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Anya Taylor-Joy’s got work to do — a lot of it. And the messier the better

A portrait of Anya Taylor-Joy
“All my friends are always like, ‘What are you doing?!? Take ... a ... break,’” Taylor-Joy says. “But the roles are too good.”
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
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Anya Taylor-Joy posted a brief Instagram video a few weeks ago during a car ride, her hair damp, her face smeared with dirt and her smile radiant as she laughed and announced, with a hint of astonishment, “Wow ... today was a very good day.” There were no words in the post’s caption, just a volcano emoji bracketed by two ice cubes.

Asked about the video, Taylor-Joy says, “That is genuinely, potentially, my happiest place,” and by “happiest place,” she does not mean Iceland, where the video was shot coming home from a recent day working on Robert Eggers’ latest movie, the Viking epic “The Northman,” nor does she necessarily mean a film set, though she will proclaim repeatedly and without prompting during a lengthy recent video conversation that she feels more at home working than she does at home or anyplace else.

Specifically, precisely, what Taylor-Joy wants to communicate is that her happiest place on earth is a movie set where she’s covered in grime and, with any luck, some kind of prosthetic blood, and where someone is challenging her to do something that’s physically hard so she can ignite the competitive spirit within herself and see how much she can endure. And that particular day in Iceland checked all those boxes, with the bonus of getting to swim around in the freezing North Atlantic. A very good day, indeed.

Anya Taylor-Joy is keeping busy on back-to-back projects.
(Jay L. Clendenin/Los Angeles Times)
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If this runs counter to the image you have of Taylor-Joy from seeing her in all those chic statement coats, turtlenecks and pleated skirts on “The Queen’s Gambit” or the perfect Regency-period costumes she wore in “Emma,” then you know her only from her work — which is all she wants to be known for at the moment, anyway. So that’s OK. But this is a young woman who likes to get dirty, so much so that when she was making the new David O. Russell movie earlier this year and she met the man who created her favorite brand of fake blood, who revealed this fact as he was applying the fake blood to her body, well, she just lost her mind. I live in your blood! It’s my favorite kind of blood! Thank you thank you thank you!

But, should you need further confirmation, Nicole Kidman, calling from her home in Australia, happily relates the first time she met Taylor-Joy, only at first she couldn’t believe it was Taylor-Joy because, having just arrived on the remote “Northman” set on top of a mountain in Northern Ireland, she saw a young woman, white as a ghost, dressed as a Viking, wearing no makeup, standing among hundreds of shivering extras.

“I thought, ‘Who’s that girl?’” Kidman remembers. “Then I take another look and, ‘Oh, that’s Anya!’ She’s in the mud, dressed in nothing, it’s freezing cold and the wind’s whipping around, and it was like meeting a kindred spirit. This is my kind of girl!”

Right now, Taylor-Joy, 25, seems to be everyone’s kind of girl. Her schedule is booked solid for the next 2½ years, starting soon with “The Menu,” a dark comedy set in the world of exotic culinary culture directed by Mark Mylod (“Succession”) and then moving next year to “Furiosa,” George Miller’s prequel to “Mad Max: Fury Road.” After that, she’ll reunite with “Queen’s Gambit” writer-director Scott Frank for the thriller “Laughter in the Dark” and Eggers again in a reworking of the vampire classic “Nosferatu,” the latest collaboration in a partnership that began with her first “real film,” the unnerving 2016 horror movie “The Witch.”

“All my friends are always like, ‘What are you doing?!? Take ... a ... break,’” Taylor-Joy says. “But the roles are too good. I wouldn’t be able to deal with it if I didn’t say yes. I wouldn’t cope. I’d rather just go for it and do my best.”

I wonder, though — and, who am I to say, I’ve only known her for all of an hour now — who are these friends telling her this. Within five minutes of meeting, we’re talking about the home she recently purchased, which leads Taylor-Joy to share something from her past that always bugged her. People would ask, constantly, “Where is home?” And depending on her mood, she’d answer, “Wherever I’m sleeping that night, I make home,” or maybe “Home is the people I love.” Those answers usually weren’t acceptable and, more than get under her skin, people’s reactions would make Taylor-Joy feel like there was something wrong with her in not being able to fulfill the expectations inherent in that question. Now she doesn’t care. And she’s damn well not going to be feel bad about it.

