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"When you're acting, you have to be able to move your face. You have to be able to communicate your emotions through your expressions, and I would hate to have that taken away. I've no intention of getting carved up or injected, thank you very much."
Had she had any such work done, it would have been particularly difficult to pull off some of the exhilarating acting moments she achieves in Todd Field's film Little Children, based on Tom Perrotta's searing novel of the same name, about a group of young married couples stifling in middle-American suburbia.
In this hot-house atmosphere, Kate's character, Sarah, begins to lose her mind as the other petty-minded 'perfect' mothers sit in judgment on her mothering skills, or lack thereof.
"I love those scenes - they did turn out very nicely," Kate said of the explicit sex scenes, before noting, "even though we were very nervous about doing them."
There's a brilliant high-wire moment of anxiety where she has to discuss Madame Bovary's adulterous behaviour and yet not let on that she's engaging in the very same thing.
The movie has been included in next month's London Film Festival, and Kate has two others coming out this year: The Holiday, a glossy studio comedy in which she stars with Jude Law, Cameron Diaz and Jack Black, and a smaller part opposite Sean Penn and Jude Law, again, in All The King's Men.
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