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BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. If Ellen Page is having trouble adjusting to being the latest It-girl, she doesnt show it.
An hour before the annual Oscar nominees luncheon, the 20-year-old actress is sitting calmly in a giant brown booth in the bar of the Beverly Hilton hotel. As the star of Juno, the indie comedy thats made more than $100 million and is up for four Academy Awards, Page has been riding a tsunami of publicity.
Shes been nominated for practically every acting prize. Shes given a million interviews. Shes on the cover of Entertainment Weekly.
Today shes the perfect picture of tomboy chic in a black-and-white striped dress and a black leather jacket. Her hair and makeup are flawless, but her nails are bitten to the quick. Shes talking about bats.
Theyre really beautiful creatures. Like profoundly beautiful, she says. Vampire bats are so sweet and they take in bat orphans. And they remember favors and they repay favors.
She recalls backpacking in Belgrade not long ago and how taken she was by the sight of bats flying overhead.
You know those moments, she says. You just feel so alive.
Acting makes her feel the same way, she says. She fell into it when she was 10 in her native Nova Scotia Then it was just silly, like a neat little experience, she says but after a few years and a few roles, it really started meaning something more to me.
I was playing roles that had more emotional maturity and more depth, and I was first feeling that connection with the heart and feeling that kind of transcendence, Page says. Your heart becomes more alive but theres also that kind of analytical part of you that starts connecting with it. ... It made me just completely fall in love.
She had already collected Canadian honors and more than a dozen credits, including a starring turn in 2005s Hard Candy, when she landed the role of Juno MacGuff. Just dont ask her to compare herself to her breakthrough character.
Sorry, she says. The How do you relate to Juno question is really the bane of my existence.
Page is something like Juno. Shes quick-witted and liable to make obscure references, like a nod to a naturalist poet and a 1959 French film. Though shes not as comfortable in my skin as her character, Page says she tried to make Juno as honest as possible.
It was just making her a young woman that we havent seen before, she says. Having her be intelligent and articulate and all those things, but also having her be naive in moments and arrogant in moments.
Juno director Jason Reitman says Page seems incapable of having a dishonest moment on screen.
I saw that in Hard Candy, I saw that when I met her, and it was a great joy to direct her every day because she made my job very, very easy, he says. Id just sit there and enjoy her.
Whether it was her honesty or her deft comic delivery that resonated with Oscar voters, Pages name will now forever be preceded by those weighty words: Academy Award nominee.
Its all very bizarre, she says. To have your name involved with a group of women, a group of people who you just have so much respect for and so much admiration for, it actually feels kind of wrong. I feel young and I feel like I just have a lot more I want to discover ... and just so much to learn.
Its been surreal and humbling to meet her idols, including Kate Winslet, who Im crazy about and who Ive seen all her movies and think shes flawless, Page says.
Page doesnt act for awards, she says, but accolades bring opportunity and validation.
Its what I love to do, and when something like that happens, its like, This is actually kind of working out, she says.
Page will next be seen in theaters alongside Dennis Quaid and Sarah Jessica Parker in Smart People, opening April 11. She plays the politically conservative daughter of a widowed English professor, delivering bitter maxims like, I think self-absorption is underrated.
Director Noam Murro says simply, Shes a genius.
The actress has been away from her Halifax home now for weeks, traveling from London to film festivals to the Screen Actors Guild Awards. Lately shes had a companion on the road, an adopted dog whose breed shes embarrassed to reveal.
Shes a rescue, can I just say that first? And this just happened, Page says. Shes a Chihuahua-toy terrier mix.
Its not a Hollywood thing, she insists. (Believe me, its not the dog I ever thought I would own.) Its just that when her friend found Patty the pup a few months ago, Page couldnt resist.
After the Oscars, Pages (and Pattys) next adventure will be a trip to Texas, where Page is set to star in Whip It, Drew Barrymores directing debut. Page plays a teenager forced to compete in beauty pageants who finds salvation when she joins a roller-derby team. Page will learn to roller-skate for the role. And shell have a chance to see bats.
Theres a lot of bats in Texas, she says. They have this famous bridge where all the bats come out and its supposed to be really amazing.
