With her dark hair and fine features, Kristen Stewart would make a great vampire — but in “Twilight,” she only dates one. Stewart plays Bella, the human Juliet to Edward’s vampire Romeo, in the teen romance, and the way she bites into the role has helped make her AccessHollywood.com’s latest Rising Star.
The L.A.-bred 18-year-old actress got her start alongside Jodie Foster in 2002’s “Panic Room” — an auspicious beginning for a child star who has worked consistently since. But no role has been as big as “Twilight,” a sensation that has made her a star among readers of Stephenie Meyer’s novels well in advance of the film’s release on Nov. 21.
“It’s a very passionate book so it makes sense that the audience would be as hardcore,” Stewart said. “They’re already going crazy over the hot vampires.”
“(I) lived with the first book,” she said. “For like three months or however long that was, and I haven’t been able to move on.”
As “Twilight” readers have discovered, it was hard for her not to identify with the character.
“Bella is sort of easy for every girl to relate to,” she said. “You feel like you are her when you’re reading the book. It’s a total vicarious experience — she really encompasses like the best very fundamental female qualities. She’s a little insecure but she compensates, she likes herself and she trusts herself.”
And she’s infatuated with Edward — a vampire as lonely as he is chiseled.
“There’s like chapters dedicated to descriptions of his jaw line (in the book),” Stewart said. “She’s just obsessed with this guy.”
Robert Pattinson, whose hair has already reportedly caused near-riots during Q&A sessions for the film, filled the role nicely.
“He was so different from everybody else that came in (to audition),” she said. “He’s very responsive, he sees and he listens. And that’s very important, that you’re not acting in a scene by yourself.”
“What I found really difficult was to keep the push and pull between the two characters and what it feels like to be around him specific and acute,” she said. “He’s not like some guy you have a crush on. Literally, you want him so bad, it hurts. It’s like a magnetic draw.”
Judging by the hordes of fans lining up to see the film, she’s not the only one being pulled in. As with most teen idols, female fans of the series have been possessive of Pattinson.
Source : http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27706367/
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