Oscar Roundtable: Brad, Leo, Helen & Co.
Newsweek sat down with Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Forest Whitaker, Helen Mirren, Penelope Cruz, and Leonardo DiCaprio for their Oscar Roundtable at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood. Watch the videos here; check out the transcript after the jump! Two excerpts below…
How strippers changed Brad Pitt’s life: “Yeah, my job was to drive them to bachelor parties and things. I’d pick them up, and at the gig I’d collect the money, play the bad Prince tapes and catch the girls’ clothes. It was not a wholesome atmosphere, and it got very depressing. After two months I went in to quit, and the guy said, “Listen, I’ve got this one last gig tonight.” So I did it, and this girl—I’d never met her before—was in an acting class taught by a man named Roy London [a famous acting coach]. I went and checked it out, and it really set me on the path to where I am now.”
When Penelope Cruz knew she was famous: “One day I came out on the street for a walk with my dad, and somebody screamed from a car, “I love you!” And a minute later, somebody else screamed, “Whore!” [Laughter] Then I knew I was famous.”
What did your parents think when you told them you wanted to be an actor?
HELEN MIRREN: My parents were very against the idea, so I trained as a teacher for three years. I was a horrible, really bad teacher. I didn’t become a professional actress until I was about 22.
FOREST WHITAKER: My parents really wanted me to go to West Point—something practical like that. Ten years into my acting career they were still trying to get me to go back to school. I wasn’t making much money, and sometimes really struggling, but I was, like, “No, Ma. This is what I want to do.” Those were difficult conversations because I had my own doubts. It took me a long time to feel comfortable thinking, “I’m an actor. I can do this.”
Cate, is it true that your first acting job was as an extra in an Arabic boxing movie?
CATE BLANCHETT: I was at university studying fine arts, and I took a year off and went traveling. I had 2,500 Australian dollars, which is nothing, and I traveled for a year on that, so I ended up in places like a bunker in Istanbul with water dripping from the ceiling. Later, I was staying in this place in Cairo. I literally had no money, and some Scottish guy who was printing money and passports in the foyer said, “Do you want to earn five Egyptian dollars?” It wasn’t to sleep with anyone. It was to be an extra in this boxing movie, so I said, “Sure.” They had free falafel.
MIRREN: We’re all in it for the free food, actually. We are all, in our hearts, out-of-work actors.
It seems every actor, no matter how successful, thinks he’ll never work again. Do you feel that way, Brad?
BRAD PITT: Not really, no. [Laughter]
You all had some surprising early jobs before you became actors. Forest was a classical tenor. Helen was a sort of carnival barker.
PITT: I had a job driving strippers around.
LEONARDO DICAPRIO: Really?
BLANCHETT: Just last month.
PITT: I love her. Yeah, my job was to drive them to bachelor parties and things. I’d pick them up, and at the gig I’d collect the money, play the bad Prince tapes and catch the girls’ clothes. It was not a wholesome atmosphere, and it got very depressing. After two months I went in to quit, and the guy said, “Listen, I’ve got this one last gig tonight.” So I did it, and this girl—I’d never met her before—was in an acting class taught by a man named Roy London [a famous acting coach]. I went and checked it out, and it really set me on the path to where I am now.
A stripper changed the course of your career.
PITT: [Nods] Strippers changed my life.
We’ll see that in the National Enquirer next week.
PITT: [Looks toward the ceiling] I just want one week off. Just one.
Leo, you made your first film, “This Boy’s Life,” at 16. What was that like?
DICAPRIO: I didn’t know how to conduct myself on a film set. The director, Michael Caton-Jones, really took me under his wing. He said things like, “When you’re rehearsing with Robert De Niro, you don’t talk about what baseball cards you’re collecting.”
MIRREN: I was like a rabbit in headlights for years on film sets, not understanding who was doing what, and how you’re supposed to behave. It is a terrifying environment, really.
Penelope, in “Jamón, Jamón” you played the daughter of a prostitute, and you became a sensation, and a sex symbol, at 17. What was that like?
