• The Very Private Public Philip Seymour Hoffman



    In a long profile published as the cover story of The New York Times Magazine, Lynn Hirschberg nominates Philip Seymour Hoffman as the leading character actor of our day. Lord knows he can't be faulted on effort. At 41, Hoffman still divides his time between stage and screen and can be seen in two big movies released this fall, Synecdoche, NY and Doubt--down one from this time last year, when he could be seen in Before the Devil Knows You're Dead, The Savages, and Charlie Wilson's War. He's also "a very active co-artistic director of the LAByrinth Theater Company, a multicultural collective in New York that specializes in new American plays. LAB mounted five productions last year, thanks in large part to Hoffman’s diligent involvement with every aspect of the process, from fund-raising to directing to acting." Hirschberg caught up with him in London, directing a West End production of a play called Riflemind, which he had previously staged in Australia. "“I don’t get nervous when I’m directing a play," Hoffman told Hirschberg. It’s not like acting. If this fails, I wouldn’t be as upset by it.” Incidentally, Riflemind was written by Andrew Upton, who's Mr. Cate Blanchett, who, like Hoffman, was in the cast of The Talented Mr.Ripley. "“On that movie," Hoffman recalled, "we shot only one or two days a week,” Hoffman recalled. “Much of the time, I was in Rome with Cate and Andrew. I have a hard time having fun, but that was heaven. And I must really like Andrew — my girlfriend, who is in New York, is about to have our third child, and I am here.”

    Whatever else he's had going on in his personal or professional life these past twelve months, so far as movies are concerned, for Hoffman 2008 was probably the year of Synecdoche, Charlie Kaufman's dizzyingly ambitious dark comedy about the promise of making sense of life through creativity and the dangers of living in your head. Hardly a universally acclaimed, unblemished success, it's one of the few recent movies that seemed worthy of some of the arguments it inspired.

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  • View the Right Thing: Mickey Rourke and Darren Aronofsky Q&A

    View the Right Thing: Nerve intern Billy Gray reports on New York film happenings.

    Mickey Rourke disappeared from the public eye years ago. And for a half hour, the packed house at the Times Center on December 8th thought he'd pulled a similar act on his talk with New York Times reporter Lynn Hirschberg and director Darren Aronofsky. But he eventually made an entrance in a pinstriped suit and purple John Lennon shades that he wore despite the dimmed auditorium setting. There's serious Oscar buzz for Rourke's turn as Randy "The Ram" Robinson in Aronofsky's The Wrestler. Despite his bad-boy image, Rourke wouldn't blow this shot at career redemption with a missed appearance.

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  • Max Von Sydow: Bergman's Violin

    In a brief interview with Lynn Hirschberg in The New York Times Magazine, Max Von Sydow Max von Sydow talks about his long association with Ingmar Bergman, who died last year. “'He had been ill for almost a year, but we had been in close contact over the phone. . . . ' Von Sydow’s wife interrupted him. 'Tell about the last time he spoke about you,' she said. Von Sydow paused again. 'He said, "Max you have been the first and the best Stradivarius that I have ever had in my hands,” ' von Sydow recalled. 'We loved each other, and I know when he stopped working, when he became ill, he missed it. He missed his actors.' Von Sydow says that "working with Bergman was always worthwhile

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