More than a competition, the actors’ prep process was about working in tandem, sharing in the journey of getting in shape and getting to know one another in a luxurious six-week rehearsal and training period in Boston. “It was a privilege to really dig into it,” Zendaya recalls, describing the rare stretch of time that these three stars could, well, play together. “I got lucky that they’re both lovely guys, kind and generous with their work and time. It created more of a safety,” she says, the inverse of Tashi’s mentality.
“Tashi goes about her confidence a little bit differently than I would suggest,” Zendaya says at the London premiere. “[The film] deals with themes of codependency—her life is so dependent on using other people that when she’s alone, she doesn’t know what to do. She’s not happy.” Tashi, despite spending the decade-plus that Challengers covers playing with her “little white boys”, is not in this for the team work. “Decimate that little bitch,” she purrs to Art in a prime example of the only kind of guidance she has, before he crashes out of the competition that begrudgingly leads him back to Patrick Zweig. Art, curled up like a soft little cat in Tashi’s lap, just wants the love she’s never been prepared to give.