VOA Special English
Emma Stone Used Dance to Prepare for Role as Billie Jean King

    2017/9/22

    American actress Emma Stone admits she has never played tennis.

    So to play the role of tennis champion Billie Jean King in the new film Battle of the Sexes, she prepared her body using a different exercise: dance.

    Battle of the Sexes tells the story of King’s 1973 exhibition match against former men’s champion Bobby Riggs, played in the film by Steve Carell. It also tells the story of King fighting for equal pay and against sexism in sports.

    Cast members Emma Stone, left, and Steve Carell pose with former tennis player Billie Jean King at the premiere of
    Cast members Emma Stone, left, and Steve Carell pose with former tennis player Billie Jean King at the premiere of "Battle of the Sexes" in Los Angeles, Sept. 16, 2017. (REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni )

    Stone, who is 28, and King, the 73-year-old tennis great, became good friends while making the movie.

    King said, “I tried to put myself in Emma’s shoes. That’s really taking a risk portraying someone who is still alive. I‘m like, ‘God, that’s a little pressure.”

    Stone won an Oscar earlier this year for her work in the musical movie La La Land. In that film, she had to sing and dance. So she practiced her footwork and body movements to play King.

    “I danced, so footwork was good. (And) I had been on stage before and when Billie Jean went out onto the tennis court it felt like her stage, so she really keyed in on that,” Stone said.

    Stone also practiced basic tennis moves like serves and cross-court backhands. But even after weeks of work, she still struggled with the simple things related to the sport.

    Stone said, ”We went to the U.S. Open ... and I was sitting next to Billie Jean, and Sloane Stephens was catching balls and tucking them in her skirt and bouncing them with the racquet.

    “It’s just little in-between stuff but that took me months to learn!”

    King herself worked with the film’s screenwriter. She recalled her experiences in the sport in the early 1970s. At the time, she was trying to establish a professional tour for women. There was also her match against Riggs.

    King beat Bobby Riggs in that famous Battle of the Sexes tennis match. More than 50 million people watched it on television.

    King says she is not surprised that women are still fighting for equal pay.

    She said, ”If you read history, you realize how slow progress is and that it’s each generation’s job to try and move the ball forward."

    “We’ve come further, but we’ve a lot further to go,” King said.

    Battle of the Sexes opens on Friday, September 22, in theaters across the United States.

    I’m Caty Weaver.

    Hai Do adapted this story for Learning English based on Reuters news reports. Ashley Thompson was the editor.

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    Words in This Story

    exhibition - n. a public display of athletic skill

    portray - v. to play a character in a film, play, or television show

    tuck - v. to put something in a particular place to hold it

    bounce - v. to hit (a tennis ball) against the court and catch its return