This Barbie is glad she didn’t party.
Oscar winner Anne Hathaway revealed that she felt “lucky” that her “Barbie” film never got unboxed.
“What’s so exciting about what Greta [Gerwig] and Margot [Robbie] and that phenomenal team [did] is they hit a bullseye,” Hathaway explained during an appearance on the “Happy Sad Confused” podcast Monday.
“The bullseye caused the entire world to reach this level of ecstasy,” the “Devil Wears Prada” actress continued. “Now imagine that version … that much energy, that much anticipation, that much emotion … but it’s not the right version. I actually think of it as a lucky thing [it didn’t get made.]”
Hathaway was initially supposed to star as the iconic Mattel doll after comedian Amy Schumer backed out over creative differences.
By October 2018, the project was ultimately scrapped after Sony Pictures’ bid on the rights lapsed. “Barbie” was later optioned by Robbie, 33, and Warner Bros., who then brought Gerwig on to direct.
“Margot is sublime,” Hathaway praised on Monday. “What she is doing as a creative person and a producer is so exciting and inspiring.”
“The mythic giants they toppled with [‘Barbie’] that have kept certain narratives in place that have not allowed opportunities to develop for so many people … they ran right through it,” the actress gushed. “Just as a cinemagoer and as a woman in Hollywood since I was a kid, I’m thrilled by the development.”
According to the “Les Misérables” actress, Robbie and Gerwig, 40, ended up making “the best possible” version of “Barbie.”
“If I believed that the version I was attached to could have done that, I might feel differently about it,” the “Ocean’s Eight” star admitted. “It’s easy just to be thrilled and happy [for them]. I love watching women kill it. To do so well, so undeniably that they actually had to write new records … come on! I think it will probably make things better.”
Even though Hathaway didn’t achieve any billing for the role, she understands that the “right role finds the right person.”
“Sometimes it’s you and sometimes not,” the “Ella Enchanted” star mused. “When it doesn’t happen, trust deeper and keep going … it sounds maybe corny, but you really do have to keep it grateful.”
Gerwig’s film, which now leads the 2024 Golden Globes with nine nominations, grossed $1.4 billion at the box office worldwide and inspired numerous online trends in conjunction with the release of Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer.”
“Never in my wildest dreams did I imagine something like this,” Gerwig previously said about the film’s massive success. “I wanted to make something anarchic and wild and funny and cathartic, and the idea that it’s actually being received that way, it’s sort of extraordinary.”
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