After you’ve played Liam Neeson’s daughter and been abducted by villains, playing the president’s daughter abducted by villains might not seem a stretch…unless you’re abducted in a space prison. In Lockout, opening Friday, Maggie Grace is out of this world, and all the worst of the worst on board the orbiting penal colony know it. Yes, Guy Pearce comes to the rescue – but we have a feeling Maggie knows a trick or two of her own by now. It was one of many things we recently had a chance to ask her about.
Maggie Grace: Nerdist – the Treehugger of nerd-dom, right?
Nerdist: The treehugger?
MG: Well, itâs like an aggregator of whatâs cool in that space.
N: It’s funny, I moved recently and just unpacked your action figure from Lost.
MG: No way! Yes, the one thatâs all figure, no action?
N: Yes.
MG: I believe she comes with sunscreen. No weapons.
N: And the sunglasses that you canât get to stay on.
MG: Oh noâ¦
N: Is it weird to have a little thing that talks in your voice?
MG: It is. Well, itâs not really my voice, at least I hope not. Itâs that really nasal Shannon voice thatâs like, âMeh. Iâm spoiled.â That one.
N: It was interesting that after you do a role like that, and The Jane Austen Book Club, you then play Liam Neesonâs teenage daughter. How do you go back and forth from teenage girl to adult roles like that?
MG: I donât know but Iâve gone back and forth ten years this week between roles. Letâs just hope itâs not like Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. Right?
N: So in Lockout, how old is the character?
MG: Iâd say mid to late twenties.
N: Tell us a little bit about her.
MG: Itâs not really a story point, her age, but sheâs an accomplished young woman, so she had to have some time to accomplish.
N: It seems like in the trailer sheâs going into a prison with a purpose, looks like sheâs interrogating the guyâ¦
MG: Yeah. Sheâs a bit more capable, which is great, and good under pressure, so I would credit her with some life experience.
N: And what is she doing in the prison?
MG: Sheâs there on a humanitarian mission. Sheâs heard some rumors that theyâre not treating the prisoners in the ways they should, so sheâs sent up to MS1 for humanitarian purposes.
N: Does it turn out that she has a secret ass-kicking background that comes into play?
MG: No, sheâs not an undercover La Femme Nikita.
N: Are you anxious to do some ass-kicking? Because a lot of times youâre the person who gets rescued in these movies.
MG: I am. Iâll put that out there, if any directors are reading this, I think Iâm ready to hit the gym and kick a little more ass myself.
N: Both you and Liam Neeson have done some Taken-esque roles after Taken, but when will we see you doing an actual follow-up with the same characters?
MG: We just finished the sequel a few weeks ago. We shot in Istanbul and Paris since October, so itâs been pretty intense but pretty fun.
N: Do you get to kick any ass in that one?
MG: More so. Itâs kind of an inversion in some ways. I think itâs great that they kept the elements that worked about the first one, but in this one, Liam and Famkeâs characters are taken, and I have to help rescue them. So itâs certainly not a coincidence, itâs a personal vendetta.
N: You figure after the first one heâd probably teach her a thing or two.
MG: She is her fatherâs daughter, so there is that. But sheâs still very much true to the character we created in the first one.
N: So what else can you tell us about Lockout? What was it like on the set? Was it fairly claustrophobic getting yourself into a prison mindset?
MG: Sometimes. It is funny, when you havenât seen daylight in months, thereâs that kind of peeking out into the world, like a little chick hatching. Itâs obviously shot in mostly stages. We shot in Serbia, because they could build these really beautiful sets, so it was a few months out there, which was an interesting experience. Belgradeâs a really interesting place.
N: Yeah, whatâs Serbia like? Did you get out much?
MG: I didnât get out much. I do remember thereâs a local apricot brandy called Dunya that the crew was a pretty big fan of on the weekends. But we worked so much, I think we were just leveled by the time we had a day off. I did pick up tennis there, though, which I figured was the perfect place. Thereâs quite a national fervor for the sport right now, with Djokovic and everything. So itâs easy to find good coaches. I learned tennis over what they say is Vlad the Impalerâs grave, and this moat around this Roman ruins. And they happened to have red clay tennis courts in them. Itâs the perfect place to learn.
N: Thatâs like a Stephen King book in the making.
MG: Right? Yeah, that was my Sundays.
N: Or like a really weird comedy, Vlad the Impalerâs ghost comes back as a tennis champ.
