
Who's that Girl?
WITH FOUR FILMS OUT
IN 2012, AMANDA SEYFRIED IS HAVING HER MOMENT. Donna Walker-Mitchell TALKS TO
THE DOWN-TO-EARTH ACTOR ABOUT LOVE, NUDITY AND HER OBSESSION WITH LES MIS .
Amanda Seyfried isn’t one to mince words. The
26-year-old star with the long blonde hair and huge eyes may look like an
angel, but she also swears like a sailor. “I have to stop cursing,” she says,
sweeping her wavy hair away from her shoulders. “I probably shouldn’t do it as
much, but I do.”
Today, in Beverly Hills, the actor looks
stunning in a J Brand grey blazer and Bird by Juicy Couture dark-denim flared
jeans with a rhinestone triple-strand necklace by Nola Singer. In her towering
Brian Atwood heels, Seyfried seems much taller than usual, even willowy.
“No matter what I eat, I think my legs will
always be good, and thank God. My mum has great legs, even after two kids and
being really busy. Genetically, I’m just going to have thinner legs,” she says,
before pausing and quickly becoming self-deprecating. “Some people think they
also look like chicken legs, so to some, even if you have thin legs, they’re
still not good. Oh well.” She shrugs her shoulders and laughs. “You can’t
please everybody. That’s the one thing I know for sure.”
However, Seyfried is pleasing everybody – at
least in Hollywood terms. This year will be one of the biggest of her career,
with four films – Gone, Lovelace, The Big Wedding and Les Misérables – due for
release. “It still surprises me that people are trusting me with these roles,”
she says. “I’m really at a good point.”
So it seems.
Lovelace is already being touted as one of
the must-see films of the year, with an impressive cast that includes James
Franco, Sarah Jessica Parker and Peter Sarsgaard, whom Seyfried describes as
“f…ing amazing”. In the biopic, Seyfried plays the troubled ’70s porn star
Linda Lovelace.
“She has an amazing story,” Seyfried says of
Lovelace. “When people hear [the name] Lovelace, they have one idea about her,
but she goes on a journey which is so negative. You have to read her books to
fully grasp what she went through. It’s a very powerful story.”
Seyfried is also quick to dismiss a common
perception about Linda Lovelace: “She wasn’t promiscuous. She had a child and
was forced to give that child up by her parents, who were so Catholic. They
were very strict and almost insensitive to a point. Not the worst parents, by
any means, but she needed to get out of there. I mean, imagine being forced to give
your baby up. What would that do to you?” Seyfried asks, her voice getting
louder. It’s obvious she is passionate about the project.
The question of how much skin she will or
won’t show on screen has been a hotly debated topic, but Seyfried is clear on
the issue. “Personally, I don’t want to show my vagina,” she says
matter-of-factly.
“Not that I judge anyone who has. If you’re
with a good filmmaker, anything goes, but we won’t exactly be re-creating
scenes from Linda’s films. That would be rated X,” she says with a laugh.
Born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Seyfried
modelled from age 11 and started her acting career at just 15. She had
recurring roles on TV soaps All My Children and As the World Turns. However, it
was the 2004 cult hit Mean Girls, which also starred Lindsay Lohan and Rachel
McAdams, that catapulted her onto the big screen. Roles in films such as Alpha
Dog, Dear John, Mamma Mia! and Letters to Juliet followed.
In terms of style, Seyfried’s upcoming films
run the gamut from suspense thriller to musical to gritty biopic, showcasing
her versatility. “I’m always trying to do something different, something I’ve
never done,” she explains.
“Gone, for instance, is a grounded
psychological thriller. I thought, ‘Why the f… wouldn’t I do it?’ It seemed
perfect for me,” she says.
In the film, Seyfried plays Jill Parrish, a
waitress who was abducted by a serial killer two years before. She believes he
has returned for her, but has taken her sister by mistake. However, nobody
believes Jill because after the earlier abduction, she was placed in a mental
hospital. Is Jill telling the truth now or has she made up the whole story?
“I couldn’t put the script down when I read
it,” Seyfried says with a smile. “I knew instantly this was something I wanted
to do because this is the type of movie I’d go and see, buy my popcorn and
enjoy.”
However, it was the role of Cosette in Les
Misérables that Seyfried pulled out all the stops to win. “I wanted that role
like I have never wanted anything in my life,” she says of the adaptation of
Victor Hugo’s classic 19th-century novel.
The starring role was one of the most coveted
in Hollywood, but it was Seyfried who got the nod from director Tom Hooper. She
is working alongside Hugh Jackman and Russell Crowe, who play Jean Valjean and
Inspector Javert respectively. Anne Hathaway is Fantine.
In order to be a contender to play Cosette,
Seyfried started having voice lessons last August. She needed no help with the
lyrics, however. “I was f…ing obsessed with Les Mis when I was younger. I know
every single word of all the songs. It is, without doubt, my favourite musical
ever,” she says.
Despite her commitment, Seyfried says she had
to wait a month before getting the go-ahead from Hooper. “I spent so much money
on that audition,” she says with a laugh. “I took voice lessons, flew to London
twice [to audition], sent two tapes over. By the end, I was exhausted by it.”
But Seyfried held on to the hope that her
goal would become a reality. “You know what?” she says, taking a sip of her
tea. “I knew I did my best and I felt great about that. My hands were clean.”
“WE WON’T EXACTLY BE RE-CREATING SCENES FROM
LINDA LOVELACE’S FILMS. THAT WOULD BE RATED X.” She wipes her hands
together and the gold bangles on her wrist clink together.
