Oona Laurence Biography, Age, Family, Matilda, Movies, Penny Dreadful, Southpaw, Interview

Oona Laurence Biography

Oona Laurence is an American actress best known for her appearance on Broadway,  I Smile Back, Damsel, Lamb, and Southpaw. She also appeared on television in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and Orange Is the New Black.

Oona Laurence Age

Oona was born on 1 August 2002 in New York City, New York, United States. She is 16 years old as of 2018

Oona Laurence Family

Her parents’ names are not known. She has two younger sibling sisters, actresses Aimee and actresses Jetè.

Oona Laurence Boyfriend

She is not in any relationship. She is still single

Oona Laurence Matilda

She was a member of the original Broadway cast playing Matilda in the Broadway production of Matilda the Musical.

Oona Laurence Penny Dreadful

She appeared as Little Girl in the British-American horror drama television series Penny Dreadful

Oona Laurence photo
Oona Laurence photo

Oona Laurence In Bad Moms

She was cast as Jane Mitchell, Amy Mitchell’s daughter in the American comedy film Bad Moms

Oona Laurence Movies

Year

Title

2012Wet Cement
Esther
2013Penny Dreadful
Correcting. Perplexing. Patrick.
2014A Little Game
Tumorhead
2015I Smile Back
Lamb
Imaginapped
Southpaw
The Grief of Others
Damsel
Vicky & Jonny
2016Little Boxes
Bad Moms
Pete’s Dragon
Lily + Mara
2017The Beguiled
A Bad Moms Christmas
2019Big Time Adolescence
TBAWhat We Found
TBALost Girls

Oona Laurence Orange Is The New Black

She was cast as Tiffany as a child, the role that was taken by Taryn Manning as an adult in an American comedy-drama web television series Orange Is the New Black

Oona Laurence Southpaw

She was cast as Leila Hope in the American sports drama film Southpaw and was nominated for Best Youth Performance with Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association

Oona Laurence Petes Dragon

She was cast as Natalie Magary, Jack’s daughter and Gavin’s niece in the American fantasy comedy-drama adventure film Pete’s Dragon

Oona Laurence Little Boxes

She was cast as Ambrosia Reed American dramedy film, Little Boxes

Oona Laurence Blindspot

She was cast as Maya Ahmadi in the American crime drama television series Blindspot Episode: “Swift Hardhearted Stone”

Oona Laurence Tv Shows

Year

Title

Role

2011

Celebrity Ghost Stories

Young Phyllis / Phyllis’ Daughter

2012

Louie

Spiteful Mean Girl #4

2014

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

Zoe Harris

2015

Orange Is the New Black

10 Year Old Tiffany

2016

Blindspot

Maya Ahmadi

2018

Summer Camp Island

Hedgehog / Additional Voices (voice)

Oona Laurence Twitter

Oona Laurence Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bs1ivivHMEv/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

“Sing Your Own Song” (Oona Laurence, Paige Brady, Tori Feinstein) – Lyrics for Life

Oona Laurence and Ross Partridge Interview on Lamb Movie

Southpaw – Q&A with Oona Laurence and Jake Gyllenhaal

The following questions and answers are excerpted from a conversation that followed the NBR screening of Southpaw.

Source: nationalboardofreview.org

How did you two work together on the big dramatic scenes?

Oona Laurence: Those scenes were difficult, they’re really emotional. But I had Jake’s support and Antoine’s [Fuqua] support. And since we all went through this journey together, I got to know her [Leila] more as we went on. So when we shot those scenes, I really knew why she was crying. That scene was part of the whole journey. That was helpful in figuring out why she was crying and why she was upset.

Jake Gyllenhaal: There was a lot of improvisation. When Oona first came in to read, she walked in and we started to improvise different things. In explicit detail, I remember her saying, This is Jane my doll, and that’s John, and don’t mind his long hair, and I thought, this girl is incredible and then we started to explore. Antoine and I knew the only way this relationship would feel real was if we could actually connect to each other, on a human level, not just character to character. In the courtroom scene, there’s a lot of improvisation. Antoine had hired 5 or 6 real security guards and he said, Jake get’s wild – which I do – and just make sure he can’t get near Oona. And I didn’t know that they were real security guards. Antoine will roll for a long time, and as things got heightened, I tried to get closer to her. The first take I was able to hug her, and then I wasn’t ever allowed to do that again in any other take.

It was the same thing in the scene at the foster home where she hits me. That wasn’t written, we were just talking before the scene, and I said you can hit me if you want, and she said, I don’t want to hit you. And then we started to do the scene, and your dad, who is amazing, was like, it’s okay if you hit him (laughs) and I feel like there was a connection not just between me and you but also between your dad and me and you. There was permission given to enter the scene and give all yourself to the scene, and we all shared in that.

Can you talk about the incredible physical and emotional transformation you went through?

Jake Gyllenhaal: Antoine said he was going to shoot the film like a real fight. I didn’t know how to box so I trained for 5 months, twice a day. I figured if I trained twice a day for 5 months, that would be like training for 10 months! I would’ve done 3 times a day, I was so scared I’d look silly. I learned all the techniques and we’d go to fights on weekends and Antoine would send me film. I’ve seen so many fights over the past year, not just live, but the history of fighting and I was just in that world all the time. I didn’t do much else but learn how to fight and over time I went from pretty horrible to moderately okay. I really learned the skills and it changed my life in that way. We talked about the fact that Billy was not very articulate verbally, but he was hyper-articulate in the ring. That was where he could express himself. And the only place he really felt safe to express himself with his sensitivity and his vulnerability was with his daughter.

What’s the actor/director relationship like with Antoine Fuqua on set?

Jake Gyllenhaal: He was with me every morning when I went to my training sessions. From the very beginning. We were together through and through for all of it. So by the time we got to set, after discussions about character, the script, story, there was a secondhand language between us and we both understood exactly where we were going. We were extraordinarily close. When he lets an actor into the scene, he lets you go. He says, this is your space, you can’t break this – because it’ll hurt you – but this you can break and this you can break. He literally gives you space and says, do your thing.

Oona Laurence: He really let’s us do what we want with a scene, he let’s us direct it. He will throw certain things at us to experiment with, but otherwise we’re pretty free to try what we want to do. It’s great.

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