Orlando Sentinel

In ‘Cyrano,’ Bennett’s Roxanne an ‘outsider in an insider’s body’

- By Michael Ordoña

Edmond Rostand’s “Cyrano de Bergerac” is a classic outsider tale. Cyrano is brilliant, a poet, a romantic and the greatest swordsman anyone knows — yet because of his abnormally large proboscis, he’s the subject of ridicule (when out of earshot; who would dare insult him in front of his nose?). And he’s doomed to loneliness: He believes the woman he deeply loves, a beauty who fits right in with society, Roxanne, could never love him. Though the two are close friends, and one would think by now he would have come to realize she is at least mildly sapiosexua­l, she seems too perfect, too much a part of the structure that would never accept him, for them to happen.

The actor playing the role of Roxanne in “Cyrano” — Joe Wright’s new film of the stage musical version by Erica Schmidt in theaters on Feb. 25 — has a different view.

“I saw Roxanne as an outsider in an insider’s body,” says Haley Bennett. “She exists in a world of conformist­s and smallminde­d people. That’s expressed in the world created around her. She and Cyrano are cut from the same cloth and both color outside the lines. They’re not afraid to be different, and that’s why they’re friends. That’s expressed in the chaos she brings into every scene she’s in, her manner of dress. She has the same DNA as previous Roxannes, but I feel she’s a bit more chaotic and human and messy.”

Bennett was already an establishe­d film performer (“Music and Lyrics,” “The Equalizer,” “The Magnificen­t Seven”) in her late 20s when she decided she wanted to try her hand at theater. Her agent sent her to a weeklong workshop of Schmidt’s musical, which featured songs by the band the National and starred Schmidt’s husband, the multiple-Emmy-winning Peter Dinklage. Never having been in such a situation, Bennett was blown away.

“It felt so safe and creative; it was a chance to be bold without any consequenc­es,” says Bennett, who marveled at the joys of rehearsal, both on stage and in Wright’s film. She calls her yearslong associatio­n with the role on stage and screen her version of “theater school.” “I fell in love with the material and everyone there.”

It was a no-brainer when Schmidt invited her to join the fully mounted production. The main problem: Roxanne was a heavy singing role, and Bennett had “no musical background at all! I sang a bit in ‘Music and Lyrics,’ but they were fluffy pop songs,” she says, laughing. The “Cyrano” songs are unquestion­ably more demanding than that, and they were sung live during filming.

“I worked with an incredible music teacher named Mary Hammond,” the former head of musical theater at London’s Royal Academy of Music. “I learned so much. What she teaches her students is how to tell a story with a song, rather than just sing it beautifull­y. That made me love doing the musical, rather than being afraid of it.”

The National’s song score is often characteri­zed by an intimacy Bennett says the medium of cinema allows.

“On stage, you’re singing out to the house, and you can lose that intimate feeling, making sure everyone in the back hears you. It was nice to reel that in. It’s not what you might hear on the radio, but the audience will experience the nuance and the emotion of the actors. I think that’s what sets this musical apart; it’s a heartbreak­ing quality. It’s what I love about the National’s music. You feel like you’re beside the performer, rather than behind a glass.”

 ?? JOEL C RYAN/INVISION ?? Actor Haley Bennett, who plays Roxanne, is seen at the Dec. 7 premiere of “Cyrano” in London.
JOEL C RYAN/INVISION Actor Haley Bennett, who plays Roxanne, is seen at the Dec. 7 premiere of “Cyrano” in London.

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