Elliot Page | Page 9 | the Fashion Spot

Elliot Page

Ellen on why her character in Juno resonated with audiences so much: “It’s a teenage female lead we’ve never seen before. She dresses like she wants, says what she wants, and doesn’t apologize for it…. Girls haven’t had that sort of character before. We don’t have our Catcher in the Rye.”
Ellen on her reputation as a Hollywood outsider: “Sometimes I think I come off as a Hollywood-hater, and it’s not true. I’m not some judgmental prick. It’s not like I’m ‘Boo hoo! People like the movie.’ You know what I mean?”
Ellen on the roles available for young actresses: “You either have the rich Laguna Beach thing, where the only thing they’re worrying about is what jeans to wear to impress Bobby or you have the girl who dresses in black and cuts herself.”
Ellen on her post-Juno plans: “It’s kind of daunting to be a young actor with some stuff happening. I could do the whole [Hollywood] thing if I wanted, but I’m not going to. I look at someone like Johnny Depp or Kate Winslet and they seem to be strong individuals who have decided to take risks and be unique…. It could be easy to rush into something, so I want to take my time to figure out what’s really going to get me excited.”​

fadedyouthblog
 
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she reminds me of thora birch a bit in ghost world.. which, was equally as excellent as juno.
 
in W...march..
she looks absolutely gorgeous..

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wmagazine

Fresh Page
Actress Ellen Page is young, talented and unimpressed by Hollywood hoopla


Ellen Page is 20, but the actress—a tomboy pixie dressed in jeans and a hoodie—looks like the kind of 16-year-old you’d see smoking outside a 7-Eleven. And like a lot of smart, bored kids, Page likes to give the impression that everything is No Big Deal, even her breakout role two years ago as a psychopathic teen who lures and tortures a suspected pedophile in the indie film Hard Candy. “It’s just what I do, you know?” she says, downing a shot of espresso in a midtown restaurant. “It’s no big deal, that’s kind of my attitude.” Despite the fact that Page’s next star turn, in Juno, is being called one of the smartest, brightest performances of the year, the wispy Canadian exudes none of the cheery, I’m-so-blessed vibes of a star on the rise. Instead, she seems intent on proving she’s untouched by any of the Hollywood baloney. Fashion, for instance, doesn’t move her. “I go to these photo shoots and they’re talking to me about designers, but this is how I like to dress,” she says, tugging at her flannel shirt. What about promoting last year’s X-Men: The Last Stand, her first taste of big-budget filmmaking? Shrug. “We did the junket; we went to Cannes.”
In Juno, opening in December and directed by Jason Reitman (Thank You for Smoking), Page plays Juno MacGuff, a sarcastic, punk rock–loving Minnesota teenager who finds herself pregnant after a fling with her bandmate (Superbad star Michael Cera). She decides to have the baby and give it to a yuppie couple (Jason Bateman and Jennifer Garner) who are looking to adopt. A far cry from the typical teen screen caricatures—the jock, the mean girl, the nerd—Juno is remarkably nuanced: self-confident but not bitchy; quirky but not a social outcast. And unlike most ugly ducklings, who are, by movie’s end, transformed into stylish swans, Juno starts out not so cute and only gets fatter and less fashionable (she’s pregnant, after all). “I would have loved to see a character in a film like that when I was in junior high school,” says Page, whose mother is a first-grade teacher and father is a graphic designer. “Juno likes to rock out as herself, and I respect that.”
Page got her big break at age 10, when a casting director came to her elementary school in Halifax, Nova Scotia, seeking fresh talent for a CBC television movie. She worked steadily through her teens, mainly in Canadian films and TV, before landing the part as the baby-faced aggressor in Hard Candy. She’s stayed mostly on the thorny path of hard-to-watch films ever since. In Mouth to Mouth (2006) she shaves her head and joins a cult. In this year’s The Tracey Fragments she’s a disturbed teen wandering the streets. And in the upcoming Showtime docudrama An American Crime she plays Sylvia Likens, a teenager who in 1965 was locked in a basement and tortured to death. “She’s a spectacular actress, incapable of having a false moment,” says Reitman.
Bateman agrees that Page is the real deal. “She’s not wondering if she’s a job away from the pot of gold or whether she’s finally getting access to the best dresses for the Academy Awards,” he says. “She’s genuinely not impressed with those things.”
It probably helps that the actress still lives in her hometown, where one of her best friends is a dog trainer and another works in a pizza place. Moving to L.A. or, say, partying with the cast of The Hills is just not her style. “I think if I moved there and did that,” she says without a trace of a smile, “I would get really depressed and I might die."
 
