Welcome to Winona Ryder Fan, the latest online resource dedicated to the talented actress Winona Ryder. Winona has been in films like "Beetlejuice", "Heathers", "Edward Scissorhands", "Girl, Interrupted", "The Iceman", "Experimenter", "Destination Wedding" and "Gone in the Night". She has also been in TV Shows like "Friends", "Saturday Night Live", "Drunk History", "Show Me a Hero", "Stranger Things" and "The Plot Against America". This site is online to show our support to the actress Winona Ryder, as well as giving her fans a chance to get the latest news and images.
August 30th, 2024
LA Times
Articles & Interviews - Beetlejuice 2 - Beetlejuice Beetlejuice - Gallery - Photoshoots

‘Honestly, I was terrified’: Winona Ryder on returning with ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’

The night before I’m scheduled to speak with Winona Ryder in a restaurant on Central Park South, she did some arts and crafts. In red thread, she embroidered the name “Gena” over the left breast pocket of her gothic black suit with a high collar designed by Elena Dawson, who also made a jacket she wears in “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” (in theaters Sept. 6).

Ryder sewed the name as a tribute to actor Gena Rowlands, who had died the previous day and who Ryder had performed alongside in Jim Jarmusch’s 1991 film “Night on Earth.”

“I had to,” Ryder says, her eyes wet. She’s not sure she could make it through the day if she didn’t.

She knows she’s not supposed to take up our time talking about Rowlands, but she needed to find some way to acknowledge a loss she felt deeply. Even before she worked with Rowlands, Ryder idolized the star of films like “A Woman Under the Influence” and “Opening Night.” She remembers first being introduced to Rowlands’ work when she was around 8 years old. Ryder’s mother would project John Cassavetes’ movies onto a sheet hung in a barn on the 380 acres they shared with seven other families in Northern California, surrounded by redwoods. When Ryder takes out her phone to show me a photo, I notice her home screen’s background is a collage of Rowlands.

It’s not until about 25 minutes into our interview that I actually get a chance to directly ask a question about the project that Ryder is ostensibly promoting: Tim Burton’s “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.” In it, Ryder reprises her role from 1988’s “Beetlejuice” as Lydia Deetz, the sullen teen who meets a pair of ghosts in her attic and is eventually pursued by the title demon played by Michael Keaton in a now-iconic striped suit. In the long-awaited sequel, a grown-up Lydia makes a living as a TV host who talks to ghosts and is haunted by memories of Beetlejuice. She is also in a relationship with a manipulative manager (Justin Theroux) and has a glum, antisocial daughter herself (Jenna Ortega).

It’s not that Ryder doesn’t want to discuss the subject at hand — she’s happy to — it’s just that she has so many stories that seem to burst from her, in long paragraphs filled with sentence fragments. Sipping a chai at a steakhouse downstairs from where a row of hotel rooms have been converted into colorful versions of the new movie’s afterlife for the purposes of the junket, Ryder holds court for an audience of me.

“My parents are archivists and writers and I think I inherited that archivist-slash-hoarder gene,” she says. She keeps phone numbers from the days people used to write them down. “I have Gena’s from when I did ‘Night on Earth.’ It’s really a beautiful thing to have all this stuff.”

Her enormous brown eyes shining through a thick rim of eyeliner, Ryder drops names constantly, but those names are the incredibly cool kind that a cinephile craves. She discusses how she’s been texting with Jarmusch. She explains that she has two friends with whom she still exchanges handwritten letters: Keanu Reeves and Daniel Day-Lewis, her co-stars from “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” and “The Age of Innocence,” respectively. She reveals how Laura Dern, who she met during her first-ever screen test for the 1986 movie “Lucas” (which would become her film debut at the age of 14), once encouraged her to call up her crush. That guy was Elias Koteas, who turned her down. They are now pals.

At 52, Ryder is in yet another transitional phase of a career that began in the 1980s when she was in high school. After decades of speculation as to whether it would ever come to pass, a “Beetlejuice” sequel has finally been made and is set for a world premiere at the Venice Film Festival. Meanwhile, “Stranger Things” — the Netflix series that ushered in a career revival for Ryder when it debuted in 2016 — is finally wrapping up after five seasons. With its 1980s period setting, the streaming juggernaut was a fittingly retro platform for Ryder’s resurgence, but she never expected to be playing fearless Joyce Byers, the mother of a boy drawn into the Upside Down, for as long as she has, an experience extended due to pandemic delays.

“I’m very much aware [of] what that did for me,” she says of the show.

