Marshall Heyman Archives | Wonderland https://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/tag/marshall-heyman/ Wonderland is an international, independently published magazine offering a unique perspective on the best new and established talent across all popular culture: fashion, film, music and art. Mon, 20 May 2013 10:33:40 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 Flashback Friday: Carey Mulligan /2013/04/26/flashback-friday-carey-mulligan/ Fri, 26 Apr 2013 14:30:36 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/?p=18326 We spoke to a pre-Great Gatsby, pre-Marcus Mumford Carey Mulligan about her failing her drama school adution, An Education and the moment it all changed for her. This interview was published in Issue 22 of Wonderland, April/May 2010. Long after theater audiences discovered her luminous, soulful turn as Nina in Ian Rickson’s gorgeous production of […]

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We spoke to a pre-Great Gatsby, pre-Marcus Mumford Carey Mulligan about her failing her drama school adution, An Education and the moment it all changed for her.

Carey Mulligan for Wonderland (Image: Ben Weller)
This interview was published in Issue 22 of Wonderland, April/May 2010.

Long after theater audiences discovered her luminous, soulful turn as Nina in Ian Rickson’s gorgeous production of The Seagull, holding her own opposite Kristin Scott Thomas’ ravishing Arkadina, first in London at the Royal Court and then on Broadway, Carey Mulligan burst onto the Hollywood scene in the lovely film An Education.

Mulligan had been in movies before — most notably in her debut as Keira Knightley’s sister in Joe Wright’s 2005 adaptation of Pride & Prejudice — but An Education, directed by Lone Scherfig, based on Lynn Barber’s memoir with a screenplay by Nick Hornby, shot her out of a cannon, winning her a BAFTA for Best Actress and landing her an Oscar nomination. But how do you follow up a starmaking turn like that?

We’ll see what happens this year, when Mulligan appears in the big screen adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s masterful and much loved semi-science fiction novel Never Let Me Go, as well as the long-awaited sequel to Oliver Stone’s Wall Street, Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, out later this year.

How has this crazy ride of An Education worked out for you?

It’s been 14 months since we premiered An Education at Sundance and it feels like forever. I miss work. I haven’t worked since the end of Wall Street and that’s the longest I’ve taken off since I started acting. But the award stuff is so frequent that if you tried to work at the same time, you’d be running in and out of your job and that’s not ideal. I mainly just miss working. I was really freaked out at the beginning—not to a crippling degree—by the red carpet stuff. It just felt scary, but slowly I’ve realised, this is just so mad. And the more tired I am, the more jetlagged I am, the less scared I am.

What part is scary?
The photos. That many people looking at you. The possibility of winning where you’re going to have to get up and say something. The times when you actually have to prepare a thing to say, and you wonder: “Should I try to be funny? I shouldn’t try to be funny.” But I’ve started taking my best friend, who’s an illustrator in London, to these events. I brought her to the SAG awards and she said, “This is so weird,” and you’re suddenly like, “Right! This is bizarre,” and you can step out of it and laugh. My mum, my brother and my dad are all coming to the Oscars and they’re going to be so freaked out and amazed that I can live vicariously through them.

Remind me how everything started for you.

Pride & Prejudice was my first job. I was at boarding school and I met Julian Fellowes. He came to give a talk. I told him I wanted to be an actress and he said, “Well, that’s silly. Marry a banker.” It was a really small exchange. And I left school and my parents wouldn’t let me go to drama school and I’d applied in secret and not gotten in. And then I was working as a barmaid and a runner at a film studio and I was headed to university and I thought, “If I end up going, I’m probably going to drop out and that’s going to be a waste of everyone’s time.” I got Julian Fellowes’ address, and I wrote him a letter telling him my situation and asking him how to get into the business without going to drama school. Because even if I could get into drama school, I knew I couldn’t go because I didn’t have any money.

Why didn’t you get in?

Because I had a really — touch wood — stable non-messed up life. And I went in there and did a monologue from Sara Kane’s Psychosis 4:48, and they were like, “Who are you?” I was so desperate to be deep and I had nothing to draw from. It was a disaster. So Julian introduced me to his wife Emma Fellowes; she introduced me to Maggie Lunn and her assistant, Camilla. Maggie casts everything in London, and Camilla introduced me to Robin Hudson, who was Jina Jay’s assistant, and Jina was casting Pride & Prejudice. And they were looking for young actresses to play the younger sisters. And the tapes got to Joe Wright and I did a series of auditions for him. And then it just started.

When you look back, was it easy getting into the business?

It was surreal, but Joe was looking for actresses who hadn’t acted professionally so he could make them do what he wanted. It was just perfect that it all fell together in that way but it was the biggest lucky break ever. I can’t say I really struggled but the struggle was before, when I tried to get into drama school. It’s a completely understandable fear to have your kid go into the most unstable industry on the planet. And so many people I know did train and came out of drama school and didn’t work. More than the financial instability and lack of security, what’s so heartbreaking is the idea that you might not get to do the thing that you want to do. Sometimes parents just want to protect you from the disappointment.

