amazon’s Alexa. But this is nuanced A. I.: The suave“Walter” apologizes when he says something atypical of the real Walter. “I’ll remember that,” he’ll say, nodding.

Ultimately, Marjorie is destined to play a “prime” of herself, for Tess.

With a career spanning six decades ( her first film was 1955’ s East of Eden with JamesDean), Smith is juggling no less than three plays on or off Broadway in the next year.

“Lois Smith is one ofmy very favorite actors of all time,” Lady Bird writer/ director Greta Gerwig says.

When asked about the current state of sexual harassment allegation­s in Hollywood, Smith says she can’t recall any incidents during her storied career. But she does remember a manager whowould grab at her in the back room of the deli where she worked at as a teen “and snuggle up and see if he could kiss me,” she says. “I just tried to put him off, that was all. It wasn’t particular­ly scary. I didn’t really feel like I was in danger. But you try to avoid it.”

In today’s climate, “I think it’swonderful that people are being saved from harassment, fromviolat­ion,” she says.

 ?? DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS/ GETTY IMAGES FOR IFP ?? Smith’s first film was 1955’ s “East of Eden” with James Dean.
DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS/ GETTY IMAGES FOR IFP Smith’s first film was 1955’ s “East of Eden” with James Dean.

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