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Brad Pitt - “V Magazine” Fall 2007

Brad Pitt - “V Magazine” Fall 2007

Brad Pitt takes the Fall 2007 cover of V Magazine, as photographed by the wonderful Mario Testino. Here are some highlights from the V magazine interview by Christopher Bollen:

I know you’re in Prague right now, but the Fourth of July was yesterday. Did you celebrate it? No, we missed it here. But when you have four kids, every day is the Fourth of July.

Has becoming a father transformed your life? Yeah. It’s hilarious. It’s the funniest, most lovely thing I’ve ever taken on. And the biggest pain in the ass as well [laughs] And I couldn’t go back. I couldn’t imagine it any other way.

Do you find it upsetting how the media still has an obsessive interest in linking Jen and Angelina? It’s so manufactured. We don’t pay attention to it. I hear that they drag my mo into it. She doesn’t deserve any of this. She is the most open, loving woman you’ll ever come across. They make things up and make money off of it. I am surprise about that.

There is a popular idea that you lured the paparazzi to Africa when Angelina gave birth to spotlight problems there. Was that really purposeful? It’s fourfold. For one, we know that’s going to happen so it becomes a plus. It’s all about cost and gain, plusses and minuses. Two, and most importantly, we loved the idea of our daughter being born on another continent, something she’ll be able to have roots in as well and want to explore as she gets older. That was the preeminent factor for us. Three, we knew that they had very strong privacy laws there. And we knew there was going to be a huge bounty on our heads and we were going to get very little peace unless we went to a place like that. And four, it happened to be a place that we loved.

The Fall 2007 issue of V Magazine featuring Brad Pitt is priced at $8.95/pop and hits newsstands on Friday, September 7th.

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Photo: Amy Sussman/Getty

838 Comments

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coalharbourqt @ 09/06/2007 at 1:15 am

Will Italy be doing a big state funeral for him I wonder? He’s like a national treasure! He has been the face of Opera for several generations - hard to believe :-(

Hi ariel *waving* Good evening! :-) Wish I knew…

Passing Through @ 09/06/2007 at 1:16 am

629 Sam : 09/06/2007 at 12:54 am

Shitzy/Spam - I didn’t even read your long-ass post. You really need to put the cap back on the bottle of Jim Jones Special Lunatic Kool Aid and go to bed…for a few years…at an insane asylum…the short bus is pulling up at your door even as I type…

no longer a lurker @ 09/06/2007 at 1:20 am

OT

tita, how i wish na mapunta nga sa akin yon, wait & see muna, maski di na ma-promote basta ibigay sa akin yong salary ;). sa human resources ako & now also handling admin works sa ayala alabang village, the first of ayala land’s premier communities.

Mrs. Smith @ 09/06/2007 at 1:21 am

I’m so sad to hear about Pavarotti’s passing. My husband and I saw him in concert and he was just incredible! The best concert!. He will surely be missed.

All of Jen’s fans are sounding pathetic and creepy. Is there a need to keep answering these people? They are like stalkers and leeches, they don’t know when something is over! Move on with your lives, leave Brad, Angie and their fans alone. Staying on the thread with hate is not healthy and I don’t really think the fans care about the negativity any more. The truth is out and all peace lovers are at peace. You make yourselves ridiculous and embrassing and people are laughing at you.

Da Jolie-Pitts @ 09/06/2007 at 1:25 am

647 Passing Through : 09/06/2007 at 1:11 am
616 Alexanderina : 09/06/2007 at 12:29 am

LOL! Everytime there’s a grand slam we have this discussion about McEnroe and the Williams sisters. I think McEnroe has done a very good job of remaining UNBIASED these last few years. The thing with Mac is that he calls it like he sees it when so many “color” commentators try to take the high road and be judicious. Mac is obviously a believer in not sugar-coating the truth. I say good for him. Plus, his commentary on the tennis is always right on the money. He’s so good at explaining strategy and analyzing the match, that I don’t care about his views that I don’t agree with.

___________________________

I loved Mac as a player. His play shots were just magical and unbelievable to make. Never care for his tantrums and I was embrassed to admit to people that I was one of his fans. Now however his voice on commenting are not for me. It’s just grating sometimes like he’s twisting in his seat during commenting. I felt tense all the time listening to him talking. I put his voice on low when I watch matches for which he’s commenting on. Having said all that though Mac is very fair in his analysis of the players and their skills: he calls it as he sees, never sugar coating stuff like you said, PT.

642 coalharbourqt : 09/06/2007 at 1:08 am

I think I just changed my mind. Go to celebrity-babies.com and check out P. Diddy’s identical twin baby girls. Absolutely gorgeous!!

