'Little Women' first look: Emma Watson leads an all-star cast for Greta Gerwig's remake
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Little Women
(L-R) Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Saoirse Ronan, and Eliza Scanlen as the March sisters.
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Little Women
Saoirse Ronan as Jo March and Timothée Chalamet as Laurie, her best friend. “Jo is a girl with a boy’s name, Laurie is a boy with a girl’s name,” writer-director Greta Gerwig said. “In some ways they are each other’s twins.”
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Big Little Lies star Laura Dern as Marmee, the March sisters’ matriarch, who is raising the four girls on her own.
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Little Women
Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Saoirse Ronan, Eliza Scanlen in Little Women.
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Greta Gerwig, the writer and director, on set with Meryl Streep, who plays the sisters’ rich Aunt Josephine.
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Little Women
Saoirse Ronan reteams with Lady Bird director Greta Gerwig, and co-star Timothée Chalamet for Little Women, but this time the romantic tables are turned. “I loved that in Lady Bird, he was the one that broke my heart, but I got to break his heart in Little Women,” she said in an interview with Vanity Fair.
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Former Home and Away star Eliza Scanlen had a star-making turn in HBO's Sharp Objects, and will make her film debut as Beth March.
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Director/writer Greta Gerwig gives instruction to Emma Watson, the oldest March sister, who for this scene, borrows a fancy dress from rich friends and gets drunk on champagne at a ball.
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Saoirse Ronan says making Little Women was extra special for her as an only child. “I got to have sisters,” she told Vanity Fair.
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Emma Watson as Meg March, the eldest March daughter. Watson replaced Emma Stone who dropped out of the film to focus on press commitments for the Oscar-winning The Favourite.
Actor turned writer-director Greta Gerwig is following up her Oscar-nominated film Lady Bird with a new adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s seminal novel Little Women.
Saoirse Ronan and Timothée Chalamet, stars of Gerwig’s semi-autobiographical first feature, are back for the film based on the 1868 novel about a family of sisters on their journey from childhood to womanhood, and they’re joined by Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Eliza Scanlen, Meryl Streep, Laura Dern and more.