KRISTEN Stewart talks about her starring role in new movie Snow White
and the Huntsman, dealing with isolation, learning to ride and painful
stunt work with
- I assume you have read James Franco’s glowing review of your
performance in Snow White and the Huntsman, in which he dubs you the
warrior queen.
K: I have. Wow. I mean, really! It came out of nowhere.
– In it, he says you have braved more scrutiny of your private life than most presidents.
K: I guess I wouldn’t know how to compare it. But people would
definitely like to know about things that I don’t want to tell them,
which is fine. It’s not something I am uncomfortable with any more.
– Any more?
K: Once you find your boundaries, you stop playing this weird game of
jumping too far over and then too far back, if you know what I mean. I
know where I am comfortable, now.
In his essay, Franco draws parallels between Snow White’s premature ascension to the throne and your own rise to stardom.
K: I could really relate to her isolation – she goes through something
tough and isn’t broken by it. When you have fans and people following
you or looking up to you, you have to do things from a very, very true
place. Snow White, instead of just being this ball-busting fighter, I
think the reason she is strong is because she really stays, it sounds
maybe cliched, but she stays true.
– I hope it didn’t feel as though you were locked in a tower for seven years.
K: No! (Snorts.) Only in so far as that she is isolated from people that
look up to her. On that level, I absolutely felt for (Snow White). You
look up to people that you identify with, so there is probably a
commonality. I understand. I’ve been around certain musicians and not
been able to speak. It’s a natural reaction. But at the same time, you
want to go: “we’re no different”.
– Given the number of column-inches devoted to Kristen Stewart, we
actually know very little about you. What sort of music you like, for
instance.
K: It changes quite a bit. Today, I am obsessively involved with Bon
Iver. It might be all I listen to right now, actually. The Shins are my
favourite band. I love Interpol and Jenny Lewis.
– What did you read on the plane?
K: I read the newspaper on the plane.
– Since you travel a lot, can we assume you have made the switch to an e-book?
K: Technology literally disagrees with me. This is going to sound so
ridiculous, but warranties, passwords, accounts, numbers with emails
coinciding with different websites … I have gone through quite a few
Kindles. I need to get a new one because I love them.
– What’s your idea of a perfect Saturday night?
K: I have a pretty close-knit group of friends. I am from LA. I love Los
Angeles. Because I usually work elsewhere, I am really happy to just be
home with my friends. We do very normal things people our age do – play
a bit of music and stuff.
– You don’t strike me as a gym junkie. What do you do for exercise?
K: I am really active just generally. I hike with my dogs. I swim. I
have never really worked out, other than for this, really, because I
knew I was going to need incredible stamina that I did not have at that
point. I didn’t want to be charging up the stairs in armour to Ravenna’s
chamber and have to stop at the top and go (mimics leaning against a
wall, sucking in gulps of air.)
– You also learned to ride horses for the film. And did some stunt work.
K: A little bit. The cool thing about the action in this movie, it has a
lot of integrity. Everything I do in the movie, a girl my size could
do. So that made it more challenging because we weren’t faking it.
(Director) Rupert (Sanders) really was belting the crap out of me. Any
time we look uncomfortable or scared or possibly in pain, we are most
likely experiencing that.
– Three Snow White stories are coming out in quick succession (Mirror
Mirror, this one and the TV series Once Upon A Time). Theories?
K: Considering the source material, there is a lot of room for
interpretation. If you take a story that has always spoken to people,
moved them on some level, and make it a bit more palatable for now … In
this case, she is living in a more dangerous world but she stays recognizably Snow White … that essentially female and delicate but
strong girl.
– Traits shared by Twilight’s Bella Swan and The Hunger Games’ Katniss Everdeen?
K: The reason it feels so satisfying is because that’s how we are. It’s natural. It doesn’t feel forced.
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