Emma Stone is a throwback to the days of American screwball comedies, when a beauty could also be madcap and outrageous. In Easy A, the surprise hit of the fall, the 22-year-old gives her character spark and glamour—with her red hair and smoky voice, she’s a wonderful mix of Lucille Ball (circa Stage Door) and Rosalind Russell. Which isn’t to say Stone isn’t original. True to her age, she draws inspiration from sketch comedy and improvisation, giving her characters a looseness and spontaneity that is distinctly current. Although she’s been acting since she was a child, Stone is not jaded, self-conscious, or predictable—she seems to be up for anything. She had massively frizzed hair and braces in Ghosts of Girlfriends Past, ran from flesh eaters inZombieland, and shined in a musical skit on Saturday Night Live last October that channeled the Nouvelle Vague. Speaking French and dancing in narrow jeans, Stone was the epitome of a Godard Sixties ingenue, with a dash of Laugh-In-era Goldie Hawn. Just as Godard’s films simultaneously embraced and recontextualized cinematic archetypes, Stone is constantly reimagining the past for the future.

What was the first movie you remember seeing?
The Jerk, starring Steve Martin. It was my dad’s favorite. I grew up in Arizona, and I wasn’t really a tomboy, but I was loud. And bossy. I wanted to be Steve Martin. Or John Candy.

You’re only 22! Was there anyone closer to your own age who you wanted to be?
She’s not closer to my own age, but I loved Gilda Radner. My favorite of her Saturday Night Live characters is Judy Miller. She’s the Girl Scout who runs around her room, putting on her own show. In my Judy Miller–like way, I did sketch comedy from when I was 11. Some kids join the debate team; I joined improv class.

Did you do musicals too?
I was a stepsister in a local production of Cinderella. I had crazy red hair in a cone shape and lots of blue eye shadow. I had braces at the time, so whenever I smiled it was all red lipstick on my teeth, which was really attractive. After that I did a play called Noises Off, and when that was over I thought, I really want to be in movies. So I asked my parents and eventually they said yes.

You did a PowerPoint presentation?
Yes, I did. There was a chart; there was the song “Hollywood,” by Madonna; and there were pictures of actors like Sarah Jessica Parker, who had started young, in order to explain why we needed to move to L.A. when I was 14 instead of waiting to graduate from high school. There was a fair amount of alliteration in the presentation. It was some really heady stuff. [Laughs.] But I convinced them. When I was 14, my mom and I left Phoenix for pilot season. And…nothing happened. I didn’t get my first big part until I was 18.

Superbad, in which you play the object of desire, was your first major role.
I don’t think people thought comedy was my M.O., and it was. They always cast me as “the girlfriend” or “the young girl with attitude.” I would lose my mind if I felt like I had to be something like “the pretty girl.” When I was auditioning five or six times a week, they’d send me the descriptions of characters. And if it said “beautiful” or “gorgeous” or even “pretty,” my manager would delete it before sending it to me. Otherwise I’d immediately call him and say: “I will not be cast. It’s not going to happen.” Not to put myself down, but I just always thought I’d be a comedian. It was way more important to be funny or honest than to look a certain way.

You must have developed a devoted following of adolescent boys after Superbad.
Yes, I guess, but the movie that really has devoted followers is Zombieland. The zombie fans are avid. There is such a thing as a zombie purist, and they believe zombies need to be slow-moving and dead. Our zombies were fast-moving and alive. We were excommunicated from the zombie community.

Spider-Man fans must be just as intense as the zombie fans—and you are about to play Gwen Stacy, Peter Parker’s very blond girlfriend. And I have red hair! I think the Spider-Man fans are very upset. But I’m about to go blond.

Spider-Man is a prequel, which means your character is in high school. In Easy A, you play a high school girl who is falsely accused of being sexually promiscuous. Having never attended high school yourself, did you interview any actual high school students?
Luckily, Easy A could have taken place anywhere. The theme of reputation and miscommunication and technology could have been in any environment. Rumors fly everywhere.

