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Shailene Woodley: 'The Descendants' Teen Will Be A Star, Whether She Likes It Or Not

Woodley Clooney

First Posted: 09/16/11 05:43 PM ET Updated: 11/16/11 05:12 AM ET

"You know, it's a real funny, ironic thing. I am the happiest person; literally, I am annoyingly happy to some people," Shailene Woodley laughs. "I was naturally born an optimist, I love life, even when things are not going so great. But for some reason, I guess I can tap into my dark alter-ego emotional side very easily [laughs] and play these characters on the screen."

Putting aside any accusations of irksomeness, it's far too early on a Sunday morning -- especially one following a late Saturday night spent at a party thrown in her film's honor -- for Woodley to fake this kind of energy and excitement. "Maybe that's why I love acting subconsciously, I store all my angst and let it out," she continues, shrugging her shoulders, either modest or bewildered by her growing career as a dramatic actress.

Whether she's tapping into something deeper or just really good at pretending, the 19 year old actress is doing something right. Already playing a teenage mother in the hit ABC Family series, "The Secret Life of the American Teenager," Woodley is set to break into the larger national consciousness with a star-making performance as Alex, George Clooney's foul mouthed, drug-abusing daughter in "The Descendants," which has so far been the critical darling of the fall festival circuit.

From the moment early in the first act in which she's brought back home from rehab to help deal with the fallout from her critically injured mom's impending death, Woodley dominates screen time and launches into the film's most profound transformation. Drunk and hitting golf balls into the ocean when first picked up at her rehabilitation facility, a newfound familial responsibility casts her alongside Clooney in the story of a father and daughter forced to grow up together, side-by-side.

"I think a 17-year old going through the most angsty periods in her life, thought the world was out to get her, kind of took on the victim thing, kinda said 'f*ck life,' and through this movie and through this beautiful arc, she has a chance to not only reconnect with her family but reconnect with herself," Woodley says, reflecting on the fondness she felt for her character.

"I think she created such a barrier, such a wall around her that she never was really forced to examine her life, and the consequences of her relationships," she continues. "And in the end, she's become vulnerable -- and still independent, but independently co-dependent."

Early after her return home -- to a small island in Hawaii, much of which is owned by her dynastic family -- Woodley's Alex sets the film's main course of action by divulging a secret that hangs an even darker cloud over her coma-stricken mother's tragedy. Instead of just a speedboat accident victim now wilting away as her life support is removed, Alex divulges to her dad that his wife was sleeping with another man, caught in the act while Alex roamed the neighborhood during her school's winter break. Once she tells her father the truth, the pair -- along with her younger sister -- set off to find the man with whom the dying woman slept.

It would figure that to tell her father such a harsh truth, instead of allowing him to more fondly remember his dying wife, would be a difficult decision; instead, in this case, Woodley says the character's penchant for mature past times and beverage choices belied her maturity and ability to keep the secret.

"It's a giant decision. I don't think she would have -- I think she saw him and saw how lost he was, and then the thought of losing her mom, that's a giant secret to hold, y'know?" the actress asks rhetorically, showing sympathy for her Alex's dilemma. "I think she saw it as, I don't want this secret, I want to get this out. Yeah, she's 17, but she's still a little girl in terms of the world in relativity, so I think she needed to get that secret off her chest, and I think she saw her dad as a really weak person, and she wanted him to know that this is what is happening, you can't be in denial, you can't be stupid anymore, you need to grow up, dad."

Her forcefulness on screen, though, belies a casual humility off-set. She offers nothing but praise for her co-star Clooney, and insists that any certain delivery came at the suggestion of the film's writer-director, Alexander Payne.

"I didn't know if we were -- truly -- I didn't know if we were making a comedy or a drama," Woodley admits, deferring credit, for the umpteenth time, to the filmmaker. "Because, we would do one scene one way and then do it another way. And it was just Alexander going 'Okay now instead of glaring, why don't you smile? And you're like, 'What? That makes no sense! But I trust you,' and you do it, and after you do it, you're like, oh, I see what he was thinking."

She may sound as if she's uncertain about her craft and talent, but for a 19 year old, her career hasn't exactly fluttered along on mindlessly happy, Disney Channel-type subject matter. While it often takes actors and actresses years to get the opportunities to tackle more serious fare, Woodley's work has had a greater weight; death and estrangement in "The Descendants," and teenage sexuality in "The Secret Life."

"The most positive compliment I've ever gotten," she remembers, "was from a mother who came up to me and said, 'Thank you and your writers and the rest of the cast for this show, because it has opened up conversation outlets within our home, I can talk to my daughter and son about sex now, and I can talk to them about the consequences of it, and what you need to know before you make that decision and after that decision,' and she's like, I would have never talked about that with my teenagers. And I think that's where I think a lot of people get lost in teenage sexuality, is because they're uneducated about it."

