Vanessa Eng, who grew up in Jericho, appears in the...

Vanessa Eng, who grew up in Jericho, appears in the movie “Bugonia” with Emma Stone. Credit: YellowBellyPhoto

Vanessa Eng fully expected to become a lawyer, but now all evidence points to her becoming a successful film actor.

The 27-year-old performer who grew up in Jericho is about to make her feature film debut in director Yorgos Lanthimos' dark comedy "Bugonia," which opens in Manhattan next Friday and on Long Island Oct. 31. In the movie, she plays the dutiful assistant to a high-powered CEO (Emma Stone) who is kidnapped by two thugs who believe she's an alien.

And in a turn of events that seems as quirky as any scene in one of Lanthimos' typically surreal films, Eng wasn't even aware of what the film was about when she answered the cast call and then won the role.

"The casting director called me and said 'You got it.' And I didn’t even know who it was for, I was just sobbing hysterically. It was like somebody saw me and is giving me a chance," Eng, who now lives in London, told Newsday in a phone interview. "And then she said, "Yorgos really liked your take on the character,' And I was like, 'Yorgos, what are you talking about?' " 

Getting to work with two-time Oscar winner Stone, whom Eng calls Emily, was a truly rewarding experience, she said. "She makes your job easy. She's such a great actor that it just comes naturally when you’re opposite her."

Eng especially loved witnessing the interaction between Stone and Lanthimos, who'd previously worked together on "The Favorite," "Poor Things" and "Kinds of Kindness" as they'd work through scenes. And Eng also relished her moments on the set with Lanthimos. "Yorgos is one of those directors who’s like 'You guys do your own thing and if I have a direction I'll tell you.' But he rarely does that. He very much trusts his actors in the process."

Collaborating with such high-caliber talent was a long stretch from Eng's first acting venture, when she played Dorothy in a fourth-grade production of "The Wizard of Oz." She got cast, Eng recalled, because the teacher thought she was "loud and obnoxious enough" to play the lead. "I said, 'I don’t think that’s what Dorothy is.' But I think their feeling was that I wouldn't be afraid to do this in front of a crowd." Eng said. "It was super fun but I remember being a lot more nervous than I thought I’d be."

She waited five more years to try again, this time in a school production of "Seussical: The Musical" as Vlad Vladikoff, a "human bird running around onstage," she said. When she played her first dramatic role in high school, she was hooked. "The first day I set foot onstage, I said my lines and I thought, 'I love this.' It felt like a really transformative moment for me."

Still, when it came to time for college, her parents convinced her that law would be a safer career choice than acting. But even after getting a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Miami and a dual master's at Sciences Po and the London School of Economics in international security and international relations, respectively, Eng knew she'd rather be on a movie set than in a courtroom.

In her last year at graduate school, she took some acting classes and appeared in a few short films, which led her to answer that fateful "Bugonia" cast call.

Eng just signed with a manager and an agent in the United States, which she hopes will open even more doors. And even her parents have no problem with her career change.

"When I told my mother I got the part," Eng joked, "she said 'Tell Emma Stone I say hello.' "

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited Digital AccessOnly 25¢for 6 months

ACT NOWSALE ENDS SOON | CANCEL ANYTIME