PENELOPE CRUZ: One day I came out on the street for a walk with my dad, and somebody screamed from a car, “I love you!” And a minute later, somebody else screamed, “Whore!” [Laughter] Then I knew I was famous. It was unbelievable. I was 16 when I made the movie. I didn’t tell my parents, and I was hiding the script from them. Then they took my grandmother to the premiere, and I always felt bad about that. But the movie was good, and it did a lot of good things for my career. Every role I accepted after that I was covered up to here. [Raises her hand to her neck]
Leo, you became a teen idol at an early age also.
DICAPRIO: I had a brief run at that on television, being thrown on the cover of teen magazines, and I was trying to work away from that. I wanted to establish myself as an actor who put a lot of thought into his characters and did good work. And then I did a movie called “Titanic,” and there I was, right back into that position of being looked at as another piece of cute meat.
PITT: That you are. [Laughter]
DICAPRIO: It was pretty disheartening to be objectified like that. I wanted to stop acting for a little bit. It changed my life in a lot of ways, but at the same time, I can’t say that it didn’t give me opportunities. It made me, for the first time, in control of my career. But yeah, it was weird.
Brad, Hollywood wanted you to be a conventional leading man. You didn’t.
PITT: Acting is about discovery, for me, and these “leading man” scripts—Leo can testify to this—they’re all the same guy. You can plug any one of us into it and you get a variation on a theme, but anyone can do it. Where is the discovery in that?
BLANCHETT: So did you guys look to a relationship with a director to help champion the way out?
DICAPRIO: I definitely sought out the relationship with Martin Scorsese. It was important to me to find somebody I could trust. It’s a weird thing to put your performance in another person’s hands. We so often sit in rooms with directors and you hear their vision about a specific project, but there’s a huge difference between what they say and what actually shows up on screen.
PITT: Do directors want you to [play a version] of them?
DICAPRIO: Sometimes you get that feeling, yeah.
MIRREN: It doesn’t happen to women. You get to play their fantasy instead. But you know, [the industry] is always trying to put you in a box, and you’re always having to fight your way out of it. They don’t want you to grow up or grow older or change, so it’s great when a role comes up that allows you to take that next step. It happened with me on “Prime Suspect.” Suddenly I was allowed to look like a woman of the age that I was. I didn’t have to have glamorous lighting. I didn’t have to wear makeup. It was fabulously liberating, and it’s really why I’m still working, because I was allowed to step forward.
Forest, you’ve played roles that weren’t actually written for black actors.
WHITAKER: I had moments where the directors were open enough to let me do that, yeah. In “Good Morning, Vietnam,” my character was written as a nerdy Jewish guy. In “The Color of Money,” the character was originally a Yuppie.
DICAPRIO: Was it really? That character was stellar. I remember seeing you in “The Color of Money” at a very young age, going, “Who is this guy?”
WHITAKER: I was a replacement. They fired somebody, and I flew in and auditioned. That’s how it happened.
MIRREN: My husband [Taylor Hackford] directed … what was it called? Oh, God, I forgot the name of it. Famous movie with Debra Winger?
“An Officer and a Gentleman.”
MIRREN: Thank you. The Lou Gossett Jr. role was written for a white man, and Taylor forced the studio to cast Lou. Lou won an Oscar for it, in fact.
Which movie made you want to become an actor?
CRUZ: Pedro Almodóvar’s “Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!” I was 13 when I saw that movie. I came out of the theater completely fascinated. I started to become obsessed with Pedro, and I decided then to become an actress.
BLANCHETT: The only role I wanted to play was Lucy in “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.” I also wanted to be Gregory Peck.
PITT: I remember sneaking into “Saturday Night Fever,” and it had a profound effect on me. [Laughter]
MIRREN: The first movie that caught my imagination was “L’Avventura,” by Antonioni. Until then I had seen only Rock Hudson/Doris Day movies, and I wasn’t into them very much.
WHITAKER: When I was a kid there weren’t a lot of black actors working in films, so acting didn’t seem like a possibility. The first actor I remember being struck by was Sidney Poitier.
DICAPRIO: I tried to get an agent when I was around 7. I was a break-dancer and had a mohawk, and I was rejected. I knew I wanted to be an actor, but it wasn’t until “This Boy’s Life,” when I was 16, that I started to research quality films. I remember watching James Dean in “East of Eden.” I said to myself, “Wow, I didn’t know it was possible to give a performance this good.”
