Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Jennifer Aniston might just have her ‘Cake’ and eat it

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LOS ANGELES: Yes, Jennifer Aniston would like to thank the academy. But it won’t be this year.

At long last, many critics saw Aniston fulfil potential first revealed in 2002’s art-house hit The Good Girl in an even darker, more daring role in the drama Cake, in which she plays a drugaddict in chronic physical and emotional pain. That performanc­e earned the Friends star Golden Globe and Critics’ Choice nomination­s, and this weekend Aniston’s performanc­e is also up for a Screen Actors Guild award.

But the motion picture academy passed her by when it announced its nomination­s last week. On the day after failing to receive the Oscar nomination, the 45-year-old was promoting Cake while sitting just centimetre­s away from a poster touting her “Oscar-worthy performanc­e”.

“Well, there’s ‘ Oscar-worthy’,” the actress said, with a grin. “The truth is, this movie hasn’t even come out yet,” she continued. “I feel so lucky that any of that has even happened on a movie that we started shooting not even a year ago. We started (on) April 3 of last year. I couldn’t ask for more than that.”

But she has got at least a little bit more: the Golden Raspberry Foundation, best known for its loving slams of bad cinema with The Razzies, revealed a softer side last week when it announced a new category, the Razzie Redeemer Award, honouring former Razzie regulars who now are doing work worth applauding.

Aniston is a Redeemer Award nominee, thanks to her work in Cake.

“That’s so nice,” she said, sincerely. “You get a Nice Razzie.”

While never a winner, Aniston is a four-time Razzie nominee, primarily for roles in her string of generally poorly reviewed, but often commercial­ly successful, romantic comedies.

Given how the rom-coms overwhelm her filmograph­y, Aniston said she was surprised when Cake director Daniel Barnz asked her to read for the emotionall­y complex role of Claire Simmons.

“You start to lose trust in yourself that you can do something such as that,” Aniston explained. “So you actually start to say, ‘Does the industry actually know something that I don’t know? Can I do this?’”

Aniston gets to give at least one acceptance speech for her performanc­e in Cake. Just a week after Sunday’s SAG Awards, the actress will head some 145km north of Hollywood to accept the Santa Barbara Internatio­nal Film Festival’s Montecito Award.

“It’s been 25 years that I’ve been lucky enough to make a living doing what I love to do,” Aniston said. “So, to keep having surprises and to keep surprising myself is so exciting. And I just want to do more of that.” – Sapa-AP RAZZIE REDEEMER: Jennifer Aniston’s received praise.

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