Carey Mulligan for Wonderland (Image: Ben Weller)
Did your career start to steamroll after that?

Not really, but I worked consistently, which is all I really ever wanted and you can’t hope for anything else. While I was doing Pride & Prejudice, I did my first play at the National, 40 Winks. I played a 14-year-old rape victim. It was Pride & Prejudice, with bonnets and ribbons and cake, and then this dark play. And then I did a big tv series of Bleak House on the BBC. But I worked steadily for a while so that was kind of perfect. I never saw a ladder to climb.

When you were making An Education, did it feel special?

I loved it, but I didn’t feel it would change anything. I thought it would come out in two arthouse cinemas. Peter Sarsgaard didn’t come to Sundance and he told me and Dominic Cooper, “Guys, don’t get your hopes up because it’s a really bad year for movies and the probability is that no one will buy it.” And we went and it sold and we went apeshit. The fact that someone was going to see it in America as well as England was crazy. When we were making it, we all loved it so much. Peter became like my brother. The crew was literally the coolest gang of people I’d ever met. Dominic and I became best friends. I was so sad to walk away, and I thought, I’m never going to be able to see them again. Now I’ve spent 14 months being like, “Hi Nick. Hi Dominic. Hi Alfred.” It’s been really nice because I’ve never gotten to do that before.

When did you have the sense that An Education would become a game changer?

Right after Sundance, I got Never Let Me Go. I’d read the book about two years before I’d read the script and I didn’t think I could get it because I wasn’t getting into the room for parts like that. Nick Hornby told the producer that he should hire me, and the weekend after the reviews for An Education came out in Variety and The Hollywood Reporter, they offered me the film. It was sort of mad. But it made that difference. Suddenly I got this part that I was desperate to play, and when I was wrapping that, that’s when Oliver Stone called because he’d seen An Education. Which is so far from Wall Street. A different universe. And everything else has happened in the last few months. I love Never Let Me Go so much and I’m so protective of the book. If I saw someone fuck up Kathy [the character she plays] I’d hunt them down. And there’s only so much you can do — you can only do your best. I’ve not seen a single frame of it so I don’t know.

Wall Street is your first big Hollywood movie, right?

I was really nervous about doing it, actually. But it’s a supporting role — it’s not Shia LaBeouf or Michael Douglas’ part. It’s one of the only female characters. I knew if I did the movie, people were really going to know me and I met Oliver and he was like no one I’d ever met. And I was so excited. He’s so intelligent. I walked into his office and I waited for a second, and he marched towards me, and he went, “Oh, you don’t have long hair, you look so different,” and I thought, “Does that mean I don’t get the job?” And then I followed him into his office, and he just talked at me. He’s so clever but sometime his mind will just flip from place to place. Oliver was challenging and he wasn’t mollycoddling. It was intimidating to be the only girl, but in a great way. I’ve always been the youngest and now I’m starting to not be the youngest and it’s kind of weird. You just suddenly realise, “I’m 24 and I’m not a kid anymore, and I’m not the least experienced person here.” But I had to be one of the boys, and that was really cool. He’d push us to play things really truthfully. I loved him, but he’s testing.

Do you think the sequel will have a similar effect sociologically?

I haven’t seen it but I watched a lot of the dailies. It’s a real Hollywood film, you can see that from the trailer, which for me is a completely different genre. My side of it is really the emotional story. Can’t you tell? You see me crying so much in the trailer. But I think it’s timely and that’s the only reason he made it. He’s never made a sequel before.

Is your character fairly strong?

I didn’t want to be “the girlfriend.” But she runs a liberal website so it’s Anti [Michael Douglas’ character] Gordon Gecko, and of course is going out with Shia’s character, so there’s the whole thing there.

Did you enjoy working with Shia?

The first time we read together we were so nervous. It was just me and Michael and Shia, and neither Shia and I looked up. You never know how these things are going to work. I’d wanted to work with Shia since A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints. He’s amazing. He was so incredible in that film, and we ended up working together well.

And so what comes next?

I actually don’t have a job. It’s been hard to make decisions whilst all this is going on because you don’t want to jump into something. I wake up in the morning and spend a half hour trying to figure out what I want for breakfast. I’ve been on so many airplanes! So I need to stop on Monday, take a week off, and then refocus. Two weeks ago I thought I never wanted to be in a movie again!

Why not?

I did The View, then a photo shoot, and took two red eyes in two days, and went to a critics award show and at some point in the evening my agent came up to me and was asking for the only half hour I had in the next two weeks. And I was home, so I wanted to see my friends and I was like, “Don’t take the five seconds left that I have. I just don’t want to be in a movie! I don’t want to have the responsibility of being a big actress, I don’t want to be on a poster.”

I was at a press conference and Woody Harrelson was answering questions in front of me and they were asking him what his motivation was, and how he felt about his character. I got up there, and they said, “What are you wearing?” And I thought, “There was a time when I was an actress. Not just someone who wore dresses.”

