Jess Unstopabble: Here’s what you didn’t know about actress Jessica Chastain

Redheads in Hollywood were once typecast as fiery temptresses or hot-blooded vixens. Yet, this stereotype has subsided somewhat thanks in no small part to the many varied onscreen performances of such talented ginger actresses as Jessica Chastain, Nicole Kidman and Julianne Moore.

Chastain, in particular, has found serious cinematic success across a wide array of genres, be it sci-fi (she played Commander Melissa Lewis in 2015’s The Martian), biographical (last year she was the titular character in The Eyes of Tammy Faye), thrillers (2012’s Zero Dark Thirty) or more. For her efforts, she has nabbed a Golden Globe and was nominated for two Academy Awards and two Baftas, in addition to being named one of Time’s 100 most influential people in the world in 2012. With the talented screen siren set to grace cinemas this month in The 355 – an action-packed spy film with a star-studded cast including Lupita Nyong’o, Penélope Cruz, Diane Kruger and Fan Bingbing – we take a look at some of the lesser-known facts about Jessica Chastain.

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Estranged Relations
Jessica Michelle Chastain was born on 24 March 1977 in the Californian city of Sacramento. Her mum, Jerri Renee Chastain, and dad Michael Monasterio were extremely young parents, the latter being 20 and the former just 16 when Chastain entered the world. As an aspiring rock musician, her father abandoned his family a few years later, leaving Jerri to raise two young children by herself. Understandably, the Zero Dark Thirty star remained estranged from him for the rest of his life, and did not speak to him again before he passed away at the age of 55 in 2013.

Early Insecurity
As a single mother of four children, Jerri Chastain struggled to make ends meet. In one case, when they were living in North Carolina, the situation grew so dire that they were even evicted from their home. Recalling this turbulent period, the star has said: “Because my mom had us very young, many times we were in situations where we didn’t have stability. So, we moved around quite a bit when we were younger, and one time I came home from school, I was probably 13 years old, and there were people there locking the door…”

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Acting Dreamcoat
Unlike many of her colleagues, Chastain was still a young child – seven years old, in fact – when she realised she wanted to become an actress. The seminal moment came when her grandmother took her to see a production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. When she discovered the on-stage narrator was a scant three years older than her, she became determined to follow in her footsteps. Chastain never forgot her debt to the person who helped to spark her acting bug, and thanked her grandmother by taking her to the Oscars in 2012 and 2013 as her plus one.

From Dropout to Juilliard
Despite her obvious intellect, Chastain and school were not the best fit; she preferred to spend time reading Shakespeare rather than studying. Although she didn’t graduate from high school, she attended a local community college, and later, in 1999, was accepted at the prestigious Juilliard School in New York on a degree programme funded by a scholarship from Robin Williams.
“It was after my second year I found I got that scholarship, and it paid for not only all my schoolwork, but my apartment and my books, and my flight home to see my family for Christmas. It took care of all of that,” reminisced Chastain. “Each year I wrote him a letter about how significant that gift was to myself and to my family.”
Sadly, though, she never got to meet the comedian before his untimely death in 2014. The closest she came was at a restaurant when he was seated at a nearby table. She wanted to wait until he finished eating to introduce herself, but Williams slipped out the second he was done and she never saw him again.

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Family Tragedy
Graduating from New York’s prestigious Julliard should have been one of the happiest days of Chastain’s life, but unfortunately a dark cloud hung over her. Just three days before, her sister Juliet had committed suicide at the age of 24, having struggled with drug abuse and depression for many years. Unlike Jessica, who was a year older, Juliet had reconciled with their estranged father and was living with him when she tragically ended her life.

Love in her Acts
After her sister’s suicide, Chastain took measures to raise awareness about depression, mental health and suicide, and began supporting the charity To Write Love on Her Arms. An animal lover, she also volunteers for the Humane Society of the United States, and used to spend Sundays at Los Angeles’s Animal Acres shovelling hay for horses.

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Epic Success
Chastain’s career may have started slowly, but she blossomed into a major star. As well as Oscar-nominated movies, she has appeared in blockbuster hits, from the animated success of Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted to the epic Interstellar and the horror giant It: Chapter Two. As of 2020, the domestic box-office takings from 23 of her movies raked in over US$1.4 billion and totalled US$3.65 billion worldwide.

Noble Match
The Zero Dark Thirty star has always been notoriously tight-lipped about her personal life, but she is, in fact, married to Gian Luca Passi de Preposulo, an Italian count and scion of a revered noble family from the country’s Lombardy region. She and Preposulo – who is a fashion executive at Moncler – were married in 2017 in a private ceremony at his family’s Treviso estate, and share two children.

