elcome to Jessica Chastain Network, your oldest and most complete resource dedicated to Jessica Chastain. You may better remember her as Molly Bloom in Molly's Game or Maya in Zero Dark Thiry. Academy Award winner for The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Jessica spans her career from big to small screen, seeing her not only in movies like The Help, The Debt, Miss Sloane, Woman Walks Ahead, The Zookeeper's Wife, The Good Nurse, she also played some iconic roles for series like Scenes from a Marriage and George & Tammy. Recently she registered a podcast series, The Space Within, and had a role in Memory and Mothers' Instinct. This site aims to keep you up-to-date with anything Mrs. Chastain with news, photos and videos. We are proudly PAPARAZZI FREE!

A few months ago, she was unknown. Now she’s ubiquitous.

Jessica Chastain isn’t yet a household name, but the 30-year-old California native and Julliard graduate has turned 2011 into a remarkable cinematic coming-out party.

It started with Terrence Malick’s adventurous “The Tree of Life,” in which she played Brad Pitt’s wife and the ultimate nurturing mother figure.

She’s currently on screens in the hit “The Help,” as the ditzy but open-minded black sheep of a racist Mississippi town.

Still to come: Jeff Nichols’ festival favorite “Take Shelter,” in which she plays a long-suffering wife whose husband (played by Michael Shannon) has disturbing visions of ecological catastrophe. And “Coriolanus,” director/star Ralph Fiennes visceral Shakespeare adaptation, in which she’s the title character’s wife. And Al Pacino’s daring documentary “Wilde Salome,” the unconventional chronicle of a Pacino staging of Oscar Wilde’s “Salome,” in which Chastain plays the title character.

More? There’s “Texas Killing Fields,” a murder drama from Ami Canaan Mann, the daughter of director Michael Mann. And “The Wettest County in the World,” a Depression-era crime drama bought by the Weinstein Co. at Cannes.

Before those last five movies hit theaters, though, Chastain will show up in “Shakespeare in Love” director John Madden’s “The Debt” which opens on Wednesday.

The story follows a trio of Israeli Mossad agents, including Chastain, who track down and capture a Nazi war criminal; it flashes back and forth between the agents’ original assignment in the 1960s, and its haunting aftermath 30 years later.

“She’s got a whole bunch of movies coming out, which she’s quite nervous about,” said Madden of Chastain. “She’s not nervous about the movies themselves, but the fact that she’s suddenly going to be everywhere. The commodification of young actresses is such a desperately difficult thing to negotiate, really, because the female move star is still the biggest and best way to sell publications and other things, I’m afraid.”

Chastain spoke to TheWrap about her new movies and career.

Q: You’ve got this deluge of movies on the way. Regardless of when you shot them, you’ve got to talk about them all at once.

A: “Yeah. I have two films in every festival: two in Deauville, two in Venice and two in Toronto. Plus an international press tour for “The Debt,” plus “Take Shelter” press.

“And I’d already done a lot of press for “Tree of Life,” because of course Terrence Malick doesn’t do press. And then I had “The Help” — I did press for that and then went to the premiere the day before I started doing press for “The Debt.” It’s a good thing I like these movies.”

Q: In a way, this whole stretch began at Cannes, which must have been surreal for you. “Take Shelter” won the grand prize in the Critics Week sidebar, and then three days later “The Tree of Life” won the Palme d’Or.

A: “And there was a bidding war for “The Wettest County in the World,” which Harvey Weinstein bought! I just can’t get my mind around it. It was really my first festival like that, and I had these great characters in these really interesting movies. Of course there’s Terrence Malick and Brad Pitt, but there’s also this very small film I made for like $100 a day.

“So the fact that we take both films and we win the grand prize and the screenwriter’s prize at Critics Week for “Take Shelter,” and then the Palme d’Or for “Tree of Life,” and then there’s a crazy bidding war for “Wettest County,” I don’t think there could ever have been a better introduction.

“I’m smart enough to know it will never happen again. For some reason all the stars were aligned for that festival for me. But don’t expect this again, Jessica, because then you’re going to go crazy.

Q: As an unknown, how did you sell yourself to Madden?

A: “I knew I really had to fight for it, but I loved the script. I said, ‘I know you don’t know who I am, but I went to Julliard, I love doing accents, I’ll train in martial arts and take a German course, I’ll study the Holocaust…’

“And I had heard that it was probably going to be Helen Mirren, so I said, “…and I know it’s probably going to be Helen Mirren. She’s 5-foot-4 and I’m 5-foot-4. And you don’t want a really famous face, because you’ve got to buy that it’s a young Helen Mirren. I was really aggressive in that meeting, and a month later I had a screen test.”

Q: Is that a “be careful what you wish for” moment, when you find that you and Helen Mirren are playing the same person?

A: “Oh, I was incredibly fearful. She’s a goddess. How am I ever going to have .08 percent of the power and the force that she has?

“Having said that, she was incredibly generous with me, even though we didn’t have any scenes together.

“We worked on the accent together to make sure we had the same voice, and talked about the back story, what happened with Rachel’s family, where is she coming from, why she joined Mossad.

“And then some physical gestures. For example, there are sections where the younger Rachel and the older Rachel both answer the question, “What were you thinking at the time?” And her response both times was, “I was thinking of my mother, it helped me get through it.”

“We decided that when she says it, we would both put our hand over our heart when she says the word mother. It was Helen’s idea. She said, “It’s like a fake answer that you say over and over again. It’s kind of like when people ask you the same question during press, and you get to the point where it becomes routine, like you stop thinking of it.” And because it’s a lie, it’s absolutely Rachel playing a part.

“When you first see it you might think of it as Rachel being spontaneous, but no, this is Rachel playing a role. I don’t know if an audience will even pick up on that, but we tried to pepper the role with little things like that.

Q: Madden was talking about the commodification of young actresses, and how hard it is to avoid it. Are you worried?

A: “Yeah. I always try to stretch myself and do things that I’ve never done before. I hope I’m going to be the actor that people won’t know what to do with. Maybe that means I’ll be really bad in some films. And I’m willing to be bad in some films, because the actors that I truly love do things like that.”

Q: In June I went to the Palm Springs Shorts Festival, where I saw a short film, “The Westerner,” that starred your 12-year-old brother Daniel. You Chastains are inescapable this year.

A: “Oh, I thought he was so good in that film. He breaks my heart. I asked him afterward, ‘Do you think this is something you might want to do?’ ‘Nope.’ ‘You don’t want to make any more films?’ ‘No, I’m good.'”

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September 1, 2011   Luciana