Houston Chronicle Sunday

Bening explores motherhood, mood swings in ‘20th Century Women’

- By Steven Rea

“Sometimes I have an almost involuntar­y, intuitive reaction about a character — a light goes off in my head,” said Annette Bening, confessing that she didn’t have that response when she first read Mike Mills’ script for “20th Century Women,” which opened Friday.

Here was Dorothea Fields, a single mother who runs a makeshift boardingho­use in Santa Barbara, Calif., who sits each morning with her teenage son to pore over her stock investment­s, who smokes like a chimney and has a rueful view of the world — the world as it looked in 1979. As Bening considered what to make of the character, how to play Dorothea, nothing at first “popped out.”

“I loved the screenplay,” the actress said, on the phone from New York recently. “I grew up in California, so, for me, this was a story about where I grew up, when I grew up. And that kind of blew my mind, quite frankly, and I just looked at it through that prism. But this woman, Dorothea, I didn’t really know who she was. I found her very enigmatic.”

Not to worry. Audiences may find Bening’s portrayal of the bohemian mom, who listens to old jazz songs and dreams of piloting a biplane — and who recruits two younger women, played by Elle Fanning and Greta Gerwig, to help guide her child through the messy terrain of adolescenc­e — a bit of a puzzle. But it’s the kind of puzzle, with pieces drawn from real life, that forms a blazing, fully realized character, full of contradict­ions, passion, heartache.

And just as writer and director Mills modeled the role of the father in his 2010 film, “Beginners,” on his own dad (Christophe­r Plummer played the part and won an Oscar for his efforts), Dorothea in “20th Century Women” was very much based on Mills’ late mother.

“The more I talked with Mike about his mother, the more intrigued I became,” Bening said. “I would hear lots and lots and lots about his mom. And I spoke to his sister, who is an astrologi- cal reader — and I am a Gemini, and their real-life mom was a Gemini — and she did this reading, which was hilarious.”

Bening is 58 now — just about the age Dorothea is in Mills’ movie. The relationsh­ip between mother and son Jamie (finely played by newcomer Lucas Jade Zumann), is a tangle of parent/child dynamics. Sometimes Dorothea doesn’t know how to react to her son’s behavior, his moods, his immersion in feminist texts, say. Sometimes they hit it off brilliantl­y.

Here’s one kernel of wisdom Dorothea imparts to Jamie: “I just think that having your heart broken is a tremendous way to learn about the world.”

“I love that line,” said Bening, who has raised four kids with her husband of 24 years, some guy named Warren Beatty. “And, of course, it’s true. None of us want to have to say that to our children — but we have to.”

For her tenacious and downright beautiful performanc­e in “20th Century Women,” Bening was nominated for a best-actress Golden Globe (Emma Stone won, for “La La Land”), a Gotham Award and an Independen­t Spirit Award. Be very surprised if she doesn’t likewise nab a best-actress nomination when the 2017 Academy Award contenders are announced Tuesday.

In November, Bening was the subject of an American Film Institute tribute. She sat onstage (interviewe­d by “The Kids Are All Right” director Lisa Cholodenko) and reflected on her career. They showed clips. They showed “20th Century Women.”

“One of the good things is that the further away you get from the movies you made, fewer memories pop into your head,” Bening said, laughing. “When you’re watching yourself in movies, you’re always thinking about all the other things that were going on while you’re making the movie, that have nothing to do with the movie, that nobody else would ever think about when they were watching the movie.

“But when enough time passes by, you just can’t remember what was going on, so you begin to see the movie a little bit more how other people see it.”

 ?? Chad Batka / New York Times ?? Annette Bening plays the free-spirited Dorothea in “20th Century Women.”
Chad Batka / New York Times Annette Bening plays the free-spirited Dorothea in “20th Century Women.”

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