I don’t really care that much about fashion, I just have a brilliant stylist who dresses me, and in my own life, I’m pretty simple. So that side of things has been wearing. But then I slept for 15 hours after the Baftas and felt slightly more normal again. I don’t want to become annoying. I don’t want people to think, “Oh, her again.” I want to play supporting characters more often than lead roles, and I think that’s where the most interesting parts lie.

I’ve been thinking you’d be amazing as Lisbeth Salandar in the American remake of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. Have you thought about that?

No. I love them, though. But that would be incredible. They just made the Danish version of those. I read those three books in a fortnight. No one’s suggested that yet. I might campaign for it. A lot of the things I get are the quirky girl who wears a Ramones t-shirt and has black eye makeup.

You seem like a huge reader.

I read a fair bit. There’s nothing nicer than falling into a book but it’s really when I’m working, I’m pretty much reading. There’s nothing else to do on set. I’m trying to find a play to do in New York, but not very much is kicking around. It’s more of a case of trying to pitch myself, unless there’s a new play. With The Seagull, it’s hard because Nina is pretty much the role. So I don’t know. I’m trying to figure that out. It’s really the first time I’m ok stopping for a minute. I’ve been able to chill out. But I don’t want to be everywhere, not assuming that I would. I don’t want to take the responsibility of films rising or falling whether I’m good in them or not. I need a good director. I can see the difference with a director I’ve worked well with and one I haven’t. I’m still learning so much and I still need a steady hand. I want to work with someone who’s going to do as good a job as Lone did. She sculpted an amazing performance.

And how do you know that’s going to happen?

You don’t. You can’t take someone for three weeks to directing camp and check her out. You have to take a leap of faith, and it’s scary. And this is apart from whether the script is great and the character is great. What if in post-production they let you down? That’s probably why I’m more comfortable in theater: you have more control. In film, there are so many factors where your work can get manipulated from what you thought you were doing.

I wish I had a genius idea for a play you could do. What about George Bernard Shaw’s Saint Joan?

I’d love to do Saint Joan, I’ve been talking about doing it, but that’s a hard play to get off the ground. I just want to do something that really scares me. I don’t like the idea of rehashing parts I’ve already played, which is what people want to offer you.

You’re still based in London?

Yes. I probably would move to New York, but there’s no point in me fixing myself anywhere until I fix what the next thing is.

Maybe Sally Bowles in Cabaret would be a good part for you.

I would love that part. I can sing, you know?

They should remake the movie with you. Actually that’s a terrible idea.

Terrible idea! Terrible idea! Career suicide!

Carey Mulligan for Wonderland (Image: Ben Weller)
Words: Marshall Heyman
Images: Ben Weller
Stylist: Grace Cobb

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Megan Fox /2009/09/24/megan-fox-2/ Thu, 24 Sep 2009 13:09:34 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=613 Megan Fox is taking a break from the toys to take the lead in new movie, Jennifer’s Body. Talking to Marshall Heyman, on a rainy set in Malibu, she discusses everything from her on-going teasing of Zac Efron, things that make her skin crawl, and her frustration at being told to just “Be Hot” by […]

The post Megan Fox appeared first on Wonderland.

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Megan Fox is taking a break from the toys to take the lead in new movie, Jennifer’s Body. Talking to Marshall Heyman, on a rainy set in Malibu, she discusses everything from her on-going teasing of Zac Efron, things that make her skin crawl, and her frustration at being told to just “Be Hot” by Michael Bay.

The drive to interview Megan Fox at her Wonderland photo shoot in the canyons of Malibu is long — more than an hour away from my West Hollywood apartment. I couldn’t be more excited. I listen to the new album by The Sounds on the way Megan, best known for her role as Mikaela Banes in Transformers, has garnered a reputation for being a loose cannon, an over the top interview subject who really speaks her mind. I love that. So often we get canned responses. Here’s someone who’s anything but.

When I finally get to the set and Megan, gorgeous of course, wearing a cut-off t-shirt, huge baggy sweatpants, flip-flops, and Ray Bans, drives up with her publicist, it begins to rain. So instead of having some time alone to chat, we are stuck in a trailer with the many people who are involved in producing the shoot (stylists, publicist, photographer, etc.) but we take over one side of the trailer and they stay out of our way.

Megan, who doesn’t take off her sunglasses for the entire interview, picks up a copy of Interview Magazine. One with a dewy cover photograph of Zac Efron, an individual she likes to make fun of, she says, with some regularity.

Megan Fox: “He’s beautiful. He’s the next Elizabeth Taylor. I’m just kidding. I just like to make fun of him. I know Zac. He knows that I make fun of him out of love. Everything I say in interviews I say to his face in person. I try it on him and get his reaction and then I say it publicly.

Marshall Heyman: SO YOU’VE TOLD HIM HE’S THE MALE ELIZABETH TAYLOR?
MF: I just came up with that, but I’ll tell him that in the future. This picture made me think of it. It was like White Diamonds.