PITT: Although you were extraordinaryon “Growing Pains.”
DICAPRIO: Thank you, buddy. As were you.
Leo, didn’t you get thrown off the set of “Romper Room”?
DICAPRIO: Yeah, when I was 3 years old. I ran up to the camera and started shaking it, saying, “Look at me!”
Dustin Hoffman famously asked Laurence Olivier once what acting was all about, and Olivier replied, “Look at me, look at me, look at me.”
MIRREN: I hate being looked at.
BLANCHETT: I think it’s probably “Look into me.” What we perceive to be naturalism or realism has been utterly eroded by so-called reality television, where people are performing themselves. But what we do, actually, is unmask and reveal what it means to be human, and allow someone in. It’s taken me a long time to allow myself to be exposed in front of a camera.
PITT: Acting is really a team sport. A lot of times one actor will become the MVP, but just like in tennis, your game is elevated if you’re playing with someone better. I mean, just look at the way Cate compensated for George Clooney in “The Good German.” [Laughter]
Are there roles that you look at and think, “I wish I could have played that”?
DICAPRIO: Tons. Burt Lancaster in “Sweet Smell of Success.” De Niro in “Taxi Driver.”
CRUZ: Either of the two women in “Terms of Endearment.” Carmen Maura in “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.” Shirley MacLaine in “The Apartment.”
BLANCHETT: Anything Elizabeth Taylor has ever done.
MIRREN: It’s not that you want to play the role; you’re inspired by it. It’s not as if you’re sitting there going, “Oh, I would have been better.” [Pause] Well, sometimes you are. [Laughter]
BLANCHETT: There’s a moment in “A Streetcar Named Desire,” where Vivien Leigh has just gone into the bathroom, and Marlon Brando’s banging on the door, and she opens the door and his hand flinches. It’s the most astonishing shot. This guy that Brando could have played with complete brutality, and [instead he shows] his vulnerability, in that hand.
DICAPRIO: I wanted to ask everyone something: we all talk about being “in the zone”—becoming our character—but there are so many technical things that happen when you’re making a movie, it’s impossible not to realize that there’s a camera there, and your character has to emote this specific emotion. Those moments where it all disappears, and you’re really speaking as this other person? I’m lucky if that happens more than once on a movie.
PITT: I find alcohol helps. [Laughter]
When you’re watching a movie, are you always aware of the actors’ technique, or can you get lost in it the way we do?
MIRREN: Completely lost.
BLANCHETT: Well, I didn’t get lost in “Battlefield Earth.”
Was there a role you’d wished you’d played that you didn’t?
BLANCHETT: I’ve been lucky in a way. In school I was tall and my sexuality was dubious. I was always playing men. And then my nationality has been dubious, having played Elizabeth I quite early in my film career. So I feel like I got some weird and wonderful choices.
PITT: [To DiCaprio] Our sexuality has been dubious as well. [Laughter]
Would you care to discuss that?
PITT: No, there’s been enough discussion.
BLANCHETT: We have photographs.
Was there a role that caused you more anxiety than others?
BLANCHETT: They all scare me. But I tell myself that anxiety is just misplaced excitement. You’re constantly risking failure, so I never watch the films I’m in. That way, I always feel like, “OK, that worked.” I had an experience on “Babel” which I’ve never had shooting a film. I thought, “God, that was a really great take.” And then I saw the film, and the whole scene was played on Brad. [Laughter]
Helen, do you know what Queen Elizabeth thinks of your portrayal of her?
MIRREN: Of course I don’t.
Has she seen it?
MIRREN: I’m sure. Who could resist? Someone who is very close to the queen, a great historian named Robert Lacey, said he thinks she would have said, as the credits rolled, “That wasn’t too bad, was it? I think I’ll have a gin and tonic.”
PITT: How did you start shaping her? She’s got this great fireplug walk, and your glasses were always halfway down the bridge of your nose.
MIRREN: Obviously there’s a lot of film on her, but it’s of her in her formal role—hardly anything behind closed doors. Playing a real character, you have to behave likea detective and see things that maybe no one else has. She’s unbelievably composed, but on the films I noticed that her thumb is always turning her wedding ring round and round and round. There’s this inner beat, this tension.
