Newsweek Oscar Roundtable available! And photos available here:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newswe...eron-and-more-photos.html?cq_ck=1327105312351
Newsweek's Oscar Roundtable Reveals Actors' Private Parts
Jan 23, 2012 12:00 AM EST
Welcome to Newsweek's annual Oscar Roundtable. Michael Fassbender's penis makes everyone laugh. Charlize Theron sleeps with her statue. Christopher Plummer boogies to house music. Tilda Swinton talks about her first time. George Clooney doesn't want to live in a trailer. Viola Davis is terrified of Meryl Streep.
Print
Email
Comments (0)
Were waiting for the stars to arrive when the first distress message comes through. Charlize Theron might be late because her house is surrounded by paparazzi and she cant get out. Then a puzzling email warns that Michael Fassbender isnt coming after all.
So, of course, Theron is the first to arrive at Smashbox Studios in West Hollywood, where were holding this years Newsweek Oscar Roundtable. Shes fighting off a cold and keeps saying she sounds like a man. If so, not any man Ive ever met. By the time Fassbender blows inthe email was apparently a prankGeorge Clooney and Viola Davis and Tilda Swinton have already shown up, and the lovefest has begun. At many previous roundtablesNewsweek has been doing these since 1998the talent was often meeting each other for the first time, but this year our lineup has a lot of shared history. George and Viola (sorry, but it was a first-name kind of day) are old pals; they worked together on Solaris a decade ago, and he lent her his Lake Como villa for her honeymoon. George and Tilda are good buddies, too, having bonded making Michael Clayton and Burn After Reading. Charlize and Michael just spent months together shooting Ridley Scotts sci-fi epic Prometheus at Pinewood Studios outside London.
We knew the chemistry was going to be special this year. Although this is work for themjust part of a string of Oscar-season promotional dutiesit feels more like a cozy A-list dinner party. Fassbender, who once worked as a bartender, runs out with his publicist before the photo shoot and returns bearing vodka and Bloody Mary mix, then sets up shop behind the bar in the greenroom and begins to pour. (Its still well before noon.) With his short-cropped hair and Irish bonhomie, he bears no resemblance to the slick sex addict in Shame or the moody, sideburned Rochester in Jane Eyre, and even less to the straitlaced Carl Jung in A Dangerous Methodespecially when he and Theron start sharing stories of their drunken sky-diving experiences. Last to arrive is Christopher Plummer, dapper and elegant. At 82, Plummer is no longer the drinking man he was in his wilder dayshis recent memoir is full of memorable boozing talesso he doesnt partake. But theres no need to loosen him up: in front of our video camera, he assumes the persona of the newly out gay father in Beginners, playing with a scarf as he boogies to house music. When its Therons turn, she transforms herself into the reckless, drunken narcissist she plays so unforgettably in Young Adult, and hurls a drink at the camera. (To see these and other star videos from the Oscar Roundtable, check out Newsweeks new iPad app.)
Theres a stir in the room when the surprise seventh star arrivesUggie, the scene-stealing 9-year-old Jack Russell from The Artist. Should one address him in English or French? Swinton, not one to be starstruck, falls to her knees before the canine. Hi, Uggie, you are such an amazing dog! she says, insisting on a photo of the two of them together. Not everyone is so happy to see the pooch. Plummer expresses frustration that Cosmo, Beginners remarkable Jack Russell, isnt getting the same awards-season attention. We had the better dog, he declares, with his best silken patrician diction. He doesnt seem to want to pose in the group photo with Uggiethe competition!and no one is quite sure whether his reluctance is serious or sly.
Gavin Bond for Newsweek
Its time for the roundtable conversation to begin, but Clooney and Fassbender cant be torn away from the Ping-Pong table in the lounge. Whats the score? Were like those schoolchildren, Clooney says. We dont want to know whos winning.
The element of play is a dominant theme. These actors are very serious about their craft, but they insist on keeping it fun. If we were all doing what we should be doing as grownups, wed be working in an office, Clooney says. Were all still kids playing make-believe.
The other motif that keeps popping up is, well, Michael Fassbenders penis, which plays a memorable supporting role in Shame. No one at the table misses an opportunity to rib him. It is suggested that his member be the centerpiece at the roundtable. But Theron, known for her raunchy tongue, isnt one to be upstaged. Just before the video cameras roll, she brushes her pants with a lint remover and asks us, Hows the vagina looking?
I should have known that the talk would quickly turn to sex. Although my fellow moderator, Ramin Setoodeh, and I had decided wed open the discussion with a generic questionWas there a movie or performance youd seen as a child that inspired you to be an actor?Swinton is quick to remind me that she and I had just been discussing our first erotic memories in the cinema. Shed recently shown her 14-year-old twins Vertigo, the most sexually obsessive of Hitchcock movies. So our opening question is revised, by popular demand, to everyones first cinematic sexual revelation.
Theron: I remember being maybe 9 years old and catching a glimpse of Body Heat, of them in bed and Kathleen [Turners] hand, but over the covers, on his crotch area. And I started crying. And Ive been damaged ever since.
Clooney: So has William Hurt, by the way.
NEWSWEEK: And why did you start crying?
Theron: No, no, Im joking!
NW: How old were you?
Theron: I think I was 8 or 9.
Clooney: That ****es me off. [Theron is puzzled, then realizes hes moaning about how old she makes him feel.]
Theron: Got it. I am only 14 right now ... Yeah, that was my first little tingling sensation.
Clooney: I grew up in Kentucky. We had drive-in theaters and I remember watching Last Tango in Parisand its still amazing to me that they did Last Tango in Paris at a drive-in. In Kentucky. You can imagine.
Plummer: What an erotic state that is!
Clooney: Look at that sheep!
Swinton: But isnt a drive-in all about tingling sensations? I always imagined you could see Bambi in a drive-in and get a tingling sensation.
Plummer: There were no movies when I grew up. [Laughter.] There was barely a stage. Radio hadnt really started yet. But I still had an erotic experience nonetheless. I didnt need any of the media. But if you really are interested in knowing, I think my first was Hedy Lamarr in Ecstasy. That was really daring. I dont know if they were her tits. I think it was someone elses body and Hedys gorgeous face.
Davis: My first erotic image was Nashville. That scene whenisnt there a singer who is completely naked onstage?
NW: Gwen Welles.
Davis: Singing, you know. I remember being completely shocked by that. And so kind of titillated. She was so vulnerable, and it was like, Oh, my God, shes in front of all those people naked!
Fassbender: I think it was Wonder Woman for me, actually.
NW: The TV show?
Clooney: Was it the tiara?
Fassbender: The TV show, yeah. I was always trying to capture her between the change. [Laughter.] I felt unusual things were happening to me and I didnt understand. [For an extended version of this discussion, in which Fassbender discusses the challenge of urinating on cue in Shame and Swinton confesses that she once fell asleep on camera, go to thedailybeast.com.]
(part 1 of 2)