Megan speaks nasally, like she has a chronic sinus infection. Her statements are often spoken in the form of a question. They tend to lilt upwards.
My younger brother, Andrew, is 24 and a major fan of the Transformers toys, though not the movie. Though he denies it now, he has often expressed an attraction to Megan Fox. I decided to ask him for some questions to ask Megan. The ones he sent me the night before my interview were especially funny — more audacious than ones I might normally start with — and so I went with them. (When I told him this later, he was embarrassed, but I knew, deep down, he was pleased.)

MH: I’M GOING TO START WITH SOME QUESTIONS MY BROTHER HAS FOR YOU. THE FIRST ONE: WHAT ARE YOUR MOST FAVORITE AND LEAST FAVORITE THINGS ABOUT WORKING WITH MICHAEL BAY?
MF: God, I really wish I could go loose on this one. He’s like Napoleon and he wants to create this insane, infamous mad man reputation. He wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is. So he’s a nightmare to work for but when you get him away from set, and he’s not in director mode, I kind of really enjoy his personality because he’s so awkward, so hopelessly awkward. He has no social skills at all. And it’s endearing to watch him. He’s vulnerable and fragile in real life and then on set he’s a tyrant. Shia and I almost die when we make a Transformers movie. He has you do some really insane things that insurance would never let you do.

MH: SO IT’S A BIG DIFFERENCE FROM YOUR TELEVISION SERIES HOPE AND FAITH?
Megan laughs. The first of many big guffaws during our interview. It pleases me to no end that I can make one of the hottest women in the world laugh. Repeatedly.
MF: It’s a big difference from that.

MH: IS THERE ANYTHING ABOUT HOPE AND FAITH THAT’S THE SAME?
MF: Other than there’s always a tiny blonde around?

MH: HERE’S ANOTHER ONE FROM ANDREW. HOW DID YOU FEEL ABOUT PRESENTING WITH MICHAEL BAY AT THE MTV MOVIE AWARDS?
MF: I hate being looked at. And when I’m on stage it’s clear that I’m being stared at by everyone and that’s my worst nightmare. My only goals when I go on stage are to not vomit, trip or have uncontrollable diarrhoea. If I accomplish those three things, I don’t care what else happens.

MH: HAVE YOU EVER BEEN IN A SITUATION WHEN YOU VOMIT, TRIP OR HAVE UNCONTROLLABLE DIARRHEA?
MF (Laughing): No but I get really paranoid that something horrible is going to happen.

MH: DID MICHAEL BAY COMFORT YOU THIS TIME?
MF: He’s such a cherub of a man. He was backstage stroking my hair and comforting me. Of course not. He gets nervous too. He doesn’t like being in front of people.

MH: BACK TO A QUESTION FROM ANDREW. WHAT’S THE SEXIEST TRANSFORMER?
MF: Megatron. Cause he’s the leanest and sleekest and he’s bad. And that’s sexy.

MH: IF YOU HAD YOUR OWN TRANSFORMER WHAT WOULD YOU CALL IT?
MF: Oh my god. I have no idea. It’s too early to be that creative. I have nothing. I’m dead.

MH: IT’S GOING TO BE A ROUGH HOUR. ANOTHER QUESTION FROM ANDREW. WHO WOULD WIN IN A FIGHT: OPTIMUS PRIME OR MICHAEL BAY?
MF: I would win in a fight with Michael Bay. Because he’s never been in a fight in his life. If Michael Bay ever was in a fight, he would drop to the ground immediately in the fetal position. He would never throw a punch. That man is not a fighter. He’s all hot air. So Optimus Prime would win.

MH: WHAT’S A MORE POWERFUL SECRET WEAPON: THE AUTOBOT MATRIX OF LEADERSHIP OR MICHAEL BAY’S EGO?
MF: Is your brother in, like, film school or something? How does he know about this? If you could combine Michael Bay’s ego with Brett Ratner’s ego, then that’s unstoppable. But if it’s just Bay’s ego than I’m going to go with the Autobot Matrix of Leadership.

MH: HERE’S THE LAST ONE FROM MY BROTHER. DO YOU THINK SHIA IS SEXIER AS MUTT WILLIAMS IN INDIANA JONES OR AS SAM WITWICKY IN TRANSFORMERS?
MF: Sam Witwicky. Because I like boys that don’t try. Sam’s a little bit neurotic and doesn’t have it all together. I like funny boys. And Shia was too buff when he did Indy. Brian [Austin Green, her on-again, off-again boyfriend] is a lot buffer than Shia. He’s not a wimpy dude. He’s got a naturally badass body. He doesn’t even work out that much. He naturally has that 2 per cent body fat. His body is one of the best I’ve ever seen.

MH: DO YOU WORK OUT?
MF: I trained a lot as a kid dancing. Mostly ballet so I have a lot of muscle memory. Even when I don’t work out I look relatively in shape. I’m getting older, I know that sounds stupid because I’m 23, but I can feel things changing already. I’m trying to be healthy and have a healthy life and work out twice a week. I’m supposed to make three times but I usually only make twice.

