The Envelope Roundtables bring together the actors and directors behind the seasonâs top films to discuss the industry and their craft.
âThe Shape of Waterâsâ Richard Jenkins on why 1962 was a great time for him
In âThe Shape of Water,â Richard Jenkins plays a commercial artist in the early 1960s, forced by the times to keep his identity as a gay man closeted. As part of the filmâs triumphant celebration of giving a voice to outsiders, he joins forces with a ragtag team to help free the mysterious creature that his neighbor (Sally Hawkins) has unexpectedly fallen in love with.
âThis movie Iâm doing takes place in 1962 and I was in high school in 1962. Man it was great for me. But I was a white straight man, or boy,â Jenkins said at a recent Envelope gathering of supporting-actor Oscar contenders. âIf you were anybody else, it wasnât so great. If you were a woman, if you were somebody of color, if you were gay â itâs like I was saying, we didnât have anybody gay in my school until our 40th reunion.â
Sam Rockwell wonders what it means that he keeps getting offered a certain type of role
In âThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriâ actor Sam Rockwell plays a violent, racist police officer in the small town of the title. After a young woman is raped and murdered, it seems that little is being done to solve the crime until her mother (Frances McDormand) begins a personal campaign for justice. Along the way, Rockwellâs character has his own reckoning with who he is and what he stands for.
At a recent Envelope gathering of supporting-actor Oscar contenders, Rockwell noted how the role comes as part of a long line of dim-witted characters that at times make him question how other people might think of him.
âI get all these redneck [roles], you know, and I think itâs hilarious because Iâm a city kid,â he said. âThey try and put a lasso in my hand and theyâd throw us on horses, but Iâm a city kid, Iâm a concrete creature.â
âMudboundâsâ Jason Mitchell on how he takes away something new from each role
Jason Mitchell had a breakout role as rapper Eazy-E in the movie âStraight Outta Comptonâ and has more recently gotten acclaim for his role in âMudbound.â Playing Ronsel Jackson, who returns to his familyâs small Mississippi farm after fighting in Europe during WWII, Mitchell noted how he takes away something new from each role.
âItâs interesting to see what you can throw out, you, know, that people take to, because I never thought that Iâd be playing a veteran with PTSD,â Mitchell said at a recent Envelope gathering of supporting-actor Oscar contenders. âItâs good to learn and grow and then, you know, just see how you process things differently. I can probably read scripts that I did a while ago and feel a whole lot different about the character now; I have a lot more to offer that character.â
âWonder Wheelâsâ Jim Belushi on how heroes are made
Jim Belushi is best known as a leading man in television sitcoms. For âWonder Wheel,â he turns in a deeply emotional performance as a man coming to terms with the shortcomings of his own life as he struggles to please and provide for his wife (Kate Winslet) and protect his daughter (Juno Temple) by another woman.
âI heard a great saying one time, heroes arenât born, theyâre cornered,â Belushi said at a recent Envelope gathering of supporting-actor Oscar contenders. âOur characters are constantly getting cornered and so itâs not the cornering thatâs interesting, itâs the recovery.â
Jim Belushi explains how âSaturday Night Liveâ prepared him for âWonder Wheelâ
Actor Jim Belushi was intimidated at first on the set of âWonder Wheelâ with his Academy Award-winning colleagues, such as actress Kate Winslet, writer and director Woody Allen and cinematographer Vittorio Storaro. But what he learned while working on the television show âSaturday Night Liveâ many years ago made that pressure seem like a piece of cake.
ââSaturday Night Liveâ was probably the toughest thing that Iâve ever been through in my entire life, and Iâm including divorce,â Belushi said at a recent Envelope gathering of supporting-actor Oscar contenders. âEverything has been easy after âSaturday Night Live.â It is one of the toughest pressure cookers I have ever been in.â
Noting that he was only on the show for two years, he recalled something his brother, âSNLâ legend John Belushi, said when he added, âMy brother John left after four years and I was like, âJohn, what are you doing? What are you leaving for?â And he goes, âAh, itâs like high school, Jimmy. Freshman, sophomore, junior, senior, you gotta go.â So I felt like I was just finishing sophomore year and I needed junior and senior, but it was intense. Iâm glad I had that experience.â
Kate Winslet wants the next generation to know they can aspire to be more than just good looks
One of the many things discussed at this yearâs Envelope Roundtable for lead actresses was the emphasis society is still putting on womenâs looks: their size, the way they dress and how pretty they might be. Kate Winslet was having none of it but, as she notes, it wonât change until the next generation of girls and the ones after that are taught that there are other things to value about themselves.
