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-During the interview, Jennifer asks the writer if she can vape. They also discuss their childbirth experiences, and at one point, Jennifer “cheerfully offered the phrase ‘huge vagina.’”
-The writer tells Jlaw she went through old articles about her and mentions it must have been “self-alienating” for people to think her personality was fake. Jlaw says: “Well, it is, or it was, my genuine personality, but it was also a defense mechanism.” She continues, “And so it was a defense mechanism, to just be, like, ‘I’m not like that! I poop my pants every day!’”
-She gets why people think she’s annoying and says, “I felt—I didn’t feel, I was, I think—rejected not for my movies, not for my politics, but for me, for my personality.”
-Jlaw talks about her role in the Lynne Ramsay-directed “Die My Love” and working with Rob Pattinson. She also talks about why she chooses to play mother-like figures.
-She constantly considers getting an acting coach before she films a movie, but decides not to go through with it. Hunger Games-director Gary Ross, Jodie Foster and Emma Stone praise her skills as an actress in the profile. Emma Stone says, “She just becomes it, like a child actor. The circumstance around you is real. Be in it. That’s what everybody wishes they could do.” An old theater adage asks who you would rather watch on stage: an actor or a cat? Stone says, ““The audience would watch the cat because it’s going to respond genuinely in the moment, while the actors are still acting. It’s that quality. Jen’s the cat.”
-Jlaw credits David O. Russell with teaching her how to act.
-Jlaw talks about meeting her art-dealer husband Cooke Maroney and what she’s learned about art through him.
-She talks about not wanting to get fillers because you can see them on camera, but she gets Botox. She also plans to get a boob job. She’s going to be nude in a movie again, but she says she still thinks she would get one even if she weren’t a famous actress.
-Profile mentions the documentaries she’s produced to support women’s rights, including “Bread & Roses,” which looks at the lives of women’s rights activists in Afghanistan after 2021, and “Zurawski v Texas,” which is about a woman who was denied an abortion at 18 weeks and went into septic shock. She has become skeptical about celebrities talking about politics because of how little it seems to move the needle.
-”Die My Love’s” distributor is Mubi, which accepted $100 million from Sequoia Capital, the lead investor in an Israeli defense-tech company that was founded after the Hamas attacks on October 7. At a press conference, a reporter asks about Palestine. Even though a moderator was about to cut in, Jennifer encouraged him to continue.
-An excerpt from the profile about why she encouraged him: Lawrence told me afterward that she had noticed the reporter in the crowd earlier. “I could see something in his eyes—he was scared,” she said. “I felt that there was something he didn’t want to say, but had to.” She had prepared an answer for a question about Palestine, but she ended up being more frank than she’d planned. “I’m terrified,” she told the reporter. “It’s mortifying. What’s happening is no less than a genocide, and it’s unacceptable. I’m terrified for my children, for all of our children.” She said she wished that anything she said or did could fix things. “I just want people to stay focussed on who is responsible and the things they can do,” she added.