Alden Ehrenreich's Rules Don't Apply audition lasted five years
Actor Alden Ehrenreich spent five years "auditioning" for Warren Beatty's new period movie Rules Don't Apply.
The Hail, Caesar! star reveals he had "hundreds" of meetings with actor-turned-director Warren over the process of developing the film, which the Hollywood veteran had started working on more than 20 years ago.
The lengthy "audition" turned into a mentorship of sorts for Alden,
and he is grateful for the time he spent learning from Warren.
"I met with him for the first time when I was 19, in 2009, and we
met for about five years in sort of his audition process, I guess,"
he explained to breakfast show Today. "But over that time I kind of
had this apprenticeship with him, where I got to learn and ask him
everything I ever wanted to know, so it was pretty great."
Rules Don't Apply stars Lily Collins as a young actress who embarks
on a forbidden relationship with her driver, played by Alden.
Lily didn't have to wait quite so long to be cast in the film, but
the Mirror, Mirror beauty admits it was an odd journey from being
contacted by Warren to landing her role as Marla Mabrey.
"It was the most abnormal thing I've ever been a part of!" she
laughed. "I basically just got a phone call from my agent saying
that Warren Beatty wanted me to call him and gave me his number. I
called him at home and it kinda just escalated from there. He came
over the next day and we had a meeting, (at) which we didn't talk
about the movie at all, and then it progressed to four or five
lunches and dinners with Annette (Bening, his actress wife) at the
house and family - didn't talk about the script for the fourth or
fifth meeting, and then finally read the script!"
"I got off easy, it was a couple months," she added.
Lily reveals working with Warren was "intimidating", but in the
best sense of the word: "He's a meticulous guy, he knows what he
wants, but he's a genius and you kinda have to... allow him to do
his thing," she explained.
And the best piece of advice she received from Warren was to "let
it go".
"He said, 'Be in the moment, surprise yourself, allow yourself to
surprise others and if you can go home at the end of the night and
just feel proud that you almost don't remember what it is that you
did but it felt right, that's the best thing,'" she recalled.