By: Lynn Barker
of the A Wrinkle in Time cast told press that they all were honored to bring classic characters to life. The original novel by Madeleine L'Engle and the film introduce tween Meg Murry and her young bro Charles Wallace who have been without their scientist father, Mr. Murry, for five years since he discovered a new planet and āwrinkled timeā to travel there. They are ed by Meg's classmate Calvin O'Keefe and guided by the three astral travelers Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which to time travel to a planet where rests all the evil in the universe, rescue dad and survive.
The film is meant to inspire young people and everyone who is young at heart to find a little light in dark times. A lot of us will relate. The A Wrinkle in Time cast is as stellar as its spacy setting with Oprah Winfrey as Mrs. Which, Star TrekĀ fame as dad Dr. Alex Murry. A semi-newbie to film Storm Reid plays lead character Meg and Gugu Mbatha-Raw is her beautiful and smart scientist mom Dr. Kate Murry. Rowan Blanchard from āGirl Meets Worldā and āThe Goldbergsā on TV portrays new character Megās bully/friend Veronica.Ā
Check out cast comments. Chris says he loved working with Storm because her āB.S. meter is so sharpā. Oprah loved the fancy clothes and āflyingā on wires and Rowan loved exploring what makes a bully tick.Ā Ā
Q: Storm, this movie may launch you into stardom. Are you excited?
- Storm Reid: Iām really excited. I havenāt been nervous this entire time and Iām usually always nervous. I feel like this is our baby that we created and we love it so much and itās so great, but weāre giving it to people for them to either like it or love it or not like it at all. So thatās a little bit nerve-wracking but I feel like we did a good job and Iām really proud of us so Iām really happy and itās a blessing.
Ā Q: Oprah, your role as Mrs. Which seems tailored just for you. Do you feel like that and were you drawn to visit New Zealand for the shoot?
- Oprah Winfrey: Yes, I did. When I heard that (Director) Ava (DuVernay) was shooting in New Zealand, I said āIām going. Iām going. āIām just gonna go hang out with you for however long it takes, Iām gonna block it on my schedule. Iām gonna watch you shoot and say actionā. She said, āWell if youāre serious about that, why not take a look at the script? Iāve been wanting to ask you to do this, but I didnāt want to pressure you because of our friendshipā. I go, āOkay, Iāll do itā. I didnāt even know what (part) it was. Then I thought, okay, let me read the book, see what this is. It never got to my neighborhood.
Q: Was playing the part everything you expected?
- Oprah: I was called for the fitting for the costumes with (costume designer) Paco Delgado and realized, whoa. This is some kind of movie. And the first day on the wires, I went, āThis is really some kind of movieā. So, when you look up the word ādelight,ā thereās my picture.
Q: Gugu, you play Dr. Kate Murry, an inspiring role model for Meg. How do you see your character?
- Gugu Mbatha-Raw: Iād never played a mother or a scientist before and we got to meet this wonderful astrophysicist who was kind of the consultant on the movie. Ā We visited the Jet Propulsion Lab which was really fun. I was really drawn to the fact that even though Dr. Kate and (husband) Alex Murry are obviously a love match, theyāre also intellectual equals and itās like a meeting of minds. That pioneering spirit that they have is really what sort of keeps her hope alive when heās been gone for so long.
Q: Chris how was playing your scientist/dad character? In your opinion, what is he like?
- Chris Pine: I had so much fun with this guy, Dr. Alexander. He is so cool. His brain is hungry and searching and explorative. And obviously that ambition to do great things propels him forward to do some wonderful things scientifically. Unfortunately that shadow side of him, ambition, disconnects him from what is most important in his life and it requires his daughter to reintroduce him to the spirit and the beauty and regenerative quality of being next to human beings; touching and feeling and holding and kissing. All those things that make us human.
Q: Reese, you are feisty in this movie as Mrs. Whatsit. Tell us about your experience with the film.
- Reese Witherspoon: My agent called me and said, āAva DuVernay wants you to be in a movieā. Itās very flattering to be chosen to be part of Avaās movies because she doesnāt just make a movie, she makes an experience for everyone. She cares about what happens in front of and behind the camera. Everybody feels like they are important and valued for their contributions. And I feel like this was a masterclass in how to be a very thoughtful filmmaker. Sheās a real visionary. I got to be this amazing celestial person, who hangs out with Oprah and Mindy(Kaling) all day.
Q: What did you talk about when the cameras werenāt rolling?
