Getting her teeth into new tasks

Evan Rachel Wood. Photo by Reuters.
Evan Rachel Wood. Photo by Reuters.
The last time Evan Rachel Wood was on the telly, she was dying in a hail of wooden bullets. Such was the end of her Vampire Queen of Louisiana in True Blood, a part she had begged for.

"I was such a fan of the show, so I called [show creator] Alan Ball and said I'd do any role," she recalls.

"When I got the call to play the queen, I think I had a heart attack, being surrounded by baked, good-looking people constantly." Her turn as the 500-year-old monarch possibly made up for any disappointment the 7-year-old Wood might still hold for losing out to Kirsten Dunst in 1994's Interview with the Vampire.

And she hasn't lacked for pale and scary company in real life either, having been engaged to shock rocker Marilyn Manson until earlier this year.

She's now back with former flame Jamie Bell who, like Wood, is a former child screen star finding his feet as an adult actor.

Having worked in television from an early age, Wood (24) garnered acclaim for her breakthrough role in Catherine Hardwicke's Thirteen (2003). This year she was nominated for an Emmy for what many consider to be her most mature performance, as Kate Winslet's opera singer daughter in Mildred Pierce.

The five-part HBO series follows Winslet's over-protective mother who tries to get her life back on track after separating from her husband. As she experiences success and failure as a businesswoman and copes with the death of her younger daughter, Ray, she yearns for the love and respect of her elder narcissistic daughter, Veda.

"The story is really heartbreaking in depicting their relationship," says Wood.

"It was hard to put yourself there. It was hard to be so mean to Kate. I don't think Veda had ever felt genuine love.

"Mildred doesn't really know who she is and why she is so angry." It was the most intense role of Wood's career.

"There's not a shred of me in Veda, not the way she moves, not the way she talks and definitely not the way she thinks. That's a very good thing.

"I was working for two months before shooting, practising the piano and the 1930s dialect and opera singing even if I was being dubbed, it was hard. I am a singer but you have to train your whole life to sing opera. I didn't listen to any other music while I was filming."

Wood had never done screen nudity before Mildred Pierce. Winslet gave her some coaching.

"I was going to chicken out, but we had a long talk about it and I went ahead with it. Kate has done everything so she really put it into perspective for me and I realised how important it was for the film and especially for that moment in the story and I am so glad I did it. She was there off camera giving me the thumbs up and looking at the monitor and telling me how everything looked, so it was funny."

And Woods will also be seen in the George Clooney political thriller The Ides of March, where she plays an intern on Clooney's presidential campaign in a movie also starring Ryan Gosling, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Paul Giamatti.

"George offered me the movie when I was on the set of Mildred Pierce," she recalls. "It was completely out of the blue, but it was like we had already known each other for years. So of course I accepted. I loved that he was making a film that wasn't afraid to make people uncomfortable or ask difficult questions. It challenges the audience."

• Mildred Pierce starts on SoHo on Friday at 8.30pm.

 

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