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Biography
Child stars in general have a dreadful time growing up. Cast primarily for their looks (or their connections), the onset of acne ordinarily proves fatal. No longer cute, they are nothing, fit only to be cast into the bottomless dustbin of history. But sometimes child stars have something else to them. Not simply precociousness, but a sense
that they are far older than their years. Jodie Foster had it. Haley
Joel Osment had it, so did Christina Ricci. Jennifer Connelly had it,
too, though she had to wait 20 years for everyone to recognise it. And,
of course, there's Natalie Portman, who began her career in two of the
hardest-hitting films of the mid-Nineties (Leon and Heat), then
acquitted herself well in comedy, ensemble pieces and high drama before
starring as the regal love interest in George Lucas's 3-part prequel to
the Star Wars trilogy. An extraordinary growth pattern, and all the more
so because she also found time to undergo a high class academic
education. No fool, her. Her father, Avner, was a doctor, specialising in fertility. Throughout Natalie's youth, he would return from work and announce how many women he had made pregnant that day. At age 8, Natalie would be reprimanded for repeating his stories at school. Her mother, Shelley, from Ohio, was an artist, and later Natalie's agent. Coincidentally, Shelley was conceived on Natalie's dad's birthday, as was Natalie herself. The family lived in Jerusalem till Natalie was 3, then moved to Washington for four years. Then came two years in Connecticut, before they settled on Long Island, where she'd attend Syosset High School. By this time, Natalie was well on her way toward a career in entertainment. She'd been dancing since the age of 4 but was really taken when she saw Dirty Dancing. Now she began to really perform,
arranging pillows in rows in the family basement and charging adults 10
cents a throw to watch her. For an all-round education, her parents
would take her to the theatre, to galleries and to many foreign lands.
Her later co-star Susan Sarandon would describe Natalie's home-life as
"a rarefied atmosphere", and she was absolutely correct. She was always working, as her parents
expected her to. There was the Jewish cultural influence, emphasising
education and hard work, but mum and dad pushed harder. "They have
always made it quite clear that they believe I can be great,"
Natalie once said. "Had my parents expected less of me, I would not
be the person I am now". Training in ballet, jazz and tap-dancing,
she'd be an understudy for the lead in an off-Broadway show named
Ruthless. Also on the cast-list would be Britney Spears, and the pair
would stay close throughout their varying careers. In Leon, Natalie played Mathilda, a young girl in New York whose family (including her beloved little brother) are slaughtered by bent cop Gary Oldman and his cronies when her dad messes up a drug deal. Fortunately, Natalie escapes the massacre by hiding in the apartment of Leon (the brilliant Jean Reno), a slow, child-like and wholly dedicated hit-man. Gradually, the odd couple become close -
disturbingly close in some versions of the movie - as Mathilda learns
the craft and seeks revenge. And Nathalie was magnificent, completely
convincing as she matured from a terrified little girl into a near-grown
woman ready to kill. Her reviews were stunning, with Besson saying he
would direct a sequel only if Portman agreed to star. Natalie's
classmates, on the other hand, were not keen to have a star in their
midst, making her life something of a misery. Hutton and Portman are tremendous
together, as the relationship builds and then they slowly drift apart.
