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Lifestyle

Alicia Vikander digs deep for sympathy in transgender film The Danish Girl

The role marks the latest in a string of critically acclaimed performances for the Swedish actress, who at 27 has already established herself as a serious talent with an impressively wide range

Actress Alicia Vikander poses for a portrait at the 88th Academy Awards Nominees Luncheon at The Beverly Hilton hotel on Monday, Feb. 8, 2016, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

Alicia Vikander was 15 when she moved away from home. She didn’t know how to do her own laundry. But she wanted to be a ballerina, and the best dance school was in Stockholm, a four-hour drive from the city where she’d grown up in Sweden.

So she found a flat to rent – there weren’t any dormitories at the Royal Swedish Ballet School then – and moved in, alone. Her days began at 6.30am, and she attended classes six days a week. By 17, she was so stressed that a nurse suggested she start seeing a therapist.

Soon she would withdraw from the programme to pursue acting. But these would prove to be formative years for Vikander. They help to explain how, during the first three years of her Hollywood career, she’s shot more than a dozen movies. Five of those films – including the sci-fi thriller Ex Machina and the remake of The Man from U.N.C.L.E. – are 2015 releases.

The latest, for which she has received an Oscar nomination, is The Danish Girl. The film is based on the story of artist Lili Elbe (Eddie Redmayne), one of the first people in the world to receive gender reassignment surgery. Vikander plays Gerda Wegener, Lili’s wife, who is struggling to come to terms with her partner’s newfound identity.

Vikander (left) and Eddie Redmayne in The Danish Girl.
Vikander (left) and Eddie Redmayne in The Danish Girl.

The role marks the latest in a string of critically acclaimed performances for Vikander, who at 27 has already established herself as a serious actress with an astonishingly wide range: intimidatingly robotic (Ex Machina), hopelessly romantic (Testament of Youth), doggedly loyal (The Danish Girl).

But off-screen, she’s earned less positive reviews. The press has often found her to be aloof, describing her as “cooly remote”, “polite but not warm” and “certainly not vulnerable”.

And that’s not how millennials want their stars these days. Vikander looks like she could be the princess of a small European nation you’ve never heard of. You can tell she used to be a dancer because she’s quite dainty. It’s easy to imagine her with her hair slicked back into a bun, nothing hiding her delicate, symmetrical face.

Plus: it’s not Ah-lee-sha, it’s Ah-liss-sia.

But when asked about her reputation for being cold, Vikander becomes visibly upset. Red splotches even start to form on her neck.

“It’s tough,” she says. “I try to be myself, but I’m always nervous letting go. I am very serious about my work. But I think it’s a bit of a cultural thing, too. Everyone thinks my English is so good. But with the language barrier, I often feel like I want to add that little extra flavour to what I’m saying. Sometimes I wish people could hang out with me for 10 minutes when I’m speaking Swedish.”

Vikander is extremely proficient in English – she lives in London now – but still makes occasional grammatical errors that remind you it’s not her native language, like “part of my brain have forgotten that I did it”.

Many times, she’s felt out of place here. One summer, she attended a New York ballet camp with a childhood friend. When they first saw each other, she ran to give him a hug but was swiftly reprimanded.

“The teachers were like, ‘PDA! PDA!’” she recalled. “Girls and boys weren’t allowed to hang out after a certain hour.”

The Danish Girl director Tom Hooper postponed shooting for five months to accommodate Vikander’s schedule.
The Danish Girl director Tom Hooper postponed shooting for five months to accommodate Vikander’s schedule.

Though she grew up watching American television and film, Vikander never thought she’d become a star outside of Sweden. Her mother was a stage actress in her native Gothenburg, and so she too aspired to work in the theatre. The film industry in Scandinavia is small, and Vikander had only a few Swedish actresses as role models who’d made it in the US: Greta Garbo, Ingrid Bergman, Noomi Rapace.

She was first invited to Los Angeles to test for the lead in Snow White and the Huntsman – a role that eventually went to Kristen Stewart. But the trip, she said, was magical. She flew business class for the first time, snapping photos of the amenities to send to her mother.

“I was like, ‘It’s so obvious I haven’t done this,’” she says, laughing. “I was pushing every button. And then when I landed I called my mum to say, ‘I’m at Universal – but not the side where all the rides are! The other side!’”

Redmayne has also been nominated for an Oscar for his role in The Danish Girl.
Redmayne has also been nominated for an Oscar for his role in The Danish Girl.

She went on to describe the hotel she stayed in, a Hilton, with equal enthusiasm. She’s quite bubbly – at times even kooky – unafraid to guffaw or do dramatic imitations of her colleagues while seated in the Chateau Marmont’s austere lobby. It was in part this lack of self-consciousness that made director Tom Hooper want to cast her in The Danish Girl.

“I think there’s a tradition in English acting of emotional repression,” says the British director, who won an Oscar for The King’s Speech. “In Scandinavian tradition, they’re not so uptight emotionally. Alicia’s emotions are kind of quick to rise. And she was also completely fearless about nudity and sex scenes. That’s definitely not British. Me and Eddie were much more nervous.”

The director was so adamant that Vikander was right for The Danish Girl that when she had a scheduling conflict, production was put on hold for five months to accommodate her. So she went off to New Zealand to film Derek Cianfrance’s The Light Between Oceans opposite Michael Fassbender – now rumoured to be her boyfriend – before returning to London last February for Hooper’s film.

Vikander and Redmayne.
Vikander and Redmayne.
The Danish Girl is hitting theatres at a time when transgender stories finally begin to appear on-screen. In the film, Vikander’s character asks her husband to pose as a female model for one of her portraits. Days after the painting is finished, she’s stunned to come home and find her husband still dressed in stockings and high heels. That’s when she has to decide whether to help Lili through her transition or end the marriage.

“In preparing for the role, I met with those close to people who have transitioned,” Vikander says. “And they all wanted to tell me, ‘People forget that I went on a transition, too. I felt a bit lonely and needed support.’ And sometimes in playing Gerda, I felt like, ‘This is so tough. How could she do it?’”

At times, Vikander found it difficult to separate her feelings about the situation from her performance. When Gerda finds out her husband has secretly been dressing as a woman, she asked Hooper, wouldn’t she feel deceived?

“Alicia said, ‘Surely, my first reaction would be betrayal. I’d feel like there was a secret going on,’” Hooper explains. “I had to say to her: ‘However compassionate we are, Gerda is probably even more compassionate. You’re saying this is how I would feel.’ In pushing Alicia’s compassion, she became inspired by the character to be even more giving in her performance.”

Vikander as Gaby Teller in The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
Vikander as Gaby Teller in The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

Vikander often finds herself to be one of the more active participants on set. She’s even had trouble adjusting to more laid-back productions, such as The Man From U.N.C.L.E., where Guy Ritchie seemed just as concerned with enjoying himself as getting all his shots in on time.

“He was all about having fun and I was standing there, like, ‘Time is money!’” she remembers. “I really do like work – meeting a group of people, staying in your trailers and working 14, 16 hours a day. I feel very comfortable doing just that.”

There is one thing she’s looking forward to the next time she has a break, though. After living out of four bags for the past few years, she recently got her first place in London.

“And just having a shelf to put something on and knowing it’s going to be there in six months? That’s very exciting.”

Los Angeles Times

The Danish Girl opens on February 25