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Kirsten Dunst CONTACT
interview
EXCLUSIVE Kirsten Dunst/Wimbledon Interview by Paul Fischer in Los Angeles.
Kirsten Dunst wearily admits to being a bit thorny. Her last interview of the
day as she was dutifully bouncing around promoting her latest film, the
tennis-themed romantic comedy Wimbledon, Dunst was clearly becoming a tad
annoyed at the press’s obsession with her private life. Recently split up with
boyfriend Jake Gyllenhaal and starring in a romantic comedy to boot, the
questions have been bouncing at her all day. Forcing a half smile, the pretty
Hollywood star conceded that “just lately with the press, it’s been overwhelming
lately for me.” Dunst says that she is not quite sure why it is that at this
juncture in her career, is her personal life of such paramount importance to the
media. “I don’t know, maybe because of Spiderman II and Wimbledon, I guess I’m
in the limelight more now I suppose. Also, I live in Los Angeles where everybody
is, so I think it’s hard to keep things private, but this is where I live.” The
actress says that she continues to deflect prying questions about her private
life by being as politely responsive as possible, by “just saying, ‘I’m sorry
but I’m not going to answer that question.’”
Dunst says that she tends to read articles in magazines about her and can’t
avoid coming into contact with the tabloids. Knowing how much is written based
on untruths, the actress says that “you can’t let it bother you so much. It’s
out for a week, but I just hate when lies are made up about relationships and
nobody really knows what goes on between two people so that can be frustrating
or they make a big deal out of something I’ve said that I didn’t even mean was a
big deal, and then people get hurt. So it, I’ve just got to be a little more
careful.”
So it is time to move on to her latest movie, Wimbledon, a charming romantic
comedy that casts the diverse Dunst as a tennis star on the rise who falls for a
former champ [Paul Bettany] who discovers his game on the verge of retirement.
Dunst said during the Spider-Man 2 junket that shooting Wimbledon was in some
ways tougher than that action film, a fact she continues to concede. “Spiderman,
first of all I love, is more juvenile than this one and it’s hard to keep that,
every time before takes. Paul and I would, go here we go again, and he’d be like
fresh and sexy, because it’s hard to keep that thing going when it’s a different
take on a different angle, and it’s such in the moment with the dialogue.
Sometimes we have such little quips, and the challenge is to make them seem
natural sometimes. It’s sometimes difficult to get that balance.”
On screen, here Dunst plays an overly confident and toughly aggressive player,
whose serve is as powerful as her verbal barbs. Dunst says that she did have to
search within herself to find that character. “I think I had the confidence to
be that way because I got really good at certain parts of tennis, so to have
that base of course makes you feel more confident, so it was exciting to be that
kind of a player. For me it was fun for me to throw those racquets on the
court.” As convincing a tennis player she is, Dunst had never been especially
interested in tennis before shooting this movie. “I never really watched it or
played it,” she says. Laughing, she says that even having trained with the
legendary Pat Cash, she wouldn’t have the courage to challenge anyone of note to
a tennis match. “I think they’d beat me pretty bad, so I think I’d stick to
amateurs, such as my Dad.”
Asked what makes a good romantic comedy, which is perhaps the toughest genre to
pull off, Dunst says that “in the Working Title world, [the producers of Love
Actually, etc], they seem to find a good balance and I think that English humour
really helps out making it not so cutesy and the fact that I’m really the
masculine energy in the film which is different from most romantic comedies. In
the case of ours, you have this tennis world which really sets up a lot of the
comedy and I think it’s just a good balance in the movie, so it’s hard to make
it not too cutesy.” As for working with Paul Bettany, Dunst laughingly admits
that he did her some of the finer points of British profanity. “He uses the word
‘c - nt’ more than anybody I’ve ever met, mostly for guys, but he completely
uses it like he’s saying the word ‘water’. I mean, he has the worst mouth ever.”
At a mere 22, Dunst has appeared in over forty films, and as successful and
famous as she has become, the actress says that she is not surprised, yet
circumspect, at the success that she has attained. “I work hard but I’ve had
plenty of failures too, so I feel like I’ve learned a lot. I don’t know if
surprised is the right word at my success, but I feel that if you make choices
that really mean something to you, it’s hard not to feel successful because even
if they don’t make money, or don’t do this, you’re still doing something for
yourself, then it’s easier to feel successful.” It was Spider-Man that
ultimately cemented her huge success, and despite that franchise’s whirlwind
publicity juggernaut and an intrusive media, Dunst says that knowing the effect
of that film on her life, she would take it on if offered to her today. “It’s
given me the opportunity to have more choices and more opportunities and people
who will go and see Spiderman now, might go see another movie I’m in that they
wouldn’t go to see normally, like Eternal Sunshine or something like that. So
the fact that I have that power now is really great and that I can be the lead
in a movie and that they would finance it with me because I’m known in places
that I’ve never been to, all helps.” And Dunst remains passionately proud of the
films, especially the second one. “I’m completely proud of that movie and I
think that we made a great blockbuster. But all of us really loved the story and
are moved by it, so I think that's why audiences responded because I really do
put myself in that.” While Dunst is committed to Spider-Man 3, a fourth seems
unlikely, though regrets her previous comments that she wants her character to
die. “I was totally joking when I said that,” but wouldn’t be drawn as to
whether she would be convinced to continue on.
But there is certainly more to Dunst’s career than Spider-Man, as she takes on
the daunting task of playing the tragic Marie Antoinette for director Sofia
Coppola, which is to be shot on location in Paris and the Palace of Versailles.
Though a historical epic, Dunst says “it sounds like a big movie but the script
takes it in a very personal way.” Her Louis will be played by Jason Schwartzman,
and Dunst jokingly says that she “will have no problem playing an Austrian
character because my Dad’s German.”
The perpetually busy actress is still in the middle of shooting Cameron Crowe’s
Elizabethtown, a project shrouded in secrecy. “I think Sofia and Cameron are two
really amazing directors and respectfully they want to keep things private
because why give away the movie when you can see it in a year. It’s more
exciting to wait and wonder what it’s about, and we’ll talk about it plenty in a
year or so.”
After Marie-Antoinette it’s back to the world of Spider-Man, and Dunst hopes to
try and have a break somewhere during that hectic schedule. “I finish Cameron’s
movie at the end of September, then I don’t work again until March, which is a
big break and then after that, Spiderman will probably start in the Fall.” Dunst
hopes that during her break “I’d love to learn French because I’m going to be
spending a lot of time in Paris and I don’t know what I’ll do, but get into the
zone of Maria Antoinette, read a lot and take classes.”
Credit: herorealm.com
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