Especially about sex. You got to simulate sex in Easy A: Your character and a gay male friend try to start a rumor by loudly pretending to have sex.
That was my favorite scene in the script. But when we actually shot it, I learned how difficult it is to simulate sex for that long, from that many angles. Simulation of sex is a real workout. We must have done a hundred takes. There was an oxygen tank at one point. It took two days. Simulated sex is really fun, but it’s not easy.

Filed under: Articles, Interviews, News. on 19th Dec 2010. Add a comment.

Responding to overwhelmingly positive test screening results, Warner Bros. Pictures is moving the release date of “Crazy, Stupid, Love.” starring Steve Carell, to July 29, 2011.

The announcement was made today by Dan Fellman, President of Domestic Distribution, who stated, “From our early recruited screenings, we have seen that audiences love ˜Crazy, Stupid, Love.’ From all indications, we feel strongly that the film has a very broad appeal, so we have decided to release it where it will have the widest possible platform. The studio is very excited to include this film in our powerhouse Summer slate, alongside films like ˜The Hangover Part II,’ ˜Green Lantern’ and ˜Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2.’”

“Crazy, Stupid, Love.” also stars Emma Stone, Ryan Gosling, Julianne Moore, John Carroll Lynch, Marisa Tomei and Kevin Bacon.

Filed under: Articles, Crazy Stupid Love, Movies, News. Jennifer on 18th Dec 2010. Add a comment.

School’s out for winter, unfortunately not forever, but certainly just in time for you and your daughter to see Emma Stone wearing multiple satin corsets to her high school campus. The best news — listen up all you daddies — is that Easy A hits DVD and Blu-Ray before Christmas, on December 21st, 2010. In Easy A, Emma Stone tells a white lie to help a friend, which ends up branding her as a slut until she embraces her new reality by pinning a Scarlet Letter-style A to her chest. If this sounds unbearable, it’s actually not bad — Stanley Tucci, Thomas Haden Church, Lisa Kudrow, and the as-usual overacting Amanda Bynes also star.

The DVD will include commentary with director Will Gluck and Emma Stone, Emma Stone’s webcam audition footage, and a gag reel. Following the form that is becoming standard for the nicer discs, the Blu-Ray will have the commentary and the gag real, plus a ton of extra features including: “Extra Credit: Pop-Up Trivia Track,” “The Making of Easy A” featurette, “The School of Pop Culture: Movies of the Eighties,” a section called “Vocabulary of Hilarity,” movieIQ+sync, and BD-Live.

Source

Filed under: Articles, Easy A, News. Jennifer on 18th Dec 2010. Add a comment.

Emma Stone, the brassy young star of the high school comedy “Easy A,” says she’s well aware that she’s yet to gain a reputation as a “serious actress.” Still, Tuesday morning the relative newcomer found herself nominated for a Golden Globe alongside such stalwarts as Angelina Jolie, Annette Bening and Julianne Moore.

Stone was the first to express her surprise.

“I mean, yeah, it’s ‘Easy A,’”

she joked, shortly after receiving word of her nom in the Globes’ actress in a motion picture comedy/musical category.

“It’s not like it’s been an awards process and I’ve been to all these shows.”

For Stone, though, the Globe nomination does bolster the perception that her star is on the rise. The actress, who has had supporting roles in films including “Zombieland” and “Superbad,” recently wrapped production on the cinematic adaptation of the popular novel “The Help” and just began work on the new “Spider-Man” film, in which she plays Peter Parker’s love interest Gwen Stacy.

Before heading to the set of the comic-book film, the actress acknowledged that her career has changed drastically in the last year.

“Hands down, 2010 has been the best year of my life so far,” she said. “And this is like the giant, giant cherry on top of it. Since I have a big disaster mentality, though, it makes me a little nervous.”

Filed under: Articles. Jennifer on 15th Dec 2010. Add a comment.

Emma Stone never expected to her name to be read along with Hollywood heavy hitters Annette Bening, Julianne Moore and Angelina Jolie when the Golden Globe nominations were announced Tuesday.