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papermag

Page Turner
by Whitney Spaner
photography Jacqueline di Milia
styling Turner

Ellen Page is lying upside-down on a futon couch with her feet propped up over the back and her head dangling down off the front. She's wearing a full-length leopard-print dress and a black denim jacket. "I love this song!" she blurts. "It's the New Young Pony Club!" She's referring to the sugary-sweet electro-pop band you can probably hear on the iPod of just about every Studio B-visiting hipster right now. Page, 20, who stars in the recently released Juno, is at the photo shoot for this story. Next she slips on her own skinny jeans, a Patti Smith T-shirt, a men's vest and striped wool knit hat. This outfit is much more in keeping with Page's own style (she claims to wear basically the same jeans and plaid button-up everyday). But what she lacks in enthusiasm for fashion, she makes up for in music, and not just by selecting the playlist for her Paper photo shoot.

In an early meeting to discuss Juno, a witty, heartfelt and well-written film, director Jason Reitman (Thank You for Smoking) asked Page what she thought Juno -- the quirky 16-year-old who has a cheeseburger-shaped phone, drinks endless blue slushies, gets knocked up by her nerdy best friend (Michael Cera) and then subsequently chooses adoptive parents from the PennySaver coupon book -- would listen to for music. "The Moldy Peaches," Page answered, without skipping a beat. By the next meeting, Reitman had met with Kimya Dawson, lead singer for the Moldy Peaches, and arranged for her to contribute to the Juno soundtrack. "I was ecstatic!" says Page. With other contributors including Cat Power, Sonic Youth, the Kinks and the Velvet Underground, the soundtrack started getting Internet buzz months before the film's release.
Page, a self-proclaimed music-head, cites Patti Smith's Horses, Sleater-Kinney's Woods and Radiohead's Amnesiac as a few of her favorite albums, and credits Amnesiac as the record that turned her on to music in the first place, back when she was in the eighth grade. "I remember first hearing 'Pyramid Song,' which was, I think, their first single off that album, and just being like, 'Oh, my God, what is that? What am I feeling?' It's that inexplicable thing that art does [where] you just genuinely connect to [it]," Page explains, stopping only for a quick, impassioned breath. "And there's no reason to be analytical about it. That's what's so frustrating. We're always so analytical, especially right now in the way that our society works, it's very scientific-based. I guess that's what turns me on about film and music [is that it's not]." Page realizes she's gotten very wrapped up in what she's been saying, and looks down at her lap, apologizing. Still, she willfully communicates, with full emotional disclosure, her ideas about many things -- film, music, nature, her hometown of Halifax, Nova Scotia, the patenting of seeds of genetically modified organisms by large corporations -- it's all very inspiring, and I am struck by the urge to download her favorite album.


Although Page started acting when she was 10 (cast in a TV movie that later launched a series), she says it didn't click for her until she was 15 or 16, while she was shooting her first feature film, Marion Bridge (which went on to earn Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 2002 Toronto International Film Festival). "I just completely fell in love with [acting]," says Page. "I can read a script and kind of fall in love with a character. I completely connect my heart to that person and I can feel everything falling into place." Page credits her parents for helping to steer her clear from the path of a typical Lindsay Lohanesque Hollywood starlet, but adds with impressive self-awareness, "[That lifestyle] is just not my thing."