When you’re creating a character, do you need to find something external like that? Penelope, in “Volver”—
CRUZ: I know what you’re going to ask.
You wore a padded butt for your role.
MIRREN: I had a padded butt in “The Queen,” as well. It wasn’t just Penelope.
CRUZ: Oh, I’m so happy! Now every time someone asks me this, I’m going to say, “Helen had one, too.”
Did the butt help?
CRUZ: Completely. Pedro and I didn’t talk about it. Maybe a one-minute conversation. It just made me work in a different way, move in a different way. It was like finding the right shoes for the character.
You’ve all done some impressive accent work in your careers. Cate has done three different ones this year. Is it a hurdle to get over when you’re building a character?
WHITAKER: Accents help me figure out how to move, how to gesture. I think sometimes when an actor’s accent doesn’t work, it’s because it isn’t connected to the body.
MIRREN: Until you nail the accent it is paralyzing. You can’t act—you can’t do anything—because all you can hear is your voice making the wrong sound. What’s even more difficult is what Penelope has done. I think to act in a foreign language is the most unbelievably difficult thing. I can’t imagine it.
Penelope, your first English-language film was “The Hi-Lo Country.” Was that scary?
CRUZ: Oh, so scary. I didn’t understand a word [director] Stephen Frears was saying. He’s very sweet, but he has a very strong accent, and I only knew my dialogue for the character. I was always going to the bathroom to cry and coming back and trying to hide it.
Brad, your Irish Gypsy accent in Guy Ritchie’s “Snatch” is so great that we can’t understand a word you’re saying.
PITT: That was last-minute, night-before, full-panic mode. I kept trying to get the dialect—I probably started a little late—and it was just too stiff. I went to Guy the day before and said, “You’ve got to do this part. I can’t do it.” And he’s, like, “Yeah. Right.” But it occurred to me that the genius of what Benicio Del Toro had done in “The Usual Suspects” was that you couldn’t understand what he was saying a lot of times. So about midnight, I started walking around the North End of London, working on it and working on it, and it just kept getting more and more indecipherable. Thank God it worked.
BLANCHETT: I never think of accents as something that’s slapped on. It’s syntax and rhythm and breath. It’s about when people choose to pause, what words they emphasize. You can say it’s accent, but it’s actually thought process. It’s got to be organic. And I think the earlier you can start the better.
Brad. [He mimics being stabbed in the heart.]
MIRREN: You’re absolutely right. It’s not something that you glom on the top, as if language and accent are separate. Americans are always saying, “Oh, I love your accent.” I don’t have the bloody accent. You’ve got the accent. [Laughter] No, I never say that. I say, “Thank you so much. How sweet of you.”
Do you feel differently about your work than you did when you started acting?
PITT: When I started I had this idea that the films I did defined me, and that my life would be interesting based on the characters I’d chosen. I don’t feel that way anymore. I’m a father now. There are other things that are important to me. I was chasing something that wasn’t fulfilling. I caught myself on the phone the other day—Leo has been playing some real strong men these last few years—and I found myself saying, “I want to play more of a man.” I got off the phone and I thought, “No. Live like a man, and the movies will follow.”
WHITAKER: I had to learn to not divorce my life from my work. My work is a continual process of growth for me; it’s an expansion of myself. In the last couple of years, I’ve been taking things I learn about myself in my work and using it to be more completely there for my kids, my family, my friends. It’s flowing in a complete way. It has been a bit of an awakening.
DICAPRIO: Man, I’ve got to get some kids, huh? I only really started enjoying acting when there was a certain level of detachment from the end result. I remember being 15 and going on 160 auditions, and not getting a single role for a year and a half. I realized I was turning into one of those Hollywood kids: “Hi, I’m Leo! And I’m going to be reading today! Oh yeah, I had a great day at school! I love school!” [Laughter] I had become a product of this system where everyone is aiming to please the director, the casting director, whomever. So I started to think about the character—the work—instead of the result. You know, kids are always asking me what they should do to become actors. You give them the pat answers: “Study your lines. Work hard. Don’t give up.” But what I want to tell them is, “You have to not care what these people think about you.”
MIRREN: You were lucky to learn that at 15. Marlon Brando’s great acting advice was, “Don’t care too much.” I never understood that, because I cared so much, and still do. But what he meant was, let go of that total investment in “Are they going to love me?” “Am I going to be good?” F—- that. Maybe that’s what Brad is saying as well.
