But a far cry from her lethal but brief appearance as a sexy superspy in "Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol" is the role she's in Berlin to promote as Sidonie Laborde in "Farewell, My Queen." A young servant in the household of Marie Antoinette, Seydoux is front and centre of almost every scene, and carries the whole film on her shoulders. Officially, Sidonie is the Reader to the Queen, played by Diane Kruger, her job being to select and read books aloud at Her Majesty's pleasure; unofficially, young Sidonie is utterly in love with her Queen, devoted to and starstruck by her to the point of being blinded to her flaws. Sidonie herself is an enigma, a creature of seemingly no past, but when we got to sit down with Seydoux in Berlin, she explained that not only did the paucity of the character's backstory not scare her, in fact it was something that particularly attracted her to the role. "What I liked about this part was that you don't know anything about her, and so I could invent everything. There is one moment that makes you understand everything about her," she explained. "[A character] asks me 'We don't know anything about you...do you even have parents?' This for me was the key to build everything. That's why she's so fascinated by the Queen. It's through the Queen that she has an existence [at all]."
But more was added to the characterisation than existed on the page, mostly as a result of Sidonie playing much younger in the film than in the book. Director Benoit Jacquot asked for a certain gracelessness and clumsiness in Seydoux's performance "... this is part of her youth, she's not super sophisticated" said the actress. And it's true, there's something refreshing about seeing a period drama set in the splendour of a Royal court, in which our protagonist trips a lot and scratches at her mosquito bites. This relatability was absolutely a concern of the actress as it's a quality that the corsets and ancient etiquette can alienate. "It helps to play [the part], but I wanted her to be not too stuck in her costume. Usually when you see period films, it's something very theatrical. I wanted her to be modern, that she has something that she could be from today...," she said. "To be not too theatrical, that was the big challenge and also because I am the girl who's watching in the film, it's difficult sometimes to be filmed just observing."
So what are the difficulties she experiences making Hollywood films? "It's not really difficult. Even if I am not completely fluent in English, when I was a kid I used to go very often to America. I went to summer camp and I grew up with American young girls, so I know the American culture and it's part of the way of my culture... It was really difficult in the beginning, the young girls were not open, laughing at me a little. [But] my father wanted me to learn English. Now he is like 'You are in 'Mission Impossible'! You can thank me!'"
So yes, while the French-language "Farewell, My Queen" will be the next chance audiences will get to catch her, it seems Lea Seydoux is determined to join the illustrious ranks of French actresses who have made successful careers for themselves on both sides of the Atlantic. "I'm not obsessed to work in America, but I want to be able to do very different things... When I did 'Mission Impossible,' when I worked with Tarantino, and -- no, Ridley Scott is not American -- but I really like to play in English, and America, Hollywood, is the land of cinema."
Get the latest headlines from The Playlist delivered to your inbox every day.
2 Comments
James | February 11, 2012 3:21 PM
Love her! I hope she does the Beauty and the Beast! Expectionally talented young woman who is very down to earth.