USA TODAY US Edition

Lilly is fit to fight

The star gets to throw down in ‘Ant-Man’ — especially with ‘no-nonsense hair’

- Brian Truitt @briantruit­t USA TODAY

FAYETTEVIL­LE, G A. The classic ’60s bob she’s wearing may look cute, but it’s actually a bit of a warning to the bad guys of AntMan: It’s best not to trifle with Evangeline Lilly.

The star of TV’s Lost and two movies in The Hobbit trilogy makes her Marvel Studios debut in the new superhero film (in theaters July 17). While Paul Rudd’s title character gets the most action, Lilly figures her Hope Van Dyne, the businesswo­man and scientist daughter of inventor Hank Pym (Michael Douglas), is second when it comes to throwdowns.

“Emotionall­y, she’s a bit messed up, but mentally and physically, she’s pretty capable,” Lilly says.

FUN WITH STUNTS

It’s an early November day at Pinewood Studios near Atlanta on a stage housing the futuristic labs of Pym Technologi­es. Lilly will later beat down some dudes while wearing a business suit, but before that, clad in workout gear, she practices with stunt folks, getting her muscular body loose for the upcoming scene.

“Every once in a while, just to warm up, she just drops down and does 20 really good pushups,” Douglas says. “She’s a kickass daughter.”

All the actors have trained for stunts before, “but Evangeline has an aptitude for it,” says AntMan director Peyton Reed. “It’s amazing to watch her fight.

“She’s our real secret weapon. She leaps off the screen.”

Just like Lilly, Hope has a lot of confidence in her abilities. In fact, she takes offense when her father hires cat burglar Scott Lang (Rudd) to use the super-shrink- ing Ant-Man suit and steal an important piece of technology out from the clutches of Pym’s villainous protégé Darren Cross (Corey Stoll).

In Hope’s mind, she’s the one who should be wearing the AntMan suit.

SERIOUSLY RETRO

The movie pays homage to the comic-book character Janet Van Dyne — in the film, she’s Hope’s dead mother — and her days as the superheroi­ne Wasp going back to the 1960s. Marvel was initially wary that Lilly’s short haircut would look too similar to Janet’s, thinking it might tease that Hope would take flight as the Wasp in the movie.

But Lilly, 35, fought for it. She liked the retro look for Hope; plus, from her perspectiv­e, it was low-maintenanc­e.

“I just felt she would have nononsense hair,” Lilly says. “She would just have a haircut that would say: ‘I mean business. Don’t (mess) with me.’ ”

Hope is the latest in a string of powerful Marvel women; Avengers: Age of Ultron featured a pair of them, Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow and Elizabeth Olsen’s Scarlet Witch. It was the prospect of joining that superhero family, and maybe one day playing a bigger role in it, that persuaded Lilly to sign on.

“I don’t really like multipictu­re deals. I always feel nervous about ‘What if my life plans change, what if I don’t want to do it?’ ” says Lilly, mom to 4-year-old son Kahekili. She has a second child on the way. “On the flip side, I love the

Avengers films. They’re so cool. And I thought, ‘Yeah, but how cool would it be to be in an Avengers film?’ That is a motivating factor.”

FISTS AND GIGGLES

While many actresses rush out to get personal trainers and nutritioni­sts when they get an action role, keeping herself in great shape is “just who I am,” Lilly says.

What was new this time around was learning the basics of boxing, which was unnatural for her. (Hope gives Scott a boxing lesson in the film, which ends with him on the floor and her quipping, “That’s how you punch.”)

“I’ve always been told by stunt teams that I move like a dancer, and boxing is gritty,” Lilly says. “It’s very masculine, and there’s zero femininity to it: You have to hunch your shoulders, stick your jaw out. “Even making fists, I get the giggles, because I go, ‘Look at my tiny little fists! This is ridiculous. It doesn’t look tough at all. I’m not intimidate­d by these things!’ ”

“I just felt she would have no-nonsense hair. ... A haircut that would say, ‘I mean business. Don’t (mess) with me.’ ”

 ?? ZADE ROSENTHAL, MARVEL ??
ZADE ROSENTHAL, MARVEL
 ?? ZADE ROSENTHAL, MARVEL ?? Evangeline Lilly works on her boxing technique with Ant-man director Peyton Reed. Boxing is “very masculine, and there’s zero femininity to it,” she says.
ZADE ROSENTHAL, MARVEL Evangeline Lilly works on her boxing technique with Ant-man director Peyton Reed. Boxing is “very masculine, and there’s zero femininity to it,” she says.
 ?? ALLEN BEREZOVSKY, WIREIMAGE ?? Lilly is the latest to join the club of powerful Marvel women.
ALLEN BEREZOVSKY, WIREIMAGE Lilly is the latest to join the club of powerful Marvel women.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States