PITT: Yeah, but it took me 800 words to say what he did in four.
You’re all rich. You’re all famous. You’ve all received critical acclaim. Why work? Why keep acting?
DICAPRIO: I love it. There’s no other art form in the world that affects me more. There’s nothing that I walk away from feeling transformed by the way I do with cinema. There’s something so gratifying about being burned into celluloid and knowing that I can look back later in life and have stories about those experiences. It’s an amazing gift.
WHITAKER: It’s magic. Who wouldn’t want to be a part of that?
CRUZ: It gives me so much happiness to know that I will never know everything about acting. That fear of not knowing will always be with me, no matter what happens.
PITT: It’s the love for the story, and a respect for the business. I want to be better in it, and better for it. I’m still striving for that. And I believe in the power of films.
BLANCHETT: Krzysztof Kieslowski said that filmmaking is a conversation with an audience. When you’re connecting with other people, it’s utterly thrilling. I feel alive when I’m acting. It’s tragic, but true. I would die in a rehearsal room if I could.
Helen, what keeps you acting?
MIRREN: Money. [Laughter] And it’s incredibly good fun. Of course, there are some intense artistic reasons, but I’m not going to go into them. So, yeah, fun and money.








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1,036 Comments
Golden Globes boost box office fortunes
“Babel,” from Paramount Vantage, increased its ticket sales 500 percent from last weekend after the film, an ensemble piece featuring Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett, won best drama honors at the Globes.
The film, which initially didn’t make the list of top 20 box office earners, jumped to 12th place this weekend with $2.3 million, according to studio estimates, bringing its 13-week take to $24 million.
read more …
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispo/entertainment/16518376.htm
I was suprised that the reply to an e-mail I sent the writer blasting her for that nasty comment said that Angelina Jolie is lucky to have me as a fan.
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What a moron.
565
? Says:
January 22nd, 2007 at 9:49 am
omfg you guys can’t really think that Brad has not said I love you to Angelina?
Hello, He gave up EVERYTHING to be with Her.
He owes the public nothing, Their love is not meant for public consumption.
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I totally agree with you. All these so called Angie fans who want Brad to declare his luv for Angie TO THEM, he owes you NADA!!!
Judging from their appearances, Angie is satisfied with all his PRIVATE declarations of luv to her. He wants to keep it between the two of them. If that makes him a coward in your eyes, then so be it!
~They are trying to put the pressure on them so they will split up. It will not work.
None of this bad image stuff bothers me. This is nothing new. Same oh ****,different day. Same old opinions from thr press. It’s starting anew because they were absolutely stunning and fabulous at the Golden Globes. Beauty brings out Jealousy and Envy. Jealousy is as creul as the grave. They are trying to bring them down. They will buildyou up,just to take you down. Don’t worry. It will not work.
Peace~
Thanks JJ, Nice interview, Brad is a funny guy, hope he wins
575
ANSWER THE HATERS Says:
January 22nd, 2007 at 10:06 am
I agree with you ! If totally ignored and didn’t fight back when it’s becoming so nasty from the haters, this site might become another perez hilton or female first.
I’d bet my life on the fact that when we see Brad whispering to Angelina in the pics, he is whispering I love you.
Keep the positive news coming!! Give us all the good links. We have been blessed with lots of them this past month. Keep your commentary positive and eliminate or use acronym or a code, if you have to refer to those people. They love to see their names in print, or being discussed here. Do not give them the satisfaction.
My message: We love Brad, Angie and the children!!!!
PITT: Acting is about discovery, for me, and these “leading man” scripts—Leo can testify to this—they’re all the same guy. You can plug any one of us into it and you get a variation on a theme, but anyone can do it. Where is the discovery in that?
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Nice quote by Brad. I wonder if Brad ever adviced this to his X during those years when they were together. bcos it seems his X was playing the same old, same old Rachel in very movie.
He owes the public nothing, Their love is not meant for public consumption
“Yes, you are right.
But I want to here it.
Once”
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This sense of entitlement really boggles the mind!