Ryder, however, is concerned about the future. Not about her own career, exactly, but for the continuation of the medium of film, which she holds dear. The nights she spent with Rowlands driving around in a cab for Jarmusch’s movie represent the kind of art she loves.

“I’m not a religious person,” she says. “I’m not anti-religion, but I feel like the closest is film and it’s to me a very sacred thing. I feel so protective, but I’m not in any place to be in control. It’s not up to me.”

Her personal reverence for the art is arguably why Ryder’s run in the ’80s and ’90s still looms so large in the shared cultural consciousness. The “boxes” (her term) Hollywood tried to fit her in drove her crazy, and she did her best to avoid them. Thus, she ended up with a résumé of titles that made her an icon of Gen-X rebellion, whether she was in period skirts or sunglasses: “Heathers,” “Little Women,” “Reality Bites,” as well as her collaborations with Burton, including “Edward Scissorhands” and, yes, “Beetlejuice.”

As he lounges on a hotel couch in New York, his hair typically askew, Burton, 66, recalls identifying with Ryder when he first considered her for the role of Lydia, who wears a black veil over her face and intones, “My whole life is a darkroom — one big dark room.”

“There was a sensitivity and an artistic quality, but also an otherworldliness that I remember feeling as a teenager,” he says. “I remember how I felt, and she just had that.”

Ryder also related to Lydia as a budding goth herself. “She wasn’t that different from me,” she recalls. “I was sort of like that as a teen.”

She recently found a photo taken before she even knew the script for “Beetlejuice” existed, in which she looked like she could have been in costume. Again, she reaches for her phone to show it to me and it is striking: She even had Lydia’s bangs. (The texts that pop up on her screen are in an extremely large font. “The kids are making so much fun of me because of my font,” she quips, self-deprecatingly.)

When Ryder signed onto “Stranger Things” she was still in a period of reemergence that began six years prior with a scenery-chewing role in Darren Aronofsky’s 2010 “Black Swan.” But even within the much-publicized ebbs and flows of her career, including a brief retreat from the spotlight, Ryder held out hope that she would get to reprise Lydia. A provision was built into her “Stranger Things” contract that if a “Beetlejuice” sequel ever went into production, she would get the time off required to complete it. Lydia was that close to her and she wanted to reunite with the cast and Burton. She says she was shocked when there was finally a script. But there were also nerves.

“Honestly, I was terrified,” Ryder says. “We all were.”

She also had to get used to the idea of who Lydia had become: a widowed mother with a surly unfun daughter who doesn’t believe in ghosts, dating a suspiciously doting hanger-on. “I never imagined she had kids,” Ryder says of her creation. “To me, she was still up in the attic.”

Movies
‘Honestly, I was terrified’: Winona Ryder on returning with ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’
A woman poses in a red-stitched jacket.
“I want to live in that world where artists stay really true,” says Ryder, photographed in New York in August.
(Jennifer McCord / For The Times)
By Esther Zuckerman
Photography by Jennifer McCord
Aug. 28, 2024 3 AM PT

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NEW YORK — The night before I’m scheduled to speak with Winona Ryder in a restaurant on Central Park South, she did some arts and crafts. In red thread, she embroidered the name “Gena” over the left breast pocket of her gothic black suit with a high collar designed by Elena Dawson, who also made a jacket she wears in “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” (in theaters Sept. 6).

Ryder sewed the name as a tribute to actor Gena Rowlands, who had died the previous day and who Ryder had performed alongside in Jim Jarmusch’s 1991 film “Night on Earth.”

“I had to,” Ryder says, her eyes wet. She’s not sure she could make it through the day if she didn’t.

She knows she’s not supposed to take up our time talking about Rowlands, but she needed to find some way to acknowledge a loss she felt deeply. Even before she worked with Rowlands, Ryder idolized the star of films like “A Woman Under the Influence” and “Opening Night.” She remembers first being introduced to Rowlands’ work when she was around 8 years old. Ryder’s mother would project John Cassavetes’ movies onto a sheet hung in a barn on the 380 acres they shared with seven other families in Northern California, surrounded by redwoods. When Ryder takes out her phone to show me a photo, I notice her home screen’s background is a collage of Rowlands.

