Legendary actress Meryl Streep had a hard time filming one of her most well-known movies.
In 2006, the Oscar-winner starred in “The Devil Wears Prada” as Miranda Priestly, the mean-spirited editor-in-chief of a high fashion magazine who treated employees poorly as a way to cope with her crumbling personal life.
In celebration of the movie’s 15th anniversary, Streep and her co-stars spoke to Entertainment Weekly about their time working on the film.
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Streep, now 71, famously employed a method acting style while filming, often retaining elements of her icy character while not in front of the camera, even brushing off famous co-stars Emily Blunt and Anne Hathaway.
Streep’s character has drawn comparisons to Vogue editor Anna Wintour, who has faced rumors of being a stiff employer herself.
“I wasn’t interested in doing a biopic on Anna; I was interested in her position in her company. I wanted to take on the burdens she had to carry, along with having to look nice every day,” explained Streep.
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The screen legend also talked about the movie’s wide appeal despite originally being marketed toward women as counterprogramming for “Superman Returns.”
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“Because they’d given us such straitened circumstances to make the film with a smaller budget, this opened up and said that a ‘chick flick’ can be a huge hit with a broad audience,” she said. “This is the first movie [where] men have come up to me and said, ‘I know how you felt; I have a company, and nobody understands me. It’s really hard.’ It’s the hardest thing in the world for a man to feel his way through to the protagonist of the film if it’s a woman.”