![]() ![]() I'll look after you.' And to be able to say, 'You know, there's only going to be maybe three people in the room.' That was a huge thing for him to hear – he thought there was going to be an entire crew of people whom he had become very friendly with in the room.” “So just for him to hear me say, 'I get it. I remember dreading shooting my first love scene as a 19-year-old in 'Jude.' Every day, I got closer and closer to it, I felt more and more terrified because I simply didn't know what was going to happen. “My biggest concern to be honest was that David felt comfortable. “Those scenes, of course, are tense-making,” Winslet says. And much of the first half of the intense post-World War II drama revolves around the erotic escapades between Winslet's steely character, Hanna, who is an illiterate tram ticket-taker with a secret Third Reich past, and Kross'vulnerable Michael, a 15-year-old who reads her Chekhov and other classics before they hit the sack. The young German actor had never shot a love scene before, let alone multiple ones with a five-time Oscar nominee. It all goes out the window.”īesides, Winslet, 33, says her main concern during filming was for her 18-year-old co-star, David Kross. “As time goes by and when you have children, you know, vanity schmanity. I don't have a lot of hang-ups and issues,” says the British leading lady who has become known for encouraging women to accept their bodies and reject Hollywood's obsession with stick figures. ![]() “I'm a relatively healthy person mentally. But when it came to her own skin – well, the curvaceous mother of two had no problem going buck-naked for numerous sex scenes with her teenage co-star. 'Reader' peruses lessons of love and lost idealsįor Kate Winslet, the biggest challenge of “The Reader” was getting into the emotional skin of her character, a former SS guard who has an affair with a boy half her age.
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