“There was a time when I was getting bitter
because I felt like I was in a holding pattern for a month. I’m the type of
person who likes to know I’m working towards something. Then a month after I
auditioned, Tom Hooper called me and I was so happy.”
It’s not the first time that Seyfried’s vocal
talents have won her a coveted role in Hollywood. In 2008, the actor had many
audience members asking, “Who’s that girl?” as she lit up the screen in Mamma
Mia!. Starring opposite Meryl Streep, she belted out Abba classics such as
Honey, Honey and Thank You for the Music and romped on a beach with English
co-star Dominic Cooper as they performed the duet Lay All Your Love on Me.
The pair fell in love during filming and
dated for just over two years, before ending their relationship in May 2010,
amid rumours of Cooper’s infidelity. In an interview with US Elle magazine,
Seyfried explained that “I got my heart broken pretty hard”.
Since then, Seyfried has been romantically
linked with actors such as Ryan Phillippe, Alexander Skarsgard, Josh Hartnett
and, most recently, her Lovelace co-star James Franco. But she says she is most
definitely “single” as of now. When it comes to love, she admits she doesn’t
fall easily. “It’s rare for me to love somebody,” she says.
To win her heart, grand gestures such as
scattering hundreds of rose petals on the floor or sweeping her off to an
exotic destination won’t cut it. For Seyfried, think simple and heartfelt. No
over-the-top displays of affection.
“I like things which are handmade. When I
really love someone, I like to make something for them,” she says. “To me, that
means so much more. I’d prefer a quiet night in any day.”
Dating in the spotlight can be tricky,
though, and Seyfried is well aware of that as she tries to negotiate her
singledom. “If you’re dating somebody, you don’t want someone to know that,
unless you commit to somebody, and that sucks. You have to hide and that’s really
awful,” she says.
Other than that, the actor describes her life
as “pretty normal”. “I have an easy life. I go to [pharmacy chain] CVS and
[local supermarket] Trader Joe’s, take my dog to day care. Sometimes I’m
captured doing it, sometimes not,” she says of the paparazzi who follow her
intermittently from her Hollywood Hills home.
On a day off, Seyfried likes to have lunch
with friends at one of her favourite places, organic Urth Caffé in West
Hollywood, or she simply stays at home and invites friends over.
“That’s the best,” she says. “I love my home.
I have a ballet studio in my backyard and I had my first official ballet class
with my teacher the other day. Three of my closest friends take it with me and
it’s really fun. We loved it,” she says.
To stay in shape, Seyfried also uses an
elliptical training machine and does strength training. “It’s really very basic
– cardio and weights. I’m not a Pilates or yoga type of girl. I’m going to get
into running again soon, too. I want to do that,” she says.
Taking care of herself is part of her job,
according to Seyfried. “My body is an instrument as well, so I try to keep
within a certain amount of pounds. I’m naturally thin, but fat comes very
quickly if I completely lose it,” she says, citing a weakness for Cadbury Creme
Egg chocolates.
“Losing too much or gaining too much is not
healthy. I keep it simple and I feel like I’m fine,” she says, crossing her
slender legs. “I don’t obsess over it, though. That’s not healthy, either.”
As the face of high-end beauty brand Clé de
Peau, Seyfried also knows that it’s her job to keep her skin glowing at all
times, particularly on the red carpet. In order to maintain it, Seyfried has
facials regularly. Her favourite products include a gentle cleansing foam and
the über-expensive La Crème, which she uses twice a day.
“If I was stranded on a desert island, it
would be what I’d want to take with me,” she says of the $750-a-jar indulgence.
Red-carpet regular Seyfried is a fixture on
bestdressed lists, although she is quick to praise her stylist, Elizabeth
Stewart. “I have a slight eye for fashion. But not like her. I love what my
stylist picks out for me. Personally, I love cosy, fashionable things,”
Seyfried says, listing Alexander Wang as one of her favourite designers for
casual, day-today dressing. When it comes to making a statement on the red
carpet, Seyfried opts for more glamorous labels such as Valentino, Dior, Stella
McCartney and Dolce & Gabbana.
“I like to show my legs,” she says of her
style rules. “And I like to have things around my neck. Other than that, if my
stylist shows me an outfit, I’ll say, ‘That’s great’ or ‘No, let’s move on.’
Simple.”
Simple is how Seyfried seems to like things
generally. Straightforward and direct, the actor says she doesn’t know how to
be any other way. “I’m pretty good at seeing through all the BS,” she says in
her trademark down-toearth manner.
Perhaps it comes from the fact that, as she
says, she was “never the girl who said, ‘I’m going to be a star’ ”. Although
thrilled with her success to date, it wasn’t as if Seyfried had her career all
mapped out from an early age.
“I don’t know if the career I’m having now is
a surprise, but I never had any expectations,” she says, smiling.
Seyfried’s philosophy on life matches her
easy way, and her attitude is certainly working for her. “I live moment to
moment,” she says. “That’s just who I am. As for what’s next? I have no idea,
but I’m sure it will be something pretty great.” •
Gone is in cinemas now.
“WHEN I REALLY LOVE SOMEONE, I LIKE TO MAKE
SOMETHING FOR THEM. TO ME, THAT MEANS SO MUCH MORE. I’D PREFER A QUIET NIGHT IN
ANY DAY.”
Bright star (from top) Seyfried with former beau
Dominic Cooper in April 2010; with Mamma Mia! co-star Meryl Streep; in action
with Justin Timberlake in In Time; on the trail of a killer in Gone.