MH: WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN YOU WORK OUT?
MF: My trainer’s a fucking Nazi. He does a million squats and lunges and like asymmetric balance shit, which makes me almost throw up every time I do it. And then we finish or start with yoga, which I hate equally as much. And I do it for one hour.

MH: YOU HAVE A SICK BODY FOR SOMEONE WHO WORKS OUT FOR TWO HOURS A WEEK.
MF: But it’s like a navy seal work out twice a week. I go until I almost throw up. I’ve gone back home and thrown up from being worked out too hard. It’s not fun.

MH: DO YOU WATCH WHAT YOU EAT?
MF: Recently I’ve started eating a lot better. I went to Hawaii by myself and went on a raw diet and I’m trying to keep up on it here. I have a bad sweet tooth and I eat tons of unbaked things. Dough. Fudge. Brownie mix. Cake mix. To the point where you think you have salmonella. I don’t know if I’ve ever had uncontrollable diarrhea but it’s a constant fear. It must mean something in my childhood.

MH: WHAT ARE YOUR OTHER CONSTANT FEARS?
MF: Flying. I can’t stand to touch newspapers. Anything laminated is fine. Actual dry ass paper I can’t touch. It gives me chillbumps. It’s like nails on a chalkboard. Ughh. Or like tissue paper. People can’t touch me with dry things like that. I get really upset. It’s something about how dry it is that I can’t touch it. Those are my main fears.

MH: DO YOU HAVE ANY REAL FEARS?
MF: You mean, like dying alone? I do have a fear of ending up like Elizabeth Taylor in the sense that I will have been married 8 times and this senile insane borderline personality schizoid when I’m 80, still drawing on my eyebrows.

MH: DO YOU THINK THAT WILL HAPPEN TO ZAC EFRON?
MF: No! He’s going to be all right.

MH: YOU DON’T THINK HE’S GOING TO BE DRAWING ON HIS EYEBROWS OR MAKING FRAGRANCES LIKE WHITE DIAMONDS?
MF: Me and Shia came up with a fragrance for Zac Efron. It’s called: It’s So Right it’s Efrong.

MH: WHAT DOES IT SMELL LIKE?
MF: That’s a very good question. Like midnight and sapphires. Like a musky breeze.

In Megan’s new teen horror movie, Jennifer’s Body, written by Academy Award winning screenwriter Diablo Cody, she plays a high school cheerleader who becomes a zombie and starts, quite literally, eating men.

MH: HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE CHARACTER YOU PLAY?
MF: I think she’s hilarious. When she’s feeding on a boy, she’s really healthy and beautiful. And when she goes without having a boy or a man she gets hideous and ugly. And I feel like that’s how women think. They think they need men to complete them and to make them feel beautiful, and they’re old hags and useless without a boyfriend or a husband.

I suggest that maybe the film perpetuates the opposite point of view.

MF: Who fucking really knows what the movie’s about? Diablo’s so twisted but it’s obviously a girl power movie in itself. I think it’s really about how fucked up and scary girls are. Girls are fucking nightmares.

MH: WHY DOESN’T YOUR CHARACTER SEEK REVENGE ON THE ADAM BRODY CHARACTER THAT TURNS HER INTO A ZOMBIE?
MF: There was a debate. We were going to maybe shoot that at the ending and they wouldn’t let us extend the budget. Look, I didn’t write the movie, I’m not a studio head, I get what you’re saying. I definitely would have wanted to see her destroy Adam Brody but that doesn’t happen.

MH: DO YOU ASPIRE TO MAKE MOVIES THAT ARE NOT JUST FOR FANBOYS? LIKE THE READER? OR REVOLUTIONARY ROAD?
MF: If I get to the point where I could pull something like that off, then sure I would never turn that down, but I’m not going through scripts looking for the one that will hopefully get me nominated. I’m really not pretentious in my thinking. I’m really more afraid of it now than aggressively pursuing it. Kate Winslet has had a lot of time to go to acting class and be coached and really find the truth in stuff so she can do The Reader or do Revolutionary Road. She didn’t come off of Transformers and make that movie. I think everyone aspires to getting your work recognized critically, but if I can ever get there it’ll take time. I’m not ready to jump into it right now.

MH: DO YOU WANT TO PLAY ELIZABETH BENETT IN PRIDE AND PREJUDICE?
MF: I hate watching period pieces. I can’t watch Pride and Prejudice.

MH: BUT IF THEY DID PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES?
MF: Fuck yeah that sounds like the best movie ever.

MH: WAS MAKING CONFESSIONS OF A DRAMA QUEEN WITH LINDSAY LOHAN MORE EMBARRASSING THAN BEING IN THE MARY KATE AND ASHLEY OLSEN MOVIE HOLIDAY IN THE SUN?
MF: Holiday in the Sun is less embarrassing because it went straight to DVD and I was in 9th grade so I didn’t give a shit. I was like fuck yeah, I get to get out of school and go to the Bahamas. They’re not really embarrassing movies. Everybody does them. I don’t have bad dreams about shit that happened in the past. I have bad dreams about things that are coming out all the time. Like right before Transformers comes out, I’ll have months of nightmares about things that we spent months filming and know that it’s not going to work in the movie. Moments that we thought would be funny jokes or that are going to be sheer terror and I just know I didn’t sell it at all. It’s a $286 million movie but the money can’t control the acting. There’s no amount of money that can make you a better actor.

