New photoshoot photo, article and IANOWT Q&A on Twitter tomorrow!

This photo was posted on the Netflix Instagram account earlier today. Photography by Emman Montalvan. Click on the photo to see it full size.

And Popbuzz also posted a new article on their website today –> Sophia Lillis: 11 facts about the I Am Not Okay With This actress you need to know

Also, be sure to check out this post on Twitter about the IANOWT cast doing a Q&A tomorrow:

Posted by Veronique on February 25th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Gallery - I Am Not Okay With This - Photoshoots
Vanity Fair (March 2020)

Sophia is featured in the March 2020 issue of Vanity Fair.

SEEN IN Gretel & Hansel and It Chapter Two
UP NEXT I Am Not Okay With This, on Netflix this month
Dream closet: Hannah Montana’s rotating walk-in closet
Favorite destination: Ireland
Greatest indulgence: Sleep

Posted by Veronique on February 21st, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Gallery - Magazine Scans - Photoshoots
UNCLE FRANK q&a World Premiere Sundance Film Festival

Posted by Veronique on February 20th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Uncle Frank - Videos
Decider.com Interview & Build Studio appearance (27 Feb.)

Decider posted an interview with Sophia Lillis and Wyatt Oleff on their website today.

How Sophia Lillis and Wyatt Oleff’s IRL Friendship Inspired the Core Relationship of ‘I Am Not Okay With This’

When you’re talking about Netflix’s new series I Am Not Okay With This, IT is bound to come up.

That’s because IT and IT: Chapter Two stars Sophia Lillis and Wyatt Oleff are reunited in I Am Not Okay With This as awkward friends Sydney Novak and Stanley Barber. Syd is a grieving teenager struggling with her ambivalent feelings towards her own innate superpowers. Stanley, on the other hand, is an all-too normal boy who is crazy cool because he’s not cool. Together, the two make a perfect odd couple and their chemistry zings through the series’ first season.

During a visit to the show’s Pittsburgh-based set, Decider got to chat with the cast and creative team behind I Am Not Okay With This. According to Lillas, Sydney has a lot in common with the Molly Ringwald characters of the Brat Pack era, while Oleff shared that Stanley is loosely based on Pretty in Pink‘s Duckie. As it turns out, Lillis and Wyatt were cast not because of their resemblance to John Hughes’s characters or their work in IT, but thanks to their real life friendship.

Read the rest of the interview on Decider.com!

And on Thursday 27 February Sophia and Wyatt will be interviewed at Build Studio between 1:00PM and 1:30PM. So if you’re from New York and are free that day, you can buy tickets HERE and maybe see both Sophia and Wyatt there!

UPDATE: I also added a magazine scan from Sophia in Harper’s Bazaar Australia (March 2020) to the gallery. Click on the photo to see it full size:

Posted by Veronique on February 19th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Gallery - I Am Not Okay With This - Magazine Scans
‘I Am Not Okay With This’ Star Sophia Lillis Takes On The Bustle Booth

Source: Bustle.com

When celebrities hang out with Bustle writers, we want to give them the chance to leave their mark. Literally. So we hand them a pen, a piece of paper, a few questions, and ask them to get creative. This time, I Am Not Okay With This star Sophia Lillis is leaving her mark in the Bustle Booth.

Sophia Lillis should be taking a midterm right now, but she didn’t have time to study. Early this morning the high school senior flew back to New York City from Sundance, where her film Uncle Frank, which also stars Paul Bettany, got picked up by Amazon. She’s promoting Gretel & Hansel, a moody retelling of the classic Brothers Grimm tale, and a new Netflix series, I Am Not Okay With This, based on Charles Forsman’s graphic novel. It’s not that school isn’t important to Lillis. It’s just that so much else is important to her, too.

“I’ve kind of gotten used to the whole trying to talk to the teachers and figure out a way to do [schoolwork and acting],” the 18-year-old It actor says as her mom looks on from across the room. “I’m just looking [to end] the school year with passing grades [so I can] continue with acting.”

Lillis talks about acting with a certainty that belies her age. By 7, she’d already started ruling out other visions of the future. “First of all, I couldn’t do any sports,” she says. “I couldn’t remember any of the rules.” Her twin brother had quickly emerged as The Smart One. “I even saw that and thought, Wow, I’ve got nothing.”

