USA TODAY International Edition

Busy Ricci returns with confidence of her youth

- Brian Truitt

There’s a bit of a Ricci- sance upon us, and Christina Ricci’s feeling pretty good about it.

She was a child star who began her career in 1990’ s “Mermaids” and became a household name with the “Addams Family” franchise, “Sleepy Hollow” and other films. At 42, she’s now garnering Emmy talk for her fan- favorite role in Showtime’s hit “Yellowjack­ets” and embracing the confidence of “the pure person I was when I was younger,” Ricci says.

“Sometimes through your life, you diverge from who you are and try to change and adapt or try to be what you think you need to be and all these things. I definitely went on that journey and came back around and now I feel more like the person I was at 11 or 12, which is not a bad thing for me.”

In her new 1950s- set horror film “Monstrous” ( in theaters and on demand), Ricci plays a single mom who flees with her 7- year- old son from an abusive ex but is haunted by a spooky creature at their new lake- house sanctuary. The actress, who appeared in last year’s “The Matrix Resurrecti­ons,” also has a role later this year in Tim Burton’s “Wednesday” series for Netflix, which stars Jenna Ortega as a teenage version of Ricci’s iconic character. “I can only say that I do not play Wednesday,” she quips.

By end of summer, she hopes to be back filming the second season of “Yellowjack­ets.” In the psychologi­cal survival drama told over two timelines, Samantha Hanratty plays teenage Misty Quigley, the nerdy equipment manager for a girls soccer team that crash- lands in the wilderness, and Ricci is the grown- up Misty 25 years later “born of decades of rejection and learning to gain power.”

Ricci talks with USA TODAY about her “Yellowjack­ets” role, working with kids and her cool vintage ride:

Question: There’s a lot of retro flavor in “Monstrous,” including a classic 1950s Chevrolet your character owns. Did they actually let you drive it?

Christina Ricci: Everyone was really concerned that I wouldn’t be able to drive it. But I did, no problem. Those older cars are just a lot looser in terms of steering and braking and all of those things. I drove it out in the desert. It’s pretty fun.

Q: When you’re interactin­g with your onscreen “Monstrous” son or younger “Yellowjack­ets” castmates, do you understand them better in a way because you were a child star?

Ricci: I remember being a child actor and wanting to feel like I had a place profession­ally on set, and I wasn’t necessaril­y just this visiting kid that didn’t belong there. So, I always just try to be respectful. I don’t condescend. People ask me if I give other child actors advice and the answer’s no because I just feel like it’s so much more important to just treat your co- workers, even if they’re children, with respect at all times.

Q: For ’ 90s kids, you will always be Wednesday Addams. What was it like to have a role in her Netflix reboot?

Ricci: I love that world, I love the character, and I love Tim Burton. Jenna is fabulous and her Wednesday is a really great modern take and I think people will love it. It is nice to be included in the reimaginin­g of a character that I’m so famous for playing.

Q: When you were filming the first “Yellowjack­ets” season, did you feel that Misty had potential as a breakout character?

Ricci: Not really. You’re so desperate to just make sure you get it right and do a great job, but for me, I sometimes don’t necessaril­y think about the fact that people will react to it or not. But she was always definitely the comic relief of the show. So I was aware that she would be seen in a slightly different way than the others.

Q: What’s your favorite aspect of her?

Ricci: I really enjoy playing a different sort of rage. That is what adult Misty is powered by, this deep rage at not being able to have the things that she wants in life. And she expresses it in this very passive- aggressive manner. I love passive aggressive­ness and I love seeing that as a manifestat­ion of absolute fury.

Q: Is this career resurgence by design or are you just getting better projects coming your way these days?

Ricci: Definitely “Yellowjack­ets” was better than a lot of the things that I had been working on in the past couple of years. You always want to do well, and I never stopped working. I never took like a break. I guess this sort of success is always the goal. So it is by design in terms of anyone would want this to happen. ( Laughs.) But it’s really great and gratifying that it’s sort of happening now and surprising at the same time. You keep plodding along and working and then all of a sudden you’re like, “OK! This time, it hit.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY SCREEN MEDIA ?? Christina Ricci is a mom haunted by a creature who wants her son in “Monstrous.”
PROVIDED BY SCREEN MEDIA Christina Ricci is a mom haunted by a creature who wants her son in “Monstrous.”
 ?? PROVIDED BY SHOWTIME ?? Christina Ricci plays Misty Quigley in “Yellowjack­ets.”
PROVIDED BY SHOWTIME Christina Ricci plays Misty Quigley in “Yellowjack­ets.”

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