Passing Through @ 09/06/2007 at 1:27 am

I just saw on Yahoo News that opera tenor Luciano Pavarotti has died. Even an opera hater like me could appreciate Pavarotti’s voice.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070906/ap_on_en_mu/pavarotti;_ylt=AglN5SbmeuZVEMLkdlZwBdis0NUE

Italian tenor Pavarotti dies at age 71 By ALESSANDRA RIZZO, Associated Press Writer

Luciano Pavarotti, whose vibrant high C’s and ebullient showmanship made him one of the world’s most beloved tenors, died Thursday, his manager told The Associated Press. He was 71.

His manager, Terri Robson, told the AP in an e-mailed statement that Pavarotti died at his home in Modena, Italy, at 5 a.m. local time. Pavarotti had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer last year and underwent further treatment in August.

“The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the pancreatic cancer which eventually took his life. In fitting with the approach that characterised his life and work, he remained positive until finally succumbing to the last stages of his illness,” the statement said.

For serious fans, the unforced beauty and thrilling urgency of Pavarotti’s voice made him the ideal interpreter of the Italian lyric repertory, especially in the 1960s and ’70s when he first achieved stardom. For millions more, his charismatic performances of standards like “Nessun dorma” from Puccini’s “Turandot” came to represent what opera is all about.

Instantly recognizable from his charcoal black beard and tuxedo-busting girth, Pavarotti radiated an intangible magic that helped him win hearts in a way Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras — his partners in the “Three Tenors” concerts — never quite could.

“I always admired the God-given glory of his voice — that unmistakable special timbre from the bottom up to the very top of the tenor range,” Domingo said in a statement from Los Angeles.

“I also loved his wonderful sense of humor and on several occasions of our concerts with Jose Carreras — the so-called Three Tenors concerts — we had trouble remembering that we were giving a concert before a paying audience, because we had so much fun between ourselves,” he said.

The tenor, who seemed equally at ease singing with soprano Joan Sutherland as with the Spice Girls, scoffed at accusations that he was sacrificing his art in favor of commercialism.

“The word commercial is exactly what we want,” he said, after appearing in the widely publicized “Three Tenors” concerts. “We’ve reached 1.5 billion people with opera. If you want to use the word commercial, or something more derogatory, we don’t care. Use whatever you want.”

In the annals of that rare and coddled breed, the operatic tenor, it may well be said the 20th century began with Enrico Caruso and ended with Pavarotti. Other tenors — Domingo included — may have drawn more praise from critics for their artistic range and insights, but none could equal the combination of natural talent and personal charm that so endeared him to audiences.

“Pavarotti is the biggest superstar of all,” the late New York Times music critic Harold Schonberg once said. “He’s correspondingly more spoiled than anybody else. They think they can get away with anything. Thanks to the glory of his voice, he probably can.”

In his heyday, he was known as the “King of the High C’s” for the ease with which he tossed off difficult top notes. In fact it was his ability to hit nine glorious high C’s in quick succession that first turned him into an international superstar singing Tonio’s aria “Ah! Mes amis,” in Donizetti’s “La Fille du Regiment” at New York’s Metropolitan Opera in 1972.

In the 1990s, Pavarotti’s teaming with Domingo and Carreras became a music business phenomenon and spawned copycats such as the Three Irish Tenors.

Pavarotti starred in a film called “Yes, Giorgio” (though its failure scuttled his hopes for a Hollywood career) and appeared in a filmed version of “Rigoletto.” He wrote an autobiography, “I, Luciano Pavarotti,” and made more than 90 recordings.

From Beijing to Buenos Aires, people immediately recognized his incandescent smile and lumbering bulk, clutching a white handkerchief as he sang arias and Neapolitan folk songs, pop numbers and Christmas carols for hundreds of thousands in outdoor concerts.

His name seemed to show up as much in gossip columns as serious music reviews, particularly after he split with Adua Veroni, his wife of 35 years and mother of their three daughters, and then took up with his 26-year-old secretary in 1996.

In late 2003, he married Nicoletta Mantovani in a lavish, star-studded ceremony. Pavarotti said their daughter Alice, nearly a year old at the time of the wedding, was the main reason he and Mantovani finally wed after years together.

In the latter part of his career, some music critics cited what they saw as an increasing tendency toward the vulgar and the commercial.

He came under fire for canceling performances or pandering to the lowest common denominator in his choice of programs, or for the Three Tenors tours and their millions of dollars in fees.

He was criticized for lip-synching at a concert in Modena, Italy, his hometown. An artist accused him of copying her works from a how-to-draw book and selling the paintings.

