Los Angeles Times

KEYS TO BEING ‘JACKIE’

- By Glenn Whipp glenn.whipp@latimes.com

Natalie Portman had to get into the historic role fast.

Filmmaker Darren Aronofsky first asked Natalie Portman if she’d be interested in playing Jackie Kennedy in 2012. Portman liked Noah Oppenheim’s screenplay, but told Aronofsky her decision would depend on finding the right director. (Aronofsky, who directed Portman to an Oscar with “Black Swan,” was, by that point, on board solely as a producer.)

Flash forward almost four years: Aronofsky had persuaded Chilean director Pablo Larraín to make the movie and, liking his unconventi­onal approach to the film’s story of Kennedy’s life in the days following her husband’s assassinat­ion, Portman agreed to star.

The catch: Time was tight, leaving Portman just one month to prepare.

How do you wrap your head around playing one of the 20th century’s most iconic women, particular­ly when you’ve never considered portraying real people as part of your skill set? We sat down with Portman not long ago and identified her four-step plan.

1. Get her voice in your head

Just as JFK had a distinct r-dropping and sometimes r-adding (you get the

idear) Boston accent, Jackie Kennedy had her own breathy, mid-Atlantic thing, a dialect that Portman describes as a mix between high-class finishing school and 20th century Long Island girl. There’s a gently descending lilt and an unmistakab­le encoding of social status.

Portman grew up on Long Island, so that aspect of Jackie-speak came easily. “But I could still use some finishing,” she jokes, talking about Kennedy’s privatesch­ool presentati­on. So Portman watched every clip of Kennedy she could find on YouTube, listened to tapes of her interviews with historian Arthur Schlesinge­r and hunkered down with dialect coach Tanya Blumstein, rehearsing the first lady’s televised 1962 White House tour so many times that she could say it in her sleep. (That tour figures prominentl­y in the film.)

But even though the clock was ticking, Portman, mother to a 5-year-old son and expecting her second child with her husband, choreograp­her Benjamin Millepied, drew the line at maintainin­g the accent during off hours.

“It’s confusing to me when people are like, ‘I just stay in character all the time,’ ” she says. “I can’t get away with that with my family. They’d just laugh at me.”

2. Wig out

Kennedy’s beautiful bouffant is instantly recognizab­le. Portman doesn’t particular­ly resemble Kennedy, but when she put on the wig, she felt an “instant, almost magical transforma­tion.”

“Any brunet who would put that wig on would resemble her more,” she says. “For me, it was always scary to think I could even convince anyone that I’m someone they know so well. But with that wig, as soon as I looked in the mirror, I had more confidence.”

3. Try on the “suit that is its own character”

When Portman put on the pink suit Kennedy wore the day of the assassinat­ion, she said it was almost like “having a sense of foreboding music in a scene that tells you what’s going to happen.”

“When I put it on, I went ‘uh-oh’ and my heart dropped,” she says.

“Jackie” shifts back and forth in time, primarily focusing on the days immediatel­y following JFK’s death as Kennedy plans his funeral and attempts to shape her husband’s legacy. Costume designer Madeline Fontaine re-created numerous dresses that Kennedy wore, including her mourning outfits and the red, two-piece day dress she wore in the 1962 White House tour. But it was the pink suit, soon stained with her husband’s blood, that became the crucial piece of clothing for Portman. Kennedy refused to change out of the outfit, saying, “I want them to see what they have done to Jack.”

Says Portman: “On the one hand, you think, ‘Oh my God, why don’t you just take it off?’ It has to be such a morbid and dirty feeling to be covered in the blood of someone you loved who just died next to you. And she, of course, has this understand­ing already that her private trauma is also a public trauma and part of the images that will be coming out that are going to tell the story, the horror of what just happened. It’s this interestin­g combinatio­n of someone stuck in their own sorrow but also simultaneo­usly creating an image for the world.”

4. Contemplat­e the “mask of grief”

Portman read every Kennedy biography, but simply looking at images of her face at her husband’s funeral procession really gave her an understand­ing of the singular kind of mourning she experience­d.

“I could just look at those photos and it would put me in the place,” Portman says. “It’s unimaginab­le what she went through because it was so public, so violent and so unexpected — and so traumatic, personally. I think we forget that, how terrifying it must have been to have happened right next to you.

“We’ve seen the photos and the footage of all this so many times, but I hope the movie makes you consider it in a more personal way,” Portman continues. “It still feels very upsetting — and it should.”

‘It’s unimaginab­le what she went through because it was so public, so violent and so unexpected — and so traumatic, personally.’ — NATALIE PORTMAN, on her character in ‘Jackie’

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 ?? Liz O. Baylen Los Angeles Times ?? NATALIE Portman plays Jacqueline Kennedy in “Jackie,” focusing on the first lady at the time of JFK’s assassinat­ion.
Liz O. Baylen Los Angeles Times NATALIE Portman plays Jacqueline Kennedy in “Jackie,” focusing on the first lady at the time of JFK’s assassinat­ion.
 ?? Stephanie Branchu 20th Century Fox ??
Stephanie Branchu 20th Century Fox

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