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Jennifer Lawrence Talks Motherhood,Causeway, and the End of Roe v. Wade

Image may contain Clothing Apparel Dress Blouse Jennifer Lawrence Human Person Evening Dress Fashion Gown and Robe
COVER LOOK
Lawrence has no patience for the politically unengaged. “Youhave to be political. It’s too dire. Politics are killing people.” Dior top, skirt, and belt. 
Photographed by Tina Barney,Vogue, October 2022.

It is safe to say that in her 32 years on planet Earth, Jennifer Lawrence has never struck anyone as the country-​club type. So I was surprised to learn that for our first meeting, she wanted to go golfing. “Does shegolf?” I asked her publicist over the phone. The publicist wasn’t sure. “I’ll leave that for you to unpack,” she said with a laugh.

I was still trying to figure out what sort of shoes a first-time golfer wears to a driving range when I got word that Lawrence had changed her mind. She no longer wanted to go golfing. I learned she wanted to have an unconventional spa experience, “like when they spank you with those leaves,” she said. With two days to look, I couldn’t locate a spa that offered Russianvenik massage in private enough quarters. So we settled on Tikkun, a small, intimate spa in Santa Monica.

ON THE EDGE
Altuzarra dress.Fashion Editor: Tonne Goodman.


I met Lawrence there on a drizzly Friday summer morning. She arrived wearing a pink sundress, brown leather sandals, and an oversized printed cardigan she calls her “Big Lebowski sweater.” Her blond hair was longer than I could ever remember seeing it in photos, almost down to her waist. More immediately striking, Lawrence, who had a baby in February with her husband of three years, the art gallerist Cooke Maroney, was wearing the unmistakable aura of new motherhood—that mix of euphoric new love, sleep deprivation, and a certain wide-eyed rawness that comes with having your world cracked open.

We were in a suite with side-by-side massage tables, showers, and a candlelit hot tub. Flute music played overhead. I remarked that, given the weather, it was probably for the best that we didn’t go to the driving range. Lawrence nodded. “Also, like, I’m a mom,” she said. “I need to justlie down. This is the only time I could come to a spa and not feel guilty.” Moments later she added that she’d gotten a spray tan the day before, feigning the dotty tone of an eccentric shut-in: “I was like,I’m meeting somebody from the outside! I hope she doesn’t think I’m pale!” A spa employee appeared and invited us to make use of various communal areas—a Himalayan salt room, a Korean clay room, a cold room. As the woman spoke, Lawrence fiddled with breast-pump gear that she would later wear into one of the rooms.

If it’s awkward-slash-comical to undress and go into a sauna with someone a few minutes after meeting them, it is even more awkward-​slash-comical to conduct an interview in that situation. Wrapped in flimsy sarongs, we made small talk in the heat, the red light of my audio recorder glowing between us. I felt an impulse to ask Lawrence about her baby, about giving birth—all the things two women might normally discuss in a sauna when one of them is a new mom. But I’d been warned that Lawrence was still finding her footing with the topic, boundary-wise. Conversation turned instead to her new movie.

Causeway is the first film directed by Lila Neuge­bauer, who comes from the theater world. (Her Broadway restaging of Kenneth Lonergan’sThe Waverly Gallery in 2018 was nominated for the Tony Award for best revival of a play, and its star, Elaine May, won for best actress.) Lawrence plays an American soldier who returns to her hometown of New Orleans after a traumatic brain injury in Afghanistan. On one level it’s a movie about acute post-traumatic stress. On another it’s a homecoming story, about being adrift in the fraught territory of one’s family. The most central narrative involves a relationship that Lawrence’s character, Lynsey, forms with a mechanic, James, who fixes her broken-down truck, played by the supremely talented Brian Tyree Henry.

NEW PATTERNS
“There are no games,” says Lila Neugebauer, director of Lawrence’s new filmCauseway. “There’s no fortress. She’s present and she’s in it with you and she’s game.” Erdem dress.


The various threads are weaved into a meditation on trauma, but an unusual one, in ways I couldn’t put my finger on. It does not invite comparisons to other movies that deal with war and post-traumatic stress, such asThe Hurt Locker. It’s quiet and meandering, a trauma plot unconcerned with Plot. It seems less interested in what happened in the past than with the question of what to make of it. There are no flashbacks.

