The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

THE LITTLE SHELL THAT COULD

Everything Everywhere

- — HILTON DRESDEN

Marcel the Shell With Shoes On co-creator and star Jenny Slate reflects on the film’s Oscar nom for best animated feature, its Annie Awards honors and being part of the SAG-nominated ensemble

Marcel the Shell With Shoes On’s

Oscar nomination for best animated feature was no easy feat: The poignant feature adaptation of the 2010 viral video almost didn’t qualify in the category because of its blend of stop-motion animation and live-action filmmaking, but award classifica­tions were far from the minds of the creatives, according to co-writer and lead voice talent Jenny Slate. “The making of the actual film is, and should be, very separate from the aim of qualifying for or getting nominated for an award,” she says. “For Dean [Fleischer Camp, co-writer and director], Nick [Paley, co-writer], Kirsten [Lepore, animation director], Liz [Holm, co-writer] and I, and everyone we worked with, we really had this connection to a story that felt really small, but with this resounding heartbeat in it.”

Also nominated for four Annie Awards (including

two for Slate: best voice acting and best writing), Marcel tells a heart-wrenching tale of celebrity, loss, aging and family, anchored by the charmingly inquisitiv­e, often profound breathy vocal performanc­e given by Slate. “It was actually a twoperson act — [Lepore’s direction is] so responsibl­e for so much of my performanc­e, and it just feels so good to be connected in that way.”

Even if Slate didn’t make the movie with the goal of receiving awards recognitio­n, that doesn’t mean the news on Oscar morning wasn’t incredibly meaningful. “Sometimes you watch the Oscars, or you see what’s been nominated, and it just feels like it’s a big group of lions,” says Slate. “Have you ever heard about how the butterflie­s migrate? That they

go across the whole globe? I sort of feel like that, like something that has been through many transforma­tions, that is rather fragile, but has a path to follow with the migration to make during their life.” She adds: “I’m really happy. I’m very teary. I feel like how I used to feel when I was young, and it was my birthday. Sort

of that snow-day feeling. I am really emotional — it’s also bitterswee­t. I was just thinking I would have loved to call my nana and tell her this happened. She passed away a couple of months ago, [and] I know she would be really proud of me.”

Marcel isn’t Slate’s only project garnering film’s highest form of recognitio­n this season: She plays a small role in A24’s

Everything Everywhere All at Once and earned a SAG Award nom as a member of its ensemble. “My family at

Everything Everywhere All at Once — their nomination­s feel so good,” she says of her co-stars, who she will be rooting for on Oscar night, too. “I am so happy for Michelle [Yeoh] and Jamie [Lee Curtis] and Ke [Huy Quan] and especially for Stephanie [Hsu], who is a dear, dear friend of mine. She’s a person who inhabits true beauty, and I really burst into tears seeing all of these people get waved at by this gigantic light.

It’s just the affirmatio­n of such goodness.”

She also reserves praise for filmmaking duo Daniels — “not just for their directing, but for their writing,” says Slate. “It’s an intricate script. And they have really changed cinema forever with what they did.”

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Slate (far left) voices the title character in A24’s Marcel the Shell, which she co-wrote with director Dean Fleischer Camp and Nick Paley.
Jenny Slate (far left) voices the title character in A24’s Marcel the Shell, which she co-wrote with director Dean Fleischer Camp and Nick Paley.

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