
By Max Evry
Competing with Meryl Streep's whirlwind performance as Julia Child would be a challenge for any actress, but luckily the other side of the sterling cast of “Julie & Julia” is the winsome Amy Adams, who portrays real-life blogger Julie Powell. After creating a challenge to cook 524 of Child's recipes in one year, Powell was able to turn her obsession with cooking into the basis for a book, which this movie is partly based on.
Adams' first charmed audiences with a small-but-robust supporting role in Steven Spielberg's “Catch Me If You Can”, and has gone on to charm audiences in films like “Junebug”, “Enchanted”, and “Doubt”. The young actress talked to us about playing a real-life person without actually meeting her, her own cooking abilities, and why she always winds up playing the “nice girl”.
Q: Since Julie Powell was not a celebrity, how important was it to be faithful to her in your portrayal?
AMY: I still have not met Julie Powell and so I was faithful to my interpretation of her based on meeting her through her book and through her blogs and through Nora [Ephron] who spent an extensive amount of time with her. For me, in creating a character that was living in the world of our film was really important to me.
Q: You seem to be building your career on making nice girls interesting. What are the challenges in choosing to play the nice girl?
AMY: I don't know that I saw…I think maybe my challenge is making someone not nice. I guess I didn't see her specifically as a nice girl. I saw her as very human and very flawed and sort of impatient and kind of, at times, selfish. But those are things that we all are. So for me it's just about creating human beings the way that I see them as opposed to creating a caricature of a human being.
Q: Did you and Chris Messina meet prior to the film before jumping onto the couch and making out?
AMY: Yeah, we did. We had a rehearsal process. We have a similar sense of humor. We find the same things funny. So that's helpful on set.
Q: Are you ever going to play the bad girl again? I'm going to embarrass you with a mention of “Cruel Intentions II”...
AMY: Holla!
Q: So will you play a bad girl again because you're so good at it?
AMY: Thank you. Well, right now these are the roles that are coming to me and I'm not necessarily looking to play the bad girl specifically. If there's a great role that's written and she happens to be a little nasty, but I don't want to do it just for the sake of doing it.
Q: How did this movie change your perspective on food and cooking?
AMY: There was a kitchen on set, in the studio and they would cook. Everything was fresh. There was no too old bruschetta because they were making it and bringing you fresh ones and as soon as it looked like they weren't fresh you got a new one. So we were really spoiled with some amazing food. It's really taught me a little bit more about the meditative effects of cooking and not just having to put a meal together, but really enjoying the process of cooking for friends and family.
Q: Are you making anything?
AMY: Well, right now I'm working a lot so I tend to be limited to like soup and popcorn when I'm working and nachos, but I can't find a place where I'm working that will deliver.
Q: Prior to making this movie were you a good cook?
AMY: I was a decent cook. I wouldn't call myself a good cook. I can follow a recipe, but sometimes my improvisation gets me in trouble. I'm creative. I just don't know that it turns out quite that well. I like hot sauce and so everything ends up being a little too spicy.
Q: Chris said there was talk of meeting the real people you were playing, but that in the end you both decided against it.
AMY: Yeah, and Nora was really supportive of that, and like I said, she had spent so much time with them and had a really clear idea of how they existed in this film.
Q: Passion plays such a big role in this film. What role does passion play in your real life?
AMY: No pursuit is an easy pursuit and this can sometimes be a real lonely pursuit and it takes a real love of what you do to get through the hard times. For me, I never call it real passion, I guess. I call it love. So for me it's that, loving what I do so much, my desire to get better and to learn on every project and not just learn about acting and learn about people but learn about life and learn about myself.
Q: Obviously going into the film you must have know you would have no actual scenes with Meryl, but were you aware of the characterization she was creating?
AMY: Well, it's Meryl so you know it's going to be fantastic. When we sat down to the table read we were told that it was going to be really informal, just a couple of people. It wasn't. There were about fifty, seventy people in the room and in walks Meryl. She'd just come from a fitting and she's in Julia Child's wardrobe. Even after working with her before and experiencing her brilliance and her work ethic, to see what she brought to the role of Julia Child in that table read, that was something that I definitely had in my mind when we were working. Definitely. I was sitting next to her. She's awesome.
Q: What kind of a challenge was it to create a dynamic relationship out of what is essentially a stable marriage between Julie and her husband?
AMY: There was a lot of conflict, I thought. There must be something that people are getting from this about them being happy, them being supportive of one another. It's sad that we live in a society that what I see as a completely normal couple seems like an idealistically happy couple. I think that's so sad [laughs]. I mean, they fight and they have disagreements. He walks out because she's being selfish. There's a lot that happens that I think is really dynamic and I think what's being commented on that we don't see in films a lot is a wonderful actor who showed up to support a female, playing a man supporting a woman in her pursuits. I think what's people are seeing as ideal. Hopefully men will go see this movie and be like, 'Wow, that's something to aspire to.' Something we all hope for as women, I think, is to have that level of support and that happens on the other side of the film with Stanley's [Tucci] character as well. What a wonderful gift to film that these men showed up for us to do that. So I applaud them.
Q: How do you feel about the internet, how it affects you as an actor? Chris said he didn't even know what Twitter was.
AMY: I called it Twatter. I didn't know [laughs]. I don't think I would blog. I really don't think that I would start a blog. I don't have that much dedication. It's hard enough to keep a journal. I was always one of those girls who wanted a big long diary and I would always start and then be like, 'Oh, this is no good.' I would judge my writing in my diary. The stream of consciousness thing doesn't work for me. I'm too much of a perfectionist within myself. It would take me days to edit down to the way I wanted it to sound. But as far as the affect, I think the voice of the public is interesting. It's an interesting thing. I think it has more of an affect on my family than it has on me because they tend to believe everything they read and take everything personally and when someone says something mean I think they have a hard time with it. I'm a little less affected.
Q: Did you feel like you were making the same movie as Meryl and Stanley while you were shooting because there is no real interplay?
AMY: I really left that to Nora. She would sometimes tell us when a shot was getting really technical, and why it was getting really technical, because she was going to use it to bring us into Paris. She was really good about letting us know about when she was going to go technically in and out. But Nora, and I think this is to her credit, really did an amazing job of taking you in and out of two completely different stories and two completely different time periods and spinning them together seamlessly. So I applaud her for that.
Q: What are you working on now?
AMY: 'The Fighter'.
Q: Who are you playing in 'The Fighter'?
AMY: Oh, I play Mickey Ward's girlfriend. It's a true life story about a fighter named Mickey Ward, a boxer.
Q: Another real-life character?
AMY: Yes.
Q: Will it be the same thing where you don't get to talk to her?
AMY: No, I met her recently.
“Julie & Julia” opens everywhere August 7th .