Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper Reunite in "Joy"
Based loosely on the life and rise of inventor and home shopping star
Joy Mangano, starring Jennifer Lawrence in the titular role for which she is
nominated in the Best Actress category in this year’s Academy Awards, the
genre-blurring story of “Joy” follows the wild path of a hard-working but
half-broken family and the young girl who ultimately becomes its shining
matriarch and leader in her own right.
Driven to create and take care of those around her, Joy experiences
betrayal, treachery, the loss of innocence and the scars of love. Ultimately, she finds the steel and the belief
to follow her once-suppressed dreams.
The result is an emotional and human comedy about a woman’s rise –
navigating the unforgiving world of commerce, the chaos of family and the
mysteries of inspiration while finding an unyielding source of happiness.
Joining Lawrence
is a typically wide-ranging Russell ensemble including Robert De Niro as Joy’s
hot-tempered yet hopelessly romantic father; Edgar Ramirez as Joy’s ex-husband,
a struggling musician living in the basement … with her father; Diane Ladd as
Joy’s insightful and influential grandmother; Virginia Madsen as Joy’s
soap-opera addicted mother; Isabella Rossellini as her father’s well-off
Italian lover; Dascha Polanco as Joy’s life-long friend and confidante,;
Elisabeth Rohm as Joy’s rivalrous sister and Bradley Cooper as the mogul-style
home shopping executive who becomes both Joy’s ally and adversary.
Outside of Joy’s
family, her biggest ally – and later her greatest business rival – is QVC
executive Neil Walker, portrayed by long-lived David O. Russell collaborator
Bradley Cooper, an Oscar® nominee for Silver Linings Playbook and American
Hustle as well as Clint Eastwood’s American Sniper. Cooper and Russell talked about bringing a
dash of early Hollywood mogul to the character, having Cooper explore an easy
flair and optimism new to their work together.
The character
both soothes Joy with his exuberant love of invention and fires her up to outdo
his expectations. Cooper explains: “Neil’s a fictional composite of several
people at QVC who worked with Joy.
What’s so interesting about him is that he’s a guy who becomes more
relaxed the more the pressure increases.
I liken him to certain coaches I had growing up who were always on an
even keel amidst utter chaos – and in that way I think he has a kinship with
Joy. At the same time, he takes his
business very seriously. He sees himself
as a Jack Warner or Daryl Zanuck, building an empire of dreams. He’s not messing around and there’s no irony
to him. He believes everything he
says.”
Rather than a
typically malevolent corporate presence, Cooper approached Neil as someone who
is exhilarated by giving people that one-in-a-million shot. “Neil is someone who doesn’t look like other
television executives, just as Joy doesn’t look like an inventor,” Cooper
observes. “And he’s very aware that he
was given a chance by Barry Diller to make QVC work. So he loves that he’s now in a position to
give others who might be iconoclasts the chance to realize their biggest
ideas. When he meets Joy, she’s on the
precipice of changing her life and he gives her that opportunity.”
Cooper notes that
he grew up with QVC. “My mother always
ordered from QVC, and it was always on in my parents’ bedroom,” he
recalls. “I’d come home from school and
the front door would be wedged open with a QVC package waiting. I even had the Miracle Mop in my college
dorm.”
He had fun
exploring the behind-the-scenes life of that world he only saw from the other
side. But Cooper’s greatest pleasure was
watching Jennifer Lawrence fully embody Joy. “She has become this incredible
force. She always was from the start – but now it’s being realized in new
ways,” he comments. “She has this
grounded, very rooted way of walking through a movie. It’s similar to what I’ve encountered with De
Niro; I find them very similar in terms of the way they approach the work. That’s probably why David works with both of
them over and over.”
“Joy” opens
February 17 in cinemas from 20th Century Fox to be distributed by
Warner Bros.
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