Award-winning actress, Michelle Williams, is once again creating a buzz in her role in Manchester By The Sea. Here, she talks about the fi lm, taking risks and what motherhood means to her.
Somewhere along the way, actress Michelle Williams’s career underwent a startling transformation. Initially featuring in glossy adolescent fare like Halloween H20, bubblegum politico drama, Dick, and cult classic, Prozac Nation, she went on to land a starring role in Ang Lee’s Oscar-winner, Brokeback Mountain, earning her fi rst Academy Award nomination [one of three since] and that was that – suddenly the pixie-featured girl from Montana was a force to be reckoned with.
She scooped parts with famed director Martin Scorsese [Shutter Island], Derek Cianfrance [Blue Valentine] and in Simon Curtis’s critically acclaimed My Week With Marilyn. Today, we meet to discuss her role in Manchester By The Sea, the long-awaited comeback from writer-director Kenneth Lonergan.Williams co-stars with Casey Affleck in this grief-laden tragedy about loss and redemption, which has already picked up six Bafta nominations and a Golden Globe win for best actor.
But for many of us, we fell in love with Williams as the feisty heroine, Jen Lindley, in the teen drama Dawson’s Creek. Is she aware how important that role remains for a lot of people? ‘I think for a certain generation, Dawson’s Creek was a kind of milestone they grew up with in their developmental years, alongside all of us, and it’s really special.’
Relentless questions of a Creek comeback do raise a smile for the 36-year-old. ‘My character died in the end, so I don’t know how that’s going to work!’
هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة March 2017 من Psychologies.
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هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة March 2017 من Psychologies.
ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 9,000 مجلة وصحيفة.
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Why Are We So Sensitive About Being Sensitive? - Feeling empathy, energy and emotion keenly is not a failing - it can be your strength and your superpower, discovers Yasmina Floyer
All of us are sensitive - it is the very nature of being human. However, as with most behavioural characteristics, it exists on a scale. Jenn Granneman, founder of the world's largest community for introverts and co-author, along with Andre Sólo, of Sensitive (Penguin, £10.99), tells me about the characteristics of someone who is highly sensitive: 'Simply put, if you're a highly sensitive person, your body and mind respond more to the world around you. You respond more to heartbreak, pain, and loss - but you also respond more to beauty, new ideas, and joy. You're more affected by everything around you, but you also draw more from these experiences.
Try a Little Kindfulness - Make kindness a conscious practice and infuse your life with everyday abundance, writes Dr David Hamilton
The more we care about others, the more we realise that most people are just like us - trying to figure things out and hoping for a good day. It's easier to fear what you don't know, but once you get to know people, the world seems a lot smaller and cosier. So next time you're tempted to scroll past someone's problem, dismiss someone's feelings, or just be in your own little bubble, remember: the world's a better place when we all give a little f*ck. Let's sprinkle that stuff everywhere like it's magical kindness glitter!
There's No Excuse to Slow Down! - Presenter, podcaster and author Gabby Logan talks to Psychologies about health, happiness, and overcoming hurdles in midlife...
Presenter, podcaster and author Gabby Logan talks to Psychologies about health, happiness, and overcoming hurdles in midlife...When TV presenter Gabby Logan started to experience brain fog in her late 40s, struggling to recall the correct word or name on live TV, she initially put it down to tiredness. 'I couldn't quite get that name or articulate in the way I had previously been able to, so I was concerned, but it coincided with lockdown and not doing any telly for a while. I remember feeling quite nervous going back to live TV.' But the former international gymnast soon realised that it was a symptom of perimenopause and promptly went onto HRT, which she says has balanced her hormones.
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Summer break or make!
Hello, lovers! September is here, and the lazy holiday season is behind us. And for many-me included - now feels like the perfect opportunity for a personal kick up the backside, and to embark on a relationship reset. In my work, it's typically women who take the first steps accessing couples' help, but recently (and encouragingly) I've noticed an uptick in men reaching out to get relationship advice and wanting to put the work in.
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As the seasons shift and shudder, threatening rhythm and routine, Heidi Scrimgeour embraces September in all its bittersweetness...
Big wild world
Caro Giles fills up her cup with summer colour and awaits autumn wonder...