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Actress Fanning is coming of age
From Larry Fine
NEW
YORK—Child actress Dakota Fanning is coming of age both on the film
screen and in real life as she closes in on a milestone birthday.
“In three months I’ll be an official teenager,” the delicate,
fair-haired Fanning told Reuters, her feet folded beneath her during an
interview to publicize her starring role in the children’s classic
“Charlotte’s Web,” which opens Friday. Fanning plays Fern in the
live-action version of the beloved novel by E.B. White, a character who
rescues a runt pig from certain slaughter and nurtures him to maturity.
Next month Fanning will be seen in a grittier role, portraying a rape
victim in “Hounddog,” a drama about a troubled young girl set against
the backdrop of the rise of Elvis Presley. Fanning is proud of both
films and sees her involvement as part of her growing process.
“I believe that I’m kind of in the same stage as Fern is,” Fanning said.
“Kind of growing up, between being a little girl and an official
teenager.
“But also we’re a little bit different. Fern is starting to like boys
and I’m really not. We’re also kind of just growing up, going through
more physical changes. We’re getting taller, getting more mature and
thinking about things in different ways than we did when we were
younger.” Fanning finished shooting “Charlotte’s Web” about 18 months
ago. Since then she completed filming “Hounddog,” written and directed
by Deborah Kampmeier, which has caused a stir because of speculation on
how the sexual assault is portrayed. “It is a Southern story about a
young girl going through some tough things and overcoming adversity and
coming out as a better person, kind of through music and Elvis Presley
and that movement in the early ‘60s,” Fanning said. BOUND FOR SUNDANCE
“It was a wonderful film to be a part of. I hope that people learn
things from it and I hope that it touches people. I’m really proud of it
and I can’t wait for it to come out in Sundance (Film Festival) in
January.” Fanning began appearing in television commercials and in
dramatic TV roles at age 6 and has since worked alongside the likes of
Sean Penn (“I Am Sam”), Denzel Washington (“Man on Fire” and Tom Cruise
(“War of the Worlds”). She said she relies on her own experience and the
guidance of her directors when tackling a new role. |