It’s not until about 25 minutes into our interview that I actually get a chance to directly ask a question about the project that Ryder is ostensibly promoting: Tim Burton’s “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.” In it, Ryder reprises her role from 1988’s “Beetlejuice” as Lydia Deetz, the sullen teen who meets a pair of ghosts in her attic and is eventually pursued by the title demon played by Michael Keaton in a now-iconic striped suit. In the long-awaited sequel, a grown-up Lydia makes a living as a TV host who talks to ghosts and is haunted by memories of Beetlejuice. She is also in a relationship with a manipulative manager (Justin Theroux) and has a glum, antisocial daughter herself (Jenna Ortega).
A woman in black poses with a demon in a striped shirt.
“Just seeing her on set, I almost started crying,” director Tim Burton says. “I can’t even put it into words.” Ryder and Michael Keaton return to roles they originated in 1988.
(Warner Bros. Pictures)

It’s not that Ryder doesn’t want to discuss the subject at hand — she’s happy to — it’s just that she has so many stories that seem to burst from her, in long paragraphs filled with sentence fragments. Sipping a chai at a steakhouse downstairs from where a row of hotel rooms have been converted into colorful versions of the new movie’s afterlife for the purposes of the junket, Ryder holds court for an audience of me.

“My parents are archivists and writers and I think I inherited that archivist-slash-hoarder gene,” she says. She keeps phone numbers from the days people used to write them down. “I have Gena’s from when I did ‘Night on Earth.’ It’s really a beautiful thing to have all this stuff.”

Her enormous brown eyes shining through a thick rim of eyeliner, Ryder drops names constantly, but those names are the incredibly cool kind that a cinephile craves. She discusses how she’s been texting with Jarmusch. She explains that she has two friends with whom she still exchanges handwritten letters: Keanu Reeves and Daniel Day-Lewis, her co-stars from “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” and “The Age of Innocence,” respectively. She reveals how Laura Dern, who she met during her first-ever screen test for the 1986 movie “Lucas” (which would become her film debut at the age of 14), once encouraged her to call up her crush. That guy was Elias Koteas, who turned her down. They are now pals.

At 52, Ryder is in yet another transitional phase of a career that began in the 1980s when she was in high school. After decades of speculation as to whether it would ever come to pass, a “Beetlejuice” sequel has finally been made and is set for a world premiere at the Venice Film Festival. Meanwhile, “Stranger Things” — the Netflix series that ushered in a career revival for Ryder when it debuted in 2016 — is finally wrapping up after five seasons. With its 1980s period setting, the streaming juggernaut was a fittingly retro platform for Ryder’s resurgence, but she never expected to be playing fearless Joyce Byers, the mother of a boy drawn into the Upside Down, for as long as she has, an experience extended due to pandemic delays.

“I’m very much aware [of] what that did for me,” she says of the show.
A woman in black looks into the camera.
A woman in black stands with her head lowered.

“People talk about the disposability of especially women in this industry,” says Ryder. “Even well-meaning, great people talk about it.” (Jennifer McCord / For The Times)

Ryder, however, is concerned about the future. Not about her own career, exactly, but for the continuation of the medium of film, which she holds dear. The nights she spent with Rowlands driving around in a cab for Jarmusch’s movie represent the kind of art she loves.

“I’m not a religious person,” she says. “I’m not anti-religion, but I feel like the closest is film and it’s to me a very sacred thing. I feel so protective, but I’m not in any place to be in control. It’s not up to me.”

Her personal reverence for the art is arguably why Ryder’s run in the ’80s and ’90s still looms so large in the shared cultural consciousness. The “boxes” (her term) Hollywood tried to fit her in drove her crazy, and she did her best to avoid them. Thus, she ended up with a résumé of titles that made her an icon of Gen-X rebellion, whether she was in period skirts or sunglasses: “Heathers,” “Little Women,” “Reality Bites,” as well as her collaborations with Burton, including “Edward Scissorhands” and, yes, “Beetlejuice.”

As he lounges on a hotel couch in New York, his hair typically askew, Burton, 66, recalls identifying with Ryder when he first considered her for the role of Lydia, who wears a black veil over her face and intones, “My whole life is a darkroom — one big dark room.”

“There was a sensitivity and an artistic quality, but also an otherworldliness that I remember feeling as a teenager,” he says. “I remember how I felt, and she just had that.”

Ryder also related to Lydia as a budding goth herself. “She wasn’t that different from me,” she recalls. “I was sort of like that as a teen.”

She recently found a photo taken before she even knew the script for “Beetlejuice” existed, in which she looked like she could have been in costume. Again, she reaches for her phone to show it to me and it is striking: She even had Lydia’s bangs. (The texts that pop up on her screen are in an extremely large font. “The kids are making so much fun of me because of my font,” she quips, self-deprecatingly.)

