Jessica Chastain




Jessica Chastain on the set of ‘Molly’s Game’ in Toronto 11/29/2016



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The Edit by Net-A-Porter
December 1, 2016

Bold Choices
Model Jessica Chastain
Photographer Chris Colls
Styling Tracy Taylor



Jessica Chastain has made a name for herself – gaining Best Actress nominations along the way – playing strong women. She tells Dan Rookwood the real reason she feels compelled to choose those roles and why President-elect Trump could be a boon to feminism.

“That was Lauren Bacall’s chair,” says Jessica Chastain, indicating the floral-print slipper chair on the other side of her sitting room. “I bought it at an auction.”

Sat ballet-dancer straight, there is a look of Bacall-era classic Hollywood about Chastain. The 39-year-old is wearing a short black Prada dress with black opaque tights and black leather Prada ankle boots – quite the dramatic transformation from the wild riot of color on The Edit’s photoshoot. “I’m a California girl so I love color, but we’re in New York so we’ve got to adhere to the dress code,” she smiles.

The twice Oscar-nominated actress has recently finished remodeling the 3,200sq ft, four-bed corner apartment in a 19th-century building just off Central Park, which she bought last year for a reported $5.1m. For 10 years, it was home to composer Leonard Bernstein, who apparently wrote Westside Story in this very room. Chastain and her partner of five years, Gian Luca Passi de Preposulo (an Italian count who works for Moncler), have respected the history and grandeur of the place – the décor feels aristocratic; chandeliers hang from the double-height ceilings.

In an adjacent room a stylist is assembling rails of clothes, ready for a fitting to plan out Chastain’s wardrobe for public engagements over the next three months. The actress is about to embark on the campaign trail to promote her latest movie, Miss Sloane. In the Grisham-esque thriller, Chastain plays the titular Elizabeth Sloane, a formidable but much-criticized power player in Washington, fighting for a cause against a sexist and patronizing male-dominated governmental system.

Sound familiar? It’s timely subject matter. Our interview takes place 10 days before the Us presidential election, and Chastain, who has been vocal in her support of Hillary Clinton, is hoping not only that she beats Donald Trump but that she does so by a message-sending margin.

“If [Hillary] wins by a landslide, that tells the world that we are a country that doesn’t support racism, sexism or any other -ism, and we’re actually taking a huge stand against it,” she enthuses. “It would be incredible for girls everywhere to see that. But also I think [Trump] being so popular is really an example of why feminism is so important. Unbeknownst to him, he is bringing it all to the forefront, and I am very grateful to him for doing that. You have to look at the world in a positive way otherwise you just want to cry.”

(On election night, as adverts for Miss Sloane with the review quotes of “Gripping” and “Full of twists and turns” rolled during Cnn’s live coverage, Chastain Instagrammed a video of her split Tv screen with the caption: “Art imitates life. I may throw up tonight.”)

Chastain is doing her bit to show girls everywhere that women can be leaders. The actress toiled away as a relative unknown for seven years, before her Best Supporting Actress Academy Award nomination in 2012 for her portrayal of a brassy blond who befriends her black housekeeper in The Help. The following year she was back at the Oscars again, this time for Best Actress in Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty, in which she played a steely Cia operative who tracks down Osama bin Laden. Since then she has become one of Hollywood’s most bankable leading women and, though she has been careful not to be typecast, if there is a common thread that links her roles it is that she plays strong females – no wallflowers, no eye candy.

It is her duty, says the actress, to only say yes to roles that have substance. She turned down a megabucks blockbuster – she won’t say which – because the character was too passive. She was offered a lucrative lingerie campaign, which was tempting, but did not fit with her sense of responsibility as a role model to young women.

“If I can help create empathy and balance in society, I’m going to do whatever I can to tell stories that subconsciously create that,” says Chastain. “When I get a script that has the opportunity to create discussion and inspire young girls, I don’t want to say no to that. If something comes to me before it has financing and I can help get it made, I feel a responsibility in that. I just want to contribute.”

Earlier this year, she set up an all-female production company, Freckle Films, in part to help create more roles for women behind the camera as well as in front of it. “There are incredible movies with female protagonists, but I’m cautious to say everything’s better now because I see studios patting themselves on the back: ‘Look, I’ve got this film with diversity. I’ve got women in this.’ I think when you congratulate yourselves for diversity, that means nothing’s really changed.”

We are interrupted by Chaplin, Chastain’s three-legged rescue dog, who lollops over to say hello as tea is poured in a proper cup and saucer by Chastain’s assistant. Sugar? No, thank you, just a splash of milk. “Oh, I don’t think we have regular milk because I’m vegan,” the actress apologizes.

