Chicago Sun-Times

Robbie skates on solid ice in ‘ I, Tonya’

Star takes on another transforma­tive role

- Brian Truitt

While Margot Robbie may not be able to skate as well as Tonya Harding, the two women have one thing in common: young female fans.

Played by Robbie in the darkly comic biopic I, Tonya ( in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles, expanding in January), Harding navigates ups and downs in her controvers­ial figure- skating career but wears a huge smile when a girl approaches saying she wants to be a skater like her.

It reminds Robbie, 27, of a time after Suicide Squad opened last year and a friend texted her a picture of a youngster on a New York subway car reading a comic featuring Harley Quinn, Robbie’s colorful Squad anti- heroine.

“Her feet weren’t even touching the ground, she was so little,” Robbie recalls. “And ( my friend) was like: ‘ Hey, dude, look what you’re doing. You’re changing the world or something.’ ”

She may not be changing it yet, but Robbie is carving her niche with transforma­tive roles like Harley, Tonya and Queen Elizabeth I ( in Mary,

Queen of Scots, expected Nov. 2, 2018) and her LuckyChap Entertainm­ent production company ( co- founded with husband Tom Ackerley).

Not that she worries about all that when she’s wearing braces as awkward 15- year- old Tonya or weathering a breakdown at the 1994 Olympics as embattled 23- year- old Tonya. “When I’m on set, I forget the whole world’s going to see what we’re doing,” Robbie says.

The native of Australia’s Gold Coast was more apt to be surfing than skating growing up, and her training for I, Tonya “was a rude awakening,” she says. Because Harding was a face of the skating world — and a quasivilla­inous one after the infamous clubbing of rival Nancy Kerrigan’s knee — Robbie spent a lot of time on the ice. ( Stunt doubles were used for the most difficult sequences.)

“What I found addictive was to be good enough to go really fast, and when you know your body’s strong enough to sustain that speed, you feel invincible. And I wasn’t even doing triple axels,” says Robbie, who talked with Harding as part of her prep work. The former skating champion has been supportive from the start, granting the actress and filmmaker interviews and even attending the L. A. premiere.

The Oscars love when an actress takes on a real- life figure with a point of view, and Hollywood has taken notice, says IMDb’s Dave Karger. “It’s by far the best thing she’s ever done and the next step in her meteoric rise.”

 ?? NEON ?? Margot Robbie, 27, plays mercurial Olympic figure skater Tonya Harding in the darkly comic biopic.
NEON Margot Robbie, 27, plays mercurial Olympic figure skater Tonya Harding in the darkly comic biopic.

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