MH: WELL, I WONDER: DOES BEING A BETTER ACTOR MATTER IF YOU’RE JUST REALLY HOT?
MF: Yeah, it does matter. Not to Michael Bay because those are literally his directions some times. “Be Hot.” I’ve had that note on set before. “Mike,” I’ll say, “Who am I talking to? Where am I supposed to be looking at?” And he responds, “Just be sexy.” I get mad when people talk to me like that. Then again, audiences don’t come to Transformers to see us. They’re there to see the devastation and the explosions. I don’t want to shit on the movie, it’s a fun movie. People tend to think that I hate it and I don’t, because clearly none of us should take it seriously. That movie is clearly the reason I’m recognizable at all.

MH: WHEN DID YOU REALIZE YOU WERE HOT?
MF: I don’t think that’s something that normal people ever realize. As a female, you struggle with constant insecurities and body image. So there’s never a day you wake up and think, “I really did it today. This is a hot day.” That doesn’t happen.

MH: HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT MICHAEL BAY TELLING YOU TO BE HOT?
MF: All of us who are working right now, we all do the same shit, it’s just part of how you sell yourself. Because you’re a product. All of us are. Shia’s a product, a totally different kind. Rob Pattinson is a fucking product. It’s what the industry’s always been.

MH: IS BEING CANDID AND LOOSE PART OF YOUR PRODUCT?
MF: That’s me sort of fighting being a product, that’s me fighting the machine. But of course, now part of my product is being outrageous and outspoken so even when I’m not being that way I’m going to be sold that way. To fight that I could be PR perfect and be one full publicity android and only say the right things. Maybe that’s what I’ll do. It’s a never ending game and this is how people go insane and get addicted to pills. One thing I do hate is being involved in catfights that are not real catfights. One that’s deserved is ok.

MH: CAN YOU IMAGINE A CAGE MATCH BETWEEN YOU AND ZAC EFRON?
MF: Fuck yeah, I’m on board.

MH: WHO WOULD WIN?
MF: Should I ask him? I don’t know if he’ll be awake but I’ll try right now. That’s a really good one.

Megan has two bars of service on her Iphone and texts — or at least tells me she texts – Efron

MF: In a dance off, he would kill me. In a cage match, I gotta go with me. I have bigger shoulder muscles. I’m grittier. I wear bigger pants. He’s going to think I’m such a loser. Because it’s 11 in the morning and I’m asking him who would win in a cage match. He’s perfect, he always says the right shit. He’s extremely charismatic. His publicist goes to bed in heaven. She has no worries in her life at all. Whereas my publicist — look at her — she has to do a fucking placenta mask every morning to get rid of those dark circles under her eyes.

MH: DO YOU SEND HER PLACENTA MASKS?
MF: No, but I’m going to start.

MH: HOW DOES IT FEEL TO HAVE PEOPLE BEING OBSESSED WITH YOU? ARE YOU ENJOYING IT?
MF: No, because I don’t enjoy being looked at. But that’s part of being successful, doing magazine covers. It’s very masochistic – the one thing you’re so afraid of you become addicted to. I’m addicted to being uncomfortable.

MH: YOU HAVE THIS PUSH AND PULL BETWEEN WANTING FAME AND NOT WANTING FAME
MF: I think most people have that. I can’t imagine someone just waking up and saying, I’m so glad I’m famous. Like I can’t wait to go outside and get photographed today. I’m going to put on my cute scarf and my special vest. I’m sure they do it, but I don’t know anyone who’s like that.

MH: WHAT DO YOU WAKE UP IN THE MORNING THINKING?
MF: I don’t know what my first thoughts in the morning are. I usually go weigh myself. I’m fascinated by how much your weight can change in a day. It can change like five pounds over night. I’m not afraid of what I weigh, I just find it fascinating that I can weigh 106 one day and the next day 109. All because I ate some saltine crackers.

MH: ARE YOU A BIG READER?
MF: Yes. I read a lot of real depressing shit. I kind of read everything I can get my hands on. Right now I’m reading Delicate Edible Birds. I just finished a book called Love Sick. And then I basically read every book ever written about Marilyn Monroe.

MH: WHAT MAKES YOU OBSESSED WITH HER?
MF: I don’t know why I’m so obsessed, I just am, and if I’m going to have her tattooed on my arm, it’s sort of my job to know as much about her as possible.

MH: DOES IT COME FROM ANY ANXIETY ABOUT WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO YOU?
MF: Sure. That’s definitely a thing. I could end up like that because I constantly struggle with the idea that I think I’m a borderline personality. Or that I have bouts of mild schizophrenia. I definitely have some kind of mental problem and I haven’t pinpointed what it is. I feel like I could easily go in that direction and I need to know everything there is to know about it because I feel like it’ll keep it from happening to me. I don’t like to call it an obsession. Anna Nicole Smith had an obsession with Marilyn Monroe. I like to call it a deep-seated interest.