MG: You should write movies.
N: I should. But I donât know if anyone would buy that one.
MG: Stranger ones have been greenlit, let me tell you.
N: What do you have coming up next, other than Taken 2?
MG: Lockout comes out April 13, Friday the 13th, and Takenâs in October, and then Twilight Breaking Dawn Part 2, in November, and an indie called Decoding Annie Parker, so itâs been a busy last year, thatâs for sure.
N: How was that, doing the Twilight movie? Youâre coming into an ensemble that obviously knows each other very well, how is that?
MG: Honestly, I met some of my best friends on that movie. It really is a bonding experience to shoot over a long period of time, and we were in Baton Rouge for a while, and Squamish, BC, so I made a couple of girlfriends on that that are just dear. Cross-country skiing out there on our days off was a good way to get to know someone, and it was a good group, a really good group.
N: And what did you think of the ending of Lost, when it finally happened?
MG: I thought it was lovely. You know, youâre never going to please all the fans all the time, especially with something thatâs become so personal to so many people, but for me, it was really lovely that so many of us came back, and we had a final guitar circle just like the good old days, you know, waiting for the lighting to be set up; it was really a beautiful experience and a kind of nice way to end a period of my life that I have a lot of affection for. I grew up a bit on that show, I was twenty when we started, and moving to Hawaii and living on my own for the first timeâ¦so it was just really great to come back and see everybody and it was kind of like a college reunion for me.
N: Did you know you were going to come back after they killed you off?
MG: Yeah, we talked about it, maybe in some flashbacks and that kind of thing. So yeah, I knew it was goodbye, but maybe not a hundred percent.
N: My editor wanted me to say that because of The Jane Austen Book Club, he has started reading Jane Austen. We wondered if that was a common story you ever hear.
MG: Oh, I love that. Iâm a true Jane-ite, and thatâs kind of how I relate to conventions like WonderCon and Comic-Con, because I understand how it is to really have affection for characters and feel like you know them inside and out. I grew up with those books, and the BBC miniseries too. I can quote line-for-line. So it was so fun for me, making a fan film about something Iâm really a fan of. Yeah, this whole convention scene, huh? There actually is a Jane Austen convention in Bath once a year. Iâve thought about going.
N: How about getting into a film adaptation of one of the books, have you tried?
MG: I would just lose it. Honestly, I would make something that I could be proud of for the rest of my life if that happened. I wish theyâd hire more Americans, but itâs not usually the case.
N: Or you could combine it with the action genre you’re more known for: be in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.
MG: Iâve heard thatâs being done. I know Emma Campbell Webster wrote a book thatâs really popular as well on that subject. Itâs funny how the worlds kind of mirror one another, sci-fi fans and Jane-ites, in a way, they do come together.
N: Itâs always interesting how a lot of the fervor is mirrored in other areas. Sports fans also get into their sports and get passionate and paint themselves up.
MG: Communityâs a big part of it, we all want to be part of a tribe right? And thereâs a sense of some shared enthusiasm and some shared values and any time you see that, thereâs a really kind of sweet motivation at the center of it. So I certainly appreciate that. But Iâve spent maybe too much time in convention halls lately. WonderCon was my third convention in a while. I went to the TED conference, which was â thatâs my true geek-out moment, I lose my mind. TED talks are incredible, if you get a chance to download some. Beautiful. Incredible. I mean, if youâre ever gonna nerd out about something, at least itâs people at the top of every field in the world coming together to share what theyâre passionate about and share ideas. Itâs an incredible experience. And then I went to the Natural Foods Expo for fun, to see some friendsâ projects. So I can identify with the people attending as well, the whole convention experience.
N: Itâs interesting, you donât hear a lot of people identify that common thread within very different passions.
MG: I think the purity of desire at the center of it is the same, and you know, itâs really a sense of pride and community, and thereâs a little bit of Burning Man in it. It would also be interesting to see the Venn diagram that is Burning Man and Comic-Con. Like to see who attends both, and what costumes transfer from one to the other. That would be a beautiful coffee table book.
Lockout opens in theaters Friday.
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She is purdy
That was a pretty good interview. I’m also more inclined to see Lockout knowing her character’s not just a pretty victim.
That was an excellent interview! Brief, but concise and with some excellent questions. More of this, please!
Just an FYI: TreeHugger is a big green site . Props to Maggie Grace for being plugged in. She may have monopolized the nerd cred in the first question.