Their discussions are vital in explaining the film's point - that men
are too often blighted by sexual imagery and visions of bliss, and thus
can't see the real women in front of them, women with whom they could
have a perfectly wonderful life. Amazingly, the movie was written by
Stuart Rosenberg - better known for Con Air and Things To Do In Denver
When You're Dead. Or rather they've both discovered the SAME boy. Woody treats all this in the grand old style, having the participants occasionally burst into such classic songs as I'm Through With Love and Makin' Whoopee. Only Barrymore would be over-dubbed, believing her voice to be more than the public could bear. And then came the painfully under-rated
Mars Attacks!, Tim Burton's star-studded homage to 50s sci-fi. Jack
Nicholson played the beleaguered president James Dale, with Glenn Close
as his cold wife and Natalie as his bright, perky and thoroughly aware
daughter, Tuffy. With her parents whacked by the alien invaders, it
would be Tuffy who presented the medal of victory to teenage hero, Lukas
Haas. Natalie and Lukas (himself formerly a child star) would actually
date for a while in real life. For a start, due to her father's work,
Natalie's family would talk about sex far, far more than most. And,
anyway, who WOULD want to see their 14-year-old daughter having sex with
Jeremy Irons? Natalie went further, decrying the loose morals of much of
Hollywood's output. Discussing Pulp Fiction and the use of violence as a
comedy tool, she said "I just don't like hearing people laugh at
violence". Natalie would graduate from High School with honours in 1999. The same year came her biggest role yet, as Queen Amidala in Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace. Here Jedi Master Liam Neeson and his maverick apprentice Obi-Wan Kenobi are sent to the planet Naboo, where young Amidala is being forced to sign a treaty with the evil Federation. They all escape to another planet, where they discover a young slave boy, named Anakin, all the while being pursued by the thoroughly unpleasant Darth Maul. Both young and innately serious, Natalie
was excellent as the queen, both regal and girlish (qualities that would
lead Harpers And Queen to describe her as "the new Audrey Hepburn"),
though there were problems with her voice, which was changing throughout
the lengthy filming period. She'd be asked to provide over-dubs at the
end. She'd also miss the movie's big New York premiere, having to study
for those final exams. Thus there's much fun and fireworks, with
Natalie being nominated for a Golden Globe. And it so nearly didn't
happen. Natalie had originally turned the part down, not wanting to play
a nude scene (not good for a role model and, besides, how embarrassing
would it be to have your school-friends see you rolling around naked?).
As Sarandon had co-star approval, she refused to continue without
Natalie, so scenes were re-written. High praise, indeed. And Sarandon
continued to laud Natalie after filming, saying "I felt at all
times that I was working with an equal. She has a natural grace that
doesn't make her seem as if she's of her generation".
Co-incidentally again, in the movie Sarandon called Natalie her Pooh
Bear, as Natalie had called Tim Hutton back in Beautiful Girls. So, in 2000, off she went to Harvard to
study psychology, sharing a room with three other girls and taking
preliminary classes in chemistry, War And Peace, advanced Hebrew and
expository writing. After Star Wars, there were many fans out there who
wanted to get in touch. The other eight Natalies on campus would be
bombarded. But Portman, mindful of Foster's dreadful experiences at
Yale, had changed her name again. Such was Natalie's fame that another
actress-turned-Harvard-student, Oscar-nominee Elizabeth Shue, found
herself wholly ignored. Protected by Obi-Wan Kenobi and his
apprentice, young Anakin, she begins to fall for Anakin, adding the
central romance necessary to lead to Star Wars: Episodes 3 to 6. It was
rumoured that Natalie was seeing Hayden Christensen (Anakin) in real
life, but she poo-pooed the notion. Next would come a yet more challenging role, in Garden State, filmed during her final semester at Harvard (how she got that degree is anyone's guess). This was written and directed by Zach Braff, who also starred as a young man heavily medicated by his psychiatrist father Ian Holm ever since, as a child, he supposedly brought about the severe crippling of his mother. Now the mother has died and Braff returns
home for the funeral, meeting up with and gradually falling for Portman,
playing a cute, flighty, mendacious epileptic, a wonderfully neurotic
girl who cajoles him into getting a life. It would be a major indie hit,
made for $2.5 million and bringing in ten times that at the US box
office. To begin with, Portman seems the most
decent of a pretty despicable bunch, exhibiting a life-battered
soulfulness, but this doesn't last as the movie digs ever deeper into a
black hole of selfishness, desire and distance. It would be Natalie's
first overtly sexual role, and early in 2005 it would see her win a
Golden Globe and be nominated for an Oscar. She'd come across this organisation while
doing some research for a professor at Harvard and had been impressed
both by its prime mover, Jordan's Queen Rania, and its aims - to help
women in Third World countries establish a banking system that would
offer constructive loans at very low interest. Portman would visit
projects established in Guatemala and Uganda and throw her weight behind
the movement. She'd also, in September, 2004, begin a course of studies
at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. And then there was Star Wars: Episode 3 -
Revenge Of The Sith, where Anakin Skywalker was drawn ever closer to the
Dark Side of the Force, helping to create the monstrous Galactic Empire,
much to the chagrin of Portman, now his secret (and pregnant) wife. Star
Wars, with its cult followers, conventions and multiple DVD box-sets,
would ensure her worldwide fame for many years to come. More
interesting, perhaps, would be Free Zone, a Middle Eastern road movie
taking her back to her roots in Israel. Here, having quarrelled with
rich mother Carmen Maura, she leapt into a cab driven by Hannah Lazlo
and, together, the odd couple took off on a journey into violence and
political intrigue. |
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