Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn RSS
    Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn RSS
    SHOOTonline SHOOTonline SHOOTonline
    Register
    • Home
    • News
      • MySHOOT
      • Articles | Series
        • Best work
        • Chat Room
        • Director Profiles
        • Features
        • News Briefs
        • “The Road To Emmy”
        • “The Road To Oscar”
        • Top Spot
        • Top Ten Music Charts
        • Top Ten VFX Charts
      • Columns | Departments
        • Earwitness
        • Hot Locations
        • Legalease
        • People on the Move
        • POV (Perspective)
        • Rep Reports
        • Short Takes
        • Spot.com.mentary
        • Street Talk
        • Tool Box
        • Flashback
      • Screenwork
        • MySHOOT
        • Most Recent
        • Featured
        • Top Spot of the Week
        • Best Work You May Never See
        • New Directors Showcase
      • SPW Publicity News
        • SPW Release
        • SPW Videos
        • SPW Categories
        • Event Calendar
        • About SPW
      • Subscribe
    • Screenwork
      • Attend NDS2024
      • MySHOOT
      • Most Recent
      • Most Viewed
      • New Directors Showcase
      • Best work
      • Top spots
    • Trending
    • NDS2024
      • NDS Web Reel & Honorees
      • Become NDS Sponsor
      • ENTER WORK
      • ATTEND
    • PROMOTE
      • ADVERTISE
        • ALL AD OPTIONS
        • SITE BANNERS
        • NEWSLETTERS
        • MAGAZINE
        • CUSTOM E-BLASTS
      • FYC
        • ACADEMY | GUILDS
        • EMMY SEASON
        • CUSTOM E-BLASTS
      • NDS SPONSORSHIP
    • Contact
    • Subscribe
      • Digital ePubs Only
      • PDF Back Issues
      • Log In
      • Register
    SHOOTonline SHOOTonline SHOOTonline
    Home » From “Rushmore” To “Asteroid City,” Performers Grateful For A Wes Anderson Education

    From “Rushmore” To “Asteroid City,” Performers Grateful For A Wes Anderson Education

    By SHOOTTuesday, June 20, 2023Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1559 Views
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    • Image 0
    • Image 1
    This image released by Focus Features shows writer/director Wes Anderson, left, with actors Jason Schwartzman, center, and Tom Hanks on the set of "Asteroid City." (Roger Do Minh/Focus Features via AP)

    By Jake Coyle, Film Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) --

    When Tony Revolori, then a 17-year-old with little Hollywood experience, was beginning to shoot Wes Anderson's "The Grand Budapest Hotel," Jason Schwartzman took him aside to give some advice.

    No one knew better than Schwartzman what Revolori, who was starring alongside Ralph Fiennes, was in for. Schwartzman was by then a regular member of Anderson's troupe, but he was also 17 when he first broke through as Max Fischer in Anderson's "Rushmore."

    "He looked at me and he said, 'None of this is going to make sense until you've actually gone through it,'" Revolori recalls. "Your life is going to change in no way and every way. But as long as you keep the people around you, you're good.'"

    Much has been made of Anderson's recurring regulars, like Bill Murray, Adrien Brody and Owen Wilson. But for many young actors, Anderson's film sets have been their first real blush with moviemaking — or, at least, Anderson's elegant style of it.

    Since "Rushmore" introduced Schwartzman, Anderson's films have been nurturing, if surreal, environments for young performers and a singular rite of passage. Anderson's productions are atypically communal, with nightly feasts among cast and crew, and a spirit that can resemble summer camp. For young actors, it can be a thrilling education.

    "This is one of the most powerful learning experiences I've ever had," says Grace Edwards, 19, one of the newcomers of Anderson's latest, "Asteroid City."

    Part of the joy of "Asteroid City" is seeing successive generations of Anderson actors, including Schwartzman, Revolori and a new crop of young faces, assemble like homegrown players on a team of all-stars. For Schwartzman, it brings back memories of his "Rushmore" audition — his first glimpse at Anderson's way of treating young actors. On his way out, Anderson asked his opinion about a wardrobe item.

    "While I was answering it, I was thinking: Why does this feel so bizarre?" says Schwartzman. "I realized because no adult other than my family had, at that age, asked me a question and really listened to the answer. I was being related to by a person who was 27. He was an adult, but not."

    In the years since, the young actors who have come through Anderson's films — often in prominent roles — have had similar encounters. Jake Ryan was just seven when he played a younger brother in 2012's "Moonrise Kingdom."

    "I don't remember much, but I remember feeling at home there," says Ryan, now 19. "It felt very cozy."

