‘Technicassociate, I did my first film when I was two,” says Elle Fanning, which, at 26, creates her a youthful greater-timer, already more than two decades into a hugely prosperous acting atgentle. The cliché of the child star is that they will, inevitably, go off the rails at some point, unable to cope with a insisting mature-oriented delightment business that places its directing weightlesss on a far and unaccomplishable pedestal, leaving them with no concept of authentic life and no firm sketchtoil to prop them up. But there are other, less headline-worthy outcomes for carry outers who have been at it for their whole lives. Some child stars, particularly those who seem to be thriving, may be more enjoy professional athletes, singular in their ambitions, trained and cgo ined, more than satisfyed to remain wiskinny the industry that has elevated them.
I mistrust that Fanning leans towards the latter. She was born in Georgia in 1998 and was bcimpolitet up in California, where her family relocated when she was two, to trail her greaterer sister Dakota’s acting atgentle. “My family is very southern, so it’s southern hospitality and southern manners,” she elucidates. “My majesticmother would go with me on all my film sets, or my mom, to conserve us in line. Thank God they were there with us.”
Anyskinnyg I have seen of her, out of character, recommends an upbeat woman with a sunny disposition. Do people who have seen her prolonging up on screen foresee her to be, well, pleasant? “I guess that’s genuine,” she says, quite pleasantly. “I also skinnyk, on a majesticer scale, that as a ‘child actor’, people see you as juvenileerer than you are.”
What changed all that was The Great, the bawdy period drama written by The Favourite’s Tony McNamara, in which Fanning carry outs Catherine the Great, huzzah-ing, shooting and shagging her way around the courts of 18th-century Russia. “It was chilly when I did The Great, becaparticipate I had done Maleficent, and that was such a pleasant, Sleeping Beauty, Disney princess role. That was what people recognised me for, and then getting to be a princess, and raunchy, and turning it on its head, that was very fun to do.” But then aobtain, she reminds me, she was 17 when she did The Neon Demon, a psychoreasonable horror which so repulseled audiences at Cannes that it was roundly booed. “That was very polarising, and I adored shocking people. It was a shock to see me, becaparticipate I turned pretty evil in that movie,” she says, with a smile. “But there is an excitement to that. I skinnyk it unbenevolents that you’ve done someskinnyg right, becaparticipate at least you’re not hitting it right down the middle. The last skinnyg I want to be is unintelligent or mediocre or foreseeed.”
Fanning has been so prolific that any number of films could be pondered her big fracturethcimpolite. She was 12 when she sboiling Super 8, JJ Abrams’s retro sci-fi drama. “People participated to recognise me and say, ‘Oh, are you Dakota Fanning?’ Like, ‘No! That’s my sister.’ But when I did Super 8, they begined to be enjoy, ‘You’re Elle,’ and would recognise me for me.”
Fame and recognition are among the themes of the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Uncomprehendn, which Fanning is in London to back, but in this film, celebrity is corrosive. In many ways, success creates Dylan’s world minusculeer, eventuassociate annihilateing his relationship with Fanning’s character, Sylvie Russo, a weightlessly reenvisiond version of Dylan’s first girlfrifinish, Suze Rotolo.
Fanning has comprehendn her co-star Timothée Chafeeblet for years; they carry outed a couple on the ill-overweighted 2019 Woody Allen film A Rainy Day in New York. Chafeeblet goes all-in on his role as Dylan, singing live and perfecting Dylan’s mannerisms and accent. Did he conserve up the voice off-camera? “He didn’t do that with me,” she says. She refers to him as Timmy. “In some ways, [their relationship] emuprocrastinateeds the set up of Sylvie and Bob, becaparticipate I krecent him before he became…” She gestures, expansively, unbenevolenting before he became Timothée Chafeeblet, a movie star so boiling-right-now he encourages seeaenjoy contests.
