Tue. Nov 5th, 2024
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Before Sigourney Weaver could return to Pandora, she had to go back to school. 

In “Avatar: The Way of Water” (now in theaters), a sequel to James Cameron‘s 2009 sci-fi adventure, the three-time Oscar-nominated actress plays Kiri, a 14-year-old Na’vi alien. Kiri is the daughter of Dr. Grace Augustine, Weaver’s scientist character, who was killed in the first movie. After Grace’s death, Kiri was adopted as a baby by Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and Neytiri (Zoe Saldaña).

To prepare to play a teenager, Weaver sat in on classes at New York’s famed LaGuardia High School for the Performing Arts, where she observed a wide range of adolescent behaviors. 

“I was just sitting on the side (of the classroom) listening to the pitch of the voices: everything from a childlike voice to an adult voice,” Weaver explains. She never participated in class exercises, though: To the young acting students, “I was just another actor. They had their own stuff to do.” 

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Kiri (Sigourney Weaver) is a 14-year-old Na'vi girl who's in touch with nature in "Avatar: The Way of Water."

When “Avatar 2” picks up, Kiri is searching for answers about her father’s identity while trying to unravel why she’s different from other Na’vi kids her age. Over the course of the film, she learns to harness powers that are tied to the natural world and Eywa, the life force of the planet Pandora. 

Cameron approached Weaver, 73, about the new character way back in 2010. “I wanted to get the band back together,” says Cameron, who first directed Weaver in 1986’s “Aliens.” 

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