Camila Morrone takes center stage, free from the shadow of her past relationship with Leonardo DiCaprio
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Camila Morrone takes center stage, free from the shadow of her past relationship with Leonardo DiCaprio
Camila Morrone, a Los Angeles-born actress of Argentine origin, is having the strongest year of her career. As a child, she noticed her parents’ acting work involved long hours of learning lines, rehearsing scripts, and auditioning. She later felt some aversion to acting during her teens but continued toward the same path. Her performance in the Netflix miniseries Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen has received strong reviews and has led trade press to consider her an Emmy nominee. If nominated, it would be her second Emmy, following a 2023 win for Daisy Jones & the Six. The series has also drawn positive horror audience response and ranked among the most-watched content in the United States shortly after release. She described the shoot as difficult but made easier by her rapport with her co-star, filled with inside jokes during winter night shoots in Canada.
"As a child, Camila Morrone (Los Angeles, 28) found it odd when she heard her mother and father arguing and repeating the same lines over and over in her family living room. She later understood that her parents' profession they are both actors required long hours of learning lines, rehearsing scripts, and attending auditions that did not always have the hoped-for outcome. The actress has said she grew to feel some aversion to acting during her teens, though deep down she knew it was the path she would follow."
"Her performance in the Netflix miniseries Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen, a horror drama directed by Haley Z. Boston and co-starring Adam Di Marco (The White Lotus), has earned such strong reviews that the trade press already sees her as a possible Emmy nominee. If that happens, it would be her second; the first came in 2023 for her role as Camila Alvarez-Dunne in Daisy Jones & the Six."
"Discerning horror audiences have responded very positively to her new series. According to the platform's data, the show was among the most-watched content in the United States days after it premiered. This is the first project produced by the Duffer brothers since the phenomenon of Stranger Things."
"The actress told Deadline that although the shoot was tough, her rapport with her co-star made it much more bearable: I'm going to remember this forever. We had so many inside jokes. We were so delirious shooting horror night shoots in winter in Canada, that we just had to make each other laugh all day, because it was too painful."
Read at english.elpais.com
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