Dynamic duo making waves in the UAE golf community with support for EGF Order of Merit events while balancing competition and social engagement
MARION COTILLARD'S first acting job was a baffling but valuable lesson in the art of denying real life in favour of make-believe.
She was 3 or 4 and playing a girl whose mother lay dead before her. Cotillard, an Academy Award nominee for 'La Vie En Rose,' could not understand why the director insisted the actress playing the dead woman was her mother, when her actual mom was right there on stage with her, playing a different woman.
"I remember he said to me, `It's your mother,' and in my head, I was like, `She's not my mother, because my mother is there!" Cotillard said with an emphatic gesture as she recalled her first stage gig in an interview. "It was so disturbing. I really remember this feeling I had."
The French actress had made great leaps forward in her craft a year or two later, the first time she worked on a TV movie, and she was doing a scene with a dog. In real life, Cotillard did not have a dog, but she now understood the game.
"The dog, it didn't belong to me, but it was my dog. They say, `It's your dog," Cotillard said. "I went, `OK, it's my dog.' I got it then." Cotillard, 32, really gets it today. She put in a remarkable performance as Edith Piaf in 'La Vie En Rose,' playing the French singer from her raw, fiery late teens through her frail last days in her 40s.
It was a breakout role for Cotillard, whose French credits include producer Luc Besson's action comedy 'Taxi' and its sequels and the acclaimed 'A Very Long Engagement' and who appeared in such Hollywood productions as Tim Burton's 'Big Fish' and Ridley Scott's 'A Good Year.'
Two more Hollywood films are coming up, with Cotillard co-starring with Johnny Depp in Michael Mann's 1930s crime tale 'Public Enemies' and with Javier Bardem and Penelope Cruz in Rob Marshall's 'Nine,' a musical inspired by Federico Fellini's '8'.
In 'Public Enemies,' Cotillard is playing the moll of gangster John Dillinger (Depp), a role requiring her to sound like an American. "The first thing I have to do to erase my French accent is think that it is actually possible, whereas for the moment, I think it's not. I have a lot of work," said Cotillard, who speaks good English but does have a heavy French accent.
Though her parents were actors and she had an early introduction to the profession, the Paris-born Cotillard had what she calls a fairly normal upbringing, taking on only occasional acting jobs. Cotillard began acting in earnest in her late teens, her stunning looks, huge blue eyes and disarming mix of sweetness and sauciness helping to establish her.
Her eyes helped land the role as Piaf. Cotillard said when she first met with 'La Vie En Rose' director Olivier Dahan, there was a list of three potential actresses to play Piaf. She was not on it.
But she later learned from Dahan that he started to fixate on her for the role after finding a book on Piaf in a shop. Something about Piaf's eyes in a photo from when she was about 16 reminded him of Cotillard.
Cotillard had only passing awareness of Piaf beforehand. "I was not a huge fan. Of course, I know her. I'm French," Cotillard said. "I knew a few songs but nothing about her life, whereas in her time, everybody knew her life, because she shared her life with the press. When she had an accident, there were pictures taken of her in the hospital room. Everybody knew where she was, what she was doing, who she was dating. "But all I knew were a few songs she wrote, songs that are still very, very alive. In all those `American Idols,' all those TV shows with very, very young people who sing, you hear people sing Piaf."
Dynamic duo making waves in the UAE golf community with support for EGF Order of Merit events while balancing competition and social engagement
Hidden Disabilities Sunflower programme provides a discreet way for passengers with conditions like autism, chronic pain, or anxiety to signal to staff that they may require additional assistance or compassion
This comes after Kerala Bharatiya Janata Party Chief K Surendran accused the Kerala government of presenting inflated relief expenditures to the High Court
Rohit's side begin a busy schedule with the opening match against Bangladesh starting on Thursday
The first centre will bring together academic researchers and practitioners from the private sector to develop and share best practices in responsible AI
More than 3,700 firefighters, over 1,000 vehicles and around 20 aircraft battling the flames
Of the 2.8 million private cars registered in the Scandinavian country, 754,303 are all-electric, compared to 753,905 that run on petrol
During his presidency, Trump referred to cryptocurrencies as a scam, but now presents himself as a "pro-bitcoin president"