Bridget
Jones is back in new film, this time facing motherhood
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[September 06, 2016]
By Holly Rubenstein and Marie-Louise Gumuchian
LONDON (Reuters) - Oscar
winner Renee Zellweger puts on her British accent again
to play bumbling Londoner Bridget Jones in the third
instalment of the film franchise, with the much-loved
character, now in her 40s, single again but unexpectedly
pregnant.
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The Texas-born actress reprises the role of the weight and
love-obsessed character for "Bridget Jones's Baby", with Colin
Firth back as the reserved Mark Darcy and new addition "Grey's
Anatomy" actor Patrick Dempsey as her love interests.
Zellweger first took on the role in 2001's "Bridget Jones's
Diary" and "Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason" in 2004, both
based on the 1990s novels by Helen Fielding.
While now older and working as a television news producer,
Jones, described by Zellweger as "a character that I love",
still gets up to plenty of mishaps.
"She's familiar to me," Zellweger told Reuters in an interview.
"But it was a different kind of experience creatively to figure
out how you show that a person has evolved but at the same time
not betray the essence of who they are".
The movie begins with Jones turning 43 and single following her
break up with long-term love interest Darcy.
But after an encounter with him as well as meeting American Jack
Qwant, played by Dempsey, Jones becomes pregnant and is
uncertain who the baby's father is.
"She's less naive, I think, which is great that both of her ...
suitors are great guys so it's a different sort of rivalry
because I think she would be less apt to fall for the silly guy
at this stage in her life," Zellweger said.
The movie has been highly-anticipated by fans, who were left
shocked with 2013's "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy" book in
which Fielding killed off Darcy and portrayed Jones a widowed
mother with a toy boy.
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"From when we started production I've been very nervous about the
pressure for it to succeed and whether it would be funny and whether
it would work and whether she's still relevant," director Sharon
Maguire told Reuters.
"But I think...there's an enduring love for this character."
Asked if she would be open to taking Jones' story further forward,
Fielding, also a screenwriter for the movie, told Reuters at the
film's Monday premiere: "I would never say never."
"It has to have integrity so I would only write a Bridget story if I
had a story to tell and something important to say."
Firth added his interest in making another film should the
opportunity arise, saying: "If I'm invited, yes."
"A certain generation is growing up with her (Jones) and some are
just discovering her and it will be interesting to see what at the
very end will be the legacy of all that," Dempsey added.
(Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; editing by Jeremy Gaunt and
Diane Craft)
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