    "Asteroid City," which opens nationwide Friday, may be Anderson's most multigenerational film yet. The story features frames within frames, but the heart of the movie concerns a fictional 1955 Southwest town where a widowed war photographer named Augie Steenbeck (Schwartzman) arrives with his bright son Woodrow (Ryan, in his third Anderson movie) and three younger daughters.

    A visit with their grandfather (Tom Hanks) awaits, but first there's a stargazer convention to commemorate a meteorite impact. The gathering has also lured a renowned movie star (Scarlett Johansson) and her intelligent daughter (Grace Edwards).

    The pains, regrets and melancholies of the adult characters mingle with the fresher but no less complex experiences of the teenagers getting a taste of love, death and fellowship for the first time.

    In Anderson's films, younger characters tend to be just as adult, if not more so, than the grown-ups. Gene Hackman's Royal Tenenbaum or George Clooney's Fantastic Mr. Fox are far from paragons of maturity. "Moonrise Kingdom" starred Kara Hayward and Jared Gilman as a pair of 12-year-old runaway romantics who sway to Françoise Hardy's "Les Temps de l'Amour." Revolori's "lobby boy" Zero played sidekick to Fiennes' concierge, M. Gustave.

    In "Rushmore," Schwartzman's Max and Bill Murray's Herman Blume are decades apart but equal rivals in love and revenge. At the beginning of shooting, Schwartzman asked Anderson why his character looked up to Murray's.

    "And he says, 'Well, I don't think he looks up to him. I think he sees eye-to-eye with him,'" remembers Schwartzman. "That's the funny thing about these movies. They're not for kids, but they are, in a weird way. It's like they're for kids when they grow up."

    When Edwards, 18, was auditioning for "Asteroid City," Anderson had her first read from "Moonrise Kingdom" — both the part of 12-year-old Suzy and her mother, played by Frances McDormand. Once she landed the role, Anderson handed her books about Hollywood in the 1950s to read and films to watch.

    "I watched some Jodie Foster films because he figured the character was very sensible and very much a Jodie Foster-like personality," Edwards says. "He wanted me to get a strong sense of what she was like on screen."

    Revolori describes Anderson as almost "a pseudo father." After "Grand Budapest" came out, they continued to regularly email. Revolori depended on Anderson's advice in navigating his career.

    "I think he enjoys working with young performers and discovering someone that he sees talent in and giving them an opportunity. I sure as hell am very, very thankful for it. It obviously kind of made my career there," Revolori says, chuckling.

    "Somebody like Tony — and exactly the same with Jake and Grace — they are wildly prepared," says Anderson himself. "But they also have young minds. The brain tissue is younger. They can remember everything. So their knowledge of the script is so ready and enhanced. They tend to be interesting just as animals. We've never seen them before. They're new, young people and they're still forming themselves."

    Anderson's young actors don't always know what he's seen in them. But his young protagonists are invariably clever, precocious kids that are in some ways stand-ins for the director, who grew up a brainy child of divorce with a Super 8 camera in hand.

    "One thing that really stuck out was he said Woodrow — and the other stargazers, for that matter — are very intelligent," Ryan says. "But it's that intelligence that makes them sort of outsiders from their would-be peers. There's a sense of loneliness in all five of them. And after meeting each other, there's a sense of: 'Wow, everyone's like me. This is how it's supposed to be.'"

    More often than not, the actors Anderson casts are likewise full of passions and curiosities, and able to recite dialogue at a good clip. Edwards envisions acting in movies like the European films she and Anderson would discuss.

    "Going home after was strange," says Edwards, who lives in Bismarck, North Dakota. "I have no right to compare it to a soldier coming home from the front but there is a similar aspect."

    Revolori, now 27, has been reluctant to turn mentor, even though he's remained in the company, returning in "The French Dispatch" and "Asteroid City."

    "I feel like I have to keep proving myself in his films. They're always the best times so I never not want to be called back," says Revolori. "Every time I do get called back I'm like, 'You better be on your A-game.' And I wonder if anyone else feels that way.

    "But I do feel like I'm part of his family."

    For Anderson and Schwartzman, "Asteroid City" marks just how far they've come since they met. In the film, Schwartzman's manner, accent and movement are unlike anything he's done before — a father and a far cry from Max Fischer.

    "When we made 'Rushmore,' he relied a lot on me," says Anderson. "Now, in a way, he doesn't rely on me at all. He went to the set every day whether he was working or not in costume — not something I asked him to do. He had a ritual for how to prepare each day that I wasn't even aware of. There was nothing like that back when we met. He's on a totally different level."

