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Why Winslet’s career sank after Titanic

Source: News Corp Australia Network:
February 10, 2021 at 11:11
Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in Titanic. Picture: AFPSource:Supplied
Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in Titanic. Picture: AFPSource:Supplied
She starred in the biggest blockbuster of all time – then fell into a career slump. Now, Kate Winslet finally reveals what was really going on.

Kate Winslet has opened up about having a career slump following the popularity of Titanic in 1997.

The actress starred alongside Leonardo DiCaprio in James Cameron’s epic love story set amid the famous sinking of the ship when it hit an iceberg in 1912. The movie was one of the biggest hits of the year, earning an impressive 11 Academy Awards in 1998. Although she didn’t win, Winslet was nominated that year for best actress in a leading role.

Appearing on a panel of women that included Michelle Pfeiffer, Rashida Jones, Vanessa Kirby and Andra Day for the Los Angeles Times, Winslet was asked about going from being a relatively unknown actress, despite a best supporting actress nomination for Sense And Sensibility in 1996, to navigating the turbulent waters of Hollywood.

The British actress explained that, at the time, she was plagued by the feeling that she did not belong.
 

Winslet said she feared Hollywood after the success of Titanic.
Winslet said she feared Hollywood after the success of Titanic.Source:Supplied

 

RELATED: Kate Winslet’s awkward Titanic screen test

“I was playing an American for the first time. And working with Leo, who I’d seen in [What’s Eating] Gilbert Grape and Basketball Diaries. So it was like, ‘Oh, my God, I’m Kate from Reading,’” she explained. “I was the overweight girl who would always be at the end of the line. And because my name was a W, sometimes I wouldn’t even get in the door of the audition because they’d run out of time before the Ws. And I was in Titanic. It’s mad.”

Jones asked the actress how, at a young age, she seemed to have the foresight to stave off pressure from Hollywood to capitalise on her rising star, opting instead for more independent, artistic ventures before solidifying herself as the household name she is today.
 

After Titanic she opted for smaller, indie films – like the Australian production Holy Smoke.
After Titanic she opted for smaller, indie films – like the Australian production Holy Smoke.
Source:News Limited

 

RELATED: Kate Winslet reveals who nearly played Jack in Titanic

“The honest answer is I was scared of Hollywood. A big, scary place, where everyone had to be thin and look a certain way. And I knew that I did not look that way or feel like I fit there, so if I was ever going to belong, I had to earn my place. And to me, I hadn’t earned it,” she said.

The star went on to note that she was concerned that Titanic was a “fluke” and that, despite having two Academy Award nominations at her back, she felt she couldn’t compete with younger, more in-shape actresses vying for popularity. It wasn’t until going through a major life event that she found the courage to dominate show business.
 

Winslet said 2004’s Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind turned her career around.
Winslet said 2004’s Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind turned her career around.Source:News Limited

 

RELATED: Kate Winslet reveals the Titanic scene that still haunts her

“I had this feeling of ‘maybe that was just luck’. When I became a mother at 25, all of that stuff evaporated completely,” Winslet said. “Then two years after she was born, I was asked to do Eternal Sunshine [Of The Spotless Mind]. I do believe that was a huge turning point in my career, because from then on people suddenly went, ‘Oh, she can do that?’”

Today, Winslet is anything but afraid of the spotlight. She’s even reteaming with Cameron for another major blockbuster movie that saw her take to the water. She was cast in the sequel to the director’s 2009 smash-hit Avatar. In November, it was revealed that Winslet expanded upon the aquatic skills she learned filming Titanic and broke Tom Cruise’s record for holding her breath underwater to film a scene:

 

Although it’s unclear what her role will be, the film’s official Twitter account announced months ago that she held her breath for seven minutes and 14 seconds.

This story originally appeared on Fox News and is republished here with permission


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