“Let’s just be honest, that’s pretty surreal,”

Stone, 22, tells PEOPLE of going up against Jolie.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do when I see her in person. I’m going to freak out when I see anybody in person.”

Stone got a best actress nod for her role in Easy A, and admits she became emotional after hearing the news.

“It’s insane! I’m still coming to realization that I got nominated,”

Stone says. ”

I’m in the state of ‘Oh, My God!’ My mom and dad called and they were on speakerphone and said, ‘We’re proud of you,’ and that was the best. I teared up.”

She’s looking forward to bonding with her good pal and fellow Globe nominee Jesse Eisenberg.

“I can’t wait to see him and hang out with him,”

she says.

“I think Jesse is the greatest and he was unbelievable in The Social Network.”

And who will be her date to the show? “My mom,” says Stone.

“I’m pretty excited about that. I would really like to bring my mom. She doesn’t know yet. You can break the news!”

Next up, the actress will play the female lead in the upcoming Spider-Man prequel.

Source

Filed under: Articles. Jennifer on 15th Dec 2010. Add a comment.

December 14 was just like any other morning for Emma Stone, who was “dead asleep” when her manager called “in tears” to share some life-changing news.

“As you can imagine, I was expecting this and I wasn’t surprised at all when they called me,” the Easy A actress joked to UsMagazine.com of her Golden Globe nomination. “I looked like Cinderella when she wakes up and the doves came and put a robe on me.”

Well, not exactly. “I lost my s*** of course,” Stone, 22, laughed. “It’s just so wild and so unexpected.”

Kidding aside, Stone has some serious competition in the Best Performance by an Actress in a Comedy or Musical category: Angelina Jolie (The Tourist), Annette Bening and Julianne Moore (The Kids Are All Right), and Anne Hathaway (Love & Other Drugs).

“They’re all terrible,” Stone teased. “No, I’m honored. They are amazing.”

Though she hasn’t begun to think about what she’ll wear on the red carpet, Stone has already decided on who she’ll bring to the January 16 fete.

“I don’t know what the deal is. I’m just gonna see how many people they’ll let me bring,” she told Us. “I’ll just have the whole family on board and we’ll be rolling up like the Beverly Hillbillies to the Golden Globes.”

In the meantime, Stone plans to celebrate her nomination with her Spider-Man costar Andrew Garfield, who was also nominated for his role in The Social Network.

“We’re shooting today so I’m gonna see him. I’ll get to go give him a big hug,” she said. “Nothing like this has ever happened in my life and I never thought it would at any point. It’s an unbelievable honor and surprise and a cherry on top of what was one of the best years of my life.”

Source

Filed under: Articles. Jennifer on 15th Dec 2010. Add a comment.

As MTV News’ Thankful Week draws to a close, we begin to cast our gaze away from the big screen and towards tables soon to be the scene of turkey-crazed feasts. But we have one last honor to bestow: the actress we’re most thankful for in 2010.

The winner is none other than Emma Stone, a move that completes a nifty “Spider-Man” double win, as we also honored Andrew Garfield — who’s stepping into the role of Peter Parker — as the actor we’re most thankful for this year. Stone won the part of Gwen Stacy in October, capping a stellar year for the 22-year-old.

From the top-notch teenage rom-com “Easy A” to her “Saturday Night Live” hosting gig to the opportunity to shoot flicks opposite the likes of Steve Carell (“Crazy, Stupid, Love”) and Justin Timberlake (“Friends With Benefits”), Stone was already having a great 2010. Then “Spider-Man” director Marc Webb came calling. Her life is never going to be the same — and she couldn’t be more excited.

The always-energetic actress called up MTV News in the midst of “Spider-Man” preproduction to talk about what a surreal year it’s been and how she’s dealing with the pressures of taking on the iconic Marvel series.

MTV: Thanks for calling up to chat.

Emma Stone: Thank you for having me!

MTV: Well, you’re going to be very excited in a second.

Stone: What is it? What’s it going to be? You like how I’m excited at the mere mention that I’m going to be excited?