âItâs so important that weâre putting across an image of what it means to be strong, successful, proud of your body, proud of who you are and proud of what you say,â the âWonder Wheelâ actress said, so that young women âwill know that these are interesting things to aspire to be. It isnât about an image.â
Annette Bening explains how âyou want to be in a place of uncertaintyâ when creating art
When the younger women who took part in the recent Envelope Roundtable for lead actresses began to wonder about confidence and insecurity and, you know, when do the jitters actually go away, veteran actress Annette Bening spoke up to ease their concerns by essentially telling them: It never goes away. But thatâs not a bad thing, she assured them.
âWhenever youâre a creative person, you always have a certain amount of insecurity and uncertainty,â she said. âYou want to be in a place of uncertainty, a place where something surprising can happen. Thatâs where the gold is.â The trick, she said to Soairse Ronan and Margot Robbie, is simply to cultivate those feelings, acknowledge them and accept them. And then, essentially, go with the flow.
Diane Kruger explains how her âIn The Fadeâ role made her feel âa whole other level of responsibilityâ
With âIn The Fade,â actress Diane Kruger took on a role in her native Germany for the first time. Written and directed by Fatih Akin, the film tells the story of a woman struggling to move forward with her life after her husband and son are killed in a terrorist bomb attack. Kruger won the best actress prize for her performance at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival, and as she explained during the recent lead actress Envelope Roundtable, the fact-based story was one that has stuck with her in unexpected ways.
âI didnât quite realize how sometimes, maybe to my own fault, sometimes a character makes you discover so much more about yourself and your capability of empathy,â she said. âYou know people talk about the craft of acting but every once in a while you get to play someone who has to live with that reality youâre portraying, and that sets a whole other level of responsibility in what a film can do.â
Jessica Chastain found the portrayal of women in the 2017 Cannes festival films âreally disturbingâ
Actress Jessica Chastain found the portrayal of women in the films she saw at the Cannes film festival âreally disturbing.â
Actress Jessica Chastain took part in the recent lead actress Envelope Roundtable for her performance in Aaron Sorkinâs directorial debut, âMollyâs Game,â an adaptation of the memoir by Molly Bloom about her time running a high-stakes underground poker game. Chastain was also part of the jury for the 2017 Cannes Film festival and spoke out at the time regarding the collective impression those films made for their depictions of women. During the roundtable, she noted that she had never before watched 21 films in such a short amount of time. And with such a disappointing results.
âWatching in that concentration, it became very clear to me, how the world viewed women and how little stories talked from a womanâs point of view, a story about a woman who wasnât victimized,â she said. âOf course, there were exceptions at the Cannes film festival. However, I found it really disturbing in general, the image that was portrayed of women in the lineup that I saw.â
Margot Robbie is grateful she didnât know Tonya Hardingâs story before portraying her in âI, Tonyaâ
Actress Margot Robbie was grateful that she was able to approach âI, Tonyaâ with a fresh perspective since she wasnât familiar with Tonya Hardingâs story.
As part of the recent lead actress Envelope Roundtable, actress Margot Robbie talked about her work on the darkly comic biopic âI, Tonya.â Having grown up in Australia, Robbie wasnât aware of the infamous saga of figure skater Tonya Harding. So she was able to approach the performance with a fresh perspective.
