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 ‘A loss of control’: Jennifer Lawrence on the downside of superstardom

Jennifer Lawrence opens up about her difficult experience after' Hunger Games' fame.

Jennifer Lawrence as Lynsey in Causeway
Image via Apple TV Plus

The Hunger Games helped propel Jennifer Lawrence into a life of high-profile fame, but she also lost so much in the process.

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In a story from Variety, Lawrence discussed her career as part of the London Festival’s “Screen Talk” series. She was candid about her banner year of 2012 with a string of successes that followed, but everything wasn’t going so well behind the scenes.

“I think I lost a sense of control. Between The Hunger Games coming out and winning the Oscar [for 2012’s Silver Lining Playbook], I became such a commodity that I felt like every decision was a big, big group decision. When I reflect now, I can’t think of those following years, [because there was] just a loss of control.”

During this time, Lawrence was Hollywood’s “It” actress. She scored multiple roles, which included joining the X-Men franchise as Mystique, and she worked again with David O. Russell in American Hussle. On top of that, she was a meme goldmine with hilarious soundbites and videos of her clumsiness being shared all over social media.

She took a three-year hiatus from the big screen, Lawrence got married and had a child, and she’s now ready to return to the spotlight with renewed vigor. She said that it feels personal for her for the first time in a long time, and she’s clearly done a lot of soul-searching to get to this place.

In her new drama, Causeway, from director Lila Neugebauer, Lawrence plays Lynsey, United States Army veteran who returns from combat with a brain injury and struggles to acclimate herself back into her home environment. Lawrence started the project pre-pandemic in 2019, and the production delay gave the script time to be developed further. She called it a “very personal” project, and that she gets emotional each time she returns to it.

Lawrence compared this project to her experience working on the low-budget indie hit Winter’s Bone, a story about an Ozark teenager trying to survive and take care of her younger siblings. It’s fitting that she relates it to a beautiful movie she made before The Hunger Games success. Causeway was even more personal to her, she said, because it felt like diary pages. Also she has a more vested interest in the movie because this will be her first credit as a producer under her production company banner, Excellent Cadaver.

Causeway will be available to stream on Apple TV Plus on Nov. 4.

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