It’s the first movie Lawrence has done with her production company, Excellent Cadaver. (The company name refers to a Sicilian mafia term for a hit job on a high-profile person. “I will have a target on my head every time I make a film,” Lawrence joked.) This fact interested me. Lawrence is a force in Hollywood, a four-time Oscar nominee and a best-actress winner of record-​breaking financial might, most known for big, loud comedies (Silver Linings Playbook,American Hustle, Don’t Look Up) and even bigger, louder franchises (The Hunger Games, X-Men). In its subtlety and attention to substantive emotional matters,Causeway has more in common with one of Lawrence’s first movies,Winter’s Bone, in which she played a teenager scraping by in the Ozarks. I was curious: Why this story?

“At first I didn’t know,” Lawrence said. “I think I was just off-the-bat drawn to the rhythm. I like a fast-paced Marvel movie as much as the next person. But I do miss the slow melody of a character-driven story.” After reading the script, she moved on it immediately. “I was like,We have to make this. Let’s make it now.” There’s usually a deeper reason Lawrence gravitates to a role, one that doesn’t become clear until later. “I don’t really know why I’m making a movie or why I’m drawn to make a movie until it’s in retrospect.”

They shot some ofCauseway in late 2019. Then, because of the pandemic, production stopped. They weren’t able to shoot the rest until late 2021. A lot happened in those two years. Lawrence got married. She slowed down. Without the set schedules of big franchises—a structure that had always made her feel safe—she had the space to ask herself:Who am I? What do I want to do? By the time they resumed shooting, Lawrence was pregnant, and the more subterranean thing about Lynsey had come into focus. “Her untenable home, her inability to commit to one thing or another because of these internal injuries that are completely invisible but huge—I think I connected with that at that specific time in my life,” she said. “So much was going on with me at that time that I didn’t realize. Until I was back, pregnant, married, making it. And I was just like,Oh, this is a woman who is scared to commit.

DOUBLING UP
“It’s so scary to talk about motherhood. Only because it’s so different for everybody,” she says. “The morning after I gave birth, I felt like my whole life had started over.” Erdem dress.


We moved to the cold room. I told Lawrence that I’d wondered if there was more of a story behind this choice of film. “It’s very personal,” she said. “I get emotional every time I watch the movie. Not just because of what I said about getting married and stuff. It’s too personal to talk about.” In one way or another, she is always revisiting the same ground, she added. “I have had a pretty consistent theme in all my movies since I was 18. I’m curious if, now that I’m older and I have a baby, I’ll finally break out of that.” Assuming she meant the young, maternal, Joan-of-Arc-in-the-wilderness thing, I suggested that it didn’t apply toall her movies. Certainly her role inJoy, as Miracle Mop inventor and infomercial mogul Joy Mangano, was a little different. “Yeah,” she said. “Butnot. Not in terms of the theme that I’m thinking.”

It was time for Korean body scrubs. This took place in separate rooms. Afterward, we met back in the suite for reflexology. Lawrence announced that she’d thought about it and now had a more specific answer to my question: “Art more often than not is about one’s mother. I hesitate to say that because I would hate for somebody to go back and watch my movies, or watch this movie in particular, and think that that is the way that I’m painting my mother. My mother is a wonderful person. But that doesn’t mean that there aren’t still things from my childhood that I’m working out.”

The subject of motherhood was starting to feel less like an elephant in the room than a giant woolly mammoth. Eventually, as we both lay horizontal on the dueling massage tables, I broached it. Lawrence said she was willing to talk about her own experience, but that she would be drawing a boundary around her baby and husband. (She did share that the baby is a boy, and that his name is Cy, after the postwar American painter Cy Twombly, one of Maroney’s favorite artists.)

Lawrence spoke deliberately, with, as I read it, a keen understanding that she was approaching a third rail. “It’s so scary to talk about motherhood. Only because it’s so different for everybody. If I say,It was amazing from the start, some people will think,It wasn’t amazing for me at first, and feel bad. Fortunately I have so many girlfriends who were honest. Who were like,It’s scary.You might not connect right away.You might not fall in love right away. So I felt so prepared to be forgiving. I remember walking with one of my best friends at, like, nine months, and being like,Everyone keeps saying that I will love my baby more than my cat. But that’s not true. Maybe I’ll love him as much as my cat?

But she did fall in love right away, and it does seem she loves her baby more than she loves her cat: “The morning after I gave birth, I felt like my whole life had started over. Like,Now is day one of my life. I just stared. I was just so in love. I also fell in love with all babies everywhere. Newborns are justso amazing. They’re these pink, swollen, fragile little survivors. Now I love all babies. Now I hear a baby crying in a restaurant and I’m like,Awwww, preciousssss.

Abby Aguirre is a freelance writer in Los Angeles. ...Read More

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