“I woke up, and (my
mother) said, ‘You’ve been nominated! You’re nominated!’” recalls
Quvenzhane of learning she’s up for the best actress prize at the 85th
annual Oscars. “I was like, ‘Oh my God!’ But it was on the inside. It
wasn’t on the outside.”
At 9 years old, the “Beasts of the Southern Wild” star is the youngest woman — ahem — girl to ever be nominated in the category.
“We
were all literally losing our minds this morning, and she’s totally
taking it in stride,” says “Beasts” writer-director Benh Zeitlin, who is
himself nominated in the directing and adapted screenplay categories.
“It’s magical. She’s just poised and fearless. I saw that the first day I
ever met her when she was five. To this day, she just knows who she is,
and she’s confident.”
Quvenzhane,
who hails from Houma, La., about 60 miles southeast of New Orleans, was
in Los Angeles Thursday to promote “Beasts” with Zeitlin, who lives in
New Orleans. She was just 5 years old when she first auditioned for the
film’s lead role of Hushpuppy, a little girl struggling to survive with
her ailing father in the southern Delta as a storm approaches.
Admittedly,
Quvenzhane has never watched an Oscar telecast. (“Whenever they said
you might make it to the Oscars, I was like, ‘Who’s Oscar? I don’t know
Oscar,’” she says.) When asked who she wants to meet at the star-studded
ceremony, her answer is “everyone from the Disney Channel and
Nickelodeon — but not Nick at Nite.”
When
it comes to fashion, Quvenzhane is open to wearing “all colors except
for black by itself” on the big day, and she’s not interested in wearing
a really long gown.
“I might step on it,” she explains, matter-of-factly.
Understandably,
Quvenzhane isn’t too aware of her competition, which includes the likes
of Naomi Watts from “The Impossible” and Jessica Chastain from “Zero
Dark Thirty.” She does know one of her fellow best actress nominees:
Emmanuelle Riva of “Amour.” But that’s only because she met her the day
prior when the pair posed for a photo together. Both have something in
common. Sorta. They’re record breakers. At 85 years old, Riva is the
oldest best actress nominee.
Despite
her young age, with a Spirit Award nomination and a few other awards
now under her belt, Quvenzhane is already adapting to Hollywood’s awards
season madness. That doesn’t mean she’s prepared to just stick to
acting though. What’s herultimate goal?
“Actress-dentist,” she says with a toothy grin.
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