Variety

Tiktok star Addison Rae on prepping for her “He’s All That” role; Emma Stone is focusing on being a new mom

- by Marc Malkin

Addison Rae (1), whose social media fan base already has 123.2 million followers, is making her acting debut in the upcoming remake of 1990s rom-com “She’s All That”— but she insists she’s not taking her big-screen endeavor for granted. The Tiktok star worked with an acting coach ahead of shooting the movie, which has been renamed “He’s All That” because of the gender swaps of the main characters. “I was taking [acting] classes probably seven days a week before the film started and [spending] like hours and hours a day doing script analysis,” she told me at the MTV Movie & TV Awards (see p. 24). “I definitely made sure to take it seriously.”

Emma Stone (2), who won a Golden Globe for “La La Land,” hasn’t been keeping up on the recent HFPA implosion — for good reason. “I’ve completely done a news blockage for the past eight weeks of my life because I’ve been going through some personal stuff,” the “Cruella” star tells me with a smile, alluding to reports she gave birth two months ago to her and husband Dave Mccary’s first child. “I was just learning about this yesterday, so I don’t feel fully equipped to weigh in yet, but any institutio­n that needs changing when a lot of people are calling for change … I think is never a bad thing. It’s only a positive thing.” “Cruella” co-star Emma Thompson, who has two Globes, declined to comment on the future of the organizati­on. “I have no idea,” she says. “I’ve not been party to their conversati­ons.”

Congrats to Conrad Woolfe. After nine years at Telsey + Co. — where he worked on “Mary Poppins Returns” and “Miss Sloane” and television’s “Love, Victor,” “One Day at a Time” and “The Walking Dead: World Beyond” — he’s gone out on his own to launch Conrad Woolfe Casting. He’s currently casting Netflix’s musical film adaptation of the book series “The Witch Boy.” EXCLUSIVE: Outfest launches “The Outfronts,” a celebratio­n of queer TV featuring 18 panels across five days of programmin­g starting June 8. Participan­ts include “It’s a Sin” creator Russell T. Davies, “Pose” star Angelica Ross (3), stars of “Rupaul’s Drag Race” and “Equal” stars Cheyenne Jackson and Alexandra Grey.

Padma Lakshmi (4) is blasting Indian officials for their handling of the country’s pandemic crisis. “I think that the government really screwed up,” the “Top Chef” and “Taste the Nation” host tells me while promoting Stella Artois’ partnershi­p with the James Beard Foundation’s Open for Good restaurant relief initiative. “I think internatio­nal aid organizati­ons have to go there, and it has to work like a military plan, but for that you need a government that’s not arrogant. … India managed to control it early on, but I think they just got too cocky.”

Sebastian Stan (5) may play a tough guy in “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,” but he’s still prone to embarrassi­ng injuries. On this week’s “Just for Variety” podcast, the actor reveals that he endured a lot of pain while shooting the Marvel series after suffering a broken pinkie toe when he walked into a wall going back to bed after a late-night pee: “In between the takes and setups, I would run upstairs and two people would help me out of this boot and I would just take my foot and put it in a bucket of ice.”

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