Help in the Dark
Since 2010, the actress has racked up more than 30 credits, most of them feature-length films. These include her Oscar-nominated performances in The Help and Zero Dark Thirty and acclaimed headlining roles in the likes of Miss Sloane and Molly’s Game, both of which earned her Golden Globe nominations. While The Help may have put Chastain on the map, it was Zero Dark Thirty that solidified her credentials and catapulted her into the big league.
But she nearly didn’t appear in the latter film at all. It wasn’t due to a lack of interest on her part – she accepted the lead role of CIA agent Maya Harris even before reading the screenplay – but because of scheduling conflicts due to a contractual obligation to co-star in Tom Cruise’s 2013 action film Oblivion. Thankfully, Cruise released her from that former commitment, and we now have a wide breadth of fantastic films from that one fateful decision.

 

The full version of this feature appears on Gafencu Magazine’s January 2022 print issue as ❝Double Digits❞ by Tenzing Thondup. Download the free app (iOSAndroid) for digital editions of the magazine.

Games Over: Is actress Jennifer Lawrence set to quit movie-making for politics?

Dial back just 10 years and it’s pretty much safe to say that no one had heard of American actress Jennifer Lawrence. Since then, though, she has appeared in more than 20 movies and won a host of awards – including that most-prized of Hollywood accolades, an Oscar. Away from the screen, she has also become one of the prime movers in the #MeToo movement. That’s not bad going for someone who is still two years from turning 30.

Back in 2010, she was still very much below the radar. She’d appeared way down the cast list in three moderately successful movies and had barely troubled telly fans with a couple of largely-forgettable roles. Then came Winter’s Bone.

Jennifer Lawrence in her breakthrough movie, Winter’s Bone (2010)

While it’s a movie that would hardly make it to the list of Hollywood All-Time Greats, this bleak tale of a young woman searching for her meth-dealing father in the Missouri wilderness proved the perfect vehicle for young Lawrence, with audiences and professional pundits alike wowed by her steely on-screen magnetism and clear mastery of her craft.

With Winter’s Bone (2010) very much her calling card, 2012 saw her take the lead in three movies, each of which further burnished her rising star status. One of them – Silver Linings Playbook – even led to her troubling the Oscar jury once again. This time, they voted in her favour and she walked off with the much-coveted Best Actress title at the 2013 ceremony.

Oddly enough, it was Lawrence’s previously anti-acting mother who cajoled her into auditioning for her subsequently career-defining role as Katniss Everdeen, the heroine of the post-apocalyptic The Hunger Games quartet of movies. A huge success from the opening night of the first instalment onwards, the role confirmed her as Hollywood royalty, while also seeing her widely acclaimed as a feminist icon – a status she happily embraced. 

Jennifer Lawrence in her iconic role as Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games (2012)

Clearly, such lessons were not lost on Lawrence herself. Finding she was paid way less than her male co-stars for her Oscar-nominated performance in the 2013 crime drama American Hustle, she went very public with her dissatisfaction. In the process, she established herself as one of the key players in a growing movement that was calling for an end to gender discrimination when it came to Hollywood earnings.

After the leaking of some very personal photographs to the public Lawrence, rather than being apologetic over their nature, formally released the images herself and set about owning the situation. She also used the apparent scandal as a platform for denouncing the abusive treatment of women around the world, and, in particular, for calling to an end to Hollywood’s heterosexual male-dominated hierarchy.

At the UK premiere of her 2017 film Mother

Her avowed stance as a libertarian feminist, however, has not seen her immune to criticism. Indeed, when she appeared at the premier of Red Sparrow, her 2018 spy thriller, in a glittering Versace gown, complete with plunging neckline and a thigh-high slit, the Twitterati were quick to call out her apparent hypocrisy.

Responding to such charges with her characteristic frankness, she said: “It’s utterly ridiculous the way certain factions overreact to everything I say or do or even something as wholly innocuous as what I choose to wear. Such comments do not move us forward. At best, they are silly distractions from the real issues. Everything you see me wear is my choice. And if I want to be cold, well, that’s my choice too.”

Lawrence attending THR’s Women In Entertainment Power 100 Breakfast

Perhaps in tacit admission that red carpet glamour wasn’t necessarily enhancing her self-adopted role as a global ambassador for women’s rights, she has since announced her intention to step back from making movies, saying: “I am taking a year off to fix our democracy.” It’s a promise she seems intent on keeping.

As well as continuing to champion women’s rights, she has also emerged as a key player in RepresentUS, a US-based anti-corruption movement dedicated to ensuring future US elections are free of the dirty tricks and chicanery that have characterised the most recent campaigns.

Jennifer Lawrence striking a pose at the 2011 Academy Awards

Summing up where she is right now, she says: “Everything I care about falls under the wide net of political corruption. As I get older, I find my passion increasingly turns to politics.” Given that Ronald Reagan proved that an acting background was no bar to becoming president back in the ’80s – and that the current Oval Office incumbent first made his name as a reality TV star – Jennifer Lawrence may yet find a role more career-defining than even Katniss.

Text: Anthony Warren  
Photo: AFP