MTV: Uh-oh, I really have to come through now. Look out your window — there’s a blimp with your face on it!

Stone: Oh my god, it’s so beautiful, I’m looking right now! You wanna know what’s really insane about that? I actually pulled back the curtain and looked at the sky.

MTV: I’m sorry to disappoint, but I can tell you that every year we honor various people we’re thankful for, and this year you’re the woman we’re most thankful for.

Stone: Oh my god, shut up! Get out of here! I prepared a 10-minute speech, is that OK?

MTV: I’m afraid we don’t have enough time. You know, the man we’re most thankful for this year is your “Spider-Man” co-star Andrew Garfield.

Stone: Hey, I know that guy! We’ve met. He’s the worst!

MTV: I won’t tell him you said that. It has been quite a year for you. “Easy A” gets a great reaction, you’re shooting movies with people like Justin Timberlake and Ryan Gosling, you host “Saturday Night Live,” and then you land “Spider-Man.” Does 2010 feel like a landmark year?

Stone: It feels kind of scary saying this because that means it’s only downhill, but it’s been the best year of my life. Not just with how lucky I’ve been work-wise, but with my family and friends. I’m totally terrified for 2011. I have such a disaster mentality, it’s not even funny.

MTV: Which raises the question, are you ready for something as big as “Spider-Man”? Can you ever be ready for something like that?

Stone: The way I have to approach it, and I think Andrew would agree, is just like any other movie. You’re going to put the same amount of focus into this that you would with anything. It just happens to be an exponentially bigger budget. So there’s that. It’ll probably feel different when we start to do press, but we won’t have to deal with that for another year and a half. And there are harnesses I’m going to have to use in this one. That’s the only difference: just the harnesses.

MTV: Seriously, though, it’s been quite a year for you with onscreen love interests. The women in the office are jealous — Penn Badgley, Timberlake, Gosling, Garfield. You’re a lucky woman …

Stone: What can I say? You cannot compare them. They are so wonderful in their own ways. Again, it’s been an amazing year.

MTV: Has there been one surreal point in particular that kind of encapsulates 2010 for you?

Stone: Hosting “Saturday Night Live.” That’s always been my ultimate dream. That moment before you come out those doors when Don Pardo says your name and you’re standing there … I had never let myself imagine what that would feel like. That moment when you walk through those doors was probably the most surreal moment, not just of this year, but ever.

MTV: So you guys are in rehearsals for “Spider-Man,” right? What is that process like at this point?

Stone: Today I went and did hair tests, because I have blonde hair now since Gwen has blonde hair. My natural hair is blonde, so it’s kind of nice. I looked in the mirror and said, “Oh my god, it’s me again, it’s been so long!” We’re finalizing the visual stuff. And I think we’ll start actually rehearsing, because we start shooting in two weeks. Andrew and I went and learned about science yesterday. Gwen really likes science, so we learned about science. I was homeschooled, so I never went to chemistry class in a traditional setting like Gwen is into. That was really beneficial.

MTV: There seemed to be so much competition for the role of Gwen Stacy. Do you ever think, “Why me?” What do you think won you the part?

Stone: I ask myself that question every day. I have no f—ing idea. It’s the most amazing idea, I can’t even tell you. I don’t think I ever will figure out how it happened. It’s been mind-blowing. I know things will eventually change, so I’m just trying to avoid thinking about it and just enjoy it while it’s happening. Ugh, what am I even saying? Don’t write any of that down!

Filed under: Articles, Interviews. Jennifer on 26th Nov 2010. Add a comment.

LOVEFiLM: How did you get involved in the project?

Emma Stone: It kind of started like any other job, I read the script and then I auditioned, so it was just a pretty basic evolvement.

LF: Olive isn’t the coolest kid at school, did you draw on any of your own high school experiences?

