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Page 1: l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l ... · ing the red carpet at the Golden Globes and SAG awards in LA, she flew home to show off Wolf to friends and family

30 NT NEWS. Saturday, January 25, 2014. www.ntnews.com.au

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Making a splashHardwork has paid off for formerNeighbours actressMargotRobbie.ByNEALA JOHNSON

Clockwise from main, Margot Robbie lights up the red carpet; in an infamously sultry TheWolf of Wall Street scene with Leonardo DiCaprio; Robbie during her Neighbours days

Having the

Neighbours contract

was perfect; it gave

me the time to put

everything in place,

sowhen I did get to

America I could hit

the ground running

MARGOT Robbie wouldlike to issue a dis-claimer: ‘‘I’m not

that good.’’At just 23, the Queensland-

born-and-bred actor has madea huge Hollywood splash, go-ing scene for sexy scene withLeonardo DiCaprio in MartinScorsese’s Oscar-nominatedtale of stockbroker excess,The Wolf of Wall Street.

Robbie not only won therole over higher-profile youngactors, she took what couldhave been a thankless trophy-wife part and turned it into amemorable ballbreaker.

Most would have by nowseen the image of Robbie withher stiletto heel planted onDiCaprio’s forehead, from ascene where wife works hus-band into a sexual lather thenkeeps him hanging, just toprove she has some power inthe relationship. That’s justthe tip of the iceberg; Robbielaughs that it’s a good thingthose shocked by the de-bauchery in the film ‘‘didn’tsee the original draft’’.

The casting director whoput the Australian in front ofScorsese, Ellen Lewis, hassaid that, while it was a‘‘provocative film’’, Robbiewasn’t intimidated.

‘‘I guess I was just hiding itvery well, because I was ter-ribly intimidated,’’ Robbielaughed. ‘‘But with thosetricky scenes, I feel like if youdon’t commit to it 100 per cent,they end up looking silly. So Ithought, ‘It’s all or nothing,’and I really went for it.’’

It turned out to be a dreamstart (Wolf is only Robbie’ssecond international feature,after British rom-com AboutTime). Yet the success nowhas Robbie worried that she’slost the element of surprise.

‘‘The nice thing is, whenno one knows you, the bar isset really low . . . So youhave the ability to exceed ex-pectations,’’ she said.

Post-Wolf, ‘‘everyone’s setthe bar really high and expectsme to be brilliant. I almostwant to put the disclaimer outthere first: ‘I’m not that good!Don’t set your expectationstoo high!’ It’s going to beharder now, if anything.’’

One gets the feeling Robbiewill be OK — she got herselfthis far, after all.

Though the graduation from

Neighbours or Home and Awayto Hollywood stardom seemsalmost de rigueur these days(Melissa George, Chris Hems-worth, Ryan Kwanten, Isla Fi-sher, Jesse Spencer, etc), Rob-bie’s shot at the States wasno afterthought.

In that way, she has some-thing in common with hernext ridiculously famous co-star, Will Smith. (They teamup in pickpocket comedy Fo-cus, to be released later in2014.) After deciding he want-ed to be the biggest movie starin the world, Smith closelystudied the careers of thosealready there.

Robbie was similarly sys-tematic: using her time onNeighbours to draw up a ca-reer road map and start putt-ing it into action — for in-stance, taking Americanaccent lessons two years be-fore she stepped foot in US.

‘‘I didn’t grow up knowinganyone in the industry, so Ididn’t know how anyone

would go about pursuing a ca-reer in acting. It was never aplausible career choice,’’Robbie said.

‘‘When I started working onNeighbours, I met people whohad been doing it for 20 yearsand supported their familyquite comfortably. It sud-denly dawned on me that youcould do it as a career.

‘‘But it wasn’t just hittingthe jackpot — Angelina Joliedidn’t just win the lotto.There were steps you couldtake to pursue that, to make itsomething you could live off.So that’s when the planstarted forming.

‘‘Having the Neighbourscontract was perfect; it gaveme the time to put everythingin place, so when I did get toAmerica I could hit theground running.’’

Now Robbie is a bit of anevangelist for the virtues ofhard work: ‘‘I just keep tryingto tell people, when they seethese things that seem so outof reach, ‘No, trust me, if youput the time and the effortand the work in, it will hap-pen. It has to happen’.’’

Happen, it has, for Robbie.Or perhaps that should be hap-pening, it is. Fresh from wow-ing the red carpet at theGolden Globes and SAGawards in LA, she flew hometo show off Wolf to friends andfamily at the Brisbane pre-miere. A day or two after that,she left for New Zealand,where she’ll this week beginshooting her ‘‘passion pro-ject’’, the post-apocalyptic dra-ma Z for Zachariah, with Ch-iwetel Ejiofor and Chris Pine.

‘‘Right after filming Wolf ofWall Street, still no one knewwho I was,’’ Robbie said.‘‘They went with another ac-tress (Amanda Seyfried) whoobviously had more internat-ional value. It made sense.’’

Then Seyfried pulled out.‘‘Somehow I got the good

fortune of having the scriptback on my lap,’’ Robbie said,‘‘and I had two days to fightfor it as much as I could.’’

She’s also been rumouredas a likely Jane to AlexanderSkarsgard’s Tarzan in a bigbudget reinvention. That oneis ‘‘still in the works . . . but avery exciting prospect’’.

Much like Robbie herself.The Wolf of Wall Street is

nowshowing

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