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Anya Taylor-Joy in the Netflix drama "The Queen's Gambit."
Anya Taylor-Joy plays a chess phenomenon in the Netflix period drama “The Queen’s Gambit.
(Charlie Gray/Netflix)

“My third movie was ‘Split,’ with M. Night Shyamalan, and he and I got very close,” Taylor-Joy says. “And I remember him asking me one day, ‘Are you running toward something or running away from something? Which one is it?’ I think I’m running toward something. There was the moment when I was 19 or 20, and I felt very confused just because I’d poured so much energy into characters that I didn’t know who I was any more. But through quarantine and then the months that have followed, I just like to feel useful. I don’t feel like I’m leaving myself behind as much any more.”

Where Taylor-Joy feels most useful is the set, where she naturally assumes the role of caregiver and advocate. On “The Northman,” she took on the unofficial job of “cold cheerleader,” arriving for work every day, proclaiming, “Isn’t this amazing? I know we’ve been in the ocean for hours and it’s so cold we all want to cry! But we’re making art!” (“I’m surprised someone didn’t throw me to the ground at one point,” Taylor-Joy says, laughing.)

She does this on every one of her projects, making sure everyone feels safe and sound and supported and loved. (“She seeks people out,” says “Queen’s Gambit” executive producer William Horberg, likening her talent to Cate Blanchett‘s.) Taylor-Joy thinks this caregiving instinct comes from feeling unheard and unseen as a kid, a time when she was bullied in her self-described awkward years growing up in London.

“My favorite situations are when people are self-described weirdos and they feel comfortable,” Taylor-Joy says, letting out the sound of a contented sigh. “That’s all I want to do: make people feel like whatever they’re bringing to the table is a beautiful expression of their originality.”

Anya Taylor-Joy
Taylor-Joy thinks this caregiving instinct comes from feeling unheard and unseen as a kid, a time when she was bullied in her self-described awkward years growing up in London.
(Jay L. Clendenin/Los Angeles Times)
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Taylor-Joy has spent the last few months living in Los Angeles, a place she‘d never felt comfortable. But now, having explored the canyons, she says she has found her pocket, a place she “can connect with and plant something and it will grow and bear fruit, if that makes sense.” Driving home one night from shooting the untitled Russell movie earlier this year, listening to some good music — it might have been Florence and the Machine or Kate Bush or Elliott Smith — she felt like she was going home, a far cry from when she first came to the city at 18 and, filled with anxiety, remained holed up in her hotel room.

She’s working, even when she’s not on set. Lately, Taylor-Joy has been learning how to drive a car like a badass so that she can do most of her own stunts in “Furiosa.” She’s a bit dodgy on the details (“I’m trying not to get in trouble!”), but it’s OK to say that she’s enjoying learning high-octane maneuvers under the tutelage of George Miller’s stunt team. She also keeps filling journals with her own thoughts and those of characters she’ll be playing, along with lyrics to songs she’s writing. Melodies have long coursed through her head, and she really got into making music while shooting “The Northman,” layering vocals on top of vocals to create some “pretty bizarre” songs.

“I’m very big into lyrics,” Taylor-Joy says. “My favorite music makes you think. I put a lot of thought into that, and that’s usually the aspect that makes me feel better. It’s the cathartic release when you look at a song and a poem and go, ‘Oh. That’s what that situation was.’ It’s not this amorphous cloud that I’m trying to understand.”

Anya Taylor-Joy is nominated for an Emmy.
(Jay L. Clendenin/Los Angeles Times)

One of her journals, the one Taylor-Joy kept while shooting the Russell movie (she’s sworn to secrecy) contains the long, red acrylic nails she wore in the film (“that sounds gross, and I don’t care,” she says). Taylor-Joy keeps a memento from every character she plays. From “The Queen’s Gambit,” she has a hat, a couple of pairs of shoes and some really great pants that she can actually get away with wearing in her day-to-day life. As she wrapped “The Northman,” Eggers gave her a sword, knighting her with it as he presented it.

“I do love beautifully crafted weapons, especially from a film set that have a meaning behind them,” Taylor-Joy says. “I was like, ‘Really? I get to keep this?’” Her next thought: Please don’t tell me I have to travel with this sword. Eggers shipped it to her London home, the one that she never sees, where it will someday be mounted on a wall. She’s OK just knowing it’s there. Meanwhile, works calls. Picking through her cold In-N-Out grilled cheese, Taylor-Joy circles back to that conversation she had with Shyamalan.

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“I’m definitely running ... I’m under no misguided thought that I’m taking a leisurely stroll anywhere,” she says. “Oh, no. I’m running. It’s a concerted effort. But it just fills me up so much. It makes me so happy. And I feel so lucky that I wake up at 4 o’clock in the morning and think, ‘I get to do this today!’” Then she goes to work. And she arrives home.

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