The son of a baker who was an amateur singer, Pavarotti was born Oct. 12, 1935, in Modena. He had a meager upbringing, though he said it was rich with happiness.

“Our family had very little, but I couldn’t imagine one could have any more,” Pavarotti said.

As a boy, Pavarotti showed more interest in soccer than his studies, but he also was fond of listening to his father’s recordings of tenor greats like Beniamino Gigli, Tito Schipa, Jussi Bjoerling and Giuseppe Di Stefano, his favorite.

Among his close childhood friends was Mirella Freni, who would eventually become a soprano and an opera great herself. The two studied singing together and years later ended up making records and concerts together, according to Elvio Giudici, an Italian opera critic.

In his teens, Pavarotti joined his father, also a tenor, in the church choir and local opera chorus. He was influenced by the American movie actor-singer Mario Lanza.

“In my teens I used to go to Mario Lanza movies and then come home and imitate him in the mirror,” Pavarotti said.

Singing was still nothing more than a passion while Pavarotti trained to become a teacher and began working in a school.

But at 20, he traveled with his chorus to an international music competition in Wales. The Modena group won first place, and Pavarotti began to dedicate himself to singing.

With the encouragement of his then fiancee, Adua Veroni, he started lessons, selling insurance to pay for them. He studied with Arrigo Pola and later Ettore Campogalliani.

In 1961, Pavarotti won a local voice competition and with it a debut as Rodolfo in Puccini’s “La Boheme.”

He followed with a series of successes in small opera houses throughout Europe before his 1963 debut at Covent Garden in London, where he stood in for Di Stefano as Rodolfo.

Having impressed conductor Richard Bonynge, Pavarotti was given a role opposite Bonynge’s wife, soprano Joan Sutherland, in a Miami production of “Lucia di Lamermoor.” They subsequently signed him for a 14-week tour of Australia.

It was the recognition Pavarotti needed to launch his career. He also credited Sutherland with teaching him how to breathe correctly.

In the following years, Pavarotti made a series of major debuts, appearing at La Scala in Milan in 1965, San Francisco in 1967 and New York’s Metropolitan Opera House in 1968. Other early venues included Vienna, Paris and Chicago.

Throughout his career, Pavarotti struggled with a much-publicized weight problem. His love of food caused him to balloon to a reported high of 396 pounds in 1978.

“Maybe this time I’ll really do it and keep it up,” he said during one of his constant attempts at dieting.

Pavarotti, who had been trained as a lyric tenor, began taking on heavier dramatic tenor roles, such as Manrico in Verdi’s “Trovatore” and the title role in “Otello.”

Pavarotti often drew comparisons with Domingo, his most notable contemporary. Aficionados judged Domingo the more complete and consistent musician, but he never captured the public imagination like Pavarotti.

Though there appeared to be professional jealousy between the great singers, Pavarotti claimed he preferred to judge himself only against his earlier performances.

In the mid-1970s, Pavarotti became a true media star. He appeared in television commercials and began appearing in hugely lucrative mega-concerts outdoors and in stadiums around the world. Soon came joint concerts with pop stars. A concert in New York’s Central Park in 1993 drew 500,000 fans.

Pavarotti’s recording of “Volare” went platinum in 1988.

In 1990, he appeared with Domingo and Carreras in a concert at the Baths of Caracalla in Rome for the end of soccer’s World Cup. The concert was a huge success, and the record known as “The Three Tenors” was a best-seller and was nominated for two Grammy awards. The video sold over 750,000 copies.

The three-tenor extravaganza became a mini-industry. With a follow-up album recorded at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles in 1994, the three have outsold every other performer of classical music. A 1996 tour earned each tenor an estimated $10 million.

Pavarotti liked to mingle with pop stars in his series of charity concerts, “Pavarotti & Friends,” held annually in Modena. He performed with artists as varied as Ricky Martin, James Brown and the Spice Girls.

The performances raised some eyebrows but he always shrugged off the criticism.

Some say the “word pop is a derogatory word to say ‘not important’ — I do not accept that,” Pavarotti said in a 2004 interview with the AP. “If the word classic is the word to say ‘boring,’ I do not accept. There is good and bad music.”

It was not just his annual extravaganza that saw Pavarotti involved in humanitarian work.

During the 1992-95 Bosnia war, he collected humanitarian aid along with U2 lead singer Bono, and after the war he financed and established the Pavarotti Music Center in the southern city of Mostar to offer Bosnia’s artists the opportunity to develop their skills.

He performed at benefit concerts to raise money for victims of tragedies such as an earthquake in December 1988 that killed 25,000 people in northern Armenia.