No wonder RC and the rest of the media/tabloid hacks also expected Angie to present as they wanted her to. Her feelings or Brad’s feelings should not factor into the equation at all. Its about what the public at large wants, not what B&A wants.
Well, see/hear this-
http://i3.tinypic.com/4i1kino.jpg
It is luv, baby!
47
Alexanderina Says:
January 21st, 2007 at 9:58 am
I love the Oscar Roundtable Discussions, this is one of my favorite part, just love this part, tells you how far this man has come and grown, way to go Brad
Do you feel differently about your work than you did when you started acting?
PITT: When I started I had this idea that the films I did defined me, and that my life would be interesting based on the characters I’d chosen. I don’t feel that way anymore. I’m a father now. There are other things that are important to me. I was chasing something that wasn’t fulfilling. I caught myself on the phone the other day—Leo has been playing some real strong men these last few years—and I found myself saying, “I want to play more of a man.” I got off the phone and I thought, “No. Live like a man, and the movies will follow.”
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Hey Alex, I love that quote. Thank God he is no longer being held back by a selfish partner that cares about nothing but herself.
Why do we have to hear Brad declare that he loves Angie? Hasn’t it been said time and time again that action speaks louder than words? To me, their actions since they came out together as a couple at the TGS premiere is enough for me to SIGH SWOON and DROOL over them as a couple to die for.
In 2006, when they were together but there was not much PDA, everyone was screaming for them to show some PDA. Now that they have actually shown a lot of PDAs, people now want to hear them say that they love each other. Sheesh, some are just never satisfied.
Brad has given up his Golden Couplehood and his status as Golden Boy of the MiniVan Majority and the lovers of America’s Sweetheart == he has even jeopardized his career standing to be able to be with Angie and the kids. If this doesn’t say out loud that he loves Angie with all his heart, I don’t know what will.
498
May Says:
January 22nd, 2007 at 6:42 am
Love your informative post about the work and effect of Grameen Bank. I so agree. I’ve been following the work of Grameen bank for many years. The whole idea of micro credit empowering the impoverish is tremendous. The reality that the impoverish that they empowered are mainly women (I read that about 90% of their loans are made to women because they were a better credit risk). There was an article that reported that the work of Grameen bank in giving loans to women were actually changing the shape of an otherwise male dominated society.
Someone asked how they could donate to the Maddox Jolie Pitt Project. Try this link from Wildaid.
http://www.wildaid.org/index.asp?CID=6
Just follow the instructions. You should note though that they don’t have Maddox Jolie Pitt Project listed, but they list a number of sub-organisations that you can donate to including wildaid Cambodia or ACAP Cambodia etc. Take a look. Hope this helps
Rotflmao….this is a joke, yeah? I mean the people who want BP to declare his love for AJ to them? What is this….Melrose Place? Do you think if you wish for it and be vocal about it, the Writers or TPTB will incorporate it into the “Script”? Honestly, I believe some people are beginning to think AJ and BP’s lives is just another soap opera.
People like Caryn James think they’re writing reviews on a show….that’s the only explanation for her less than accurate account of the GG Red Carpet walk. As someone already pointed out, it says a lot that a movie critic chooses to write about the demeanour of an actress whose sole reason for being there was to support her man. Yeah, Ms. James did not write about Forest Whitaker who went home with the Best Actor trophy or Jennifer Hudson….a relatively new comer to the scene. Nah, those things, those people aren’t as interesting as AJ giving Ryan Seacrest a cold shoulder. Is it any wonder we have crappy movies like “Epic Movie” shoved down our throats?
I know it’s been said already but I’d like to say it again….Please, please can we not waste time on this?
584
jq Says:
January 22nd, 2007 at 10:39 am
PITT: Acting is about discovery, for me, and these “leading man” scripts—Leo can testify to this—they’re all the same guy. You can plug any one of us into it and you get a variation on a theme, but anyone can do it. Where is the discovery in that?
=====================
Nice quote by Brad. I wonder if Brad ever adviced this to his X during those years when they were together. bcos it seems his X was playing the same old, same old Rachel in very movie.
**************************
So true. This is why we know X has limited talent, because she plays Rachel Green in every damn role.
STARDUST,TEAM LARA CROFT,CLINIQUA,PASSING THROUGH,AFRICAN GIRL,LYN CAMPBELL AND OTHER RESPECTED BLOGGERS AT JJ.