Page's breakout role came with 2006's Hard Candy, in which she plays Hayley, an unassuming 14-year-old girl who pursues Jeff (Patrick Wilson) over the Internet. She ends up torturing him, both physically and psychologically. Last year, Page dabbled in the world of Hollywood blockbusters as Kitty Pryde in X-Men: The Last Stand. And with her current role as Juno, which seems to have been tailor-made for her, Page is positioning herself to be among the most desirable indie actresses in the business. But regardless of how famous she gets, in either Hollywood or independent circles, she's pretty confident that she'll stay the same person. "I really seriously and honestly do not think I'm special because I'm an actor," Page muses. "It's more like people's projections of me change. When I went home after X-Men, I think people assumed I would be different and I really don't think I am. If anything, I've become more self-deprecating," she says with a laugh. In the Halifax flat she shares with two friends, Page isn't worried about building up her Hollywood résumé, and is happy to pick and choose her roles as they come. Next up, she plays Sylvia Likens in An American Crime, a film based on the true story of 16-year-old Likens, who in 1965 was tortured to death by her demented caretaker, Gertrude Baniszewski (played by Catherine Keener in the film). Page is also preparing to start work on a film with one of her Juno co-stars, Olivia Thirlby, called Jack and Diane, about two teenage lesbians who fall in love but are tested by the distance between them. "I never go in [to a film] with some kind of narrow-minded view of what I want it to be," says Page. "But it has to make me feel something in my heart or there's just no point."
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The New ‘Indie Girl’: Ellen Page

BLACKBOOK: When did you start acting?
ELLEN PAGE: When I was ten, a local casting director came to my school, and picked me for a part, because I had brown hair and was short, I guess.
BB: Any early roles you’d rather forget?
EP: Everything that I’ve done has led to something else, which has led to something else. It’s kind of fun when people try to label me a cool, indie girl, and I’m like, “No, I’m pretty sure I was in a movie called I Downloaded a Ghost, which is about a girl who downloads a ghost.”
BB: How has your family been dealing with the premieres and the press?
EP: They’re pretty chill about it all. I think they’re super-psyched. They support me, and they have their lives. They’re not overbearing. I think they get freaked out from time to time.
BB: Has fame left its mark on you at all?
EP: The only real change is that I’ve realized I have to be a little more cautious about things. I’ve become a little more exposed, vulnerable. To a certain extent, you have to remain private about things. Sometimes it makes me question people more. It’s like, “Oh, that’s so funny that these people who never talked to me in high school are now talking to me.” It’s like, **** you. Do you really think I’m the kind of person who’s going to fall for that?
BB: Have you been introduced to the seedy side of Hollywood?
EP: No matter what industry you’re in, there are always negative aspects. Of course there are negative aspects to Hollywood. I’m just lucky that I grew up in Halifax, Nova Scotia. I think people who grow up surrounded by Hollywood are in that self-important, self-indulgent, surreal world—and they forget that the majority of the world doesn’t care about movies or magazines. The majority of the world could give a rat’s ***.
BB: Do you ever think that you might be in over your head?
EP: Totally, which is why I take off all the time. I haven’t worked since Juno. I went traveling, camping with friends. People are so obsessed with the next thing, progressing, succeeding. Society has such a weird perspective on success. I think whatever progress we have seems to be leading to destruction, which is a really scary thing. And when I start to feel myself attaching my happiness and sense of importance on what I do, that’s when I’m like, “Okay, I need to get my feet on the ground. I have to go remind myself what’s important.” Everything, life, is too fragile for that.
BB: What are you reading right now?
EP: [Laughs.] Right now, I’m reading something by Daniel Pinchbeck.
BB: No way. Are you reading 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl?
EP: Shut up! That’s exactly what I’m reading! Oh wait, my Dad’s calling me. Forget it, he can wait. I read Breaking Open the Head, and I’m also reading a Diane Ackerman book, just cause hers is beautiful, poetic, nature writing, which makes me happy and depressed at the same time. And his stuff, well, it just freaks me out.
BB: Your projects are dark. Why are you drawn to stuff like this?
EP: Challenge is a big aspect of it, because if it’s not a challenge, then I’m bored. And if I’m bored, then I’m not passionate. And if I’m not passionate, then I get depressed. It definitely is a form of escapism, and I’m addicted to it. That’s actually why I took some time off. I said to myself, “I’m fine as myself, as a normal human being.” These roles have come to me, and the characters tend to branch away from stereotype, and offer me the ability to connect with them.