Lillis cast her net wide, trying dance classes and singing. While she liked the arts, she insists she wasn’t improving as fast as the other kids. Around that same time, her stepfather recruited her to perform in a short movie he was making for film a class. “I dragged a red wagon around New York,” she remembers. “That was it. That was the whole thing.” Fast forward 11 years and that seemingly random afternoon spent roaming Times Square in a Halloween costume feels like a turning point. “That was the first time I really had a lot of fun doing something, and other people noticed, and I started taking acting classes.”

Watching her twin fill out his college applications this year has only reaffirmed Lillis’ choice. Far from growing tired or burnt out by a decade of performing, she’s more eager to do good work. “Whenever I look for a script it’s like, is it a good story? Is it a good character?” she says.

“You don’t usually see that, actually. Sometimes you get some roles where the girl is just mean, and without a reason to be mean. That old angsty teenager thing without a reason to be angsty, and I always feel like that isn’t totally accurate, being a high schooler myself. I’m not that angsty, am I?” Suddenly a teenager again, Lillis looks to her mom for confirmation. She shakes her head. “Nice,” Lillis says. “That’s good.”

Click on the gallery link below to see the photos full size.

Posted by Veronique on February 19th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Gallery - I Am Not Okay With This - Photoshoots
Variety Video

Every year the line-up of the Sundance Film Festival is filled with powerful stories from independent filmmakers from around the world. Because many of them brought us to tears, Variety decided to ask the actors and filmmakers behind this year’s Sundance films what was the last movie to make them cry.

Plenty of classics were thrown out. Actress Sophia Lillis of “Uncle Frank” named Peter Weir’s Dead Poets Society. “Uncle Frank” director Alan Ball said “I have a go-to movie if I ever need to cry, and that’s ‘To Kill a Mockingbird.’” His actor Paul Bettany followed up by saying he had just watched the Gregory Peck-starring drama with his daughter and cried as well.

Posted by Veronique on February 19th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Videos
PopCulture and Vogue Australia interviews

Sophia was interviewed by PopCulture and Vogue Australia about her upcoming Netflix show “I Am Not Okay With This”.

PopCulture: ‘I Am Not Okay With This’ Co-Stars Sophia Lillis and Wyatt Oleff Reveal What Went Into Their ‘It’ Reunion (Exclusive)

It co-stars Sophia Lillis and Wyatt Oleff may have ditched the creepy clown in I Am Not Okay With This, but they’ve kept a dynamic on and off-screen that made them a perfect fit for the upcoming Netflix series.

From the people behind hit shows Stranger Things and The End of the F—king World, Lillis and Oleff star in the “irreverent origin story” of teenage girl Sydney (Lillis) trying to juggle her relationships with friends like Stanley (Oleff) and mysterious superpowers. Dropping on Netflix Feb. 26 and also starring Sofia Bryant (The Good Wife), Kathleen Rose Perkins (Episodes), Aidan Wojtak-Hissong (Falling Water) and Richard Ellis, the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-filmed series was developed from a graphic novel by the same name by Charles Forsman.

Lillis told PopCulture. com on a visit to set that having Oleff with her on this new project has been a bit of a comfort as she made her way through the filming of the first season.

“It’s been fun. I love him so much, and I feel like it’s always good to get to know people,” Lillis said. “That’s kind of the whole thing in acting with new projects. In new projects, you get to know more people and expand, but it’s also really nice to have someone you know so you don’t have to go [in alone], even though I love it.”

Reflecting on his relationship with Lillis from It’s first iteration to It Chapter Two, Oleff revealed that the two really bonded when they had more one-on-one time doing press for the Stephen King novel’s film the first time around due to the pure number of people on set during the actual filming. When Lillis was cast as Syd in I Am Not Okay With This, producers immediately noticed their real-life friendship and chemistry on and off-screen and immediately knew they had found their Stanley.

Dipping into the dynamic between Syd and Stanley, Oleff felt a certain kinship to his character, whom he built by drawing on John Cryer’s iconic Pretty in Pink character, Ducky.