That vegan diet, she explains, is the main reason her skin – which won her a beauty contract as the face of Yves Saint Laurent’s Manifesto fragrance – looks so flawless. She has been vegan for 10 years; her mother, Jerri, is a vegan chef. “So much comes down to the food you eat and I eat a very clean diet,” says Chastain. “Being vegan has made a huge difference in my life.” She also swears by Sk-ii masks, which she sleeps in during long-haul flights to protect her skin, even though they make her look “like Jason from Halloween”.

It wasn’t always so. As a teen, she struggled with severe acne and had to be prescribed powerful drugs. She wore braces to straighten her buckled teeth and resented her pale skin, freckles and red hair. “I didn’t like looking different,” she says. “Being a redhead, you can’t fit into the group. I wanted to be blond so bad. I had really bad self-esteem and I asked my mom if I could dye my hair but she wouldn’t let me.”

Her hair color is inherited from her maternal grandmother, Marilyn, who was the person who first inspired her to take up acting and has championed her ever since – it was she who walked the red carpet with Chastain before her first Oscars. When Chastain first moved to Los Angeles in order to break into Hollywood, she was advised to go blond. She refused – it had taken a long time for her to feel comfortable in her own skin.

“I look at myself now and I look at myself when I left college [The Juilliard School in New York, where she was on a scholarship funded by the late Robin Williams]. I still feel awkward at times, but then I’m sure I probably auditioned terribly because I had such fear and doubt about myself. Not anymore.”

Now, of course, she embraces her coloring. “I called my company Freckle Films because it was something I used to hate about myself,” she says. “But I want to make movies about our differences as a society so that's why I called it that. Now, I celebrate it.” Would she ever consider cosmetic surgery? “Who knows? When I’m 50 or 60, I might. Some people think I’ve had a nose job. I’ve never had anything like that done, but I have no judgement of anyone that does.”

Chastain will turn 40 in March. Does she worry about roles drying up, as they do for so many Hollywood actresses after a certain age? She bristles. “When I read interviews about male actors, they aren’t asked these questions,” she says. “I feel – and please don’t take offence – but I feel that the media has a responsibility to not continue to ask them.” She’s right, of course.

“Maybe at some point I won’t be acting,” she offers. “Maybe I’ll be producing or directing or teaching at Juilliard.” Later, she adds: “I feel like something’s happening. I feel like a change will soon happen in my life. Maybe I won’t act for a few years. I’m happy, I’m content, but I could do something else for a bit.”

Is she talking obliquely about having children, perhaps? Chastain deflects the question. She keeps her private life private to protect her family from press intrusion. “I want people to be more interested in my work than my personal life,” she says. “I want to disappear into the characters I’m playing and not have the audience say, ‘Oh, she’s going through a divorce right now.’”

For the record, Chastain is nowhere near a divorce. She lives in New York partly so she can hop easily to La for work or to Italy to be with her boyfriend. They are spending Christmas together. “I have two weeks off from filming and we’re just going to go to Italy, drink wine, eat pasta and sleep all the time,” she says. “Heaven.”
Miss Sloane is out now (Us); February 10 (Uk)
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^ HQ

Hair: Renato Campora
Make-up: Mary Wlles
Nails: Angel Williams



awake-smile.blogspot, visualizing.fashion
 
Jessica Chastain on the Set of ‘Molly’s Game’ in Toronto 11/29/2016


hawtcelebs
 
'Miss Sloane' screening in New York City - December 3, 2016

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Actress Jessica Chastain attends 'Miss Sloane' Toronto Premiere held at Isabel Bader Theatre on December 5, 2016 in Toronto, Canada.

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Actress Jessica Chastain attends The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Hosts an Official Academy Screening of MISS SLOANE at MOMA - Celeste Bartos Theater on December 4, 2016 in New York City.

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zimbio.com, wireimage.co.uk, laineygossip.com​
 
Getting ready for the Golden GLobes
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Actress Jessica Chastain attends the 74th Annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 8, 2017 in Beverly Hills, California.

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zimbio.com
 
I love the color and the embroidery, but I don't like the way the straps were so far apart, kinda made her shoulders look huge.
 
The more I look at this dress, the more I like it, but at first glance, it definitely did look unfinished, and the embroidery seem amateurish.
 
W Magazine March 2017 by Mert & Marcus


wmagazine
 
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After playing characters who took on the gun lobby, Southern racism, al-Qaeda, and assorted husbands running the gamut from clueless to abusive, Jessica Chastain can *hardly be blamed for wanting a vacation from human nature. She told her agent to look for a film about animals. Along came The Zookeeper’s Wife, out this month, based on the best-selling book by Diane Ackerman. The story draws on the unpublished diaries of Antonina Zabinski, who, with her husband, Jan, ran a zoo in Warsaw, Poland, and smuggled some 300 Jews to safety during the Nazi occupation. Chastain’s is the title role, and the film revolves around her as she cares for a dwindling menagerie and a growing flock of people. The Jews locked in the ghetto are photographed by those on the outside through the bars of the gate. The film, she says, is about “life in a cage.” So much for that vacation.