âIn hindsight, Iâm really grateful I wasnât aware of the situation, or I didnât know who any of these people were going into it, so I could really approach it with no preconceived notions or judgment,â she said. âI quickly found out that everyone had passed judgment on her.â
âMollyâs Gameâsâ Jessica Chastain feels for everything women have to go through just to be heard
âMollyâs Gameâ actress Jessica Chastain explains how researching for her role gave her âa lot of compassion for women in our societyâ for everything they have to go through just for âsomeone to listen to what they have to say.âÂ
In the role of Molly Bloom for the movie âMollyâs Game,â Jessica Chastain plays a woman navigating her way through the male-dominated world of high-stakes underground poker. As she said during the recent lead actress Envelope Roundtable, the experience made her think about how women are seen and perceived in the world.
âFor me it was so much about what society tells women about what they need to be valuable,â she said. âSo I would show up on set with this long black hair and my spray tan and short dresses with the highest heels and my cleavage out. And I could feel the power that I would receive on set, I could feel this immediately, âNow people are paying attention to me.â And at the same time I felt smaller.
âAnd it really gave me a lot of compassion for women in our society,â she added. âIn order for someone to listen to what they have to say, they have to smile enough, they have to maybe not wear too many pantsuits, all these things that the film explores.â
âThe Beguiledâsâ Nicole Kidman explains how director Sofia Coppola âvibrates in this feminine placeâ on set
âShe vibrates in this feminine place that is not as plot driven as much as it is atmospheric,â said Nicole Kidman of âThe Beguiledâ director Sofia Coppola.
As part of the Envelope Roundtable for supporting actresses, Nicole Kidman, Holly Hunter and Laurie Metcalf described their experiences working with female filmmakers, and how that can lead to a different atmosphere on-set. Kidman spoke of working with Sofia Coppola on âThe Beguiled,â as well as her experiences with Jane Campion. Hunter won an Oscar for Campionâs âThe Piano.â Laurie Metcalf spoke about working with Greta Gerwig on this yearâs âLady Bird.â
âSofia, she vibrates in this feminine place that is not as plot-driven as much as it is atmospheric,â Kidman said.
âSheâs very quietly spoken, and unbelievably powerful,â she added. âPeople are running around doing things, and she speaks barely above a whisper.â
Michelle Pfeiffer says that her acting hiatus and comeback just sort of happened
âMother!â and âMurder on the Orient Expressâ actress Michelle Pfeiffer explains how her time away from acting just sort of happened.Â
A three-time Academy Award winner, Michelle Pfeiffer seemed to have more recently stepped away from Hollywood. Then this year she came back in big way, including supporting roles in Darren Aronofskyâs wild, provocative âmother!â and Kenneth Brannaghâs large-scaled telling of âMurder on the Orient Express.â
On our recent Envelope Roundtable for supporting actresses, Pfeiffer spoke about how it wasnât so much a conscious decision to take time off and come back to acting, as just the way things turned out.
âIt wasnât unusual for me to take a year or two off in between projects anyway and I think two years became three and then, I donât know, it became five,â she said. âBut the truth is, it was actually when my second child started looking at colleges that I thought, âHmm, maybe itâs time for me to get my foot back in the door.â And at that time things started presenting themselves that looked interesting and then, here I am.â
Holly Hunter explains why âThe Big Sickâ is more of a rom-com than âBroadcast Newsâ
Holly Hunter explains why âThe Big Sickâ is more of a rom-com than âBroadcast News.âÂ
âThe Big Sickâ has been hailed as a welcome return for the romantic comedy, as a couple comes together, goes through adversity, falls apart and comes back together again. The movie was written by the husband-and-wife team of Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani based on their own experiences. Nanjiani plays himself, with Zoe Kazan standing in for Gordon, and Holly Hunter and Ray Romano as her parents.
Hunter was at the Envelope Roundtable for supporting actresses recently and talked about âThe Big Sickâ in relation to âBroadcast News,â the 1987 film in which she starred and is now widely considered a classic modern rom-com. She noted how âBroadcast Newsâ was taken less as a rom-com in its day and in fact, ââBig Sickâ is more the romantic comedy genre, I think, because Kumail loves it.â
Allison Janney auditioned three birds for âI, Tonyaâ
Allison Janney discusses her approach to filming her âI, Tonyaâ scenes with a bird on her shoulder.