Awards
Winona Ryder and David Harbour share deep bonds on the set of ‘Stranger Things’ — and off

May 23, 2018

When Ryder signed onto “Stranger Things” she was still in a period of reemergence that began six years prior with a scenery-chewing role in Darren Aronofsky’s 2010 “Black Swan.” But even within the much-publicized ebbs and flows of her career, including a brief retreat from the spotlight, Ryder held out hope that she would get to reprise Lydia. A provision was built into her “Stranger Things” contract that if a “Beetlejuice” sequel ever went into production, she would get the time off required to complete it. Lydia was that close to her and she wanted to reunite with the cast and Burton. She says she was shocked when there was finally a script. But there were also nerves.

“Honestly, I was terrified,” Ryder says. “We all were.”

She also had to get used to the idea of who Lydia had become: a widowed mother with a surly unfun daughter who doesn’t believe in ghosts, dating a suspiciously doting hanger-on. “I never imagined she had kids,” Ryder says of her creation. “To me, she was still up in the attic.”
A man pleads with a woman on a porch.
Justin Theroux plays Lydia’s manager, also something of an exploiter. “You’re at a weird spot in your life and you let someone in and before you know it they’re taking advantage,” Ryder says of his character. “That made sense to me.”
(Parisa Taghizadeh / Warner Bros. Pictures)

Her co-star Theroux brought her around to the idea that Lydia would find herself in a codependent relationship with someone who doesn’t necessarily have her best interests at heart. “When he said that, I was like, ‘Oh, that is true,’ ” she says, having found herself in similar positions. “You’re at a weird spot in your life and you let someone in and before you know it they’re taking advantage. That made sense to me.”

The visceral nostalgia hit Ryder once they got Lydia’s look right. While she knows that there have been some complaints online about how Lydia hasn’t changed her hairstyle in nearly 40 years, Ryder dismisses those nitpicks. “I feel like I dress the same,” she says. “I still have the same stuff.” I can even see it in her current ensemble, which is very Lydia-esque, with its high collar and intentionally frayed sleeves.

For Burton, Lydia’s journey was about showing how the contours of life change a person. Watching Ryder embody the role again was profound for him.

“Just seeing her on set, I almost started crying,” he says. “I can’t even put it into words. It was just such an emotional experience.”

Burton adds that it was also “very special” to watch Ryder and Ortega interact. “To me, there’s a vibe about them that is always very strong,” he says. In many ways, the film is a passing of the torch from one breakout star playing a strange teen girl to another.

As for Ryder, she was immediately impressed with her younger co-star after Ortega mentioned “I Am Cuba,” the 1964 film by Soviet director Mikhail Kalatozov, during one of their early scenes. They were working in a crypt and Ryder says she almost wept hearing Ortega reference specific shots from the classic.

Ryder appreciates getting to interact with the up-and-coming generation of film lovers who remind her of herself, excitedly telling me how her “Stranger Things” co-star Finn Wolfhard is obsessed with Elliott Gould. Still, she gets frustrated when there is a lack of curiosity among her more junior colleagues.

“I don’t mean to sound so hopeless,” she says. “There are a few that are just not interested in movies. Like, the first thing they say is, ‘How long is it?’ ”

Ryder’s professorial advocacy is undercut by the way she just seems to want to gab. She’s got a casualness about her that’s true to her status, but she also has always existed somewhat out of time, a quality that allowed her to play the offbeat loners of Burton’s world as well as heroines invented by Louisa May Alcott and Edith Wharton, in films from Gillian Armstrong and Martin Scorsese.

These days, she is consciously a bit of a relic. She doesn’t use social media and waxes poetic about the days when you would hear about an interview with an actor like Al Pacino coming out, and you’d have to wait months to be able to read the piece. She mourns the transition to digital cinematography. She reminisces about the time when you would hear the flapping of a reel running out during a take. She wants to turn back the clock just a bit.

“I don’t know what could happen, but if there’s some sort of detox and reset,” she says, trailing off and wishing for a do-over. “Because you have to build character.”

Ryder has been wondering what she wants to do next, in part because she feels the pressure of aging that is all too common for actresses.

“People talk about the disposability of especially women in this industry,” she says. “Even well-meaning, great people talk about it.”

She remembers running into Meryl Streep a decade after they made the 1993 Isabel Allende adaptation “The House of the Spirits,” and Streep telling her she was only getting offered parts of “witch” or “mom.” She was in disbelief that even someone like Streep could feel so sidelined.

Ryder would like to work with screenwriter David Simon again, with whom she made two TV series, “Show Me a Hero” and “The Plot Against America,” but she still worries that this kind of dense, intellectual material doesn’t have a home anymore. Still, whenever she’s feeling too down she sees a movie like “Tár” or “Uncut Gems” and it lifts her spirits.

