I think you've under-exposed this shot, and the shadows have been pushed way, way down onto the bottom part of the "toe" of the film's characteristic curve. That's why I think it looks soooo contrasty: the shadow areas did not get nearly enough exposure. If this is a scan of the negative, then with most scanners it's going to look not optimal, since the shadows are basically, clear areas on the negative. Most color negative film should have a pretty good, generous exposure for the shadows. I have NOT shot the new formulation of Portra, but my gut feeling tells me to set your meter 2/3 of an ISO step LOWER than the rated ISO, to ensure more shadow bias.
You don't mention how you are metering your color neg shots, but metering is kind of a big deal in terms of how it is done, and what you read off of, and what kind of meter, and what Exposure Index you shoot the film at if not using the nominal ISO value. Without more info, it's tough to give a lot of concrete advice, except "exposure for the shadows", so there's some "meat on the bones" when the film goes into the scanner. If for example, you "peg a highlight" by using an incident meter and measure the flash on her forehead, with the dome aimed right at the main light, that exposure is going to be at the least, two stops too LITTLE for those shadows...and the shadows at that incident light/forehead reading will be verrrry thin on detail, and the film will be pretty clear in those shadows. Same thing if you shoot a digital capture and "peg" the highlight value of an in-camera JPEG--that's not the right exposure amount needed for NEGATIVE film...but it is close to right for positive film or digital JPEG.