In âI, Tonya,â Allison Janney plays LaVona Golden, mother of figure skater Tonya Harding, who would become embroiled in the scandal surrounding the 1994 attack on fellow skater Nancy Kerrigan. In the film, the contentious relationship between Harding and Golden becomes a big part of the story and Hardingâs motivation for success at skating.
A real-life documentary interview with Hardingâs mother formed the basis for scenes when she talks directly to the camera with a small pet bird on her shoulder.
During the Envelope Roundtable for supporting actresses, Janney talked about auditioning three birds for the part and how the calm bird picked for the role wasnât so calm on shooting day, while adding âIt was fun, I really fell in love with the bird.â
Actress Laurie Metcalf noted, âHe is a wonderful scene partner for you.â
This is how Hong Chau responds to people who find her âDownsizingâ character controversial
Hong Chau shares how the âregularâ audience and film critics have reacted differently to her âDownsizingâ character and accent.Â
With only her second role in a movie, actress Hong Chau has created one of the most talked-about characters of the year. In âDownsizing,â directed by Alexander Payne, a process is used to shrink humans to just five inches tall. Chau plays a Vietnamese political activist who is shrunk down by an opposition party. Upon becoming a cleaning woman to the wealthier parts of the tiny world, she helps a man (Matt Damon) see the bigger picture.
The role has proved to be controversial, with many journalists asking if the film presents a cultural stereotype in its depiction of Chauâs character. On the Envelope Roundtable for supporting actresses, Chau noted the conversations she has had with regular audiences and those sheâs had with journalists have been very different. She also discussed how she defends the character and its representation in the movie.
âI think thereâs a difference between characters with an accent who have two lines in something and my character, where she is driving a good portion of the story,â Chau said.
âIâm glad that people are sensitive to it and theyâre well-meaning, but I hope that people are going to go into the movie with a big heart as opposed to exercising their mind like, âIs there something that I need to pay attention forâ Thatâs not really what you should go into any movie with.â
For Jordan Peele, âGet Outâ became about black representation in horror
âGet Outâ director Jordan Peele says, âThe sunken place is this metaphor for the system that is suppressing the freedom of black people.â
Seven directors gathered together for the Envelope Roundtable to talk about their work and found their wildly different films actually had a lot in common. They all, as Jordan Peele put it, explore a âmissing piece of the conversation.â Here Peele discusses what âthe sunken placeâ from his horror film âGet Outâ meant to him:
âThe sunken place is this metaphor for the system that is suppressing the freedom of black people,â he said. Itâs âthe lack of representation of black people in film, in genre. The reason Chris in the film is falling into this place, being forced to watch this screen, that no matter how hard he screams at the screen he canât get agency across. And that, to me, was this metaphor for the black horror audience, a very loyal fan base who comes to these movies, and weâre the ones that are going to die first. And we yell âGet out, get out of the house.ââ
Guillermo del Toro set âThe Shape of Waterâ in 1962 to show how things for âthe otherâ are just as bad today
Director Guillermo del Toro explains that âThe Shape of Waterâ is set in 1962 âfor a reason. Because itâs about today. And about the âotherâ ... I wanted to talk about things now.â
As Greta Gerwig (âLady Birdâ) noted at the Envelope Roundtable for directors, the films of all the participants â regardless of the time period in which they take place â are about now.
âThe Shape of Waterâ director Guillermo del Toro certainly agreed, and his fairy tale/Cold War thriller is set in 1962.
âWell, it was â62 for a reason. Because itâs about today. And about the âother,ââ he said. But, he added, âyou donât want to root it in now. Itâs too direct for me. I like the idea of being able to have people lower their guard with the âOnce upon a time,â you know, and then listen. And then emotionally, I try to make it very real and very specific to me. ⌠I wanted to see, can I talk about love without sounding disingenuous?â
During turbulent times, these directors wield stories as weapons of empathy
Directors Greta Gerwig (âLady Birdâ), Jordan Peele (âGet Outâ) and Kathryn Bigelow (âDetroitâ) discuss the particular power stories wield to humanize the âother.âÂ
In these times of divisiveness and antagonism, or as Guillermo del Toro put it at the recent Envelope Roundtable for directors, âthe vulgarity and the brutality of what weâre living,â filmmaking can be used as a tool to humanize the âotherâ said Jordan Peele (âGet Outâ) and Kathryn Bigelow (âDetroitâ).