“How my character relates to Stan and Syd’s kind of dynamic is just like, in real life, it’s kind of my duty to annoy her,” Oleff admitted. “Stan does it anyway, but he doesn’t mean to, but he does it. And it’s not on purpose or anything, but after a bit, she’s just kind of like, ‘Ugh,’ in the best way possible. She still views him as a nice friend, but just some stuff he does, just some little quirks he has, just make her a little annoyed.”
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I Am Not Okay With This comes to Netflix on Feb. 26.

Vogue Australia: Rising star Sophia Lillis on Netflix’s new sci-fi drama I Am Not Okay with This

At 17, Sophia Lillis has achieved more than many actresses twice her age. She came to prominence as Beverly in the 2017 horror It and 2019 sequel It: Chapter Two, in which Jessica Chastain plays her as an adult. She also appeared as the younger version of Amy Adams’s character in the HBO thriller Sharp Objects and the titular sleuth in Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase. Her next project is darker still: a supernatural Netflix series in which she stars as Sydney, a teen struggling with anxiety, rage and familial grief. Ahead of the show’s premiere on February 26, we meet Lillis to discuss filmmaker John Hughes, graphic novels and the golden age of complex high-school dramas.

I Am Not Okay with This is both a black comedy and a sci-fi drama. How would you describe it?
“Essentially, it’s about a high schooler trying to overcome the usual hurdles, juggling problems at school and at home. Then, she figures out that she has super powers which reveal themselves when she gets emotional or angry. She’s pretty angsty so it’s really not a good mix.”

It’s also about Sydney’s relationship with her friends Dina [Sofia Bryant] and Stanley [Wyatt Oleff], who you worked with on It and It: Chapter Two. What was the casting process like?
“I auditioned, got a callback and got onto the project early. That meant I could do read-throughs with other actors, including for the Stanley and Dina roles. I got lucky because Sofia is great. While doing read-throughs, we talked in between and she was so sweet and funny. I feel like the casting people clocked that. Plus, I’m so happy I got to work with my friend Wyatt. Sydney and Stanley need to have good chemistry because they are so close, so having him in that role was amazing.”

Were you a fan of Charles Forsman’s graphic novel which I Am Not Okay with This is based on?
“I’d heard of it before I joined the project because I’d watched The End of the Fucking World [the show based on another Forsman graphic novel and created by I Am Not Okay with This’s director, Jonathan Entwistle]. Then, I went back and read both novels. I Am Not Okay with This is tricky to adapt because you have to balance the darkness and the humour. Jonathan is great at that.”

What were the biggest challenges when it came to playing Sydney?
“She thinks of herself as almost dysfunctional, but in reality she’s dealing with it all rather well. She is overwhelmed by her problems, so she shuts down and is in denial for most of the series. She’s also very awkward which makes her relatable. You can see she’s trying to do her best, trying to control her emotions, trying to live a normal life, but not everything goes her way.”

Sydney’s breakdowns are so intense and often difficult to watch. Were they exhausting to film?
“I think it’s so much harder for the crew than it is for me! When Syd’s having a breakdown and her powers make the wall crack open, the crew are the people who have to make sure the cracks open right on time and that all of it looks real. I’m just there acting and watching them work [laughs].”

The show is packed with pop-culture references. What did Entwistle share with you in advance?
“Jonathan said he wanted to add a John Hughes element to the show, so I watched Pretty in Pink, Sixteen Candles and The Breakfast Club. I also watched some [Italian film actress] Giulietta Masina films. Jonathan didn’t ask me to, but I like to watch her before starting any project. She’s my childhood favourite.”

Complex, and sometimes dark, high-school dramas have dominated TV for the past few months – from Stranger Things and Sex Education to Euphoria. Why have they been so popular?
“I’ve seen bits of those shows, though I haven’t watched Euphoria yet. My friends keep telling me that I have to watch it. What I like about them, especially Stranger Things, is that they show kids actually playing their own age. I Am Not Okay With This does that too. It means there’s less of a disconnect, because as a kid watching the show you can actually see yourself in the characters. It’s so different from seeing a 25-year-old playing a 17-year-old. I used to watch high-school shows when I was in middle school and I would think, ‘I’m supposed to look like that and act like that when I’m older’. When I finally got to high school I thought, ‘Oh god, what happened?’ [laughs]. These shows feel more authentic, more real – except, of course, I don’t have super powers.”

The show also focuses on Sydney grappling with her own sexuality. Why was that important?
“It’s something so many kids go through in that period of their life. It’s a time when you’re trying to figure out who you are, so I think it needs to be in there and we need to talk about it.”