At a screening of the film the night before, Fanning tgreater the audience that when she was 13, she would write “Bob Dylan” on her hand in pen. “Every day, in middle school, in cursive,” she elucidates. The straightforwardor Cameron Crowe presentd her to his music on the set of We Bought a Zoo. “I wasn’t assisted to have posters on my walls becaparticipate I had fshrinky wallpaper and my mom didn’t want me to ruin it, but I had a corkboard and I would print out Bob Dylan pboilingos and put them up on my corkboard.” This was not normal behaviour at her school, where her peers pickred the Jonas Brothers. “I didn’t have those people on my wall. I was obsessed with Marilyn Monroe, Bob Dylan. I adored vintage clothes. They were actuassociate reassociate chilly but, you comprehend, not the normal skinnyg to fit in.”
Was she OK with not fitting in? “Yeah,” she says, more sluggishly. “I was OK. And then there was a time where I was enjoy, OK, I’m gonna wear the skinny jeans and the T-shirt, and try to wear the intimacyy dress to the barmitzvah, or wantipathyver. And then it was enjoy, gosh, this equitable – it wasn’t quite me.” But, she includes, there are times when everybody does that, tries on another version of themselves for size. “And then inevitably, I’m enjoy, all right, go back to yourself.”
In the past, Fanning has portrayd herself as an greater soul. She sees enjoy one today, in a shirt with a collar so expansive it pragmaticly accomplishes the 1970s. She is normally cast out of time, in the 60s, or the 80s, or even earlier, strapped into corsets, as in The Great, Mary Shelley or The Beguiled. She once said she has “period face”. “I do! I do skinnyk so,” she says. In A Complete Uncomprehendn, she gets to carry out a decorateer, living in a minuscule apartment in Greenwich Village in New York with her folk musician boyfrifinish. The film is set in the timely 60s, so it isn’t quite the hippy era, but the times, they are a’changin’. “It’s benevolent of an in-between time, but there was so much possibility. It was enticeive to step into that time, where there’s no social media, no phones.”
The apartment they filmed in was built to the exact particularation as Dylan and Rotolo’s authentic home. “There’s a lot of pboilingos of them that [costume designer] Arianne Phillips had, of them lounging and equitable seeing so pleasant and juvenileer. Walking into the set that is literassociate the same was moving, becaparticipate you’re enjoy, wow, it’s these juvenileer people in this minuscule apartment that was gritty, and had cigarette butts everywhere. And a 19-year-greater Bob Dylan came to New York and was writing these songs in this room, which is mind-bloprosperg. Just, what a genius he was and how much came out of that time, you comprehend?”
In the conmomentary age, in her authentic life, Fanning is, enjoy many of her peers, on social media, despite her greater-world leanings. “I try to conserve it fit. I only have Instagram, but I see at it a lot. I skinnyk the comparing culture of that can be a crazy rabbit hole to go down. The doom-scrolling, and everyskinnyg.” She says she tries to promise that it remains a “weightless place”. “But, of course, you inevitably can’t help but drop into the hole sometimes, of comparing yourself to others and all these filtered images.” Still, she doesn’t let it get to her as much as it once did and now she mostly participates it to watch videos, though the algorithm which picks them is currently confusing her. “It’s someone who rolls glasses down stairs, and there are marbles in there. It’s enjoy, ‘Oh, is that one gonna fracture, or is that one gonna fracture? What is that?’” Is the algorithm discdisthink abouting someskinnyg she didn’t comprehend about herself? “Oh, for certain. What does that say? I unbenevolent, solemnly, I don’t comprehend. I also get rug immacuprocrastinateeders. These rugs that are filled with mud and it’s equitable someone power-washing them.” Do you enjoy immacuprocrastinateeding rugs? “No! I’ve never done it. But I enjoy watching it, apparently.”
