Smith: And it*s interesting because after that, after "Salome," you started to do quite a few films?
Chastain: "Salome" was my first film.
Smith: And then there was a string of them, but they got hung up?
Chastain: Yeah. It*s funny because I was working. Even when I wasn*t working in L.A. and just auditioning, I still was going to the library, adapting "Hamlet" for a female movie (laughs).
Smith: This is what you did in your spare time?
Chastain: Yes, no matter what, I made sure I was working every day. But, yeah, I was doing Terrance Malick*s "Tree of Life" and I got "The Debt" and all these incredible films, but for one reason or another, they would get hung up. "Salome" is just now is coming out in the U.K. September 21st, and it was my first film. "The Debt" was being released by Miramax, and it was announced right before it was coming out [that] Disney sold Miramax, so they stopped the release. Everything stopped, so I thought, *Okay, what is going on? I don*t understand. I*ve wanted to do this my whole life, I*m getting to do it, but why is it not coming out into the public?"
And then 2011 happened, and it was like --
Smith: Bang! I mean, how many films came out in 2011 that you were in?
Chastain: I don*t remember. "Coriolanus," "Take Shelter," "Tree of Life," "Salome" went to Venice. "The Help." I feel like there*s another one that I*m forgetting (laughs). "Texas Killing Fields"!
Smith: Were you telling people, "I swear, I*m in the movies"?
Chastain: Yes, oh my gosh! So my first film, I*m acting opposite Al Pacino in "Salome." I mean, come on, my first on-camera scene partner is Al Pacino! And of course my parents are telling everyone and my grandmother.
And she came to see the play, she got a picture with Al, which she then put in a frame and put on her bedside table, her and Al (laughs). And so everyone*s telling, "Yeah, oh, yes, Jessica, she*s doing great. She*s acting with Al Pacino." [And] The movie*s not coming out.
Then I get "Tree of Life" opposite Brad Pitt. I mean, is there a bigger movie star? (laughs) And everyone*s telling, "Yeah, Jessica*s playing Brad Pitt*s wife. They*re married in this film, and it*s with Terrence Malick." Years are going by. Nothing*s coming out. So at one point my mom called me up laughing. She goes, "Everyone thinks we*re lying!" It*s like, *What are you doing in L.A.? Because none of your movies are coming out." But then I had the last laugh (laughs).
Smith: What was that year like for you?
Chastain: It was really shocking and special because all of a sudden everything was coming out. I used to feel like, I would go on a film set and the actors would kind of look at me and go, "Okay, we*ve never seen her before. Is she any good?" (laughs) Like, I could feel this kind of, "Okay, let me prove myself."
And there was something kind of amazing about having these movies come out with people that I love. Like, I love "The Help." I love those ladies from "The Help" so much. I loved going to Cannes with "Take Shelter" and "Tree of Life."
Not only was it just my movies coming out that I was so proud of, but I got to go to film festivals. I love watching movies. I*d always dreamed of going to a film festival and meeting directors. I think it was 2011, I was at the Palm Springs Film Festival, and earlier that day I had seen Gary Oldman in the restaurant, which I freaked out. I was like, "It*s Gary Oldman!" but I was too embarrassed to go say hi.
And on the red carpet someone says, "Who are you excited to see tonight?" I go, "Well, Gary Oldman. I saw Gary Oldman is here, I know for sure, because I saw him in the restaurant. So I would be really nice to meet him." As I*m saying that, he comes around down the carpet and comes up to me and goes, "Hello, Jessica, I just wanted to say I love your work." I mean, the stuff he was saying was what I imagined I was going to say to him when I met him. It was like being in "The Twilight Zone," you know, where I*d spend so much of my life as a film fan, this kind of nerdy girl that goes to the theater and watches double features of Hitchcock. And I love Gary Oldman in "Dracula." "Dracula," for me in particular was pretty special. And he said all this to me, and he goes, "I was too shy to come up to you." And I was like, "You were too shy, I was too shy!" And then he walked away, and I started crying. And of course it*s on camera, which is kind of embarrassing, but I guess it was just me coming to terms with, like, it*s so wonderful that I can*t imagine that all this is real.
Smith: You had dreamed about this since you were how old?
Chastain: Since as long as I can remember. Since I knew it was something that a person did for a living. It wasn*t like I want to be an actor; I was like, that*s what I am. My grandmother took me to a play when I was seven years old. "Joseph and Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat," I think it was. And it was just interesting *cause we never really went to go see the theater in my family or anything like that. She said, "Well, this is kind of a special occasion because this is a real theater. You know, these were expensive tickets or whatever (laughs), and as a professional play, they do this for their job."
And then I remember there was a little girl on stage, and as soon as I saw that a little girl was doing it as her job, it*s just like clicked in my head, like, "This is my job." I wasn*t a great student. I wasn*t so good at sitting in a desk and doing the math stuff. I had a great imagination, but I didn*t know how to make it work in a public school system (laughs). But for some reason when I saw this girl onstage, immediately I knew this is what I*m supposed to do.
Smith: It wasn*t even, *I want to do this"?
Chastain: No. This is what I am. And that*s the moment I*m so profoundly grateful for because I*ve seen so many people, like some of my siblings struggle with, "What do I want to study?" Or "What do I want to do with my life?" I*ve never once had that question. I*ve always known. And it doesn*t necessarily mean I*m going to be hugely successful. It*s not like I said, I have to get nominated for awards. I never had those kinds of expectations or demands of myself.
It was just like there*s something in me that wants to use my imagination and my creativity, and there*s this closeness you feel with other actors when you*re onstage, and this incredible connection.
Smith: You*ve thanked your grandma?
Chastain: Yes (laughs).
Smith: Over and over, for introducing you to acting?
Chastain: Uh-huh.
Smith: She got to go to the Oscars with you?
Chastain: Yeah, both times.