PLEASE READ MY POST #498.
I WANT YOUR FEED BACK. IF YOU DON’T AGREE WITH ME, I AM FINE. IF YOU THINK I AM PREDICTING TOO MUCH, HUH,ITS OK WITH ME!!
141
abigail Says:
January 21st, 2007 at 2:10 pm
The real lou….the Babel Box-Office went up for Babel…it earned 2.3 million this weekend up +444%
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I had no doubt what so ever, that Babel would make a lot more money after the GG, I don’t think some people even knew about it, It was never really advertised. I think it will even make lots more
look at the good company braddy’s keeping! so, since this was an oscar’s roundtable, is this a hint that braddy’s gonna be getting that all-important phone call?
With strong loving fans such as this, Angie and Brad and their children will do fabulous. This is a solid couple, do doubt about that. So the haters can just stew in their ugly bitterness.
I think people who hate injustice, should stop buying the publications that slander and libel people. Stop giving them your hard earned money. I use to buy them until I realized that these people make up sh*t and try to destroy lives. And when they started trying to destoy my girl Angie, that was the last straw.
587
briseis Says:
January 22nd, 2007 at 10:52 am
Why do we have to hear Brad declare that he loves Angie? Hasn’t it been said time and time again that action speaks louder than words? To me, their actions since they came out together as a couple at the TGS premiere is enough for me to SIGH SWOON and DROOL over them as a couple to die for.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I bet as soon as this public declaration is made, then there will be more demands. The next one will probably be for them to actually “do the deed” publically so the masses can see for themselves if the smokin’ chemistry is real!!!
http://i13.tinypic.com/2pt6xsm.jpg
More real than imagined, I tell ya!
591
May Says:
January 22nd, 2007 at 11:01 am
May, I don’t think you are predicting too much to say that one day, Angelina and Brad may be considered for the nobel peace prize. They are only just starting their work and it seems to me that they are building alliances with key people and organisation, and leveraging their fame to open doors, raise funds for their projects. Of course, there are others who do very much good - Bono, Bill and Melinda Gates, may all come up for serious consideration as well. All is good. Stay positive, focus on the good.
588
lylian Says
______________
lylian, thank you. So, what do you think? Is there hope for Cambodia too? I live here in Ghana, I am an Indian and I’ve travelled around (both developed and third world countries) and have witnessed poverty as well as luxuries. My passion is the upliftment of the poor especially women and children.
Do you think The Pitts effort will and can change the Cambodian masses?
Lets not waste the board for disccusing our anger towards the useless tabloids writeups. As for me I don’t even bother to click on the link, I just don’t feel the need to read them.
597
May Says:
January 22nd, 2007 at 11:18 am
“…As for me I don’t even bother to click on the link, I just don’t feel the need to read them…”
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Me too! So you live in Ghana? Used to be your neighbor to the west, but have now been in the US since 1980. Keep up the good work with the upliftment of poor women and children.
We love Brad&Angie’s hearts & also their children!!!!!!
Go Angie, Brad and their beautiful children (Mad. Z, and Shi).
I was wondering if one of our resident video maker could make a new on and use the song for “For the First Time” forgot who it was song/written by (hear it one the radio this morningg) — but if they could use some of the pics that have been post here today and some from other shots of Angie and Brad.
I just thing that song speak volumns when it comes too these two.
As they say in life you have to kiss some frog in order to find your prince and I feel that Angie finally found her prince and awesome family!
588
lylian Says:
and
597
May Says:
I agree with your posts. Just a quibble though: Microcredits alone may not be enough to change the life prospects of the poor. I have read accounts of increasing spousal violence once women have access to credit (Mexico), also increase in child labor because mothers with credit need their children to work with them or to take care of domestic work at home (Malawi). There are also the cases where women obtaining credit on behalf of their husbands had to sell whatever assets they had- often jewelery- to pay back the loan, so the other members of the group can continue to apply (Bangladesh). I am still waiting if and when the development community will ask why the poor is poor, and pay attention to exclusion and stigmatization as well. I am not noting the quibble because am against microcredits but noticed how, so many times, the donors miss the relations within the households and the web of relations within which the households try to survive.
~curly
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