![]() She’s taught me a lot about working with your natural instincts and enhancing them with techniques that are really helpful and creatively fulfilling. But I’ve started seeing a coach in New York, who’s incredible. KNIGHTLEY: It’s funny, because you’re really having to learn as you go.ĭEPP: Definitely, and managing on my own weird creative instincts. And I was like, “I have done none of this, and you guys are all so good.” In fact, when I did the movie Voyagers, I was so impressed and intimidated because almost all of the actors came from insanely prestigious, incredible theater schools. Do you have acting coaches or did you go to drama school?ĭEPP: I didn’t go to a drama school. Like, how interesting must it be to build a character when you’re really thinking about all of their physicality, in the way that a stage actor would, but that film actors often forget to do. So it really struck me when you were doing it. KNIGHTLEY: We often forget to use our bodies because we work in close-ups. You know this better than I do, but when you’re in character, it’s easy to fall back into your own mannerisms and the way that you sit in your own body. KNIGHTLEY: What did you learn from this role that you can bring to others?ĭEPP: It taught me how to angle my movements to any character that I’m playing, even if they’re as human as can be. So he goes to this treatment center for young adults who feel this way about different animals, and when he’s there he meets a wildcat, played by me, and they grow close. KNIGHTLEY: But what is it? I know that you were learning how to be a cat, but can you describe what the premise is?ĭEPP: I hope I don’t butcher it, but it’s called Wolf and it follows a boy named Jacob, played by George MacKay, who believes that he is a wolf. ![]() I was like, “I really hope that we end up getting to make this movie, because otherwise I will have been crawling around in my house like a maniac for months on end, for nothing.” And I remember you coming back and being like, “I was in class to learn how to be a cat today.” And I was like, “Sure, of course you were.” So what the fuck is this film? It sounds amazing.ĭEPP: We were supposed to shoot it a couple of weeks after we wrapped our film in March 2020, so obviously it didn’t happen right when it was supposed to. I remember you were about to do it when we were filming. KNIGHTLEY: There’s one that I think we’re meant to be talking about here, Wolf. I fnd those projects to be the most creatively fulfilling because they allow you to enter into a different mindset. I gravitate towards things that are a little bit outside of the box, or bordering on the strange. And so I want to ask you, what’s your thought process when choosing roles?ĭEPP: Weird and wonderful is definitely the direction I’m trying to go. And he’s like, “What the fuck are you doing?” I was looking at all of the work that you’ve been doing, and I think that your choices are super interesting. My husband woke up this morning and I was already looking at pictures of you. KNIGHTLEY: It’s been a bit creepy, actually. ![]() KNIGHTLEY: I feel like I’ve been your stalker all morning, because I’ve been looking at loads of pictures of you. Cat person.įor our September issue, Keira Knightly gets inside the head of her Silent Night co-star, Lily-Rose Depp. The Pirates of the Caribbean star first sued Heard, 37, for defamation in 2019 over a December 2018 op-ed for the Washington Post in which she described herself as a domestic abuse survivor.Top by Hermes. In June 2022, her father, 60, was awarded $10 million in compensatory damages and $5 million in punitive damages in his highly publicized defamation trial against ex-wife Amber Heard. ![]() The Tusk actress is no stranger to controversy. “But I’m comfortable performing in that way, I enjoy it. “There are many women who have felt exploited by the nudity they’ve done and have thought, I didn’t feel great about that,” she said. Lily-Rose also defended the show’s use of nudity. This is not going to be for everybody, and that’s fine. Not to compare it, but I feel that this is kind of like that again. It was provocative, and I knew it was going to be tough for people. The “Die for You” musician, 33, agreed with the sentiment, saying: “When I first started making music, it was the exact same thing. ![]()
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