Bryce Dallas Howard.Photo:COURTESY APPLE

COURTESY APPLE
Bryce Dallas Howardmay be known to most for her varied acting roles, but she’s slowly been building a second career for herself as a director — and fully intends to continue to play dual roles in Hollywood.
“I love directing and it’s as important to me as acting and it’s always been happening in the background,” theArgylleactresstells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.
Bryce, 42, helmed the 2019 documentaryDads, as well as several episodes of multiple Star Wars series, includingThe Mandalorian,The Book of Boba Fettand the upcomingStar Wars: Skeleton Crew.
She tells PEOPLE she looks to fellow multi-hyphenates likeRobert RedfordandJon Favreaufor inspiration. Bryce also, of course, eyes her own father’s successful transition from onscreen to behind-the-camera work.
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“My dad never intentionally shut off acting, he just started directing full time and he still even talks about it. He’s like, ‘Oh, I’d love to act,’ " shares Bryce of her father, Oscar-winning director andHappy DaysalumRon Howard. “But he makes zero time for it. For me, I hope it’s something where I’m lucky enough to do both in some capacity.”
Ron Howard.Lawrence Schwartzwald/Sygma via Getty

Lawrence Schwartzwald/Sygma via Getty
Bryce says she has shadowed Ron on-set to glean inspiration from his approach. She asked to be a fly on the wall as he directed 2018’sSolo: A Star Warsstory — a request he was “not really into” at first. Her past experience and interest in working with special effects companies and emerging technology on projects likeJurassic Worldfranchise (which shared some of the same crew withSolo) helped sway him.
“My pitch was like, ‘Really? I know everyone. Please. I just finished working with everyone for the last six months,'” she recounts. “I was like, ‘The crew is not going to be uncomfortable with me. I promise. I’ll be invisible.’ "
Bryce Dallas Howard and Ron Howard.Daniele Venturelli/WireImage

Daniele Venturelli/WireImage
A notably inclusive environment was also present onArgylle, her spy action comedy out Friday. Director Matthew Vaughn was “so generous and so open,” says Bryce, and allowed her into his process. “What’s funny is thatArgylleis a movie about spies and in my life, I’ve always had this perspective that it’s like, infiltrate the set. Learn, learn, learn as much as possible,” she tells PEOPLE.
No matter what, Bryce sees every opportunity in the industry as a positive step in her overall journey: “It’s been really wonderful to lean more into gaining experience than finding that perfect one thing,” she says. “And I love to work.”
source: people.com