Cailee Spaeny of ‘Alien: Romulus’ Is Learning How to Be a Star (original) (raw)
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But the young actress, who has the lead role in “Alien: Romulus,” is also wondering if she wants to be one at all.
“This could really easily be a chapter of my life and not my whole life,” Cailee Spaeny says of the Hollywood career she began crafting as a teenager. Credit...Ryan Pfluger for The New York Times
Cailee Spaeny Is Still Learning How to Be a Star
But the young actress, who has the lead role in “Alien: Romulus,” is also wondering if she wants to be one at all.
“This could really easily be a chapter of my life and not my whole life,” Cailee Spaeny says of the Hollywood career she began crafting as a teenager. Credit...Ryan Pfluger for The New York Times
- Aug. 14, 2024
The actress Cailee Spaeny, the seventh of nine children born to committed Southern Baptists, left school in Missouri at 13. She had found work at a theme park, Silver Dollar City, in the Ozark Mountains, which allowed her to strike out on her own.
“I was just so ready,” she said. “I definitely had a feeling that I needed to experience something else really early on. I wanted out of this Midwestern box.” Silver Dollar City was that first step.
The next year, she took another one, convincing her mother to drive her across the country to Los Angeles, where she quickly secured an agent and a manager. More trips followed, more nights sleeping in the spare rooms of friends of friends or families met at church. Finally, when she was 17, she booked a role in the action movie “Pacific Rim Uprising.”
Casting directors noticed her then. Wryly, Spaeny narrated what happened next. “This fresh-faced little girl comes to town,” she said. “She’s from the Midwest, she’s got a bit of an accent, bright-eyed, bushy tailed. They jump on that opportunity.”
Spaeny, now 26, is still reasonably bushy tailed. She has wide-set eyes, an open countenance suggestive of some Great Plain and an unfussy femininity that she can ratchet up or way down as a role demands. There’s also an intensity to her, a tinge of the steeliness that had her paying her own way when she was barely a teenager. Hollywood jumped on that, too.
Coming off “Uprising,” she booked four roles in a single week, and then she booked more, moving briskly from teen fare (“The Craft: Legacy”) to auteur-driven films like Alex Garland’s “Civil War” and Sofia Coppola’s “Priscilla,” in which Spaeny played the lead. Now she is starring as Rain in “Alien: Romulus” (in theaters Aug. 16), the latest entry in the space horror franchise.
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