In Maudie, Sally Hawkins embraces the art and life of Nova Scotia artist Maud Lewis
NATHALIE ATKINSON Special to The Globe and Mail Published Wednesday, Apr. 12, 2017 3:46PM EDT
It took just one look to beguile Sally Hawkins.
When Irish director Aisling Walsh proposed the actress star in Maudie as Nova Scotia folk artist Maud Lewis, the Oscar-nominated Hawkins said yes almost immediately. The pair had worked together on the BBC adaptation of Sarah Waters's Victorian crime tale Fingersmith and, as Hawkins explains by phone from England, they remained close and hoped to collaborate again.
Initially, all Walsh sent Hawkins was one image: the iconic photograph of the diminutive Lewis from the series taken by the Star Weekly photographer Bob Brooks in 1964. The photo shows Lewis sitting at her portable desk by the window alongside her paintings and paints. "And surrounded by tulips! I saw this little hunched woman with this incredible smile and those twinkly little eyes and I knew," Hawkins recalls, "before I even read the script. Just this beautiful spirit shines out from this photo."
Next came a brief outline of Lewis's life and a couple of examples of her cheerful rural scenes, which cemented the deal.
NATHALIE ATKINSON Special to The Globe and Mail Published Wednesday, Apr. 12, 2017 3:46PM EDT
It took just one look to beguile Sally Hawkins.
When Irish director Aisling Walsh proposed the actress star in Maudie as Nova Scotia folk artist Maud Lewis, the Oscar-nominated Hawkins said yes almost immediately. The pair had worked together on the BBC adaptation of Sarah Waters's Victorian crime tale Fingersmith and, as Hawkins explains by phone from England, they remained close and hoped to collaborate again.
Initially, all Walsh sent Hawkins was one image: the iconic photograph of the diminutive Lewis from the series taken by the Star Weekly photographer Bob Brooks in 1964. The photo shows Lewis sitting at her portable desk by the window alongside her paintings and paints. "And surrounded by tulips! I saw this little hunched woman with this incredible smile and those twinkly little eyes and I knew," Hawkins recalls, "before I even read the script. Just this beautiful spirit shines out from this photo."
Next came a brief outline of Lewis's life and a couple of examples of her cheerful rural scenes, which cemented the deal.