USA TODAY US Edition

Portman’s ‘Jackie’ earning early Oscar buzz

She’s getting rave reviews for her portrayal of the enigmatic former first lady

- Patrick Ryan

Actress channels former first lady, right down to the accent

In the pantheon of specific accents, Jackie Kennedy’s reigns supreme.

So when Natalie Portman signed on to play the former first lady in the biopic Jackie, she faced the seemingly impossible task of replicatin­g Kennedy’s unusual mid-Atlantic dialect, marked by discordant, rounded vowels and a hushed, breathy timbre.

“The first day I did it, I could definitely see everyone’s faces like, ‘Uh-oh,’ ” Portman says with a smirk. “It’s quite eccentric, the way she spoke. We toned it down a little bit even.”

Director Pablo Larraín was among those worried that Portman’s accent was too over-thetop — that is, until he rewatched Kennedy’s White House tour TV special from 1962, which is painstakin­gly re-created in the film. “It was hard for me to get used to ... but then I got it,” Larraín says. And the question of “How long would the audience need to not ( be) looking at Natalie, but at Jackie? She achieves that in just a couple of minutes.”

Her portrayal has critics convinced. Jackie (in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles, expanding nationwide through January) boasts 93% positive reviews on RottenToma­toes.com, with 27 of 28 pundits on awards site GoldDerby.com predicting Portman will clinch her third Academy Award nomination. She won best actress in 2011, playing a deranged ballerina in Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan. Aronofsky, a producer on Jackie, brought the project to Portman five years ago. But Noah Oppenheim’s script — an unorthodox account of the week in 1963 after President John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion, told from the harrowing perspectiv­e of his widow — sat in limbo until last year, when Portman was introduced to Chilean director Larraín, whom she calls “the only filmmaker who could make this movie. He had really interestin­g ideas and approached every day like a search.”

The actress was similarly his first choice for Kennedy, a fashion icon whose beauty and mystique made her the “most unknown (public figure) of the 20th century,” Larraín says.

“You look at (Kennedy) and it’s very hard to know what’s going on with her, and that’s something Natalie has,” he says. “She can be elegant, sophistica­ted, dangerous and do a great performanc­e. But there’s something that’s impossible to explain, which is her mystery. I was after that.” Portman, 35, says “time and maturity” helped inform her performanc­e. Coincident­ally, she was the same age filming Jackie as Kennedy was during the events of the film. And like the first lady — who died of lymphoma in 1994 at age 64 — the Oscar winner is famously private when it comes to family.

She is married to French choreograp­her Benjamin Millepied, with whom she has a 5-year-old son, Aleph, and is expecting a second child in the spring. (“It’s like I have my own scaffoldin­g,” she jokes, leaning her elbow on her pronounced baby bump as she poses for a portrait.)

“I’m obviously public on a much smaller scale than she was,” Portman says shyly. But being in the spotlight does make you “aware of your image: how other people view you, how you want them to view you, who you really are, and what parts you want to keep to yourself.

“Obviously, I don’t edit my own interviews like she did. But you can control what you say and don’t say, and what you put out there.”

Being in the spotlight does make you “aware of your image: how other people view you, how you want them to view you, who you really are.” Natalie Portman

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY ??
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY
 ?? STEPHANIE BRANCHU ?? Natalie Portman plays the grieving widow in the dark days of 1963 in Jackie.
STEPHANIE BRANCHU Natalie Portman plays the grieving widow in the dark days of 1963 in Jackie.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States