In The Edge of Reason, we catch up with Bridget six weeks after the end of Bridget Joness Diary. Bridget and the very handsome Mark Darcy (Colin Firth) have spent six wonderful weeks getting closer and more comfortable in their relationship. But Bridget, ever the self-analyzing young woman, cant seem to just relax and enjoy the moment. She starts to wonder, after just six weeks, where is this relationship going?
In this interview with Renee Zellweger, the Academy Award-winning actress tells what it was like to climb back into Bridgets skin. Zellweger also puts to rest the rumors she had been reluctant about gaining weight for the role, and that shed been against doing a sequel.
INTERVIEW WITH RENEE ZELLWEGER:
Were you reluctant to do this movie? What changed your mind about the film and gaining the weight again, and have you begun to identify more with Bridgets hopeless optimistic romanticism?
I try my best. I try my best, to answer your second question. About the weight issue, I don't know where the notion that I was hesitant to have that experience in the first place came from, or that I had negative feelings about the experience the first time around. I don't know where that came from. I read it myself somewhere and I don't know where that surfaced, but it didnt come from me.
It wasnt a negative experience in any respect. It contributed so much to the experience of bringing Bridget Jones to life the first time. And so I knew that it was essential in repeating the journey. It had to be authentic to me. It had to be. And if youre not going to become the character and be the character, then I dont really see the point in undertaking the experience. I wanted to have that experience and people were suggesting to me, Oh, it might not be necessary. Or, You shouldnt do as much as you did last time because its probably not healthy. For me, then it would render the experience pointless from a creative perspective. I wanted to revisit this character in every respect.
Getting to [the] point [of] deciding to go forward and make a follow-up film, it took a while. Probably because the first experience meant so much to me, and because I have so much respect for this character and also what she represents. I didnt want to compromise that in any way by following up with a film that meant nothing, just because we could. I wanted to be certain that the motivation for making this film came from a creative place. And I wanted to be certain that it was a film that was substantial enough that it could stand on its own, regardless of what had happened with the first picture. I wanted to be sure that it was a necessary film and that this character had more stories to tell.
I was more comfortable with the idea of making this film because its not a sequel in the traditional sense. There is a book that has been written and so her journey has continued and I had nothing to do with it. It was there already from Helen Fielding, obviously. So, that being said, it gave it purpose. But again, it was just being careful that we wouldnt do anything that might blasphemize the first, or how people felt about this character, because we went forward irresponsibly with her.
Do you identify with Bridget?
Im trying, like I said. I do my best. Its what I admire most about her is her ever-present optimism in the face of so much adversity. I love that shes able to laugh at herself and get back up and keep on trying. Well, I do my best. I keep on trying anyway.
PAGE 2: Renee Zellweger on the Walk, the Accent, and the Weight Gain




