Michelle Williams talks about her third Oscar nomination on the Today Show. Such a good interview. Was I the only one who noticed that she was asked much better questions than the other Oscar-nominated actresses? I saw one of Rooney’s and it was just the endless typical “what was your reaction?” and “how do you feel right now?” questions.
Interviewer: When you got up there at the Golden Globes, you thanked your daughter, Matilda, and so I was wondering, because you’ve also described this role as really the hardest for you so far,  how does your daughter get credit for your being in this position now- being so lauded for this role and how you portrayed it?
Michelle: She gives me balance. And I know that any risks that I take in my work are actually in a way- they’re safe, because nothing really bad can happen there. And my success as a parent is what matters most to me.
Interviewer: Is there a part of [Marilyn], given her ability in the past to grab onto people, that’s clearly portrayed in this movie, is there a part of her that you cannot let go fully?
Michelle: In some ways, something that I really love about acting is that you never really have to say goodbye. And that as long as it’s not destructive or harmful to your personal, daily waking life, there’s a way to keep people, characters, situations, events close in your heart, and I kind of feel that way with her, maybe more than everybody I’ve ever played, because she was real and in some ways I feel to let go of her is an abandonment that I don’t want her to suffer again.

Michelle Williams talks about her third Oscar nomination on the Today Show. Such a good interview. Was I the only one who noticed that she was asked much better questions than the other Oscar-nominated actresses? I saw one of Rooney’s and it was just the endless typical “what was your reaction?” and “how do you feel right now?” questions.

Interviewer: When you got up there at the Golden Globes, you thanked your daughter, Matilda, and so I was wondering, because you’ve also described this role as really the hardest for you so far,  how does your daughter get credit for your being in this position now- being so lauded for this role and how you portrayed it?

Michelle: She gives me balance. And I know that any risks that I take in my work are actually in a way- they’re safe, because nothing really bad can happen there. And my success as a parent is what matters most to me.

Interviewer: Is there a part of [Marilyn], given her ability in the past to grab onto people, that’s clearly portrayed in this movie, is there a part of her that you cannot let go fully?

Michelle: In some ways, something that I really love about acting is that you never really have to say goodbye. And that as long as it’s not destructive or harmful to your personal, daily waking life, there’s a way to keep people, characters, situations, events close in your heart, and I kind of feel that way with her, maybe more than everybody I’ve ever played, because she was real and in some ways I feel to let go of her is an abandonment that I don’t want her to suffer again.

Awards Season

So it’s awards season, and I’m doing my annual pre-Oscars film viewings. I hadn’t actually seen as many films as I’d liked to this past year- I’ve learned that I’m just too restless for the cinema- and I’m definitely making up for it this year, because my list feels never-ending. Feel free to recommend me anything not on my list you think is worth watching. I’m open to pretty much anything from any genre. :)

The Ides of March
Moneyball
Shame
50/50
Bridesmaids
Midnight in Paris
My Week With Marilyn
Crazy, Stupid Love
The Help
Drive
Jane Eyre
The Descendants
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Pt. 2
J. Edgar
In The Land of Blood and Honey
The Flowers of War
Melancholia
The Artist
Take Shelter
Hugo

"...and the backs of my eyes
hum with things i've never done."


21, female, brisbane. I'm a first year creative writing & literature student who loves books books books, science fiction, films, michelle williams, tokyo, russian literature and documenting everything. I want to write films someday.

Photographs
Writing