The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Oscar-winner offered job in supermarke­t

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VENICE: Hollywood star Frances McDormand said Friday she was offered a job in a supermarke­t as she was making her latest film.

“Nomadland”, which is premiering both at the Venice and Toronto film festivals, is set among the growing tribe of impoverish­ed elderly van dwellers who wander the West, clinging onto the last threads of the American Dream.

The double Oscar-winner plays a widow who is forced to take to the road after a mine closes, wiping her tiny community from the map.

McDormand said she was “offered employment” while she was walking around a Target store during the shoot.

“I was given a form to fill out if I wanted employment,” she said.

The actress, who won Oscars for her performanc­es in both “Fargo” and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”, said she was chuffed.

“So I went back to Chloe (Zhao, the director), and said, ‘It’s working.’”

Her character subsists on low-paid jobs to fund her life of the open road, and discovers a community of similar souls who help each other make the best of things.

Critics gave the film a lengthy ovation at its Venice premiere, with loud applause for McDormand when her credit appeared.

McDormand’s eyes well up as she described her relationsh­ip with the van dwellers she met, many of whom play themselves in the movie, including

Bob Wells, the 64-year-old whose YouTube channel CheapRVLiv­ing has nearly half a million followers. “Each individual who goes on the road has to be self-reliant,” she said, “but they do gather for Rubber Tyre Rendezvous because they need community for knowledge. I guess you would call it a socialist situation, where it’s all for one and one for all.”

“The choice of van they use for their mobile lives “has a lot to do with the economic disparitie­s in our country,” McDormand told AFP by Zoom.

“But Chloe is not trying to make a political statement. Instead we are leading you to a community which is making very difficult decisions for themselves and she is telling their story.”

Beyond increased evictions, the Covid-19 pandemic is also drawing many people to the road, she said, “because of being locked in and locked down”.

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