ES: I only went to high school for my first semester of the ninth grade year, but then I left and was home schooled, so it’s a different experience. I think the film is related to how someone feels in life in general. School is a more extreme version of what happens in life because you see the same people every day. It can happen in a work environment or anything like that. I mean, it was the same with the kids when I was doing theatre growing up, so it’s all relatable…

LF: What I loved about the film is that you can be a teenager or you can be in your twenties or in your thirties even, and still enjoy it…

ES: I think anyone can relate to being 17 and working out who you want to be, what you want to do with your life and who you want to be with. It could happen in the work place with a 35 year old woman. It’s just a subject matter. I think it’s a universal story rather than just having to be 17 and high school for this to happen.

LF: You’ve played a geek before in Ghosts of Girlfriends Past and a cool kid in Superbad, which did you prefer?

ES: Oh gosh that’s hard to answer. Olive was so much fun to play. The best part of being an actor is playing different sides of yourself while you’re playing other characters.

LF: What was it like having Stanley Tucci and Patricia Clarkson as parents? I want them to be my parents…

ES: You can always tell what it’s like working with them when you watch the film. They were so funny and amazing and loose. We gelled together so well and made it so much fun. They were only there for three days but they were great. You learn a lot from working with people like that. I simultaneously want them to be my parents and want to marry them both, which is this kind of weird symbiotic relationship, that just doesn’t go together…(laughs)

LF: As much as I don’t like the song, I loved the Pocket Full of Sunshine scene, was that fun to film or painful?

ES: The director Will Gluck has these two little girls who had a card that played a song over and over, so that scene is in the movie because of his own experience with an annoying song. And it’s haunted us ever since. We were at a national press day and they played the song as we were walking out. As much as it’s funny in the movie, it really haunts us.

LF: Which was your favourite scene to film?

ES: Well I really loved filming with Stanley and Patricia, they were great days. Those were my favourite days. It was great.
The best part of being an actor is playing different sides of yourself while you’re playing other characters.

LF: What can our readers expect from Easy A?

ES: That’s a hard question to answer. Sorry I have trouble summing up the movie in one sentence. There are lots of great scenes and there’s a lot to take away, it touches on modern technology and the spreading of rumours, in a teenager’s world. It’s just really good fun…

LF: It’s great news that you’ll be starring in Spider-Man, how does it feel to be part of something so huge?

ES: I’m so excited, it’s going to be a crazy re-imagining and it’s going to be a lot of fun. It starts soon so I’m really looking forward to it.

Filed under: Articles, Interviews, News. Jennifer on 3rd Nov 2010. Add a comment.

We’ve added 3 new high quality movie stills of Emma Stone in her upcoming new movie, ‘The Help’ movie to the gallery also we added one high quality photo from behind the scenes of this movie, take a look.

thumb 001 Emma Stone in ‘The Help’ Moviethumb 003 Emma Stone in ‘The Help’ Moviethumb 004 Emma Stone in ‘The Help’ Moviethumb 002 Emma Stone in ‘The Help’ Movie70118593694310352090 Emma Stone in ‘The Help’ Movie

GALLERY LINKS
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Filed under: Articles, Behind The Scenes, Gallery Updates, Photos Adds, Stills, The Help. Jennifer on 3rd Nov 2010. Add a comment.

EMMA Stone admits she used to have a “little mental breakdown” when she lost out on a movie role.

The Easy A actress — who convinced her mother to move with her to Hollywood when she was just 15 – found it difficult deal with rejection when she didn’t win parts.

“It was a strange and pretty isolated experience at first. Every time I’d get turned down at an audition I’d have a little mental breakdown, but it all ended up working out alright,”

she said.

Emma — who is naturally blonde — says she dyed her hair red because she convinced her locks were holding her back.

“In my mind, I’m a redhead so I don’t mind paying homage to the redheads of the world,”

she said.

Stone — who has landed the female lead in the Spider-Man reboot — recently revealed that she wants the tabloids to start writing stories about her life.

“I haven’t really heard any [rumors about me], but I keep encouraging people to please make some up,”

she said.

“They are always so much better than the truth.”

Source: ShowbizSpy

Filed under: Articles, News. Jennifer on 2nd Nov 2010. Add a comment.
 
 

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