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For 23-year-old Ciara Bravo, ‘Cherry’ is a star-making role

Twenty-three-year-old Kentucky native Ciara Bravo has been working in entertainment for more than half her life starring in Nickelodeon shows and getting bit parts in movies, but with a leading role in the new Apple TV+ movie “Cherry,” she's finally found herself on the brink of stardom

Via AP news wire
Thursday 11 March 2021 08:56 EST
Ciara Bravo Portrait Session
Ciara Bravo Portrait Session (2021 Invision)

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Ciara Bravo didn’t have high hopes for her prospects when she saw the names attached to “Cherry ” She’d been working in the business for over a decade, but it was mostly in television and bit film roles. No way, she thought, was she going to be cast to star opposite “Spider-Man” himself, Tom Holland in a major film based on a bestselling memoir about PTSD and opioid addition from Marvel maestros Joe and Anthony Russo

“It was SO out of my league,” Bravo said in a recent interview.

She sent in a tape anyway and for four weeks she didn’t hear a word. When her agent texted saying he had news, her first thought was that he was going to drop her. Not because of him, she said, “He’s wonderful.” It was just her anxiety.

Then he dropped the bombshell: She got the role. No second audition. No meeting. No chemistry test. The tape was that good.

“When Ciara’s audition came to us at AGBO, we said, ‘Stop the presses,’” said Tom Larocca, a producer and the co-founder of the company. The Russos even claim they knew after 20 seconds.

It’s not unlike the revelation many have had or will have once they see her in the film, which is currently in theaters and hits Apple TV+ on Friday. Earlier this year, Robert Downey Jr. declared himself “her new biggest fan” and waxed poetic about her raw and vulnerable performance as a woman who gets drawn into addiction along with her partner, Cherry. Yes, it’s Holland’s big foray into more adult films. But it’s Bravo who steals the show. Now, at just 23, she’s on the brink of stardom.

Bravo hails from Alexandria, Kentucky, just across the river from Cincinnati. When she was around 8, she was spotted by an agent at a county fair who asked her mother if she was interested in acting or modeling.

“It sounds fake, I know,” Bravo laughs. “And also, like, the scariest start to any story.”

But soon after she and her mother started taking trips to Los Angeles for auditions. About four years in, she got her first big break in the Nickelodeon series “Big Time Rush” and then in the channel’s movie “Jinxed.”

“I feel very lucky that my mom never put too much weight or pressure on it. She was very clear that the second I stopped enjoying acting, we didn’t have to keep doing it,” Bravo said. “I think that allowed me to just thoroughly enjoy the experience and just play and figure out what this world was and if I wanted to live in it or not.”

As she booked other things and started to learn more about the craft of acting and building a character, she realized she loved it and there was no turning back. At 18 she made the decision to forgo college for the moment and move to Los Angeles. More TV roles followed, notably on Fox’s “Red Band Society” and some films, too, including the indie “The Long Dumb Road” and the Netflix anorexia drama “To The Bone.” But “Cherry” was the game-changer.

In the book, her role, Emily, is only seen through Cherry’s eyes, which the filmmakers knew was a problem for the movie. Bravo credits the screenwriters Angela Russo-Otstot and Jessica Goldberg for helping turn this idealized projection into a flawed, three-dimensional person. Then she took it to the next level.

“When Ciara came aboard, we felt there was a full character behind her performance, one we hadn’t guessed at,” Anthony Russo said. “She brought vulnerability and a fierceness to her that was unpredictable.”

Bravo dove headfirst into the preparation, reading everything she could and dissecting the script while on the Calgary set of the FX series “A Teacher.” She even went to Cleveland a few weeks early to visit a rehab facility to try to understand more the life of an addict.

“I know without them being very frank and honest about what it looked and felt like to battle a beast like heroin addiction, I wouldn’t have been able to do a quarter of the work that I did on this project,” Bravo said.

It was a hard shoot that required intimacy coordinators, drug consultants and a lot of trust between her and her collaborators. The Russo brothers, she said, always checked in with her to make sure she was feeling safe. And, of course, she had Holland.

Forging the relationship with her co-star was, "The easiest part of the whole process,” she said. “He’s got such a great heart and he’s an absolute joy to be around. He’s just this warm, bubbly guy.”

In the few weeks before the shoot, they went to dinners with the cast and the crew and spent many days just sitting on his patio or his couch, watching movies and TV over cups of tea and talking about life. Among their selections: A lot of “New Girl” and Disney’s “Aladdin.”

Now, Bravo is thinking carefully about her next move. She’s been grateful for the time and space over the past year to reflect on where she wants to go from here. And the opportunities are already starting to light up now that “Cherry” is out. She’d like to direct at some point, maybe even a documentary. But for now it’s all acting.

“That’s where my true passion lies,” Bravo said. “And I want to keep riding this train for as long as possible and see where it takes me.”

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Follow AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ldbahr

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