'Being killed off in Lost is still my worst heartbreak'
The Independent|June 26, 2024
Maggie Grace, star of the kidnap thriller Taken’, sits down with Adam White to talk about her love for England, playing damsels in distress, and how women’s roles have moved on
Adam White
'Being killed off in Lost is still my worst heartbreak'

If you were a fictional blonde woman in the Noughties who was chased, abducted, shot at or maimed, you were probably played by Maggie Grace. Between the blockbuster puzzle box series Lost, where she played rich-girl-with-regrets Shannon Rutherford, and Taken, in which she was Liam Neeson’s eternally kidnapped daughter, Grace cornered the market in damsels in new-millennium distress.

For a bookworm and self-described Jane Austen nerd who grew up on tales of multifaceted women deft at shaking loose the shackles of the patriarchy, this was... tricky.

“I don’t know if I had an essence of fragility to me,” the 40-yearold says today, slowly, softly and, dare I say it, with a slight fragility to her. “But that was just what was available [back then], and how we saw young women. I mostly played rape victims for a living for at least the first half of my career.” She winces a bit. “So it’s really heartening to see a lot of younger female parts now having more agency, and moving the story forward.”

Grace, in the last decade or so, has evolved past the women-inperil characters, annihilating zombies in Fear the Walking Dead and battling tornados in the action movie Hurricane Heist. Her transformations become even more impressive once you speak to her – she admits to being an introvert, both before fame and very much during it, and over Zoom she has positioned her camera a bit higher than one normally might for an interview like this. It means she sits at the lower right-hand corner of the frame, her face sometimes disappearing from it entirely.

That shrinking quality is used to great effect in Grace’s new movie, a British psychological thriller called Blackwater Lane.

هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة June 26, 2024 من The Independent.

ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 9,000 مجلة وصحيفة.

هذه القصة مأخوذة من طبعة June 26, 2024 من The Independent.

ابدأ النسخة التجريبية المجانية من Magzter GOLD لمدة 7 أيام للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة وأكثر من 9,000 مجلة وصحيفة.

المزيد من القصص من THE INDEPENDENT مشاهدة الكل
Pogacar faces generation's greatest stage racers in fight for third Tour de France win
The Independent

Pogacar faces generation's greatest stage racers in fight for third Tour de France win

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2 mins  |
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Thanks, Andy! How Murray allowed small town scarred by tragedy to redefine itself
The Independent

Thanks, Andy! How Murray allowed small town scarred by tragedy to redefine itself

Andy Murray didn't put Dunblane on the map. It was already there, sitting quietly between Stirling and Perthshire in central Scotland, when a sleepy town home to a few thousand people became the scene of Britain’s deadliest mass shooting.

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6 mins  |
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Man who turned Pep down could be key for Southgate
The Independent

Man who turned Pep down could be key for Southgate

Cole Palmer can seem like the missing link for England, the footballer who can give them something they are lacking. And as Gareth Southgate's side still miss a left-footer who can play left-back, who is capable of contributing in the final third, there came an unexpected revelation.

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3 mins  |
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Why Slovakia must believe they can knock England out
The Independent

Why Slovakia must believe they can knock England out

Slovakia take on England tomorrow in the Round of 16 in Gelsenkirchen. An advance to the knockout stages - their second in eight years - is already a big success, but Slovakia feel there is more to achieve against a heavily criticised Gareth Southgate side.

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4 mins  |
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Spalletti's trying to win the trophy an outburst at a time
The Independent

Spalletti's trying to win the trophy an outburst at a time

There was a point on Monday night, when Luciano Spalletti was mid-rant, when the thought occurred that the famously awkward Aurelio De Laurentiis might not have been the awkward one in their relationship. Or the most awkward one, anyway.

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4 mins  |
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£52bn stock market listing could rebound on Starmer
The Independent

£52bn stock market listing could rebound on Starmer

Huge flotation sounds like a coup for Labour's business friendly ambitions. But beware

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3 mins  |
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Baldwin fails in attempt to dismiss manslaughter case
The Independent

Baldwin fails in attempt to dismiss manslaughter case

A court ruling yesterday put an involuntary manslaughter case against Alec Baldwin on track for trial early next month as a judge denied a request to dismiss the case on complaints that key evidence was damaged by the FBI during forensic testing. Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer sided with prosecutors in rejecting a motion to dismiss the case.

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1 min  |
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French far-right leads in final polls ahead of vote
The Independent

French far-right leads in final polls ahead of vote

Marine Le Pen's National Rally (RN) party is increasing its lead in the polls as campaigning reached its final stages in France's snap election yesterday.

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2 mins  |
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Iran heads to the polls as Middle East future at stake
The Independent

Iran heads to the polls as Middle East future at stake

Election follows death of the president in helicopter crash

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5 mins  |
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'My first feeling was not of upset or anger... it was fear'
The Independent

'My first feeling was not of upset or anger... it was fear'

With his country poised to take over the EU presidency, a Hungarian writer talks about homophobic laws and his worries for the young, after his children's book was banned

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4 mins  |
June 29, 2024