Will there be a second season of I Am Not Okay with This?
“I sure hope so! Besides that, I’ve got a few other things coming out: [the fantasy horror] Gretel & Hansel and [a comedy called] Uncle Frank. Last year I went from working on one thing straight into another and now it’s all coming out at once, so that’s really fun to see. After that, I have another project coming up, but I’m not sure how much I can say on the topic just yet – but it’s a Western!”

I Am Not Okay With This is on Netflix from February 26, 2020.

Posted by Veronique on February 14th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - I Am Not Okay With This
FBE video interview

https://www.instagram.com/tv/B8PPqhBpOQD/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

I also made screencaps from Sophia in this video. Click on the gallery link below to see all caps.

Posted by Veronique on February 13th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Gallery - Screencaps - Videos
New Straits Times Interview

#Showbiz: Dark twist to a classic

SHE’S only going to be 18 on Feb 13 but Sophia Lillis has already made a big impact on moviegoers worldwide.

The American actress from New York City turned heads with her portrayal of Beverly Marsh in the recent big screen Stephen King adaptations of It.

After the horror films — It (2017) and last year’s sequel It 2 — Lillis had also starred in the acclaimed HBO drama series Sharp Objects, where she played the younger version of Amy Adams’ character.

Not wanting to break her momentum, the young actress now takes on the lead role in the unnerving new psychological thriller, Gretel & Hansel.

Blowing the dust off the Brothers Grimm classic, the new film from writer-director Osgood Perkins (of I Am The Pretty Thing That Lives In The House fame), features Lillis and newcomer Sammy Leaky going up against Alice Krige’s (Carnival Row, Star Trek: First Contact) mysterious witch after taking one very wrong turn in the woods.

As psychological thrillers go, Lillis’ latest work is an emphasis on old-school, slow-burn tension – here playing a young survivor whose perception of her off-kilter world seamlessly segues between reality and fantasy, fable and nightmare, imagination and hallucination.

If Gretel & Hansel is any indication, we can expect much more from Lillis in the years to come.

Below, she talks about the new film and her career so far.

Read the rest of the intervie at the New Straits Times website.

Posted by Veronique on February 7th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Gretel & Hansel
The Hollywood Reporter interview

How ‘It’ Star Sophia Lillis Became a Horror Go-To Before Finishing High School

The actor, in theaters with ‘Gretel & Hansel,’ recently found herself at a crossroads about acting: “I’m turning 18 soon, and I have to start thinking about what I want to do with my life.”

Gretel & Hansel star Sophia Lillis has accomplished quite a lot since her breakout role as Beverly Marsh in 2017’s It. Whether it’s playing a younger version of Amy Adams’ character on Sharp Objects or serving as the foundation for Jessica Chastain’s portrayal of Beverly in It Chapter Two, Lillis’ resume of five films and two series is made all the more impressive by the fact that she’s still a few months away from graduating high school. With Gretel & Hansel in theaters and a new Netflix show debuting Feb. 26, Lillis recently made a big decision about her future.

“I’m turning 18 soon, and I have to start thinking about what I want to do with my life: if I want to continue acting or stop for a little bit and go to college. I’ve thought a lot about it, and I’ve decided I’ll stick with this,” Lillis tells The Hollywood Reporter. “This is a good job to have, and I really enjoy it. As for the horror thing, I would like to try new things… but I don’t mind horror at all. In fact, I’ve come to actually like it, but I never saw myself as the main horror girl.”

Given how sympathetic Beverly Marsh was in It, it’s no surprise why fans of the horror genre have taken to Lillis like they have. Even Chastain was enamored with Lillis. “I remember watching it with the other boys, and they were like, ‘She acted just like you! She does the same things that you do,'” Lillis recounts. “And I was like, ‘Oh, I didn’t know that. I guess she did.'”

In a recent conversation with THR, Lillis also discusses the particulars of shooting Gretel & Hansel, spending time with Adams and Chastain and reuniting with her It co-star Wyatt Oleff for their new Netflix series, I Am Not Okay With This.

Read the rest of the interview on the The Hollywood Reporter website.

Posted by Veronique on February 7th, 2020
Articles & Interviews - Gretel & Hansel

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