The Untold Stories of Wes Studi
A profile of the overlooked icon who forever changed the way Indigenous people are depicted onscreen.
A profile of the overlooked icon who forever changed the way Indigenous people are depicted onscreen.
Tommy Orange GQ Jul 2021 20min Permalink
What’s a typical immigrant story? In his new film, “Minari,” the “Walking Dead” star has his own to tell.
A profile of Marlon Brando, 33, holed up in a hotel suite in Kyoto where he was filming Sayonara.
Truman Capote New Yorker Nov 1957 55min Permalink
Why is the actor wrestling—and nearly dying in the ring—at the age of 48? For pride, acceptance, and to undo the mistakes of his past.
Thomas Golianopoulos The Ringer Mar 2020 Permalink
Encounters and interactions with a semi-famous star.
Brittany Terwilliger Pithead Chapel Jun 2018 10min Permalink
I played a father for a 12-year-old with a single mother. The girl was bullied because she didn’t have a dad, so the mother rented me. I’ve acted as the girl’s father ever since. I am the only real father that she knows.
Roc Morin The Atlantic Nov 2017 10min Permalink
A movie star's press junket notes and observations.
Tom Hanks The Hollywood Reporter Sep 2017 25min Permalink
A profile of Moonlight’s Mahershala Ali.
Carvell Wallace GQ Jun 2017 Permalink
“It never really worked for me to have long arguments about motivation. I think looking at your own life, on- and offscreen, you can motivate anything, or you can delude yourself into anything.”
Susan Sarandon, George Saunders Interview Apr 2016 10min Permalink
“He’d gotten hold of this notion that one times one doesn’t equal one, but two. He began writing down his logic, in a language of his own devising that he calls Terryology. He wrote forward and backward, with both his right and left hands, sometimes using symbols he made up that look foreign, if not alien, to keep his ideas secret until they could be patented.”
Erik Hedegaard Rolling Stone Sep 2015 20min Permalink
The world’s most famous child star grows up.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine Oct 2013 25min Permalink
A profile of the actor.
Alex Witchel New York Times Magazine Aug 2013 15min Permalink
An interview with a blotto Lee Marvin.
Roger Ebert Esquire Oct 1970 15min Permalink
A profile of the hardworking Samuel L. Jackson, whose movies have grossed more than any actor’s ever.
Pat Jordan New York Times Magazine Apr 2012 15min Permalink
FRANCO: “Straight” and “gay” are fairly recent phenomena. One of the things the great book Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture and the Making of the Gay World, 1890–1940 is about is the way those labels have changed behavior. Between World War I and World War II, straight guys could have sex with other guys and still be perceived as straight as long as they acted masculine. Whether you were considered a “fairy” or a “queer” back then wasn’t based on sexual acts so much as outward behavior. Into the 1950s, 1960s and so on, the straight and gay thing came up based on your sexual partner. Because of those labels, you do it once and you’re gay, so you get fewer guys who are kind of in the middle zone. It sounds as though I’m advocating for an ambiguous zone or something, but I’m just interested in the way perception changes behavior.
James Franco, Stephen Rebello Playboy Jul 2011 30min Permalink
A profile of Justin Timberlake:
This need to succeed, to become his generation’s multi-talented Sammy Davis Jr., is part of what makes him appealing to filmmakers. “I needed someone who could be a Frank Sinatra figure, someone who could walk into the room and command all the attention,” says David Fincher, of casting Timberlake as Sean Parker, the Facebook investor and rogue, in The Social Network. “I didn’t want someone who would just say, ‘I know how to play groovy.’ You can’t fake that stuff. That’s the problem with making movies about a rock star—actors have spent their lives auditioning and getting rejected, and rock stars haven’t.”
Vanessa Grigoriadis Vanity Fair Jul 2011 15min Permalink
A rare interview with Gene Hackman, who says Welcome to Mooseport was his last movie, unless he “could do it in my own house.”
Gene Hackman, Michael Hainey GQ Jun 2011 10min Permalink