So I had all the technical training in place which, now when I start working other accents, I can adapt that knowledge and use it for whatever accent I need. M.R.: I did a lot of technical training a couple years ago when I was preparing to move to America, to prepare for the standard American accent. How did you master that Long Island accent? So our first encounter was a little interesting but that definitely broke the ice and we've had a great working relationship ever since. DiCaprio, and then a few minutes later we're doing our scene and I ended up getting carried away and hitting him in the face. And I walked into the room and for a heartbeat I thought, "Who is that? Someone sort of homeless-looking in the corner?" And that was Mr. We weren't in the Hamptons, we weren't at a cocktail party, we were in a studio audition room in New York, and he still had his giant beard and long hair from "Django Unchained" because he had just wrapped filming. Margot Robbie: Ha, no, it wasn't really like that at all. DiCaprio at all similar to your character's first meeting with Jordan Belfort? Yahoo Movies recently caught up with Robbie to talk about all the trappings that come with portraying a Long Island housewife in the '80s (think big hair and spray tans), why she thought DiCaprio was a homeless person when they first met, and her big year in movies, which also included her role as the English-accented first love of leading man Tim (Domnhall Gleeson) in the era-hopping family rom-com " About Time."
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