- Reese: We got to talk about what would we impart to a young woman today, right now? And discuss that with Ava and with Storm, and it was extraordinary. Really, a beautiful experience.
Q: Okay Mindy, your turn. How are you feeling about being part of the film as Mrs. Who?
- Mindy Kaling: Itās absolutely incredible. Ava saw something in me and we actually met at a party for Malala (Pakistani activist for female education). We were the only three women of color at this big party. And after I finished talking to Malala, Ava and I had a great conversation and I feel so blessed to be part of the film and to wake up every morning and spend four hours in the makeup trailer with these two (women, Oprah and Reese) was great.
Q: Rowan, you are a bully in the film and you were subject to bullying in āGirl Meets Worldā. Can you talk about that?
- Rowan Blanchard: Sure. From watching movies growing up I always looked at bullies as very one-dimensional characters, especially girl bullies. Itās very stereotypical that girls catfight or that girls fight over stupid things and that girls hate each other. And so I was interested in approaching Veronica and Megās relationship in a way where I was able to recognize what it means to be the bully. Itās so much more deep and layered than just a bully and a victim. I think, especially between young women, thereās so much competition thatās bred outside of their relationships interpersonally. I was interested in exploring that.
Q: Storm, what about Megās relationship with her father; kind of a daddyās girl thing? How did you get into that?
- Storm: Well, my dad hasnāt been missing for four years, so I didnāt really know how to translate that at first, but I really had to step in Megās shoes with all the situations sheās going through. Thankfully, Iām not getting bullied and Iām not going through the things that Meg is going through. Me and my dad are very close and thinking about him being missing for four years really helped me (get into that). Then working with (Chris) and seeing how focused and how intense, he is, I felt the connection and I felt the pain and the love. Mr. Chris was really helpful as well.
Q: And Chris?
- Chris: āMr. Chrisā. Cutest thing in the world. Working with young adults is a wonderful opportunity for an actor because their BS meter is so sharp. As an (adult) actor, you build a bunch of tricks that, if you get lazy, you can sort of throw them in. But if you work with a kid, they just keep you right there, you got to be right there. So that was lovely working with Storm because sheās such an authentic human, such an authentic actress.
Q: And Meg has such an important influence on her dad.
- Chris: The beautiful thing about this piece is that, a man that has become so rigid and structured and needy of getting the validation of his community is so hard that he forgets the most beautiful thing on the planet, this beautiful, supple, blooming flower of a gorgeous daughter that he has. He forgets that thatās the prize. Property or money, none of that stuff matters. Ā So that moment when they meet, thatās like, the man finding his young inner child and ing everything thatās beautiful about being a human.
Q: So cool. Whoever wants to answer, what was a childhood fantasy that you acted out as an adult?
- Gugu: I think itās this life that we get to live as actors, you know, we get to play letās pretend. For me, certainly acting and performing, dancing, telling stories, was something I did for fun and I got to make my hobby my job. That was always my childhood fantasy, what are we going to play today? Also I was an only child, so I didnāt have any playmates at home. I get my playmates and my siblings from this wonderful job we get to do.
- Mindy: I loved science fiction and fantasy growing up but it was a genre that largely did not love me back. I never saw any representation of like a dark-skinned Indian woman, Indian girl in anything that I saw. And itās a really peculiar thing when you grow up loving something that shows you no love back. I broke out in TV and comedy which is so welcoming to me, but to be part of this, a science fiction fantasy movie, I finally feel welcomed with open arms to something that has ignored me completely. I think itās something that the miniature version of me could watch and be excited by.
Q: Oprah, Mrs. Which says in the movie that we need to restore hope. Do you think itās possible to be hopeful in times like this?
- Oprah: Oh yeah, for sure. I think the darkness is there to help bring out the light in all of us. And if you think about it, if we turned all the lights off and one person just held a candle, you would start to dissipate the darkness. You would banish the darkness. And look at how much darkness it would take to actually engulf all the light that every candle would hold. So it just takes a little bit of light. Thatās what weāre hoping for and if everybody can get that message, thatās how we have hope in the world. Weāre looking for warriors who can bring hope back.
Q: Beautifully said.
See A Wrinkle in Time in theaters Friday, March 9th! 3k6t
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Have Your Say 27211o
Have you read the famous novel on which the movie is based? Do you think and hope time travel can be possible? What would you do to get back a missing family member? Talk about it below with a comment!
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