MH: OH, LIKE ME AND BOB FOSSE. WHAT ARE YOUR GOALS? FOR WHERE YOUR CAREER MIGHT TAKE YOU?
MF: I feel like I’d be really good at playing someone with a psychosis, a real deep mentally ill person.

MH: WHAT ABOUT OTHER LIFE GOALS? DO YOU WANT TO GET MARRIED? HAVE KIDS? RULE A KINGDOM?
MF: I would love to create a kingdom. I would love to breed my own – not superior race – but I would breed children and I would train them each in a special skill. One would be trained in the art of nunchucks.

MH: KIND OF LIKE KUNG FU PANDA?
MF: Or Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. I have to find someone who’s naturally physically agile, a really good athlete.

MH: AND THAT’S NOT BRIAN AUSTIN GREEN?
MF: I don’t know if he would be down with making our kids train nunchucks from birth to 18. I don’t know if he wants to create an army.

MH: YOU HAVEN’T TALKED ABOUT THAT WITH HIM?
MF: No. He thinks I’m a ridiculous person. He doesn’t like talking about this kind of thing.

MH: I FEEL LIKE THIS COULD TURN INTO A MOVIE.
MF: It could turn into a movie. We’re writing it right now.

MH: WELL I BETTER GET A CO-PRODUCER CREDIT

Megan laughs, which suggests I won’t quite get a co-producer credit. Her publicist comes over to break up our fun. “Are you done?” she asks. “You could go on and on, I know. It’s fun, right?” I return to Megan’s idea for a movie. “I really feel like we’ve cracked on a hundred million dollar idea,” but she’s already on to answering my question seriously.

MF: I do want to have kids one day. But I don’t want to be an old mom. I’d like to do it before 25. So maybe in 2 years. I always feel like I’ll freak out once I get pregnant. I’m ok with other people’s diarrhea, I just don’t want to have mine publicly.

Photography: Mariano Vivanco
Fashion: Anthony Unwin
Words: Marshall Heyman

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #19, Sep/Oct 2009

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Chase Crawford /2009/09/24/chase-crawford/ Thu, 24 Sep 2009 11:36:29 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=563 Gossip Girl heartthrob, Chace Crawford is graduating to the big screen with Twelve and stepping up to remake Footloose. He to Marshall Heyman about making it in Hollywood. When the actor Chace Crawford removes his baseball cap and pulls up a chair at the Belmont Lounge, a relatively low-key Young Hollywood hangout in the center […]

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Gossip Girl heartthrob, Chace Crawford is graduating to the big screen with Twelve and stepping up to remake Footloose. He to Marshall Heyman about making it in Hollywood.

When the actor Chace Crawford removes his baseball cap and pulls up a chair at the Belmont Lounge, a relatively low-key Young Hollywood hangout in the center of Los Angeles that’s akin to a high-priced dive bar, it is impossible not to get lost in his eyes. They are so electric, so transfixingly ice blue that they deserve their own colour in a box of Crayola Crayons. They are such showstoppers that on the set of Twelve, Crawford’s upcoming film and his first big screen starring feature role since Gossip Girl became a worldwide phenomenon, his co-star, the rapper 50 Cent, joked that Crawford has “Skyline Eyes.”

“I’m not going to say it’s hurt me,” Crawford says of his boyish features, which also include his now signature bushy eyebrows. “I’ve got to thank my mom, though. She’s a beautiful woman. She bestowed on me some good genes.”

Indeed, this summer, Crawford’s good genes earned him the much-coveted title of People magazine’s Hottest Bachelor for 2009. Not bad for a college dropout who, just a few short years ago, was earning money by valeting cars at the oceanfront restaurant Geoffrey’s in Malibu.

Crawford, who turned 24 in July, grew up near Dallas, the son of a dermatologist (his father) and a teacher (his mother). (His sister, Candice, just graduated from college and hopes to pursue a career in sports broadcasting.) The story of Crawford’s first encounter with acting is right out of High School Musical or the new Fox sitcom Glee. In high school, Crawford was a football player, even if, he says, he was into art and painting. But during his senior year, the drama teacher asked him to audition for a role in a production of The Boyfriend.

“I sang the National Anthem,” Crawford recalls. He got the part. “It was a good little role and something about it was just fun, but it didn’t even really trigger anything in me.”
After high school, he landed at Pepperdine, a small Jesuit college on the beach in Malibu. A year later, he dropped out to do some soul searching. “I was just sort of confused and didn’t know what I wanted to do,” Crawford explains. “Everyone there seemed like they knew what they wanted to do, which is, of course, complete bullshit. So I took off.”
During that time of — a time when he was valeting cars, “flooring down the street and back” — a friend convinced him to meet her commercial agent. “I didn’t realise how much money one commercial could give you. I’d done minimal modeling in Dallas and just hated it. I met him, and he goes, ‘Can you do improv?’ And I’m like, ‘What’s improv?’”
Eventually, Crawford wised up to the vocabulary of Hollywood and started going out on auditions. “Finding someone who will push you and believe in you, that’s the first big step,” Crawford says of starting out in the business. “And I started getting really good feedback right away.”

