Cate Blanchett: ‘I set alarms all the time. It’s the only way I can remember to do things’

Cate Blanchett covers the latest issue of Harper’s Bazaar UK, where she’s promoting TAR, which will likely get her another major Oscar campaign. I was startled to realize that Cate is 53 years old now – she exists, in the zeitgeist, as someone who is either 42 or 29 and nothing else. She looks amazing though. She’s taken care of her skin, that’s why. Cate and her husband Andrew Upton split their time between Australia and England, although I think the family is primarily based in the English countryside these days. Cate references that in this interview, plus she talks about environmentalism and how she views her career and a lot more:

Environmentalism: “Often, the language around climate change is about sacrifice. But when you go out to the theatre – or to a movie, or an art gallery – and you have an extraordinary time, and you laugh, and you cry, and you’re entertained, and you eat wonderful food, and then you think: ‘Oh my goodness, my carbon footprint was pretty close to neutral,’ that’s beautiful. If you grapple with these things creatively, you can have beautiful but practical solutions that actually benefit us all. It’s not a sacrifice – it’s an opportunity.”

Her phone is constantly beeping with alarms & messages: “This is what my life is like,” she says, laughing at what she calls her ‘early-onset dementia’. “I set alarms all the time. It’s the only way I can remember to do things.”

The actress life: “When I was young, I thought acting was something you did for fun. Maybe I still think that? It wasn’t about building a career; it was doing these random things. Being an actor has staved off the inevitable decision about what I have to do with my life, because I’ve empathetically stepped into various different experiences, whether they’re fantastical or based in the real world. I think I’m probably quite shy, and I find that the best way to get to know people is through making things together. It’s a way of having very active, visceral, engaging conversations with people. It keeps me social.”

On cancel culture: “People often talk about left and right, up and down, right and wrong, good and bad. I don’t think in those terms. Art exists in the grey area. I don’t know the answer to this question, but it’s a conversation that we must have, as artists, as humans, as a society. How do you remain in a robust and brutal relationship with the thing that you are making? You have to have a powerful inner critic, and sometimes that can come out. I have been spoken to in ways that now I could probably go to HR and complain about, but those conversations that were had with me early on in my career made me a better actor. It’s important we speak honestly with one another.”

Domestic life in England: She and Upton have four children, ranging in age from 20-year-old Dashiell, who’s studying film at university in the US, to Edith, still at primary school. “They enjoy a sense of anonymity here, which I’m grateful for,” she says. During lockdown, the Uptons bought a mini electric jeep to amuse the children; when I ask how Blanchett relaxes, she laughs about driving it around the garden with the dogs in the back. The previous afternoon she had donned a linen apron and wandered up to her greenhouse to decant honey, pick apples and cut sunflowers, and was almost late for the school run as a result. “I completely lost track of time. It’s a humbling experience, trying and failing to grow things! But then, when you get seven strawberries, suddenly everyone’s so excited, and you’re like, who wants half a strawberry?”

[From Harper’s Bazaar UK]

It’s crazy to think that the great actress of her generation just bums around her mini jeep in her English garden and tries to grow strawberries. That being said, I bet the disconnect is great for her. She’s always been like that, throughout her career too – she dipped out to have babies, went back to work like nothing happened, dipped out to spend more time with her family, and on and on. She’s still so in-demand as an actress too – Bazaar listed all of the stuff she has coming out or that she’ll start working on soon, and she’s got so much going on!

As for this – “I have been spoken to in ways that now I could probably go to HR and complain about, but those conversations that were had with me early on in my career made me a better actor.” The ends don’t justify the means, Cate. Just because you feel stronger and more resilient because you survived some sh-tty stuff doesn’t mean that every woman will survive it? It’s like she’s saying: toughen up, snowflakes. And that’s just… wrong.

Covers courtesy of Harper’s Bazaar UK.

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14 Responses to “Cate Blanchett: ‘I set alarms all the time. It’s the only way I can remember to do things’”

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  1. Colby says:

    I wonder if Cate has ADHD? Using alarms is a strategy I use to remember to do things or be on time as well.

    • ohhey says:

      Same! For me, it’s not only the forgetfulness that makes me have to set alarms. It’s also the hyper-fixation and how it messes with my perception of time. Sometimes when I’m working on something eight hours can seem like two.

    • Case says:

      Ha! I came to say the same thing. One of my greatest ADHD hacks is using my Reminders app constantly. Thoughts come and go through my mind so rapidly that if I don’t make a reminder, I’ll forget it completely.

    • Qtpi says:

      Came here to say I wonder if she has ADHD and see I am in good company! 🙂 I was diagnosed at 38 with the inattentive only version. Life changing. And I use alarms all day long.

    • liz says:

      That was my first thought, too. Kiddo has ADHD and it’s a constant refrain around here – “did you set a timer/alarm?”

  2. s808 says:

    Not alarms but if it’s not on my google calendar, you can forget me remembering to do it.

  3. girl_ninja says:

    Setting alarms on my mobile is one of the only ways that my ADHD mind can get things done. Love that Cate the Great uses them too.

  4. Nicegirl says:

    Same girl, same. I have hard time with the sound of the alarms but I do need the reminders. Smdh. I love the mental images of her living her life in the garden, being late to the school run, spending time with the kids and dogs, just taking an angelic sabbatical from monitoring the cosmos to learn about life as a regular human, as opposed to her natural state, lol. Goddess takes a holiday. I disagree w the level of mean honesty convos being necessary, take that shiz to HR ladies.

    La Blanchett!!! 💕 🖖

  5. Mabs A'Mabbin says:

    But in a way I get what she’s saying with that unfortunate wording. Look around, people are behaving like feral animals. Openly. Hate speech, guns, all of it. Before, that shit was subdued and mostly hidden throughout commerce at all levels. We’re not talking street crime here. Oh but it was big and there in almost every building across wherever land and politely shoved in our faces. God forbid the office went out for drinks. Holy shit does alcohol enable.

    Had I not experienced, and survived, I couldn’t have been an advocate for women in my orbit. I’m tiny, but I’m loud and can be vicious. When I said stop, I had a wealth of wisdom embedded in that “stop” for the man, or men, to get off that woman.

    It’s wonderful how this is such a generational conversation, because it’s taken centuries to f*cking get where we are. You think my grandmother told me anything about misogyny, racism, evangelical fascists? A woman who went through two world wars, the great depression, the dust bowl, a few more wars, information age? We need to listen to every woman’s version and respect their experiences. Unless of course they’re denying our progress and admonish and oppress our existence (GOP?).

  6. Pointillist says:

    Fantastic actress but her feminist politics are rubbish. Look at her response around Woody Allen and even around #metoo so to the poster up there no I don’t have to listen to every woman’s experience when they minimise or think a legal only response is the best way.