Current:Home > Contact'Queen of America' Laura Linney takes on challenging mom role with Sundance film 'Suncoast' -Edge Finance Strategies
'Queen of America' Laura Linney takes on challenging mom role with Sundance film 'Suncoast'
View
Date:2025-04-26 12:14:26
If Tom Hanks is America's Dad, Laura Linney is our mom.
That's the dream scenario for actor-turned-filmmaker Laura Chinn, who puts her childhood on screen in the new coming-of-age film "Suncoast." But for a while in the casting process, she wouldn’t allow herself to believe that Linney might actually say yes to playing her fictionalized mother.
“I was like, ‘But Laura Linney is the queen of America! How can I send her a script?’ And when she read it and wanted to meet, I spent the whole week dancing around my house,” says Chinn, whose film is playing now at Sundance Film Festival.
One Zoom call later, Linney was starring in Chinn’s semi-autobiographical, 2005-set dramedy as Kristine, an embattled Florida mom who moves her dying son into the same hospice-care facility as Terri Schiavo – the main nugget of truth from which Chinn fashioned the rest of her "Cinderella tale." ("Suncoast" streams on Hulu Feb. 9, but Sundance is including it in the festival's on-demand digital platform to watch Jan. 25-28.)
Kristine's life is so consumed with spending as much time with her son before the end comes that she winds up neglecting her quiet teenage daughter Doris (Nico Parker). And when Kristine wants them all to stay together at the hospice, Doris rebels and instead embraces her youth by having parties with classmates in her house with her mom away.
Ranked:All the best movies we saw at Sundance (including 'Suncoast' and 'Luther: Never Too Much')
Linney, who turns 60 next month, has played plenty of maternal characters in her long career – in addition to being, as Chinn points out, a familiar celebrity face who exudes warmth and inspiration. But for Linney, the challenge was the aspects of death and grief in Kristine's story.
“The future is not a bright thing for her and that's a very different dynamic to play with, just profound fear of the inevitability of what's coming," Linney says. "Letting go of a child, how do you handle that? How do you keep it all together?
“She can't fall apart. She can't. She's got to keep moving forward for (her son), and for all of them.”
One key scene occurs when a grief counselor at the facility asks Kristine if she has any children and she says one, her son. But she quickly remembers Doris and laughs nervously about her faux pas. “She's exposed herself to herself. There's a realization of truth that she was really not aware of,” Linney says. Adds Chinn: “That one misspeak says volumes about what's going on at home.”
Chinn remembers going to visit her brother at his hospice when she was 18, and getting searched for guns and bombs because of all the protesters. She couldn't even bring in a camera to take a picture of him. But her actual mother was never as “overtly flinty” as Kristine, Chinn says. "My mother was fiercely passionate about my brother. She gave up everything and just fought so hard for him. I wanted to capture that. And as a result, though, I was the other kid with that feeling of, well, I want attention, too."
Linney wanted to balance Kristine's “very fractious quality” with someone who is ultimately sympathetic and caring. “People are never one thing,” says the actress, who met Chinn’s mom and reports she’s “wildly different” from her character. “It's easier to make sense of the world if someone is just mean, just angry, just jealous, just wonderful, only generous. But we have to evolve our minds and our perception when you realize that everybody's carrying a whole lot within them.”
The three-time Oscar nominee has one son herself, Bennett, 10, and her own motherhood definitely affects how she plays roles like Kristine.
“It's the little stuff,” Linney says. “It's the way you look at your child. It's the way you smell them. It's how your face hurts when you smile for so long, because you love looking at them and you find them delightful. It's the frustration when they let you down. It's the sensory overload when someone is asking you question after question. It's feeling like you're not a good parent when you're doing your best. It's the gratitude of having them, and it's the fear of letting them go and feeling like you're letting them down and letting yourself down.
“It's all of those things you understand on a more cellular level.”
Linney doesn’t think she’s ever pulled from her own mom, at least not consciously, for her acting life. But, she says, “I do look like my mother more and more, and that's a bit of a freaker. Muscularly, the way my head will turn and it's like, ‘Oh, boy, that looks like my mother.’
“My mother is nothing like the characters that I've played," Linney adds. "She's a very different person. But I'm sure there are things that bleed through. That's sort of inevitable, but I've certainly not intentionally gone to that well.”
'Will & Harper':Will Ferrell's best friend came out as trans. He decided to make a movie about it.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Why Kim Kardashian Says North West Prefers Living With Dad Kanye West
- 15 must-see holiday movies, from 'The Marvels' and 'Napoleon' to 'Trolls 3' and 'Wish'
- Eminem's Daughter Hailie Jade Shares Rare Insight Into Bond With Sibling Stevie
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Trial to determine if Trump can be barred from offices reaches far back in history for answers
- Georgia Tech scientist sentenced to nearly 6 years for defrauding university, CIA
- Low World Series TV ratings in 2023 continue 7-year downward trend
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Natalee Holloway’s confessed killer returns to Peru to serve out sentence in another murder
Ranking
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Pentagon UFO office launches digital form to collect info on government UAP programs, activities
- Approaching Storm Ciarán may bring highest winds in France and England for decades, forecasters warn
- 'The Reformatory' is a haunted tale of survival, horrors of humanity and hope
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- The 9 biggest November games that will alter the College Football Playoff race
- Israeli envoy to Russia says Tel Aviv passengers hid from weekend airport riot in terminal
- Video shows camper's tent engulfed by hundreds of daddy longlegs in Alaska national park
Recommendation
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
U.S. infant mortality rate rises for first time in 20 years; definitely concerning, one researcher says
Bracy, Hatcher first Democrats to announce bids for revamped congressional district in Alabama
5 Things podcast: One Israeli and one Palestinian cry together for peace
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
The US has strongly backed Israel’s war against Hamas. The allies don’t seem to know what comes next
Jury selected after almost 10 months for rapper Young Thug’s trial on gang, racketeering charges
Toyota recalls nearly 1.9M RAV4s to fix batteries that can move during hard turns and cause a fire