I ask whether she’ll have time to take in any cinema when she’s at Venice, but she explains she has to do the “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” premiere in London the next day. It is, however, a question that prompts her to start reminiscing about her time on the Cannes jury under Scorsese.

“I loved the ‘watching five movies a day’ thing, but to have to choose …” she says, her voice tightening to imply how hard the actual act of judging was. “It was also the year of the Dogme movie and there were like 100 terrible Dogme movies.” Her jury ended up awarding one: Thomas Vinterberg’s “The Celebration,” the first and, ultimately, best feature to emerge from the ascetic, anti-effects movement.

Our time is running out, but we keep chatting about movies and festivals as she is whisked away to her next obligation. Just before she is ushered out the door, she shares yet another incredible anecdote about how she used to have dinners every weekend with Roddy McDowall, Karl Malden, Jessica Tandy and Carol Kane.

“That was like my posse,” Ryder says as if that was a totally normal group of people to have as a posse.

Ryder’s old-soul quality is what made her the perfect choice to play Lydia all those years ago, and the quality still surrounds her like an aura. When I ask if she feels any pressure because of how meaningful her work is to so many people, she just calls herself lucky. She eventually brings us back around to Gena Rowlands.

“You just have to not compromise and I want to live in that world where artists stay really true,” she says. “I feel like that’s what John and Gena did.”

Source: latimes.com

August 29th, 2024
Venice Film Festival
Articles & Interviews - Beetlejuice 2 - Candids - Events & Premieres - Gallery - Videos

Winona attended the Venice Film Festival yesterday. Click on the gallery link below to see all new photos.

UPDATE: Here are some videos from Winona at Venice:

August 19th, 2024
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice New York Photo Call
Beetlejuice 2 - Candids - Events & Premieres - Gallery

Winona attended the Beetlejuice Beetlejuice New York Photo Calltwo days ago. Click on the gallery link below to see all new photos.

August 17th, 2024
Winona Doing Press for Beetlejuice 2
Beetlejuice 2 - Behind the Scenes / On Set - Candids - Gallery

I added 2 new photos to the gallery of Winona doing press for Beetlejuice 2 yesterday:

I also added some new photos of Winona Spotted In Midtown New York City yesterday. Click on the gallery link below to see all new photos in full size.

July 11th, 2024
Harper’s Bazaar
Articles & Interviews - Gallery - Photoshoots - Videos

How Winona Ryder Made It to the Other Side
The star on revisiting Beetlejuice, sticking it out in Hollywood, and staying off social media

It is a warm afternoon in late spring, and Winona Ryder and I are walking through the Oakland Cemetery, a Victorian-style graveyard located in the center of Atlanta. Large oak and magnolia trees shade the manicured paths as we stroll between the grand mausoleums and tombstones. Ryder is wearing a straw bonnet, with a well-worn Leonard Cohen T-shirt under a black chore jacket that has a pin of a cartoon drawing of Jim Jarmusch affixed to its lapel. Her eyes are rimmed with eyeliner, and her sneakers are splattered with paint. Ryder is the first to admit that the word icon has become overused: “Everyone uses it now, and they don’t know what a real icon is,” she says. But she looks, as she always has, like the poster child for Gen X. She defined cinema in the ’90s, embodying both a romantic moodiness and an idealistic dissatisfaction that few other actors have rivaled.

Gazing at the final resting places of others tends to prompt questions of longevity. Ryder stops to read from a headstone: “Life so fully lived, haven’t had to wait. Gone fishing.” She tells me she has a deep admiration for the late actress Ruth Gordon, who won an Academy Award when she was 72 for Rosemary’s Baby and worked well into her 80s. In past interviews, Ryder has said that she’s ready for her “Ruth Gordon years,” an allusion to a lengthy career that many who enter the industry as ingenues, as Ryder did to some extent, rarely pull off. When she was 13, she auditioned for the role of Rina in what would become her first film, Lucas, which came out in 1986. Rina, she recalls, was written in the script as unattractive. This didn’t deter her. “I wasn’t hurt by it,” she says. “I was more like, ‘Oh, cool. Can I be Ruth Gordon?’ ”

For the past six months, Ryder has been living in Atlanta, where she’s filming the final season of Stranger Things, with her boyfriend, Scott Mackinlay Hahn. This September, she will star in the new Tim Burton film Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, the long-anticipated sequel to Burton’s original 1988 film, Beetlejuice, reprising the role of Lydia Deetz, which she first played when she was just 15 years old and helped catapult her to stardom. Ryder is telling me how she found her way back to playing Lydia, who, like Ryder, is now a middle-aged woman. “I felt bad for her,” she explains.

In Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Lydia is a pill-popping widow. She hosts a television show called Ghost House, thanks to the fact that she still possesses the uncanny ability to see and speak to the dead. She’s dating—but not in love with—her obsequiously slimy manager, Rory (played by Justin Theroux). Her teenage daughter, Astrid (Jenna Ortega), hates her; she finds Lydia’s gift a cheap gimmick, largely because the one person Lydia can’t contact from the afterlife is Astrid’s father, who tragically died in a fishing accident. Life, it seems, did not quite go as planned for Lydia Deetz. “My mom,” Astrid declares at one point, “is a very broken person.”

Parts of Lydia remind Ryder of a younger version of herself. “In my 30s, I had two disastrous relationships that were—they weren’t wrong, but this was before you would ever think to Google someone,” she says. “When I look back, I’m like, ‘What the hell was I thinking?’ I was dating the type of person who only lets you know a few weeks in that they’re in a relationship with someone else. And you’re just like, ‘What the fuck?’ ”

Not too long ago, Ryder read through her diaries from that period of her life. “You clearly write when you’re depressed or upset. I tend to not write when I’m really happy,” she says. “I was going through them and just asking myself, ‘How?’ I was clearly trying to deal with …” Ryder trails off. “It was very sad. I was clearly trying to believe the best and to give grace to myself. But I was taking care of everything but myself.”

Ryder’s 30s were a well-publicized rough patch. After a meteoric rise in her teens and 20s, landing roles in era-defining films like Heathers, Mermaids, Reality Bites, and Little Women and working with renowned directors such as Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola, Ryder was burnt out. Work had been nonstop, and the celebrity that followed put her personal life in the center of an unrelenting spotlight. Following her 2001 arrest for shoplifting and the tabloid scrutiny that followed, she retreated from the spotlight—a period that, for Ryder, was as much about regrouping as it was stepping out of a life she’d inhabited since her teens and figuring out what she wanted out of it all. It wasn’t until she played an aging ballerina in Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan in 2010 that she finally felt her career had turned a corner. “That was a very liberating thing, because I was playing my age. … And I think in a lot of people’s minds, that really helped. I sort of graduated,” she told The New York Times in 2016.

Now 52, Ryder is in a much different place in her life and work, inhabiting more of an elder-stateswoman role. She refuses, for example, to wear heels on the red carpet, preferring to style herself (a rarity in Hollywood), either hiding her boots with a floor-length dress or incorporating them into her outfit. “I actually made a conscious decision, maybe six years ago,” she says. The Winona Book, published last year by Idea Books, features candid Polaroids of her by Robert Rich, the former vice president of public relations for Marc Jacobs, who became her close friend and whose basement office below the Marc Jacobs store in New York’s SoHo neighborhood was a haven for celebrities looking to remain undetected. The book achieved a cultlike status and sells for up to $300 on eBay.

She has been with Hahn, founder of the sustainable organic-cotton company Loomstate, for the past 14 years. (The two met at the premiere of Black Swan, when Hahn, who failed to recognize Ryder, complimented her for her work in The Fifth Element, a film in which she never appeared.) Hahn, who joins us during our cemetery walk, is handsome and soft-spoken. He has a distinctly grounding presence, serving, seemingly, as a kind of ballast to Ryder’s more windblown life as an actor. “He’s so great. He really is. I’m really lucky,” Ryder says. They will soon return to either New York City, where they rent, or Los Angeles, where she owns a house. She and Hahn want to move, but they’re not entirely clear as to where.

Ryder is nervous about the upcoming election. Her parents—established writers and left-wing intellectuals—decamped from Northern California, where Ryder was raised, to Canada after George W. Bush was re-elected in 2004. Uncertainty looms on the horizon. Ryder—who can careen from topic to topic in delightful digressions—lists why: the college-campus protests, Jared Kushner’s statement about developing Gaza, the carceral system, and Joe Biden’s chances of beating back Trump in the general election. “It’s just a scary time,” she adds.

Soon after the first Beetlejuice premiered, there were rumors that Burton was at work on a sequel. Supposedly, a script for Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian once existed. “Beetlejuice Goes to Outer Space, Beetlejuice does whatever,” Burton says. “There’d been talk about it, but I never really understood why it was popular. And this was when people didn’t talk about sequels.”

In the intervening decades, though, Ryder and Burton kept in touch, meeting secretly to discuss making a second Beetlejuice. “There were a lot of times my agents didn’t know that I was meeting up with him,” Ryder says.