    Schwartzman, 42, wasn't even sure he could pull off the part. He worked extensively with a dialect coach and even used a moisturizing clay to mold his face into a more rigid expression.

    "When you know someone for so long, there's really no hiding," Schwartzman says of Anderson. "Reading the script, it was definitely like: I don't know how to do this. I felt like what he was saying by giving this to me was: 'I think you have this in you.'"

    REGISTRATION REQUIRED to access this page.

    Already registered? LOGIN
    Don't have an account? REGISTER

    Registration is FREE and FAST.

    The limited access duration has come to an end. (Access was allowed until: 2023-06-22)
    Category:News
    Tags:Asteroid CityGrace EdwardsJason SchwartzmanTony RevoloriWes Anderson



    Funny and Feminist Fashion Advances The Storytelling In “Palm Royale”

    Friday, November 14, 2025

    When Kristen Wiig steps out of a vintage Rolls-Royce in the opening scene of Season 2 of "Palm Royale," she's sporting a tall, yellow, fringed hat, gold platform sandals and sunny bell bottoms, with fabric petals that sway with every determined step. It's the first clue that the costumes on the female-driven comedy are taking center stage. The Apple TV show made a splash in its first season with the starry cast, high production values and ubiquitous grasshopper cocktail. Wiig's character, Maxine, tries to break into Palm Beach high society in 1969 and bumps heads with co-stars Carol Burnett, Allison Janney, Leslie Bibb and Laura Dern. But also playing a starring role are the vintage designer frocks that reflect each character. For Season 2, which premiered this week, Emmy-winning costume designer Alix Friedberg says she and her team coordinated "thousands" of looks that reflect the characters' jet-setting style. She says 50-60% of the brightly colored and graphic print costumes are original vintage designer pieces, sourced by shoppers and costume designers. "The looks are so iconic. Sometimes Kristen will walk in in something, and it brings tears to my eyes," Kaia Gerber — who plays Mitzi — said in a recent interview. The creative process entails more than shopping If not original vintage, Friedberg's team builds the costumes, and if a character has to wear an outfit in multiple scenes or in big dance numbers, the team may create duplicates to preserve continuity. Friedberg says she was lucky to find so many vendors with vintage designer pieces in great condition. "(Bibb's character) Dinah wears a few original Oscar de la Renta pieces that are really so perfect. Bill Blass was a big one, Oleg Cassini," Friedberg says. "There's a... Read More

    No More Posts Found

    MySHOOT Profiles

    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Previous ArticleEditor Blake Bogosian joins Cut+Run
    Next Article Havas Rolls Out Welltainment At Cannes Lions Fest
    SHOOT

    Add A Comment
    What's Hot

    SAG Awards Change Name To The Actor Awards Starting In 2026

    Friday, November 14, 2025

    Funny and Feminist Fashion Advances The Storytelling In “Palm Royale”

    Friday, November 14, 2025

    Late Poet Andrea Gibson Shares Their Terminal Cancer Journey In “Come See Me in the Good Light”

    Friday, November 14, 2025
    Shoot Screenwork

    The Best Work You May Never See: Steve Rogers Directs A Christmas Tale of Togetherness For Telstra

    Friday, November 14, 2025

    Building on last year’s Effie and Cannes-winning campaign for Aussie telecommunications company Telstra, this chapter…

    Top Spot of the Week: Disney, Director Taika Waititi, adam&eveDDB Team On “Best Christmas Ever”

    Thursday, November 13, 2025

    Travelers, TBWA\Chiat\Day NY, Director Henry-Alex Rubin Stage A Touching Holiday “Snowstorm”

    Wednesday, November 12, 2025

    Poke The Bear, Director Jorn Threlfall Help Put A Lad In Santa’s Good Graces With Sweet Treats From See’s

    Tuesday, November 11, 2025

    The Trusted Source For News, Information, Industry Trends, New ScreenWork, and The People Behind the Work in Film, TV, Commercial, Entertainment Production & Post Since 1960.

    Today's Date: Fri May 26 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn RSS
    More Info
    • Overview
    • Upcoming in SHOOT Magazine
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Policy
    • SHOOT Copyright Notice
    • SPW Copyright Notice
    • Spam Policy
    • Terms of Service (TOS)
    • FAQ
    STAY CURRENT

    SUBSCRIBE TO SHOOT EPUBS

    © 1990-2021 DCA Business Media LLC. All rights reserved. SHOOT and SHOOTonline are registered trademarks of DCA Business Media LLC.
    • Home
    • Trending Now

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.