Key Points

Scarlett Johansson made the intentional choice to cast real Holocaust survivors in her directorial debut. She worked closely with the Shoah Foundation to find willing participants from the community. The survivors showed remarkable patience and engagement throughout the filming process. Eleanor the Great premiered at TIFF and is set for theatrical release in September 2025.

Key Points: Scarlett Johansson Casts Real Holocaust Survivors in Eleanor the Great

  • Cast real Holocaust survivors to authentically share their stories
  • Worked with Shoah Foundation to identify willing participants
  • Jessica Hecht helped connect with survivor community
  • Survivors were patient and engaged during filming process
2 min read

Scarlett Johansson talks about casting real Holocaust survivors in directorial debut

Scarlett Johansson discusses casting real Holocaust survivors in her directorial debut Eleanor the Great, working with Shoah Foundation to preserve their stories authentically.

Scarlett Johansson talks about casting real Holocaust survivors in directorial debut
"It wasn't really ever a question of whether we would cast real survivors - Scarlett Johansson"

Los Angeles, Sep 9

Hollywood actress-director Scarlett Johansson has shared insights on her feature directorial debut. The actress recently attended the Toronto International Film Festival.

She revealed that for her upcoming film ‘Eleanor the Great’, which stars June Squibb as the titular character, she cast real holocaust survivors for the movie to "share their stories”, reports ‘People’ magazine.

The actress, 40, told ‘People’, "It wasn't really ever a question of whether we would cast real survivors. It was more of how we can identify people that would want to participate, could participate. So, we got really lucky”.

She further mentioned, “Every time we would find someone who could participate, it was like, 'Yes, we got another survivor’. I think at the time there were like 250,000 survivors living there. Of course, every year it's much less. So, we were able to identify [that] it's a community”.

As per ‘People’, the actress noted that Jessica Hecht, who stars in the film "was really helpful actually in helping identify a couple of people" for the movie, along with the Shoah Foundation in finding people who were interested. “I have to say that the whole group was so patient”, she added.

She shared, "I don't think anybody in the group had really done a film like that before. They really were just engaged and listening”.

The newly-minted director also said that the survivors were eager to "share their stories”, adding jokingly, "They were pretty excited about catering”.

‘Eleanor the Great’ celebrated its TIFF premiere on Monday, September 8. The premiere was attended by Johansson along with co-stars Squibb, 95, Hecht, 60, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Erin Kellyman. Following a world premiere in May at the Cannes Film Festival, where it earned a five-minute standing ovation, ‘Eleanor the Great’, written by Tory Kamen, is set to bow in theaters on September 26, 2025.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Respect to Scarlett for this approach. In India we understand the value of oral history and passing down stories through generations. This preserves truth in a way that actors simply can't replicate.
A
Arjun K
While the intention is good, I hope the survivors were properly compensated and not just used for authenticity. Sometimes Hollywood exploits real stories without fair treatment. Hope this was different!
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Sarah B
As someone who studied history, this is crucial. With survivors dwindling each year, capturing their firsthand accounts is preserving history itself. Much respect to everyone involved in this project.
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Vikram M
The catering joke shows how human they are despite their traumatic past. Reminds me of our grandparents who survived Partition - they also found joy in simple things while carrying heavy memories.
N
Nikhil C
Hope this film gets a proper release in India too. Our younger generation needs to understand these historical events beyond what's in textbooks. Real stories have so much more impact!

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