'The Other Boleyn Girl'
First-time feature director Justin Chadwick tapped Golden Globe winner Scarlett Johansson — like Portman a former child star — to star as Anne's younger sister Mary. And though their characters vie for the same prize onscreen, Portman insisted that the two had no such rivalry off camera.
"People are dying to pit us against each other, every interview we do, they just would love for a story of a catfight to be there," she said.
On the contrary, the two young actresses connected seamlessly as both friends and co-workers.
"I signed on first and then I was really excited," Portman said. "I've admired Scarlett since 'Manny and Lo,' I've been a fan of her since we were kids. We really were a team throughout and really wanted to be together. We had the same goal of making a great movie."
A New Look at History
History has long depicted the intrigues of Henry VIII's court and the turbulence — and treachery — of the king's many failed marriages.
The film fleshes out the characters who acted out that historical drama around the king, who is played by Eric Bana.
Insisting that "all history is fiction to some degree," Portman explained that this film is "an imagination of the relationships, based on a lot of facts and truths."
From 'Star Wars' to Star Power
Portman said that in her off-screen life she is constantly searching for ways to "divert energy" — her own and that of the tabloid-fed public watching her every move — to "something that actually matters."
Most recently, that has taken the form of Portman's social work, including a new designer line of shoes made completely without animal products.
"It makes me feel a little bit better about being in a tabloid if they are like, 'Oh, and look, she's wearing her vegan shoes' and someone's like 'Oh I'm not going to kill animals for my fashion choices,'" she said.
Reflecting on her life, Portman said that she feels "very lucky." With a career ranging from the child turned hitman in "The Professional," Queen Amidala in the "Star Wars" films, to the role of the precocious Marty in "Beautiful Girls," Portman has continued to seek new ways to challenge and reinvent herself.
For now, British history has never looked so good.