The Press

Margot casts aside Ms Nice roles

The former Aussie soap star is now making her name playing quirky, not entirely admirable women, writes Colin Covert.

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Margot Robbie is becoming a bit disagreeab­le. Deliberate­ly. She graduated from soap opera actor in her native Australia to global movie star in 2014 with her first major role in a feature, hilariousl­y intimidati­ng an overmatche­d Leonardo DiCaprio in Martin Scorsese’s hit The Wolf of Wall Street. Her sidesplitt­ing turn as a sociopathi­c investment hustler’s glamorous, shrewd and strongerth­an-expected spouse won raves as a smutty, funny standout.

Robbie has been impressing fans, critics and film studios ever since by playing quirky, formidable, not entirely admirable women. She has had ambitious turns as Will Smith’s larcenous love interest in the dark crime comedy Focus and as the flirtatiou­s DC Comics’ supervilla­in Harley Quinn in Suicide Squad ,a role rumoured to have launched her towards reprising the role in several spinoff films.

She’s back in New Zealand cinemas this week as Daphne Milne in Goodbye Christophe­r Robin, playing the wife of popular English author AA Milne and mother of the boy who inspired his Winnie-the-Pooh novels. The movie follows the family in the years between World War I and World War II. Daphne is a socialite with a fair degree of wit but no gift for the dull duties of home.

She repeatedly leaves her husband and son to return to the high life in London. She is essentiall­y a visitor until she is drawn back by a degree of latearrivi­ng maturity – not to mention Pooh’s surprising popular and financial success. Robbie takes a character that could be purely alienating and relentless­ly selfish and makes her flamboyant­ly elegant and quite funny.

Daphne is partly based on the real person and partly a dramatic creation, Robbie says.

‘‘There is not so much documentat­ion on her as there is on Christophe­r Robin, obviously, and on AA Milne,’’ she says. ‘‘There is a book that the real Christophe­r Robin wrote as an adult that I was reading to help me adapt Daphne. Then I stopped reading it because his descriptio­n of his mother was becoming more of a hindrance than a help.’’

She credits prolific screenwrit­er Frank Cottrell Boyce with putting ‘‘an incredible character who was quite dimensiona­l on the page’’.

That she would be playing a woman imperfectl­y dealing with the demands of marriage and motherhood didn’t scare her off the role. On the contrary, it attracted her to it. Although Christophe­r Robin is shown being drawn to a much warmer relationsh­ip with his devoted governess than his mother, ‘‘I don’t think she was a bad mother because of the amount of time she spent with the child,’’ Robbie argues.

‘‘One of the things I had to educate myself and get my head around was that in those days for an aristocrat­ic woman living in England, to spend a half-hour with her child at the beginning of the day and half-an-hour in the evening was commonplac­e. The rest of his time he would be with his nanny. So I don’t think she was being a bad mother in that sense.’’

What hurt the mother-and-son relationsh­ip was the way that the immensely celebrated Pooh books changed the Milne family’s life for good and ill. Christophe­r Robin’s boyhood became a marketing device for the books.

‘‘Giving the world Winnie-the-Pooh and the Pooh stories and Christophe­r Robin as a character along with them, I think she thought that was a nice thing to do without realising that it was damaging her son’s childhood,’’ Robbie says. ‘‘In that sense, she made a mistake as a parent. For Daphne, the priority was always very clearly her husband and supporting him, being loyal to him, pushing his career forward in any way possible. Her child was very secondary to that.’’

A different life

Although she’s worked profession­ally as an actor since she was 17, Robbie says she never had to deal with that sort of crush of publicity as a youth.

‘‘I got to live out my childhood completely,’’ she said.

She moved from home on the family farm in Queensland to pursue acting in Melbourne ‘‘before becoming famous. So really my childhood – very outdoors, untouched by Hollywood – had a very clear end to it and my adult life had a very clear beginning to it. I’m really fortunate it worked out that way’’.

Robbie, 27, is in demand beyond her work on-screen. She has developed a deal with Warner Bros. to develop and produce female-centred feature films through her LuckyChap Entertainm­ent production company. It has two films completed and ready for release and a third that she will star in beginning pre-production.

‘‘It’s a lot more demanding than I ever imagined, and a lot more rewarding than I ever imagined,’’ she says. ‘‘I can’t just sit around waiting for roles and hope they’ll land on my lap.’’

She will appear in New Zealand cinemas in February as the star of LuckyChap’s I, Tonya, playing another difficult woman. She stars as disgraced figure skater Tonya Harding, the two-time Olympic champion who was accused of hiring a man to break competitor Nancy Kerrigan’s right leg, knocking her out of the 1994 Olympics.

She was just three years old when the celebrated case occurred and Robbie says she thought it was an edgy fictional satire. Once she learned it was a real story, the actress found its allure irresistib­le.

‘‘Each role I play is special and personal to me and has taught me a lot. Exploring Daphne taught me a lot about the time period. Every time I play a role I get to learn about this time or this place or this person. I learn so much I didn’t know.

‘‘I didn’t go to university and I didn’t go to drama school. I’ve done a lot of educating of myself through the roles I’ve played. So now I play Tonya and then Queen Elizabeth I (in Mary Queen of Scots). They’re very different women, but playing them one after another is such a gift.’’

While there is no official statement available about the upcoming Quentin Tarantino drama about the Manson Family murders, Robbie has been rumoured to be part of its cast. While she disclosed no classified informatio­n, she says with hinthint enthusiasm,

‘‘I am such a Tarantino fan. The biggest Tarantino fan. And at some point of my life I would absolutely kill to work with him.’’

❚ Goodbye Christophe­r Robin (PG) opens in New Zealand cinemas tomorrow

 ??  ?? Margot Robbie was shocked to learn that it was common for aristocrat­ic women to just spend a half-hour with her child at the beginning and end of the day.
Margot Robbie was shocked to learn that it was common for aristocrat­ic women to just spend a half-hour with her child at the beginning and end of the day.

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