âIt feels like all of these stories are exploring a missing piece of the conversation,â said Peele âStory is one of, if not the most important tool, weapon we have against hatred and violence.â
âEspecially now,â Bigelow said. âYouâre almost weaponizing storytelling in order to somehow contextualize the unthinkable.â
âAnd story promotes empathy, right?â Peele said.
âRight, exactly, humanizing it,â Bigelow agreed.
âItâs one of the few ways we can actually see through the eyes of another person,â Peele said.
Angelina Jolie was sensitive of her crew that lived the events of âFirst They Killed My Fatherâ
Director Angelina Jolie explains how she was mindful of the emotions that could be evoked by the scenes she was re-creating to film âFirst They Killed My Fatherâ in Cambodia.Â
With âFirst They Killed My father,â Angelina Jolie crafted a visceral film that captures the fear and trauma of wartime 1975 Cambodia from the perspective of a young girl. In bringing the memoir by Luong Ung to the screen, Jolie was aware of added concerns that were unusual for a film production.
âEvery single Cambodian crew member was affected by this war,â Jolie said at the Envelope Roundtable, where she gathered with six other Oscar contending directors. âMany of these children knew their parents went through this, but they never talked about what happened. But now theyâre going to re-create a scene, and theyâre going to see, and experience, and feel what the parent went through. We had to be really sensitive to that.â
Directors Kathryn Bigelow and Sean Baker are drawn to the line between fiction and documentary filmmaking
âDetroitâ director Kathryn Bigelow and âThe Florida Projectâ director Sean Baker explain how they were drawn to the space that blends fictional narratives with stories rooted in facts for their films.Â
With her film âDetroit,â Kathryn Bigelow dramatizes real-life events that occurred during the 1967 riots in that city. In âThe Florida Project,â Sean Baker tells a tale that explores life on the poverty-stricken fringes in contemporary Florida. Both movies weave fictional and dramatic elements from factual truths, creating stories that feel all too real.
âThereâs a place where drama and documentary kind of fuse, and thatâs sort of a place that interests me,â Bigelow said. âIt becomes very topical and timely, and thatâs where the journalistic aspect comes in.â
Baker picked up on Bigelowâs idea of a fact/fiction hybrid by adding, âItâs the cinema that Iâm really finding the most fascinating right now and the most interesting, where that line is blurred between narrative fiction filmmaking and documentary-style filmmaking.â
To Jake Gyllenhaal, the most important thing to do now is listen
âStrongerâ actor Jake Gyllenhaal shares his belief that the most important thing he can do now in response to allegations of sexual misconduct in Hollywood is to listen.Â
As allegations of sexual abuse and harassment have roiled the entertainment industry, awards season has continued apace, albeit with a newfound and unexpected seriousness. Joining the Envelope Roundtable for lead actors for his role as Boston Marathon bombing survivor Jeff Bauman in âStronger,â Jake Gyllenhaal expressed the kind of genuine candor and soul-searching that has suddenly become part of the process.
âItâs a confusing time. Everyone is trying to digest what all of this means,â Gyllenhaal said. âI feel like to me the most important thing that I have discovered in this period of time, particularly being a man in this business, is to listen. This takes a lot of work and will from everyone. ⌠How do we behave moving forward?â
Hugh Jackman is humbled by the courage of those stepping forward about experiencing sexual harassment
âLoganâ and âThe Greatest Showmanâ actor Hugh Jackman shares how he is humbled by the courage of those who have spoken up about their experiences with sexual harassment, despite âthe amount of shame and guilt that is attached to this entire subject.
Hugh Jackman was on the Envelope Roundtable for lead actors for his role in the deeply felt superhero character study âLogan,â even as he will also soon be seen in the musical âThe Greatest Showman.â Questions of how to respond to the sexual harassment and abuse scandals that are shaking Hollywood are both inevitable and yet still difficult to answer. When the subject came up, Jackman was the first to respond, expressing his feelings on what this moment could come to mean.
