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Other directors and actors have confirmed that. Anthony Minghella, who directed her in "The Talented Mr. Ripley," once swooned over her in an essay, calling her "a natural comedienne, a whole body actor." Geoffrey Rush, an Australian countryman and frequent co-star, has said she "has a constant amorphous physicality." Many have rhapsodized over her phosphorescent skin (as Galadriel in the "Lord of the Rings" films she literally glows) which slights her fiercely observant eyes. Her shape-shifting, from Bob Dylan in "I'm Not There" to Katharine Hepburn in "The Aviator" (which won her sole Oscar), is legendary. "You have to find a point of connection, but I'm not interested in reducing the character to my set of experiences," says Blanchett. "That's the way, hopefully, you keep expanding as an actor, that you're constantly challenging your understanding of how people think and behave." Her presence on screen, though, has been rarer in recent years. Five years ago, Blanchett and her playwright husband Andrew Upton, with whom she has three sons, began leading the Sydney Theatre Company. Their stewardship as artistic directors, which Upton will continue solo for several more seasons, has been roundly applauded, including those productions of "Streetcar" and "Uncle Vanya." She on Saturday finished a run of Jean Genet's "The Maids" before flying from Sydney to the U.S. to promote "Blue Jasmine." "I hope I've become a better actress through simply concentrating on theater," she says. "I went to a theater school with no hopes or particular aspirations to work in the cinema. It's a small industry and I'm a bit peculiar-looking. I didn't think I was that girl." Asked whether she missed the movies while focusing on work at the STC, she quickly answers, "No." She acknowledges she was "a bit burned out" from back-to-back film work before taking over the theater: "I was so bored with myself, which is a frequent feeling I have." Instead, she relished the chance to run the company where she started out after drama school: programming a year of plays, tackling major roles, giving young playwrights a showcase and being part of a country's cultural discourse. "People talk about it like it's a great sacrifice," she says. "Are you kidding me?" Blanchett does, though, have a number of films lined up. She's shot two Terrence Malick films, and stars in George Clooney's historical thriller "The Monuments of Men," due out in December. She's also signed up for a movie with David Mamet and another with Todd Haynes. "In a way, I've come back with renewed passion for it all," she says before insisting: "I never want to work. Even when you're presented with these great opportunities, I think, 'I really love being in my pajamas with the kids.'" So why does she keep saying yes? "The offers!" she exclaims. "Woody Allen picks up the phone, what am I going to say? I'm not going to be that schmuck who says, "Mmmm, maybe not.' I get out of my pajamas and I go to work."
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