Julia Roberts has spent decades as the embodiment of Hollywood charm, grace, and that radiant, unmistakable smile. From the effervescent Vivian Ward in Pretty Woman to the witty, self-assured characters in Notting Hill and Erin Brockovich, she has defined an era of film with her magnetic presence. Yet, in August: Osage County, Roberts left behind everything that made her a cinematic icon and stepped into territory that demanded vulnerability, rawness, and emotional exposure unlike anything she had tackled before. In Bartlesville, Oklahoma, the 44-year-old actress became Barbara Weston — a woman unraveling under the weight of family dysfunction, personal grief, and the unrelenting pressures of returning home to confront long-buried resentment.