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Sienna graces the cover of Gotham Magazine (sept’09)
Posted on September 20th, 2009 | Filled in: Magazines | With No Comments »

Sienna Miller may seem the quintessential young British actress with proper English diction, a London home and a BAFTA nomination. But she has a dark secret: She’s really a New Yorker. The actress was born in the Big Apple and lived here for a year before moving to the UK. She even has an American passport. “I think you always have an affinity with the place where you were born,” she says. However, there is a downside. “When people find out I was born in New York they think I’m faking my British accent.”

This month the 28-year-old star returns home to make her Broadway debut in the lead role of the Roundabout Theatre Company’s production of After Miss Julie. (Previews start on September 18 and the play will run through December 6.) The fast-paced, three-person drama is set in the kitchen of a posh British country manor on the eve of the Labour Party’s surprise election win in 1945, which swept Winston Churchill out of office. “It was a time when everybody felt that the world was changing,” says the play’s director, Mark Brokaw. “When the class system seemed to be dissolving and when all seemed possible.” It’s an adaptation of August Strindberg’s late-19th-century play Miss Julie by playwright Patrick Marber, who is well-known for penning the smash hit Closer.

Even though the play takes place more than 60 years ago, “It feels much more current to us,” says Brokaw. “I thought so much about it during this last election when people were in the streets celebrating Obama’s victory.”

As Miss Julie, the dangerously flirtatious and irreverent daughter of the manor’s owner, Miller spends most of the play’s 70 minutes scandalously wooing and sparring with her father’s chauffeur. Her foil is played by fellow Brit Jonny Lee Miller (no relation), most recently seen in the ABC TV series Eli Stone. “It’s a pretty full-on play. It’s going to war every night with Jonny,” Miller says. “Patrick Marber’s dialogue is so amazingly written. I wish I could be that clever in a fight.”

But the play isn’t just a screaming match. And like Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, Miss Julie is a dark character whose motives are complicated. She is both victim and antagonist. “I want to make her sympathetic in some way so you understand that she’s not just this promiscuous, spoiled person. Actually she has a reason for being that way,” Miller explains. “It’s very easy to get carried away with the shouting and the insults and lose sight of the fragility.”

For Brokaw the character also must have a real presence. “[She] is the object of desire for her sexuality but also for her class in society. That’s something that somebody either has or they don’t,” he says. “She has such an effortless charisma. And a beauty that just kind of radiates from her. And I think that’s what Miss Julie needs.”

To get into Miss Julie’s head, Miller visited a number of historic estates around England to get a sense of what it was like to live and work in a manor house. She also immersed herself in the popular culture of the era, listening to music and watching movies. “It’s really hard for me to relate to the euphoria of that [night] without, obviously, having lived it or studied it,” she says. Miller interviewed people who lived the history—in this case, those who actually experienced the jubilation of the landmark election—just as she did to prepare for her role as Warhol muse Edie Sedgwick in 2006′s Factory Girl.

Pretending to be Sedgwick was very draining and ultimately made Miller a little crazy. “I was really trying to feel everything she felt and make friends with a lot of her family and a lot of her friends,” she says. “It began to infi ltrate my own life in a way where I felt like I was a little lost.” But the experience didn’t scare her away from taking on another challenging character. “I love playing tortured, messed-up people for some reason,” she says. “To me that’s more interesting than being the perfect person. It’s the parts of ourselves we don’t want to admit to.” In Miss Julie, Miller has defi nitely found a demanding role. “I love pushing myself in an emotional way,” she says.

It’s also a return to serious drama for her. Miller’s last project was this summer’s big-budget action film G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra. “It’s an interesting juxtaposition of two completely different worlds,” she says. Not only did she have fun making the movie but she enjoyed learning martial arts and firing a gun. “I think it was probably time for me to do a film that people actually want to go and see,” she jokes. “As opposed to my tortured indie art-house fi lms that maybe ten people have seen.”

After some prodding she concedes that in New York her films do pretty well and that she’s extremely excited about performing on the Great White Way. “To be on Broadway was an absolute dream, since I was little,” she says. “I always wanted to do theater.” Miller is also just happy to be back in the City. “I love any excuse to be in New York,” she says. Not only have a number of her fi lms been set and filmed here, including Factory Girl, Interview (2007) and Alfie (2004), but she studied at The Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute. “When I lived in New York it was one of the happiest times in my life,” she remembers. “It’s such an amazing, vibrant, exciting place to be.”

Months before leaving London, Miller was already dreaming about her free time in between performances. Much of it will be spent walking around the West Village, Soho and Central Park. The self-proclaimed food lover was also coming up with a list of restaurants to visit, including Tamarind, near Madison Square Park. (For “my curry fix,” she says. “That’s the best curry I’ve ever had.”) She’ll also head up to Harlem for a heaping plate of soul food at Sylvia’s on Lenox Avenue. “I’m obsessed with collard greens and fried chicken,” she says. Photographer Bruce Weber introduced Miller to the New York institution a number of years ago; she tries to eat at the restaurant every time she’s in town. Then there’s drinks at the Gramercy Park Hotel and dinner at underground hot spot La Esquina. “I kind of like to mix it up—trendy and also more authentic,” she says.

New York is also the perfect location for Miller to find inspiration for her clothing line Twenty8Twelve. She cofounded the brand with her older sister Savannah, a graduate of the prestigious London fashion and art college Central Saint Martins. The play will obviously occupy most of Miller’s fall, but she’ll still have plenty of time during the day to sniff out trends and comb vintage stores and flea markets. “For me that part of it is heaven,” she says. “We definitely take inspiration from all sorts of places.”

Her acting is also good for the brand, and not just as free publicity. “Often our collections are inspired by the film I’m doing at the time,” she says. After she costarred with Keira Knightley in last year’s World War II epic The Edge of Love about poet Dylan Thomas and his relationships, the clothing line included a number of garments that were influenced by the ’40s.

Miller feels so at home here she may never go back to the UK. “I think I’m going to fall so in love with being in New York that I probably won’t leave when we finish the play,” she predicts. There is just one small problem. “January and February—they’re pretty grim,” she says. “I’m glad I’m missing that biting, freezing wind down the avenues.”

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HIPPIE HIPPIE SHAKE (2010)
Director: Beeban Kidron
Role: Louise Ferrier / Baroness
Status: Completed
Release Date:: 21 May 2010 (UK)

G.I. JOE: THE RISE OF COBRA (2009)
Director: Stephen Sommers
Role: Anastasia 'Ana' DeCobray / Baroness
Buy: Amazon | Play | HMV


HUGO BOSS ORANGE FRAGRANCE
Status: In Stores






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‘Twenty8Twelve has taken the essence of cool, modern London dressing – slick tailoring, rock-chick cool and romantic vintage pieces – and edited it into an accessible collection’ - The Guardian UK.
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