Beetlejuice tells the story of Barbara and Adam Maitland (played by Geena Davis and Alec Baldwin), a young couple living in Winter River, Connecticut, who tragically die in a car accident only to discover, to their surprise, that they have become ghosts. Their peaceful country home has been sold to the obnoxious and ostentatious Deetz family, which includes Charles, a wealthy real-estate developer; his wife, Delia, a sculpture artist (played brilliantly by Catherine O’Hara, whose future husband, Bo Welch, was the production designer); and Charles’s daughter from his first marriage, Lydia. The Maitlands call upon an ancient trickster demon named Beetlejuice (Michael Keaton) to help scare the Deetz family away, as their extravagant renovation and garish art collection have obliterated all calm and happiness from their (now dead) existence.

As a director, Burton is a first-class world builder whose imaginative leaps have kept him distinctly out of step with his peers. Unlike other cult films from the 1980s and ’90s that have developed a dated patina over time, Burton’s work often feels suspended in another universe altogether. The world of Beetlejuice exists in a strangely gothic contemporary America, one where ghosts blast Harry Belafonte at full volume and where a demon can don a black-and-white-striped suit that looks like it could have been designed by the Antwerp Six. As Lydia puts it so well in the first film: “I myself am strange and unusual.”

Burton had made his directorial debut a few years prior with Pee-wee’s Big Adventure. Ryder was a virtual unknown, with just Lucas under her belt, a role for which she had dyed her hair black. It’s a style choice she has more or less maintained throughout her career. If you watch Lucas, you can see flickers of Lydia Deetz in Ryder’s Rina: Both are young women in possession of an innate sense of cool. “Tim’s a terrific caster,” says Keaton. “He doesn’t always get credit for that, but if you look through his films, he always casts really, really well, and that includes Winona.”

“When I met Winona, she reminded me of how I felt as a teenager,” says Burton. “And she’s got what I love with certain actors. She can say something with just her eyes. … There’s a soul coming out. So without dialogue, without anything, there’s something there. It’s why you make movies.”

“Everyone wanted to be Lydia after watching the first film,” says Ortega. “She’s so self-assured and smart and ahead of her time.” Indeed, Beetlejuice unlocks a deep truth about what it feels like to be a teenager and what it’s like to grow up in an increasingly alienating world. When Lydia discovers that she can see ghosts, it reveals a kind of supernatural exceptionalism to her, which is something most teenagers hope for in their lives: for something to rescue us from the banality of the ordinary. That is the appeal of Lydia Deetz. But it took Ryder to give Lydia a particular vulnerability, a kind of softness and naivete that endears her to everyone.

As Ryder recalls, her first encounter with Burton was unassuming. That day, she strode onto a soundstage at Culver Studios to meet Burton, with her father waiting for her in their car. Character actors were on their lunch breaks, a woman was dressed in a corset, and someone else was in an animal costume with the head removed. “I was sitting there, and this guy came in holding a folder, who I thought was a messenger or something. We started talking about Edward Gorey. About half an hour into this conversation, I feel like I’m making a friend, and I ask him, ‘Do you know Tim Burton? This is his office, right?’ And he went, ‘Well, that’s me.’ I didn’t know that directors could look like Tim. He was 27. Immediately, I was like, ‘Oh, shit. I’m sorry. Do you want me to read?’ He told me no. I remember feeling like ‘Oh, God, did I blow it?’ I had this fear when I got up to leave, and I was like, ‘Hey, man, it was really great meeting you. Good luck, this sounds really great.’ I added, ‘If you want, I can come back.’ But he told me that he wanted me to do it. That had never happened. I’d never been offered a part without a reading for it or on the spot like that, ever.”

“She probably thought I was some kind of weird stalker,” says Burton. “But I had that effect on people. I didn’t speak very well, so people didn’t understand what I was saying. In fact, they still don’t. But again, that’s why I feel like we connected, because I didn’t scare her away. She ultimately got it and got who I was.”

Beetlejuice was a resounding success. It would also form the beginning of a sustained relationship between the director and both Keaton and Ryder, with Burton casting them in his subsequent films. Keaton would play the titular Caped Crusader in 1989’s Batman and 1992’s Batman Returns, and Ryder would star as Kim Boggs in Edward Scissorhands in 1990, opposite her then-boyfriend, Johnny Depp. She describes working with Burton as a kind of “telepathy,” one where the director doesn’t finish his sentences and gestures his intentions but she still, somehow, understands perfectly what he’s trying to convey. “He could be like, ‘Maybe, I think, yeah. You know?’ And I’ll be like, ‘Yeah, totally. I know.’ ”

Did they understand they were making a cult film? Something that would spawn a Broadway musical and an endless parade of Halloween costumes, memes, imitations, and subtle references (“I do feel like Moira Rose of Schitt’s Creek and Delia Deetz are sisters,” says Ryder)—an unrelenting obsession the world over? “We weren’t quite sure what we were making,” recalls Keaton. “We just knew this guy had something.”

