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Beautiful, athletic Estella Warren plays human slave Daena in
the new Planet
of the Apes film. She's done 5 films in a little over a
year but you might remember her best from her recent role in Driven
with Sly Stallone. Born in Canada and raised outside Toronto, Estella
was a National Champion synchronized swimmer and World Bronze Medallist
before starting a modeling career. In the last two years she's been
on the covers of GQ and Talk and recently, was named
number one on Maxim's "Hot 100" list. She spoke to us about her
Apes role, leaving her swimming career behind and the silliest
question she's ever been asked.
Teenhollywood.com: Your character barely speaks. Was it hard
to act without speaking?
Estella: I thought that was so great about her. I got to use my
athletic background and show her physicality in this movie. I was
constantly running and swimming and horseback riding and jumping
through windows and I think it's amazing for an actress in Hollywood
to get an action hero role with all levels. She's really aggressive
and she has so much animosity and she can still be scared and loved
and vulnerable. It was a really fun character to play. Tim (Burton)
and I sat down in the beginning and said this is a character who
has grown up knowing that you can't speak to the apes or look them
in the eye so there is that innate fear in her. Even when there
is a little bit more equality in the middle of the film between
the group going on this crusade, she's still a bit skittish about
speaking to the apes. She shows a lot of her emotions with her body
stance and the way she holds herself. She's very tight and nervous.
In her eyes, she shows the fear and anger and vulnerability.
Teenhollywood.com: Would you have taken a role in this film if
it had been in an ape suit?
Estella: Oh yeah, of course. You do anything to work with Tim Burton
because he's brilliant. His movies are unlike any others. He has
his own class of movies and they're always so creative and original
and interesting and bizarre. It's a testament to him that actors
like Tim Roth and Helena Bonham Carter would go through five hours
of hair and make-up to work with him.
Teenhollywood.com: You're number one on Maxim magazine's "Hot
100" list. Is that a good thing?
Estella: I don't know. I didn't choose that. Somebody else put me
in there. I didn't know until I opened up the magazine. I was like,
"Whoa, where did that come from?" But, I like it. It's a nice compliment.
It was flattering and good for my ego.
Teenhollywood.com: There are issues of feminism involved in being
labeled a "hot babe." Are you comfortable with that?
Estella: I chose not to do the cover of Maxim for this movie and
it was rather controversial with the studio but I felt like I did
that as a model and it would be a step back for me to do it as an
actress because that's not the direction I was looking at going
in. If people are comfortable doing that, if actresses find that
would help their career or be fun then that's great.
Teenhollywood.com: What kind of tools does your athletic background
bring to your acting?
Estella: There's such a structure and discipline that goes along
with being a professional athlete and you take that with you wherever
you go. In acting they don't hand you that structure. You have to
make it yourself and, because I had it before, I know that I have
to get my sleep and be mentally and physically prepared for those
14-hour days.
Teenhollywood.com: Mark Wahlberg was saying he was pretty beaten
up in this film. How about you?
Estella: I had lots of bruises, scrapes, that kind of thing, but
I think we're all more proud of them. I got to do a lot of my own
stunts so I'd be like, "You see that? That was from a stunt I just
did."
Teenhollywood.com: There are real chimps in this movie. In your
next film (a comedy called Down and Under) you work with kangaroos.
Estella: Kangaroos and camels. It was funny and the animatronics
are incredible. The people on that did Babe and those kangaroos
were so life-like, so real. And yes, there is a swimming scene in
that movie. It's in a waterfall and we're cleaning up after we put
all kinds of mud on our faces to catch a kangaroo to get rid of
our human scent.
Teenhollywood.com: Do you have a pet at home?
Estella: No. I'd love to have a dog but (it would be) really unfair
to the dog…how much I travel. I'm not a little dog person (so I
can't take one with me).
Teenhollywood.com: Tim Burton says he's actually kind of freaked
out by chimps. Do you feel that way?
Estella: I didn't work with the chimps in this movie but for the
cover of Talk magazine, I worked with a real baby chimp and
it's really amazing to me how intelligent they really are and how
much we can see behind their eyes. It's a bit eerie but it's a great
point for the movie as well because you go and see the film and
it's action packed and you escape from your life but you go home
and you're still thinking (about the animal/human issues). That's
a good movie.
Teenhollywood.com: Is there a little bit of regret every time
you see the Olympics that you didn't continue in that career?
Estella: Yeah, of course there is. I was very close but I wouldn't
change anything. Every step along the way, even the insignificant
ones, if you change them, you may not be in the same position you
are right now. I wouldn't be here and I like this.
Teenhollywood.com: Do you get angry at people who say synchronized
swimming shouldn't be classified as a sport?
Estella: I think once people actually try it it's a different story.
It's my love of the sport that is important for me. I think it's
incredibly difficult and it gave me so much discipline and structure.
You get to be flexible and a good strong swimmer.
Teenhollywood.com: Are you dying for a role where you don't have
to jump in the water and swim?
Estella: I like that they keep getting me swimming in movies. It
kind of shows my background and I'd like to do it in every movie
if I could get a little swimming thing in there. I didn't have a
double for the swimming scenes (in this film). It was all me.
Teenhollywood.com: Do you feel you are stuck now in action or
physical roles?
Estella: Not really. My first film was an all-improv movie called
Perfume with Jeff Goldblum and Omar Epps and Rita Wilson.
The second movie I did was a drama called Tangled, then Driven,
Planet of the Apes, and I just did Down and Under,
a comedy. So I think I'm just testing the waters and feeling out
what I like doing and trying to keep doing things that are inspiring.
Teenhollywood.com: Are you used to all this press attention yet?
Estella: It's really hard. I did 70 interviews yesterday and you
get sick of talking about yourself. You just give everything you
can for as long as you can.
Teenhollywood.com: I'll bet women ask you different questions
than men do.
Estella: Yes. I get a lot of clothes and what do you eat questions
and do you work out questions from women and from men it's more
like "How did you feel in that outfit?" It's funny.
Teenhollywood.com: What was the silliest question you've been
asked?
Estella: What is your favorite body of water? A river, an ocean,
or a lake? I'm here to talk about this film. It's like in Notting
Hill when Hugh Grant comes in from Horse and Hound and
says "Were they any horses in that movie or hounds for that matter?
We treat them equally." So funny.
Teenhollywood.com: How do you like living in L.A.?
Estella: It's very strange to get recognized but I have a very good
little market that I like to go to and the people who work there
know me and they get me through really quick. You know what I like
is Target and Walmart. Those big stores are so American. I could
spend hours in those stores just takin' my cart and lookin' at the
shoes and the t-shirts. Maybe I need new sheets and picture frames
and batteries.
Teenhollywood.com: Who are some actresses you admire?
Estella: Michelle Pfeiffer, Catherine Deneuve, Julianne Moore, Jody
Foster, Meryl Streep.
Teenhollywood.com: What kind of music do you listen to?
Estella: Everything. Not a lot of country but I listen to everything
from Radiohead to Johnny Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, Miles Davis,
to Gate Crasher Techno CDs and sometimes The Doors and Led Zeppelin.
Teenhollywood.com: Do you pinch yourself now and then about how
your career has taken off?
Estella: Oh yes. All the choices that I've made have all been,
in some way, performing and in some way wanting to entertain. My
whirlwind came with five movies in a year and three months. That's
a lot of movies back to back. I enjoy it. I love being in front
of the camera and think I have the best job on earth but it's time
for a break. I just bought a house in L.A. and I’m gonna go sit
in it and dive into the pool.
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Interviewer and writer Lynn Barker
is a Hollywood-based entertainment journalist and produced screenwriter.
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