Emma
Stone honed dance skills to play tennis great Billie
Jean King
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[September 21, 2017]
By Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Emma Stone admits she's never been a sports player, so
when she was asked to play former world tennis No. 1
Billie Jean King in the movie "Battle of the Sexes," the
Oscar-winning actress approached it from a different
direction - dancing.
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King, by contrast, who pioneered the fight for
equal pay in tennis more than 40 years ago, pictured herself in
Stone's position as she worked with the actress to portray her
character.
"I tried to put myself in Emma's shoes. That's really taking a
risk portraying someone who is still alive. I'm like, 'God,
that's a little pressure," King said.
Stone, 28, and the 73-year-old tennis legend became good friends
while making the movie that tells the story behind King's 1973
exhibition match against former men's champion Bobby Riggs
(Steve Carell) to fight sexism in the sport and society at
large. It opens in U.S. movie theaters on Friday.
Stone, who won an Oscar in February for song and dance musical
"La La Land," had never played tennis so her early sessions with
King focused on footwork and choreography.
"I danced, so footwork was good. (And) I had been on stage
before and when Billie Jean went out onto the tennis court it
felt like her stage, so she really keyed in on that," Stone
said.
Later came weeks of practice on serves and cross-court
backhands, but for Stone, even the simplest things were tough.
"We went to the U.S. Open ... and I was sitting next to Billie
Jean, and Sloane Stephens was catching balls and tucking them in
her skirt and bouncing them with the racquet.
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"It's just little in-between stuff but that took me months to
learn!" Stone said.
Professional players were hired to reproduce the shots in the match
against Riggs, which was watched by more than 50 million on
television.
For her part, King worked for weeks with screenwriter Simon Beaufoy
recalling her experience in the early 1970s, when she not only
established the break-away Women's Tennis Association and took on
Riggs but also was wrestling with her own sexual identity. She came
out as gay in 1981.
More than 40 years after beating Riggs, women are still fighting for
equal pay and rights on and off the tennis court, not that it comes
as any surprise to King.
"If you read history, you realize how slow progress is and that it's
each generation's job to try and move the ball forward.
"We've come further, but we've a lot further to go," King said.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant, editing by Marcy Nicholson)
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