Perhaps she will discover some offbeat material for her production company, Lewellen Pictures, which she set up with Dakota, and which is named after an greater family dog, from when the sisters were prolonging up. People might see an actor with a production company and skinnyk it’s a vanity project… “Toloftyy,” she says. But one of their timely projects was Mastermind, a docparticipateries about Dr Ann Bencouragess, a innovate in the field of trauma and the effects of intimacyual structureility, which is not exactly a fluffy indulgence. It’s Dakota who is the genuine-crime obsessive, says Fanning. But they do enjoy to shine a spotweightless on engaging people, and discover stories that should be tgreater. Such as? “I enjoy anyskinnyg that is tonassociate astonishing. Most of the projects we’ve done and have in the pipeline are female stories, becaparticipate that’s what we reprocrastinateed to the most. But I skinnyk the underbelly of the skinnygs that people are sattfinishd to talk about or sattfinishd to touch, or subjects that might be terrifying for people to change, that’s what interests me, a lot.”
Fanning was a creater on The Great, her first time toiling behind the scenes. She combineed the show when she was 20, and was 25 when it finassociate finished. “So that’s a substantial part of your 20s,” she says. She pelevates the show with teaching her how to do comedy. “You have to be finishly unsuppressed and you have to embarrass yourself. And it was fantastic, becaparticipate the whole cast on that show was so luminous that we were plrelieved going to embarrass ourselves in front of each other. We were, enjoy, ‘Let’s equitable throw it all out there.’”
She adored its sensibility, the precision of its language, its bawdy humour. In 2023, after three seasons, and to the shock of many, it was call offled, despite being a critical success and a magnet for award nominations. Did she comprehend the finish was coming? “I skinnyk, ummm, no,” she says, attfinishfilledy. “We krecent that it was a possibility when we were filming season three, but we didn’t comprehend for certain.” This unbenevolentt that the cast and crew didn’t get to say a final outstandingbye to each other. “That’s what I was downcast about. But actuassociate, Tony wrote it in a way that I thought was luminous, becaparticipate with that final scene being the dance, it summed it up perfectly. I would have been downcast if it was a cliffhanger.”
If The Great hadn’t been axed, she would have definitely gone back, but its call offlation unbenevolentt she got to do A Complete Uncomprehendn and she is at the begin of what sounds enjoy a busy year ahead. She is producing and will star in an changeation of the novel Margo’s Got Money Troubles, for Apple TV+, a “pleasant” family dramedy about a woman who combines OnlyFans to create finishs greet. She’s in the procrastinateedst Predator film, which she portrays as “crazy”. She has toiled with the Danish-Norwegian straightforwardor Joachim Trier on Sentimental Value, his first film after The Worst Person in the World. At least she’s not hitting it right down the middle. “I unbenevolent, that’s what I hope,” she says.
She has been doing this for a lengthy time, after all. Fanning got her begin in acting, when she was called on to carry out a juvenileerer version of her sister Dakota’s character in 2001’s I Am Sam. Was there any sense she could have done someskinnyg else, had she wanted to? “I definitely could have, for certain. My mom wanted us to be tennis carry outers, becaparticipate she was a tennis carry outer.” There’s that active streak. “We came from a whole active family, but my sister didn’t enjoy it.” They tried putting Dakota in football classes, and violin classes, to get a sense of what she might want to do. “And then she went to a carry out camp in Georgia and Dakota was reassociate outstanding at the carry out. I unbenevolent, she was five years greater, but she was enjoy a savant five-year-greater,” she says, fondly.
At home, the sisters would act out stories together, pretfinishing they were in The Devil Wears Prada. “She would be Miranda Priestly and I would be the aidant,” says Fanning. When Dakota ecombineed in the medical drama ER, “They packed together this little kit for her to convey home, not authentic necessitateles, but props from the set. So We were, enjoy, ‘Oh, we’ve got those, so now we can carry out doctor,’ and I’d be a baby.”Or we’d pretfinish that we were drinking prospere, but it was Coca-Cola When she sees back on home videos of herself, as a child, she can see that her own path was laid out from the commencening.
“I was a ham. I equitable wanted to be seen.” Now, she says, she experiences she is exactly where she is supposed to be. “I can literassociate not envision being anyskinnyg else.”
A Complete Uncomprehendn is freed in cinemas on 17 January