In 2005, he landed a peripheral role in the post-pubescent horror film The Covenant, a box office bomb about warlocks. Still, it was a particularly strong showcase for up and coming teen idols, including Sebastian Stan, who now dates Crawford’s Gossip Girls co-star Leighton Meester, and Taylor Kitsch, who went on to snag a role in Friday Night Lights, a show Crawford particularly wanted, considering his Texas hometown and his passion for football. “I’m still best friends with all those guys,” he says.

Rather than Friday Night Lights, however, Crawford landed Gossip Girl. He plays Nate Archibald who is continually caught between the female leads (Meester and Blake Lively), not to mention many of the other women who appear regularly and even irregularly on the show, in various states of undress. Needless to say, the show is pretty racy — including Nate’s affair during season two with a much older woman.

“People ask, do I feel guilty about the influence Gossip Girl has on teenagers?” Crawford says, posing and answering his own question. “Look, we’re actors. I’m not an expert in how to raise a child. The show’s going to steamroll right ahead if I don’t have the part.”

Crawford is also transitioning as fast as he can back onto the big screen. First up is Twelve, directed by Joel Schumacher and based on a novel by Nick McDonnell. It’s set in a similar milieu to Gossip Girl: Manhattan’s posh private schools. In the movie, Crawford plays White Mike, a drug dealer, who’s selling a potent new drug called Twelve. “It’s totally different,” Crawford explains of Gossip Girls versus Twelve. The film, he says, is both funnier and darker than its television counterpart. “Also, I dropped like ten pounds and my hair was greasy and not flat-ironed.”

Crawford has also signed on to star in a remake of Footloose, the 1984 film starring Kevin Bacon about a town that outlaws dancing, which will begin filming next spring. Once Zac Efron dropped out, Crawford quickly was ushered in, in part, the Hollywood rumor goes, because a studio executive asked his daughter what she thought of Crawford and she squealed with excitement. Still, Footloose remains mostly a carrot dangling in front of our faces at the moment: we will have to wait months and months and months to discover if indeed, Crawford can sing and dance.

“God, I hope so,” he says, with a broad smile. “The guy’s not a dancer per se. But I’ve played sports all my life. I’ve got some balance and agility. It’s going to take a lot of practice. But, put it this way, there’s no gymnastics pole swinging or dancing with cigarettes. I’m starting to find my rhythm and I’ve got to polish it.” (This time to audition, rather than the National Anthem, he sang the song “Footloose,” with piano accompaniment.) For the record, when he first started acting professionally, his mom insisted he take dance classes. “I got there and just walked out,” Crawford says. “Now, she could not be happier [that I’ll be learning to dance.]” As for singing, “I’m a habitual car singer,” Crawford admits. “I actually go karaoking all the time. We get pretty competitive.” Some of his favorites include Elton John and “Patience” by Guns ‘n Roses.

On the personal life front, Crawford says he’s single. While most of the cast of Gossip Girl is now dating each other, creator Josh Schwartz warned Crawford early on that he should “Avoid at all costs dating a co-star.” As of now, he’s listened. “We get to shoot in New York and have that as our playground and do the insane things that we get to be a part of. There’s a part of me that wants to share that,” Crawford says. “But I’m having fun living the bachelor life right now. It’s a good time to be single.”
He recently moved out of the Chelsea, Manhattan apartment he shared with co-star Ed Westwick for his own downtown bachelor pad. “Frat time’s over. I’m just turned 24, I need my own space,” he says. Rumors abounded that chez Westwick/Crawford was especially rowdy and messy. “I don’t know why anyone wants to read about the condition of our apartment. It cracks me up,” he says. ‘It was actually pretty immaculate. I’m OCD. I had a maid come twice a month. We have a few roof deck parties from time to time, but that’s all.”

Despite the People magazine cover, for instance, it still seems to shock Crawford that people are interested in his life. In fact, sometimes he’s mystified that of all his friends who were trying to be actors, somehow he has risen above the pack.

“You get dealt a certain hand and it’s about playing that hand to the best of your abilities,” Crawford says, by way of an explanation. “Maybe a big advantage is I do have an affinity for people and I love networking. That’s it’s own game in itself. It opens up certain opportunities and doors.”

Meanwhile, he believes, members of his peer group might act entitled. They don’t want to ask questions. They think they know it all. “But me,” Crawford says, twinkling those Skyline eyes. “I acknowledge that I don’t know what the hell I’m doing.”

Photography: Alexi Lubomirski
Fashion: Way Perry
Words: Marshall Heyman

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #19, Sep/Oct 2009

The post Chase Crawford appeared first on Wonderland.

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