Los Angeles Times

NOW A PART OF FILM HISTORY

Andra Day, Maria Bakalova, Vanessa Kirby and Amanda Seyfried, who will forever have ‘Academy Award nominee’ on their acting résumés, adjust to a new life of job offers and advice.

- BY RANDEE DAWN

Four first-timers talk about their acting nomination­s.

EARNING AN Academy Award nomination is always a big deal. Yet on the morning they were announced in March this year, Amanda Seyfried — who earned her first ever nod for “Mank” — was far from glued to the TV set.

“I was absolutely sleeping,” says Seyfried, who adds that she’d agreed to let her mom wake her with any good news when this year’s nomination­s were announced. And she’s not alone — first-timer Andra Day (“The United States vs. Billie Holiday”) was also zonked out when the nomination­s were read. Meanwhile, fellow first-timers Vanessa Kirby (“Pieces of a Woman”) and Maria Bakalova (“Borat Subsequent Moviefilm”) were busily filming their next projects and had to learn the news from coworkers.

Once awake and not actively shooting, all four of these newbie nominees began struggling to absorb the careershif­ting news. After all, henceforth they will all be known at the very least as Academy Award nominees. But the ways in which they’ve reacted seem to correlate with their ages. Although each has a different level of experience in the industry — “Borat” is Bakalova’s first Hollywood feature; “Holiday” is Day’s first starring feature role — being in your 30s, apparently, makes an industry accolade like this resonate differentl­y.

“I was a pretty arrogant son of a bitch in my 20s,” laughs Day, 36. “I don’t know if it would have been good to give that person an Oscar nomination. It’s like God or the universe waited until I was older.”

Seyfried, 35, who’s been a model and actor since her teens, admits it would have been hard to balance the weight of an Academy Award nomination if she’d been 10 years younger. “It would have absolutely felt more like a joke and not earned,” she says. “I’ve always been really insecure, and that insecurity has dissipated as I’ve gotten older. If it had happened in my 20s, I would have been gracious about it — but I don’t know if I would have been able to accept it for what it is.”

There’s some sense to that: Increasing age generally confers a greater level of comfort in one’s own skin and the ability to understand seismic shifts in the grand scheme of an individual life. But it still can be shocking: Kirby remembers crying after learning the news. “It was really surreal,” she says.

Imagine someone like Meryl Streep, Kirby suggests, who has been nominated 21 times (and has three Oscars). “I can’t imagine what it’s like to have it happen several times,” she says. “I still haven’t gotten my head around it.”

But there is a 20-something in the bunch, and at 24, Bakalova believes age isn’t a factor at all. “I’m not sure it would be different for me [if I’d received the nomination when I was older],” she says. “I’ve been working for half of my life. The view with me is it doesn’t matter that I’m 24; my whole life I’ve been doing the same thing. I’m not educated in anything else. When you’re passionate about something, there’s no difference in ages.”

Age aside, receiving a nomination tends to boost name recognitio­n, which often leads to more prime roles — and plenty of advice from all corners.

“There already has been some cool things coming in,” says Day. “And, yeah, definitely advice — warranted and unwarrante­d. I appreciate all of it.”

But, she notes, there’s one more bonus: She feels more confident in her abilities as an actor. “It affirms things for me,” she says. “If you pray extremely hard and work extremely hard and are willing to sacrifice for the people you work for, trust your director and your cast, that gives me confidence, in my God and my process.”

Not so much so for Seyfried, though. “That’s the beautiful thing about where I’m at in my life,” she says. “It didn’t make me feel more confident. I’d already reached a place in my life where I measure success by how I feel as a parent. It didn’t change how I feel about my skill set, which is good. Because if things now go the other way and I have a box office bomb, it won’t matter.”

Bakalova sees it pretty much the way Day does — as an affirmatio­n that she’s on the right path. “You have to invest the same amount of heart and energy in different projects,” she says. “I’m a perfection­ist and a workaholic, so I’m going to bring the most unique performanc­es to my producers and director.”

And, she adds, she’s ready to take on whatever great, juicy roles are now going to come down the road. “I’ve had a lot of meetings with people I’ve been admiring my whole life, and I want to work as much as possible,” she says. “I’m in my 20s. I don’t need a lot of sleep. I’m energetic, so this is where I develop my career. I’m going to grab the moment and take the risk.”

 ?? For The Times ?? Matthew Lloyd
OFFERING a range of genres and performanc­es are Oscar nomination newbies, clockwise from far left, Seyfried, Kirby, Day and Bakalova.
For The Times Matthew Lloyd OFFERING a range of genres and performanc­es are Oscar nomination newbies, clockwise from far left, Seyfried, Kirby, Day and Bakalova.
 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? Christina House
Los Angeles Times Christina House
 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? Jay L. Clendenin
Los Angeles Times Jay L. Clendenin
 ?? For The Times ?? Michael Nagle
For The Times Michael Nagle

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