Teyana Taylor expresses enthusiasm for expanding her role in Paul Thomas Anderson's 'One Battle After Another' through a sequel or additional scenes. She highlights the complexity of her character, Perfidia Beverly Hills, and relates personally to themes like postpartum depression. Taylor will receive a breakthrough performance award at the Palm Springs International Film Awards.
Teyana Taylor, known for her multifaceted career as a singer, songwriter, choreographer, actor, and director, recently discussed her role in Paul Thomas Anderson's 'One Battle After Another.' In the film, she portrays Perfidia Beverly Hills, a member of a resistance group who gives birth to her daughter Willa and then abandons her. The story jumps sixteen years ahead, placing Willa at the heart of a vast conspiracy that draws her mother's former allies back into action.
Taylor's performance stands out alongside Oscar winners Leonardo DiCaprio and Sean Penn. She collaborated closely with Anderson to develop the character, including improvising lines about postpartum depression—a topic she connects to her own experiences as a mother of two. 'I feel like it’s a topic that’s not spoken about enough. I was anxious and excited to start getting into those layers,' Taylor said.
Her portrayal of Perfidia, a driven and unapologetic woman, echoes roles like the one in her acclaimed 2023 Sundance winner 'A Thousand and One,' where she played a mother kidnapping her child from foster care. Taylor embraces such complex characters: '[Perfidia] makes decisions that we may not all agree with, but we can all agree on the fact that she’s unapologetically herself and stands 10 toes down on a lot of things that we probably wouldn’t have been able to do at one point.'
With Perfidia absent for much of the film and only referenced in a final letter, Taylor is eager to explore more. She proposes a sequel, a 'Perfidia Beverly Hills Expanded Universe,' or even a spinoff using unused footage and new scenes. 'You could literally merge the other pieces, get a few new scenes with me—and then drop it, drop it like a mixtape!' she suggested, comparing it to the approach of 'Wicked.'
Taylor's breakthrough will be honored with the Creative Impact in Breakthrough Performance Award at a January 4 brunch during the Palm Springs International Film Awards.