Los Angeles Times

As smart, strong as Hardy heroine

- By Susan King susan.king@latimes.com

British actress Carey Mulligan was anxious when she played F. Scott Fitzgerald’s American heroine Daisy Buchanan in Baz Luhrmann’s 2013 adaptation of “The Great Gatsby.”

The 1925 novel, she said, was the “most read, loved book in America.”

“Daisy is described in such adoring terms. I found that really intimidati­ng, because I had always played normal women and normal girls,” she added. “Of course, everyone who ever read that book knows exactly how they see Daisy in their own minds.”

She felt the same way with her latest role, portraying yet another celebrated literary female protagonis­t, the strongwill­ed, independen­t and willful Bathsheba Everdene for Danish director Thomas Vinterberg’s “Far From the Madding Crowd,” based on Thomas Hardy’s 1874 novel.

“You can’t dive into every single person’s imaginatio­n and pick out the qualities they see in the character,” Mulligan said by phone from New York, where she’s starring in the Broadway revival of David Hare’s “Skylight.” As an actress, the 29year-old noted, “you have to go by your instincts,” no matter how well known the character is.

In the romantic drama shot in England’s picturesqu­e West Country, often referred to as “Hardy country,” Bathsheba is a young woman without means whose life and fortunes change when she inherits her uncle’s farm. The fearless Bathsheba is determined to run the property, much to the shock of the local male farmers.

(“Hunger Games” author Suzanne Collins was inspired to name her resourcefu­l Katniss Everdeen after the self-assured Hardy heroine.)

Bathsheba is also pursued by three very different suitors — the loyal, handsome shepherd Gabriel Oak (Matthias Schoenaert­s); the wealthy older neighbor William Boldwood (Michael Sheen), who becomes obsessed with her; and the magnetic and reckless army sergeant Frank Troy (Tom Sturridge).

The Oscar-nominated actress (“An Education”) didn’t watch John Schlesinge­r’s 1967 film adaptation of “Far From the Madding Crowd,” starring Julie Christie as Bathsheba, preferring to use the book as her guide to the story.

“I loved the character,” she said. “What I loved so much was the first thing she does in the book is refuse an offer of marriage. I found that so refreshing. So often so many of these period dramas are about women trying to find men to fix their problems and sort of start their lives.”

Bathsheba’s early feminist leanings weren’t the only unusual aspect of the story Mulligan admired. “I mostly associate costume dramas with people standing in stiff corsets in dark mahogany rooms and talking in low voices. This was going to be about people really living in the land and riding around on horses and facing real problems,” she said of the film, which opens Friday .

Vinterberg (“The Hunt”), who had seen most of Mulligan’s previous work, thought from the outset that “she was the right person for the part.”

“She was the perfect combinatio­n of being very vulnerable and yet very strong and smart,” he added. “I thought she could capture this very independen­t spirit, because it is somehow part of herself.”

Mulligan, he noted, also had “faith in my work.”

“She is a woman who read the book many, many times — more times than I had — and sort of carried it with her as a kind of witness to everything we did,” he said.

 ?? Jennifer S. Altman For The Times ?? CAREY MULLIGAN loved playing the willful Bathsheba Everdene in “Far From the Madding Crowd.”
Jennifer S. Altman For The Times CAREY MULLIGAN loved playing the willful Bathsheba Everdene in “Far From the Madding Crowd.”

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