An hour before the annual Oscar nominees luncheon, the 20-year-old actress is sitting calmly in a giant brown booth in the bar of the Beverly Hilton hotel. As the star of Juno, the indie comedy thats made more than $100 million and is up for four Academy Awards, Page has been riding a tsunami of publicity.
Shes been nominated for practically every acting prize. Shes given a million interviews. Shes on the cover of Entertainment Weekly.
Today shes the perfect picture of tomboy chic in a black-and-white striped dress and a black leather jacket. Her hair and makeup are flawless, but her nails are bitten to the quick. Shes talking about bats.
Theyre really beautiful creatures. Like profoundly beautiful, she says. Vampire bats are so sweet and they take in bat orphans. And they remember favors and they repay favors.
She recalls backpacking in Belgrade not long ago and how taken she was by the sight of bats flying overhead.
You know those moments, she says. You just feel so alive.
Acting makes her feel the same way, she says. She fell into it when she was 10 in her native Nova Scotia Then it was just silly, like a neat little experience, she says but after a few years and a few roles, it really started meaning something more to me.
I was playing roles that had more emotional maturity and more depth, and I was first feeling that connection with the heart and feeling that kind of transcendence, Page says. Your heart becomes more alive but theres also that kind of analytical part of you that starts connecting with it. ... It made me just completely fall in love.
She had already collected Canadian honors and more than a dozen credits, including a starring turn in 2005s Hard Candy, when she landed the role of Juno MacGuff. Just dont ask her to compare herself to her breakthrough character.
Sorry, she says. The How do you relate to Juno question is really the bane of my existence.
Page is something like Juno. Shes quick-witted and liable to make obscure references, like a nod to a naturalist poet and a 1959 French film. Though shes not as comfortable in my skin as her character, Page says she tried to make Juno as honest as possible.
It was just making her a young woman that we havent seen before, she says. Having her be intelligent and articulate and all those things, but also having her be naive in moments and arrogant in moments.
Juno director Jason Reitman says Page seems incapable of having a dishonest moment on screen.
I saw that in Hard Candy, I saw that when I met her, and it was a great joy to direct her every day because she made my job very, very easy, he says. Id just sit there and enjoy her.
Whether it was her honesty or her deft comic delivery that resonated with Oscar voters, Pages name will now forever be preceded by those weighty words: Academy Award nominee.
Its all very bizarre, she says. To have your name involved with a group of women, a group of people who you just have so much respect for and so much admiration for, it actually feels kind of wrong. I feel young and I feel like I just have a lot more I want to discover ... and just so much to learn.
Its been surreal and humbling to meet her idols, including Kate Winslet, who Im crazy about and who Ive seen all her movies and think shes flawless, Page says.
Page doesnt act for awards, she says, but accolades bring opportunity and validation.
Its what I love to do, and when something like that happens, its like, This is actually kind of working out, she says.
Page will next be seen in theaters alongside Dennis Quaid and Sarah Jessica Parker in Smart People, opening April 11. She plays the politically conservative daughter of a widowed English professor, delivering bitter maxims like, I think self-absorption is underrated.
Director Noam Murro says simply, Shes a genius.
The actress has been away from her Halifax home now for weeks, traveling from London to film festivals to the Screen Actors Guild Awards. Lately shes had a companion on the road, an adopted dog whose breed shes embarrassed to reveal.
Shes a rescue, can I just say that first? And this just happened, Page says. Shes a Chihuahua-toy terrier mix.
Its not a Hollywood thing, she insists. (Believe me, its not the dog I ever thought I would own.) Its just that when her friend found Patty the pup a few months ago, Page couldnt resist.
After the Oscars, Pages (and Pattys) next adventure will be a trip to Texas, where Page is set to star in Whip It, Drew Barrymores directing debut. Page plays a teenager forced to compete in beauty pageants who finds salvation when she joins a roller-derby team. Page will learn to roller-skate for the role. And shell have a chance to see bats.
Theres a lot of bats in Texas, she says. They have this famous bridge where all the bats come out and its supposed to be really amazing.


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