Pavarotti was also dogged by accusations of tax evasion, and in 2000 he agreed to pay nearly roughly $12 million to the Italian state after he had unsuccessfully claimed that the tax haven of Monte Carlo rather than Italy was his official residence.

He had been accused in 1996 of filing false tax returns for 1989-91.

Pavarotti always denied wrongdoing, saying he paid taxes wherever he performed. But, upon agreeing to the settlement, he said: “I cannot live being thought not a good person.”

Pavarotti was preparing to leave New York in July 2006 to resume a farewell tour when doctors discovered a malignant pancreatic mass, his manager Terri Robson said at the time. He underwent surgery in a New York hospital, and all his remaining 2006 concerts were canceled.

Pancreatic cancer is one of the most dangerous forms of the disease, though doctors said the surgery offered improved hopes for survival.

“I was a fortunate and happy man,” Pavarotti told Italian daily Corriere della Sera in an interview published about a month after the surgery. “After that, this blow arrived.”

“And now I am paying the penalty for this fortune and happiness,” he told the newspaper.

Fans were still waiting for a public appearance a year after his surgery. In the summer of 2007, Pavarotti taught a group of selected students and worked on a recording of sacred songs, a work expected to be released in early 2008, according to his manager. He mostly divided his time between his home town, Modena, and his villa in the Adriatic seaside resort of Pesaro.

Faced with speculation that the tenor was near death, Mantovani, his second wife, told Italian newspaper La Stampa in July 2007: “He’s fighting like a lion and he has never lost his heart.”

Pavarotti had three daughters with his first wife, Lorenza, Cristina and Giuliana; and one, Alice, with his second wife.

Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press.

Passing Through @ 09/06/2007 at 1:29 am

Cr@p! I don’t know what happened to my last 2 posts, but I’ll try again - I just saw on Yahoo News that Luciano Pavarotti has died. I hate opera…but even I could appreciate that man’s voice!

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070906/ap_on_en_mu/pavarotti;_ylt=AglN5SbmeuZVEMLkdlZwBdis0NUE

AddictedtoBAMPZs @ 09/06/2007 at 1:30 am

Answer to question about Malibumom: She was NOT a troll, she was a great contributor and fan. Maybe the person posting elsewhere isn’t her, but just using that name. She may have decided just to post with an e-mail group that formed as a result of meeting here at JJ. She is missed, I feel.

Saw a tabloid tonight with a headline about Brad’s plasic surgery. Brad, listen to me and listen to me good…DON’T do it. Don’t do a thing to that amazing face. Please age beautifully and gracefully. Can you give me one example of an actor who looks OK after the knife? Look at Redford. Look at Pacino and Michael Douglas—fame and all the money in the world did not mean they got successful results. They all look strange, eery. Not right. Please, baby, don’t do it. I wish I had the address of his agent to plead my case…..

krungkrung @ 09/06/2007 at 1:35 am

i heard that if you have a cancer in the pancreas, it’s a done deal, no hope meaning you’re done and that’s it, ohmigod, scary.

#657 Brad’s not doing plastic surgery. Do away with the tabloids.

Posting has been dicey for the past hour or so. Very sad about Pavarotti. I’m not an opera fan but he had such a glorious voice. Who were the other two in the trio — Domingo and Carreras? I forget.

krungkrung @ 09/06/2007 at 1:38 am

are Details and V mags. on news stands now? ne1?

to 653 nice from not so nice @ 09/06/2007 at 1:38 am

are you the poster please? well mmm as annoying as please and theres no blog police here? stop suggesting what we adults should do. never saw you before. but I suspect you are the poster please.

664 krungkrung : 09/06/2007 at 1:38 am
are Details and V mags. on news stands now? ne1?
————–
I think Details is already out today, V is out Friday.

the real tita @ 09/06/2007 at 1:43 am

#646: ariel, that’s what I’d like to know. Can we get it on line do you think?

(Still sad about my idol. I need to hear Nessun Dorma..or Santa Lucia…what a loss!)

no longer a lurker –hey goodnight chat with you tomorrow..

Mrs. Smith- I hadn’t heard about Pavarotti’s passing away.
Oh my, what a huge loss for everyone who appreciated him and realized his unbelivable talent, that voice can never be matched… he will be missed but always be remembered for many, many years…

ariel–goodnight, I promise I’ll try to find out re the stamp…

sam, ohhh dear God what can I say, you are lost cause…I guess we’ll meet tommorrow :-(

PT and everyone else who is around, goodnight!!!!

