
It âs a Sunday morning in springtime London, and Rachel Zegler and Kit Connor are standing on a park bench in Primrose Hill. They raise their hands to their mouths in unison, and as the photographer calls, One, two, three, they scream into the void. Over the next few hours, not even the whipping winds of a blustery, overcast afternoon can deter them from giving the camera their all.
Eventually, though, a different kind of reality sets in: Itâs 55 degrees, and once Zeglerâs pink satin skirt has been fluffed for the final time, sheâs bundled into a puffer jacket with a hot water bottle and sent to her trailer. Thatâs where I find themâ Zegler with a silk scarf covering her hair, Connor âs cheeks turned ruddy by the weatherâleaning on a sofa, teasing each other.
âAre you memorized?â Zegler asks.
âIâm pretty much off-book,â Connor replies with a grin, and the pair high-five.
âAre you nervous, though?â
âOh, yeah,â Connor says.
âIâm bloody nervous.â In September, Connor and Zegler will be making their Broadway debuts in a bold new Circle in the Square production of Romeo and Juliet by director Sam Gold (its tagline? âThe youth are f**kedâ). Today, theyâre preparing for a read-through with Gold to be conducted over video link from Zeglerâs hotel. (Both are in London for work: Connor filming Alex Garland and Ray Mendozaâs Warfare; Zegler doing reshoots for her starring role in Disneyâs live-action Snow White, with Gal Gadot.)
As soon as the photo shoot is over, theyâre in a black cab to Piccadilly. And when we meet at the hotel, both have changed: Zegler is in a black sweater, Connor in jeans and a white T-shirt, the sleeves of which he intermittently tugs down over his biceps. Before I ask them much about anything, Zegler poses a question to Connor with a sly smile: âImagine if we didnât get along?â
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