Having served as that vessel, it's fitting and fateful that her first major film role comes as she exits her teen years. Time to grow up not just on screen, but in the characters she gets to play, as well.

"I'll be 20 in a month and I've always played high school characters," she says. "I think it would be fun to do more of a college setting or a young adult setting, versus a teenage atmosphere. And I'd love to do a comedy, I haven't done a comedy thus far, so I think that would be great."

Then again, dramas aren't so bad either -- and she's got high ambitions for those, too, name dropping Natalie Portman's turn in "Black Swan" as her ideal role. For the moment, though, she's letting herself take in all the madness that comes with starring in a hit, awards season shoe-in film for the first time.

"I always say that the audition was the cake, the performance in Hawaii was the icing on the cake, and this, reconvening with George and Alexander and Fox Searchlight and all these beautiful people, I don't even know what this is like -- 20 jars of maraschino cherries or something," Woodley laughs. "So I'm just taking it all in stride and waking up every day with a smile on my face and in gratitude for what that day holds. And I have zero expectations, whatever happens, happens. It's beautiful either way, so I'm enjoying every moment and so grateful for every moment."

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"You know, it's a real funny, ironic thing. I am the happiest person; literally, I am annoyingly happy to some people," Shailene Woodley laughs. "I was naturally born an optimist, I love life, even wh...
"You know, it's a real funny, ironic thing. I am the happiest person; literally, I am annoyingly happy to some people," Shailene Woodley laughs. "I was naturally born an optimist, I love life, even wh...
 
 
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02:59 PM on 09/18/2011
Wow, I fell asleep reading this.
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butchbuss00
06:55 AM on 09/18/2011
HES SO VERY OVER RATED
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12:44 AM on 09/18/2011
I will see this.
11:55 PM on 09/17/2011
George, you are still georgeous and all that and we love you still...but, you are looking like grandpa now next to these young beauties. LIke it or not, better settle down and have some kids before life passes you by. It happens faster than you know.
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EmilyRose2010
.Today is a new day!
12:18 AM on 09/18/2011
he does look like a grandpa here and lost a bit of his sex appeal, how come the three of them look like they need their hair to be combed badly?
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CateManhattan
Common sense is way too uncommon.
12:46 AM on 09/18/2011
It's Hawaii -- windy.
08:47 PM on 09/17/2011
I had a boss once who looked like Clooney..back in the day they called that 'tough luck'...LOL
07:35 PM on 09/17/2011
Why do people think they need to say "literally". Wish people would give up "actually" (every other sentence) and now it's "literally" every other sentence. Do they mean to emphasize what they want to say? Literally is not the word.
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jwb2013
REAL EYES REALIZE REAL LIES.
10:58 PM on 09/17/2011
you literally hit the nail right on the head...actually.
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Barry Clarke
Retired Air Traffic Control Aviation Meteorologist
11:21 PM on 09/17/2011
Literally, you may be correct, but actually you are......
02:01 PM on 09/17/2011
Who reads this RAG
01:58 PM on 09/17/2011
What no story about the Kardashian.
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rightasrain
09:59 PM on 09/17/2011
Oh dang! Shhhhhhhhh! Maybe they forgot.
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12:44 AM on 09/18/2011
Ugh.. way to go, Idaho.. now you've reminded them that they haven't posted one this hour yet.. :sigh: Just when I thought it was safe to browse HP without stumbling across a Kardashian bikini shot, almost nude shot, new Kardashian book/clothing line/lint collector, latest figurative street-corner photo of the younger sisters arranged by the mother or... some ridiculous... wait... all of it is ridiculous... never mind.
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Dross Cool
12:34 PM on 09/17/2011
YOU GO GIRL .... VERY SWEET AND REAL
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susou
hmm...
12:08 PM on 09/17/2011
I don't really like Shailene Woodley on "The Secret Life of the American Teenager." -- I aways thought she was a terrible actress... maybe it's just the writing of the show that's so terrible.
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cira23
01:14 PM on 09/17/2011
Yeah, I think it's the show. Definitely one of the worst shows to ever be on television. I judge people who watch it.
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Ted Cantu
03:22 PM on 09/25/2011
Thats funny.... I judge people who join sororities
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EmilyRose2010
.Today is a new day!
02:30 PM on 09/17/2011
she is a real dud and so is the rest of the cast, not of them can act, how this show is on this long is surprising, the writers are awful as well.
11:30 AM on 09/17/2011
time will tellllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
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brothers3
Professional observers.
11:03 AM on 09/17/2011
"The Secret Life of the American Teenager"

OR

Why nothing else in the world matters as long as I can convince everyone else my life matters most.
rkeeeballs
rock and a hard place
10:35 AM on 09/17/2011
that girl has spirit !! she's all that and a bag of chip's.....cool
10:21 AM on 09/17/2011
I love it that she is 19 and labeling herself as the happiest person in the world. It's so teenager! Life happens. It will show her the road less traveled.
10:05 AM on 09/17/2011
Can't wait to see it.