BB: What’s more challenging for you, tragedy or comedy?
EP: One can be much more exhausting, just because you’re always trying to reach some sort of emotional extremity. Take An American Crime. It was emotionally brutal to go through, for the mind and the body. Juno is much more sterile, and a specific balance needs to be achieved for it to be honest and attainable for an audience. That can be pretty pretty precarious.
BB: Do you have any grievances against current representations of young women?
EP: Huge grievances, against the representation of young men too. When you’re in high school, media is a huge part of your life. You’re completely inundated be representations of what you’re supposed to find sexy, what you’re not supposed to find sexy. There’s no question that kids judge each other and themselves based on what’s out there in the mainstream media. I think the media has a responsibility to be more honest and open, and it’s a ****ing drag that we can’t be more like that. I’ve been so lucky with the roles I’ve gotten to play already.
BB: Did you have any input on the soundtrack?
EP: That was actually one of the most magical parts of filming this movie. Maybe the second time I sat down with Jason Reitman, he was like, “What do you think Juno might listen to?” And I was like, “The Moldy Peaches!” I love them and [band member] Kimya Dawson. The next thing you knew, Mike [co-star Michael Cera] and I are there, playing on set, and Kimya’s there. And I’m pretty passionate about the music that I love.

BB: Have you been given any good advice from veteran co-stars?
EP: I don’t think anyone I’ve worked with has been so direct, like, “Here is some advice.” Typically, I just learn through working with each actor. Working with Catherine Keener was incredible. She is an amazing actor, and a tremendous human being. I totally respect how she rolls with her career. She is genuine and does it because she loves acting. She doesn’t think she’s special, and is unbelievably sincere.
BB: Are you at all like Juno in real life?

EP: Someone at the Toronto Film Festival asked me if I was like Juno, and I said, “Yeah, more so than some girl who likes to cut off men’s balls [like her character in Hard Candy]. I said something like, “I’m inappropriate, like Sarah Silverman on speed.” And then, jokingly, I added, “But maybe a little less racist.” I mean, of course I’m not ****ing racist. A lot of my friends see tons of Ellen-isms in Juno. I don’t really tend to care about what other people think—not in a rude way—but in a, ‘here I am, take it or leave it’ kind of way.
BB: Do you censor yourself for interviews?
EP: I mean, not really. Unfortunately, no one ever seems to talk about anything different. It’s all movies and adopting babies.
BB: How do you prepare for your roles?
EP: Well, for An American Crime, I had to get in the head of a 16-year-old girl in 1965 in Indiana. So, what the heck does that mean? What is the enunciation like in the Midwest? What is it like to be someone who is brutally tortured and starved? What happens to her brain? So, that took an element of research. For Juno and Hard Candy, I tried to connect my heart to their hearts.
BB: I love when you say that.
EP: I want to know what makes my characters happy and what makes them feel pain. After that, everything else follows through.
BB: How big is your crush on Michael Cera, or are you into Jason Bateman types?
EP: It’s Michael Cera all the way. He’s got my heart. Can we just talk about how cute he is? I’m the president of his fan club. He is one sweet, sweet boy.
BlackBook
 
In some of the new pictures, in 165 esp she reminds me of Dani from A Shot at Love with Tila on MTV. LOL
 
she looks very cute and friendly. i hope can see more of her in the future.
 
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Oscar nominee Ellen Page and Juno costar Olivia Thirlby strike the same hold-one-shoulder pose at the Fox Searchlight Pictures’ Oscar and Independent Spirit Award nominees party held at LA’s STK-LA restaurant on Friday. Also pictured: Screenwriter Diablo Cody and director Jason Reitman.



justjared.com
 
She looks so sweet in those candids posted above. Not a huge fan of the outfit but her face is so radiant. :)
 
Ellen Page @ 2008 Film Independent's Spirit Awards - Press Room, Santa Monica, February 23

celebutopia.net
 
Ellen Page with her award @ 2008 Film Independent's Spirit Awards show feb. 23


celebutopia.net
 
2008 Film Independent's Spirit Awards - Arrivals, Santa Monica, February 23

celebutopia.net

 
Can't wait to see what she wears for the Oscar's, hope it's something other than black though..
 

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