We retreat from the afternoon heat to the shade of a large magnolia tree whose long, jointed branches are something out of a Burton set. Hahn points out the tombstone of the golfer Bobby Jones, which is decorated in white golf balls, and later we stumble upon Kenny Rogers’s grave. Hahn plucks a magnolia flower from the tree’s bough and encourages us each to smell it. The scent is floral and citrusy, with a darker, more vegetal sensibility.

I ask Ryder about her Jarmusch pin. In 1991, she played a young taxi driver in his film Night on Earth.Working on a big show like Stranger Things can be draining, she admits, though she’s ever grateful for the opportunity. “And then I think, ‘What if I just hang it up?’ And then I think, ‘Well, if Jim wanted me to do something, I would do it,’ and then you start thinking of all the people that you would work with if they called, and that’s not really retiring. That’s just being available,” she says.

We are near a large Confederate memorial, and Ryder begins musing on history, war, and post-traumatic stress disorder. When did the term PTSD first appear, she wonders? “I know it was once called shell shock,” she says. We discuss how it is more commonly understood today that people other than veterans can have PTSD. Ryder is quick to acknowledge the unparalleled violence and trauma of war. Still, our conversation somehow reminds me of what Ortega tells me about Ryder, how the actress was incredibly generous with her when they first met, which was right around the time Ortega’s own star was taking off with her portrayal of Wednesday Addams in Burton’s 2022 Netflix series Wednesday. “She definitely helped me feel less alone,” says Ortega. “It’s a very isolating experience and a scary one. Being able to speak to somebody who had witnessed that firsthand, maybe even more, was a great source of comfort for me, and I can’t thank her enough for that.”

These days, Ryder is a self-professed Luddite and is not on any social media, maintaining a blissful ignorance of what the public has to say about her. Earlier this year, Kendall Jenner wore a 1999 archival Givenchy dress designed by Alexander McQueen to the Met Gala, claiming she was the “first human” to ever wear it. Quickly, though, photographs circulated online of Ryder wearing the dress the same year it was designed in a photo shoot for Flaunt magazine. Ryder was silent on the matter at the time. “I heard about that,” Ryder says when I ask her about it.

“I do remember that photo shoot. It was with my dear friend [and makeup artist] Kevyn Aucoin,” she says. “And I did wear it. I have pictures. The photographer gave me some prints. I’m in a tartan in one of them, and I’m in that dress.”

The next day, Ryder texts me a photograph of herself as a 13-year-old. This was from before she had been cast in anything, before she nabbed the role of Veronica in Heathers just a few years later, in part by going to the mall and asking for a makeover to prove she could, in fact, look like the pretty and popular one. Her hair is boyishly cropped, and she’s wearing a plaid cardigan over a Clash T-shirt. She looks beautiful and impossibly cool. I can see instantly how the world fell in love with her. Even now, though she has managed to mature in the public eye, she still possesses what one director told me was a “romantic fragility” that adds an immeasurable depth to whomever she plays onscreen. We exchange a few more messages. Did she ever think she had PTSD from those early days, when the white-hot light of the spotlight was focused so intensely on her? “The answer would be no,” she wrote back the next day. “I feel incredibly lucky to have been able to live this life—however intense and overwhelming it got, it’s NOTHING compared to what it is now with the internet and social media. I just find myself feeling tremendous empathy toward people who have sacrificed so much.”

A little bit later, I’m struck by a silly impulse to know one last thing after our cemetery walk and I send her another text: Does she believe in ghosts? The afterlife? We all know what Lydia Deetz would say. But Ryder doesn’t respond.

Source: harpersbazaar.com

CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW TO SEE ALL PHOTOS FROM THIS NEW SHOOT!

June 16th, 2024
New candids
Beetlejuice 2 - Candids - Gallery

Winona attended a junket for Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice in NY yesterday. Click on the gallery link below to see all new photos in full size.

June 8th, 2024
Stranger Things season 1 & 2 promotional photos
Gallery - Photoshoots - Promotional Photos - Stranger Things

I uploaded some great Stranger Things season 1 & 2 promotional photos to the gallery. Click on the gallery links below to see all new photos.


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Stranger Things (Season 5)
Winona as Joyce Byers
News Photos IMDb
When a young boy vanishes, a small town uncovers a mystery involving secret experiments, terrifying supernatural forces and one strange little girl.

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