Passing Through @ 09/06/2007 at 1:46 am

654 Da Jolie-Pitts : 09/06/2007 at 1:25 am

647 Passing Through : 09/06/2007 at 1:11 am

I loved Mac as a player. His play shots were just magical and unbelievable to make. Never care for his tantrums and I was embrassed to admit to people that I was one of his fans. Now however his voice on commenting are not for me. It’s just grating sometimes like he’s twisting in his seat during commenting. I felt tense all the time listening to him talking. I put his voice on low when I watch matches for which he’s commenting on. Having said all that though Mac is very fair in his analysis of the players and their skills: he calls it as he sees, never sugar coating stuff like you said, PT.

+++++++++++

I loved to watch Mac play tennis, too. He was another player that had a phenomenal ability with the raquet to pull off shots that no one else of his area could do. He was unparalleled at the net. Every now and again ESPN Classic will show in 1980 and 1981 Wimbledon finals against Borg and I get pissed because I don’t get ESPN Classic in my area without having to get the overblown digital package! I’d love to see those old matches again sometime.

As for Mac’s commentating - my sister said the exact same thing - that it SOUNDS like Mac is fidgeting in his seat. And truthfully he probably is. He’s kind of spastic anyway and he has all those funky motions he goes through right before he serves. I think he even said one time that it’s hard for him to just sit still and talk. I will say this much - sometimes he does talk to much, but then when he’s not talking I find myself wondering why he’s not explaining why the player missed a shot or how the player is off-court, in the locker room, etc. What’s funny, though, is to hear the stories told by the other announcers when Mac’s not in the booth - stories about players asking them to introduce them to Mac because they want to pick his brain or asking them to ask Mac if he’ll hit with them. And then he’ll go out and do that and come back and tell you about the players. It’s just nice to see that the young players out there appreciate a player who’a an anachronym today - a serve and volley player who was only an average player from the backcourt.

Also - a funny story about McEnroe and his outbursts. During this year’s Wimbledon Ted Robinson was asking McEnroe and Mary Carillo if it was true that John never challenged a call or made a scene on the court during a match until he was 18. Surprisingly both of them said yes. Mac said until that point it had never occured to him that he COULD question the line calls. He said he was playing a Davis Cup tie and disagreed with a line call, didn’t say anything and stewed about it the rest of the match and eventually lost the match because he was thinking about the bad call. A former player came up to him after his match and told him if he had a problem with the line calls he should’ve spoken up. Mac said after that it was like a light bulb went on over his head and from that day forward - he challenged line calls and became Mr. “You Cannot Be Serious!”

Sam, are you still getting paid by HUVANE?

Tell us, how is Jen reacting to Brad’s Details Mag article?

Is Jen chanting at the ocean now?

What is your employer Aniston/Huvane up to these days? You can tell us !!!

Sorry about the multiple posts, everybody — but they were all disappearing into the cybervoid, and suddenly they all popped up at once. The gods must be crazy tonight.

credit: roxy

Sam, read this and reap !!!

Why don’t you go ************. You have serious ISSUES girl. I know a really good shink who can hook you up with some meds to calm your CRAZY a$$ down. Anyone that has this much HATE and EVIL for someone they don’t even know personally has major issues. Seriously, Did Jen hire you to do her dirty work…come on, you can tell us. You were here early this morning with your sh1 t. Get some help because clearly you are INSANE. A fking LUNATIC. Did you just escape from the luny bin. If you are on meds…for Christ sakes TAKE THEM PLEASE.

I found a video of Angie’s Beyond Borders premier. Her hair was so long and beautiful and she was absolutely stuning.
http://www.dalealplay.com/informaciondecontenido.php?con=22811

bad karma @ 09/06/2007 at 2:18 am

#410—you my friend are a perfect example of what I have been talking about—you are a poster that attacks another posters opinion.
You call it complaining. I am posting an opinion. I have a right to that and I simply said that it would be nice if people like me could do that and get a dialogue going with other likeminded posters without the constant barrage of attacks from so called regulars, thats all.
Out of respect for Coalharbourqt—who could teach you a thing or two about civility—–I am posting lower case (sorry Coalh :-)
#410 its posters like you that make everything a confrontation.

coalharbourqt @ 09/06/2007 at 2:18 am

ariel - not sure if you will see this or not, but I had a look at the Australian Stamp and Mint and at New Idea Magazine. Also Googled, which I’m sure you have anyway. It doesn’t appear that they have given a release date yet, although the stamp was announced about a month ago. I think you’ve got the right idea seeing if anyone here from Aus knows for sure. I’m sure there’s legal red tape to cut through first. Will let you know for sure if I hear anything!

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