âI just have unbelievable empathy and am so inspired by all of the people coming out,â Jackman said. âI think the amount of shame and guilt that is attached to this entire subject and the amount of courage it takes to step forward is humbling to me. I donât think it matters if youâre a man or a woman, if youâre old or young, if youâre a parent or not, itâs a human issue. Iâm really glad the conversation is out there, itâs a great opportunity beyond our industry, really amongst society. An issue which has obviously been sort of pasted over is no longer.â
James Franco channels Tommy Wiseau to describe Tommy Wiseau
James Franco, who plays filmmaker Tommy Wiseau in âThe Disaster Artist,â uses Wiseauâs words and mannerisms to explain just what drew him to Wiseauâs story.Â
James Franco stars in and directs âThe Disaster Artist,â the impossibly true story of actor and filmmaker Tommy Wiseau and the making of his now cult classic 2003 movie âThe Room.â Rather than laughing at Wiseau, through Francoâs unexpectedly heartfelt performance the movie turns him into a heroic ideal of can-do spirit and believing in yourself. In our roundtable, Franco talked about what drew him to Wiseau as a character, complete with an impression of Wiseauâs unusual, difficult to place accent.
âTommy Wiseau had been told no his whole life. âIâm like James Dean.â Imagine the whole world saying, âNo youâre not, dude,ââ Franco said. ââI want to shoot on 35 millimeter and HD at the same time.â Why Tommy? âBecause nobody ever do it before.ââ
These actresses see change and hope in ending sexual harassment
Hong Chau (âDownsizingâ), Laurie Metcalf (âLady Birdâ), Holly Hunter (âThe Big Sickâ), Allison Janney (âI, Tonyaâ), Nicole Kidman (âThe Beguiledâ) and Michelle Pfeiffer (âmother!â) share their observations related to the recent discussions about sex
In this yearâs Envelope Roundtable of supporting actresses, the topic of sexual harassment in the entertainment industry came up. After an initial nervous pause these actresses jumped right in. Hong Chau (âDownsizingâ) credited the ongoing discussion of revelations of harassment with jump-starting a greater push to get women behind the camera and in other production positions.
Laurie Metcalf sees a new strength and savviness in the younger generation of actresses in dealing with these situations, and Holly Hunter gives a shout to social media for enabling the entire movement of women and men telling their stories.
Michelle Pfeiffer sees âa seismic change happeningâ to foster discussions of sexual harassment
âMother!â actress Michelle Pfeiffer shares her thoughts on why people are now more open about discussing their experiences with sexual harassment.
As we were preparing for this yearâs Envelope Roundtables we kept asking ourselves, would the thing everyone is talking about be something people would actually want to talk about, live, unscripted and on-camera?
It turns out yes. âMother!â actress Michelle Pfeiffer shared her thoughts freely.
âIâve had conversations with women Iâve known my whole life,â said Pfeiffer. âWeâve never had these conversations, and weâre having them now and Iâve realized one of the things that has kept it quiet has been this sort of veil of shame, and that in combination with, when something happens so much, it becomes normalized.
âBoth of those things are being lifted and I think that it will never be normalized again in the same way,â Pfeiffer added. âI see a seismic change happening and Iâm very excited about it.â
Allison Janney says âitâs a very empowering timeâ now that people are sharing their stories about sexual harassment
Allison Janney from âI, Tonya,â shares how âitâs a very empowering timeâ now that people feel free to speak up about their experiences with sexual harassment.
As the landslide of stories about sexual harassment and abuse in the entertainment industry has continued to flow, it has often been the main and sometimes only topic of conversation at screenings and receptions and the other whistle-stops of awards season.
This yearâs Envelope Roundtable of supporting actress contenders was no exception. Allison Janney from âI, Tonya,â Laurie Metcalf from âLady Bird,â Nicole Kidman from âThe Beguiled,â Holly Hunter from âThe Big Sick,â Hong Chau from âDownsizingâ and Michelle Pfeiffer from âmother!â had something to say, starting with Janney, who recalled, âI always knew about this thing called the âcasting couchâ and that was something women had to navigate.â
But now that people are telling their stories, Janney added, âitâs a very empowering time.â