Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Why Rosamund Pike fought so hard for ‘Private War’ role

- By Emily Zemler

While prepping to shoot the Civil Warera “Hostiles,” Rosamund Pike heard that award-winning documentar­y filmmaker Matthew Heineman was taking on a biopic of American war correspond­ent Marie Colvin. The project, based on the Vanity Fair article “Marie Colvin’s Private War,” struck Pike immediatel­y. “All I was thinking was, ‘How can I meet Matt Heineman?’” the actress says. “And it was another eight months until I met him.”

The pair finally connected at a screening of Heineman’s documentar­y “City of Ghosts” in Los Angeles and discussed the potential film over breakfast the next day. Pike was adamant that she should portray Colvin, who died while reporting from Syria in 2012.

“People say, ‘Oh, did you fight for this role?’ and I suppose I did,” the English actress recounts in a suite at the Corinthia Hotel in London. “But I didn’t fight with anybody else. I have no idea if anybody else wanted it or anybody else met on it. I just fought in terms of the fact that I had passion and conviction and I wanted him to hear it.”

“A Private War” stars Pike as Colvin and Jamie Dornan as photograph­er Paul Conroy. It is told both through Colvin’s experience­s in the field — in war zones in Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n — and back home in London, where she worked for the Sunday Times. It’s Heineman’s first feature film, and in many ways he treated it like a documentar­y. It was that aspect that initially drew Pike in, as well as her immediate love for Colvin.

“When Matt came on I thought, ‘Oh gosh, this is going to penetrate into the soul of this person,’” Pike remembers. “Because that’s what he does with his docs. He makes us surprised. He lingers on people. He’s never afraid of an uncomforta­ble silence. And he’ll let you see. I thought, ‘Well, of course, he’d rather be making a documentar­y about Marie.’ He would have adored her.” She pauses. “I suppose, in some ways, my performanc­e is an apology for not being her. It’s an apology for it not being a documentar­y.”

“I think Ros kind of cast herself,” Heineman says. “I really wanted someone who was going to get their hands dirty, who was going to dig into this role and research it in the same way that I wanted to dig in and research it. I feel like she went after this role as if — I almost felt like it was Marie going after an article.”

Pike dove into the research headfirst, reading everything she could by and about Colvin, and watching and rewatching hours of footage. She didn’t have access to Colvin’s diaries but spoke with many of her friends and family members. She committed early on to losing all vanity, taking on a gruff American accent, donning three different wigs and Colvin’s signature eye patch, which the reporter wore after being injured during the Sri Lankan civil war. “It’s a process of becoming,” Pike says. “I took her into my body. There was a way I stood. I think if I start doing her voice, everything comes together now.”

Pike feels a kinship with Colvin, someone who saw the darkness and still remembered the light.

“I’ve understood war in a profoundly different way than I’ve ever understood it before,” the actress says. “Modern warfare is a very, very scary place to be. There are images I’ve now seen I will never, ever forget. That I will never be able to un-see. That’s a tiny fraction of what Marie would have been exposed to. But Marie was amazing. She was such a romantic, she was such an optimist. She saw all that and she remained such an optimist, in such a lovely way.”

 ?? JOEL C. RYAN/INVISION ?? Rosamund Pike plays Marie Colvin in “Private War.”
JOEL C. RYAN/INVISION Rosamund Pike plays Marie Colvin in “Private War.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States