Sunday News

LITTLE WONDER

‘Ingenious’ movy’s tilt at Oscars glory

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The most wrenching line of Little Women was born in a quiet cabin in the woods. It was just after Greta Gerwig’s critically adored film Lady Bird competed in the 2018 Oscar race. Lady Bird star Saoirse Ronan, 25, got wind that Gerwig’s next project would likely be Little Women and made her impassione­d pitch to play Jo.

Then Gerwig, 36, went off the map, needing solitude to attack a rewrite on her screenplay based on Louisa May Alcott’s wildly popular, semi-autobiogra­phical novel, which chronicled the lives of four forthright, financiall­y stricken sisters coming of age during the American Civil War.

‘‘After the whole madness of the Academy Awards was over, I went away to the woods for a couple of weeks and just sat with everything and tried to puzzle it out,’’ she says.

And then it came: Jo’s seminal speech to Marmee (Laura Dern) in the attic after she’s turned down Laurie’s marriage proposal (Timothee Chalamet) and sent him away, possibly forever.

Jo leaps up, her eyes brimming, trembling angrily.

‘‘Women have minds and souls as well as just hearts, and they’ve got ambition and talent as well as just beauty. And I’m sick of people saying that love is all a woman is fit for. I’m so sick of it! But, I’m so lonely!’’

The speech represents just how artfully Gerwig worked to weave Alcott’s biographic­al details (the author never married and sustained her family through her writing) throughout her version of Little Women.

‘‘I pulled that [from the book] and then I just wrote, ‘I’m so lonely’ at the end. I heard exactly how Saoirse says it in the movie in my head and I started weeping,’’ says Gerwig. Months later, without prompting, that’s exactly as Ronan performed it.

‘‘It was so weird!’’ says Gerwig. ‘‘I don’t know how that works.’’

‘‘There are certain people that you just have this very, very special working bond with. I feel like that’s what we have in bucketload­s and we’ve always had that,’’ says Ronan.

Little Women is hallowed ground. The book has never been out of print since its 1868 debut, and die-hard fans of the 1994 film adaptation tend to resist new incarnatio­ns. Gerwig’s version is very new indeed, launching with the sisters as adults before layering in flashbacks.

‘‘From the very beginning, she had a specific take on the movie,’’ says producer Amy Pascal, noting room for fans to love the ‘‘wonderful’’ old versions and the new one, too. ‘‘She wanted to make it about women and economic independen­ce and she wanted to intermingl­e Louisa May Alcott’s real experience with writing the book. It was very ingenious.’’

Under Gerwig’s watch, Jo is imbued with Alcott’s fight to own her copyright over the objections of a chauvinist­ic editor. Florence Pugh’s Amy is tougher this time; she can go toeto-toe with Jo. Eliza Scanlen’s Beth is as joyful as her end is tragic, Emma Watson’s Meg is a materialis­tic martyr and Meryl Streep’s acid-tongued Aunt March is even more of a pill.

Back in the fold from Lady Bird, Chalamet calls Gerwig’s set ‘‘open and joyous and loud . . . . It was one of the sweetest and replenishi­ng [experience­s] I’ve ever had’’.

Little Women began filming just eight months after Lady Bird energised the Oscar race with five nomination­s. This time, Gerwig and partner Noah Baumbach (Marriage Story) were quietly pregnant with Harold, now 9 months old.

Gerwig told no-one she was expecting, including Ronan, who had noticed her director was eating healthier and wearing woollen dresses and anoraks.

Production wrapped in December 2018 and ‘‘in January she called me and said she was having a baby’’, says Pascal. ‘‘I said, ‘That’s fantastic, when?’ And she said, ‘In two months’. She didn’t want anyone to treat her differentl­y and she knew inevitably, male or female, people would have.’’

Where will Little Women go from here? Ronan scored a Golden Globe nod for playing Jo, but after missing key Screen Actors Guild nomination­s, the film has ground to cover ahead of Oscar nomination­s on

January 13 – made undeniably harder by the fact that Little Women is about women and made by a woman.

Just five women have ever been nominated for best director (including Gerwig for Lady Bird) – and none twice.

‘‘There is an unconsciou­s bias that stories about women or stories about people who aren’t white are less than stories about men and boys,’’ says Pascal, who doesn’t think enough voters have seen the film yet.

But no matter the incarnatio­n of Little Women, Beth’s fate is where even the headstrong Jo falters. ‘‘She really believes, ‘I can stop it’,’’ says Ronan, pointing to Jo’s core-shaking belief she can cure her sister. ‘‘And then that’s a very sad moment to realise when she’s older that she can’t.

‘‘That’s something that everyone goes through when they come out of childhood. Where they’re like, all of the plans I thought I could make and all the decisions I thought I could make about which way my life was going to go and who was going to be in it – I have no control over that at all,’’ Ronan says. ‘‘And there’s a real weight to that, you know?’’ – USA Today

Little Women (G) now showing in cinemas.

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 ?? AP ?? Actress Saoirse Ronan, left, has become something of a muse for writer-director Greta Gerwig.
AP Actress Saoirse Ronan, left, has become something of a muse for writer-director Greta Gerwig.
 ??  ?? Little Women is the story of the March sisters, from left, Meg, Amy, Jo and Beth.
Little Women is the story of the March sisters, from left, Meg, Amy, Jo and Beth.
 ??  ?? Little Women director Greta Gerwig, second from left, discusses a scene with, from left, Emma Watson, Saoirse Ronan and Florence Pugh.
Little Women director Greta Gerwig, second from left, discusses a scene with, from left, Emma Watson, Saoirse Ronan and Florence Pugh.

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