Chastain has always loved animals. “You look into their eyes and you can see what’s in their heart,” she says, echoing her character’s words to a young girl who has just been raped by German soldiers. Antonina strokes a rabbit as she talks, recounting her own childhood as a fugitive after the wartime murder of her father in her native Russia. “Animals helped her to heal,” Chastain says. “I think Antonina could connect better to animals than she could to people. And I believe animals can teach you how to handle people. I never go into their space unless they are ready to receive me.”

It was Chastain who suggested that Johan Heldenbergh, the Belgian actor, writer, and director, play Jan. A lover of foreign films, she had been impressed by his performance in The Broken Circle Breakdown, a Belgian movie he cowrote, which was nominated for an Academy Award in 2014. Niki Caro, Zookeeper’s director, agreed that Heldenbergh would be perfect for the role. But then the studio executives balked, on the grounds that he’d never acted in English. “So I went on YouTube,” Chastain says. “And I’m an obsessive person.” She typed in his name and kept searching until she came across a video of a toast he had given in a bar in Los Angeles. “And I’m like, ‘He can speak English. Here you go.’ ”

Virile and complex, Heldenbergh holds his own against Chastain, who, with her columnar neck and fine bones, is at her most radiant. The heat between them anchors the film in their life as a couple. They are heroic, though not by the usual Hollywood standards, which, Chastain notes, have more to do with aggression; their courage, she says, takes the form of compassion.

Antonina is the latest in a succession of strong women Chastain has played. In some cases, their beauty has shaped their personalities. Oddly enough, that doesn’t seem to be true of Chastain herself. She’s a bombshell on the red carpet, in a film, or whenever the situation calls for it, but not on her own time. “I don’t walk around like this,” she says, dressed in glamorous makeup, a black blouse and pants, and heels for a media Q&A following our conversation. “In our society, women are valued for their sexual attraction. I’d like to get away from the sex symbol idea of what beauty is. Actually, that’s probably the farthest thing from beauty, because it’s makeup and hair, it’s pouty lips—it’s not real.”

Chastain has a similarly ambivalent relationship to the fame that has come with her success. She obliges the photographers, but you won’t see her diet tips or the details of her private life on a cover at the newsstand. She goes to the gym. She takes the subway. “The reason we like acting is connecting to other people,” she says. “Why would I ever put myself in a situation where I couldn’t talk to those people anymore?” The Zookeeper’s Wife comes on the heels of Miss Sloane, in which Chastain was a Washington lobbyist scheming to secure passage of a Senate bill on gun control. Miss Sloane, not Ms. “It’s sexist; it’s patronizing,” Chastain says. And that’s the point. “No woman would call her Miss Sloane.” The men she deals with professionally find her hard shell and relentless drive repugnant. And yet, Chastain continues, “if you put a male actor in a role in which he can’t hold down a relationship because he’s so focused on his job, he goes with prostitutes, he’s fighting for the good of all against the good of the few. Okay, we’ve seen those characters before. The renegade, the loner—that’s the male lead, right? But for some reason, women aren’t supposed to be that. We’re not supposed to be ambitious, we’re not supposed to be ‘overprepared,’ ” she says, citing the charges leveled at Hillary Clinton during one of last year’s presidential debates.

Miss Sloane brings to mind another tough trailblazer *Chastain took on: Maya, the CIA agent who tracks down Osama bin Laden, in Zero Dark Thirty. Some critics found Maya lacking, because she didn’t have a boyfriend, as if the woman who had taken it upon herself to solve the case that had stumped all the intelligence experts needed to be made more likable by being in love. Chastain is making fine films, but she’s also intent on making a difference. “I love that Miss Sloane mentors women,” she says. “That’s the experience I’ve had—with women who take care of one another.”

The women she has brought to life still cross her mind. “Sometimes I think: I wonder what Celia Foote’s doing now. At the end of the movie, when you say goodbye to the character, you hope she’s in a better place than she was at the beginning, that she’s learned something and is going to be able to heal herself. It’s like a kid you’re sending out into the world,” she says, giving a little shove with her hands: “Good luck!” She would like to convene all those past selves she’s played for a reunion. Eleanor Rigby, who lost a son. Rachel Singer, the Mossad agent who hunts a Nazi war criminal. Jolene, the foster child who hitchhikes her way to a new life. Celia, Antonina, Maya, Miss Sloane, and now Antonina. They would all be there, trading stories and contact information, offering one another advice and a ride home.
wmagazine
 
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Jessica Chastain attends The Pirelli Calendar Presents: Peter Lindbergh On Beauty panel at Cipriani Wall Street on February 13, 2017 in New York City.
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