“I don’t think I remember the first time I saw her,” Ana de Armas says of Marilyn Monroe.
But she believes she truly engaged with the Hollywood icon’s indelible image only after leaving home at 18, when her world opened up to films previously inaccessible lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
Now, De Armas adds to the Monroe canon as a fictionalized version of the “Some Like It Hot” star — and, more importantly, of the woman born Norma Jeane Mortenson — in director Andrew Dominik’s #Blonde. lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
For De Armas, earning the role of an American icon seemed nearly unfathomable: “On paper I was not supposed to be playing Marilyn Monroe. I’m a Cuban actress. In what world could I have imagined that this was going to happen? Never.” lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
During the audition process, De Armas chose to approach the role of Marilyn Monroe as not a venerated legend but rather a relatable person undergoing extraordinary situations with familiar emotions. lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
“When she read for it, you could feel her — the world revolved around her onscreen,” the #Blonde director recalled via email. “The film didn’t really come to life until Ana appeared.” lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
While tackling 12-hour days on the set of #KnivesOut, De Armas would still find the time and energy to Zoom three hours a day with her #Blonde vocal coach. That unwavering commitment resulted in a detailed examination of Monroe’s speech. lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
Asked if he was apprehensive in casting De Armas given her own inherent accent as someone for whom English is a recently learned second language, Dominik said: “I had concerns, until I saw her act, then I forgot what I was supposed to be concerned about.” lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
The cornerstone of De Armas’ performance, and of the film’s ethos, is the marked separation between Norma Jeane and Marilyn Monroe. De Armas’ job was to take on a character, Norma, who at times plays Monroe. lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
“Ana De Armas seems to have captured the quicksilver commingling of emotions that characterized Marilyn Monroe — an air of childlike expectation and yearning,” Joyce Carol Oates, author of “Blonde,” said via email, offering high praise for her turn. lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
“Whatever happens with the movie, it doesn’t matter,” says De Armas, letting go of the pressure she felt about playing Monroe.
"It matters that we told a story that we believed in... that I challenged myself, that I grew as an actress and as a person.” lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
On the other side of the most demanding feat of her flourishing career, De Armas reflected on how Hollywood represents — or, more consistently, misrepresents — the many groups that comprise the diverse Latino ethnicity. lat.ms/3Q8B7Py
A Superior Court judge declared a mistrial Wednesday in a case against a man facing life in prison because the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department kept him in jail cells without beds or blankets for two nights.
“There is absolutely no way, if there was a conviction, that it would stand,” Judge Daniel Lowenthal said during the hearing at the Long Beach courthouse, according to a transcript reviewed by The Times. latimes.com/california/sto…
Lowenthal cited arguments by the man’s attorney indicating that his client was losing focus during the trial and unable to help with his own defense. latimes.com/california/sto…
The heat wave has pounded workers, particularly those who labor primarily outdoors or whose workplaces, like many warehouses, lack air conditioning.
It’s yet another way that climate change is contributing to inequality. It is only going to get worse. latimes.com/business/story…
“We’re seeing temperatures increase, we’re seeing heat waves become more common,” said Amir Jina, an assistant professor at the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy who researches how environmental change affects societal development. latimes.com/business/story…
As “House of Hammer” debuts this weekend, the woman whose claims launched the ongoing LAPD investigation says the project is doing more to harm Hammer’s alleged victims than to help them. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Effie, a 26-year-old European woman who declined to give her last name due to concerns about harassment, said in a March 2021 press conference held by her lawyer, Gloria Allred, that Hammer “violently raped” her. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Experts say the combination of extreme dryness, soaring temperatures and hotter, faster wildfires is putting first responders at increasing physical risk — and the problem will likely get worse in the years to come.
“To the extent that these multiple conditions coming together is chance or bad luck — there’s always an element of that when the conditions are extreme,” said Noah Diffenbaugh, a professor and senior fellow at Stanford’s Doerr School of Sustainability. latimes.com/california/sto…
On Thursday, conditions got so bad that officials had to issue a temporary pause on ground-based firefighting activities to prevent more heat-related injuries as the mercury soared past 110 degrees.
.@TheSavBananas flip baseball on its head. With eccentric rules, dance breaks and carefree atmosphere, they exist “to make baseball fun.” latimes.com/sports/story/2…
In a sport that clings to tradition, purists will grumble. Is this really baseball? Is it bad for the game? latimes.com/sports/story/2…
Twenty-seven documents with classified and top secret markings were recovered from former President Trump’s office at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, according to a detailed inventory of what the FBI removed during a search of the home last month.
The eight-page inventory detailing thousands of government documents removed in the search, includes the locations where each item removed from the property was found and if they were classified, but not the subject matter.