Matt Damon’s Disappearing Acts
The enduring career of the megastar no one really knows.
The enduring career of the megastar no one really knows.
David Marchese New York Times Magazine Jul 2021 30min Permalink
A profile of Zendaya.
Hunter Harris GQ Jan 2021 20min Permalink
An interview with the actor.
David Marchese New York Times Magazine Aug 2019 25min Permalink
On growing up in Hollywood, the cost of beating Oprah at the Oscars, and why Jack Nicholson doesn’t act anymore.
Andrew Goldman Vulture May 2019 35min Permalink
On medical acting and real pain.
Leslie Jamison The Believer Feb 2014 35min Permalink
Encounters and interactions with a semi-famous star.
Brittany Terwilliger Pithead Chapel Jun 2018 10min Permalink
“A unicorn, a monster, a phoenix, a machine, a heavyweight fighter, an astronaut, a superhero, a thoroughbred, a home-run hitter, a waitress juggling ‘16 entrees, 42 starters, 16 desserts,’ a jazz virtuoso, LeBron James, Magellan, Snuffleupagus. The actress Laurie Metcalf has been compared to all of these things.”
Willa Paskin New York Times Magazine Feb 2018 15min Permalink
“As my acting career developed, I was no longer cast as a radical Muslim – except at the airport.”
A conversation about race, Hollywood, and what it’s like to be able to conjure weed out of thin air.
E. Alex Jung New York Jul 2016 20min Permalink
How a 29-year-old actress, reeling from the death of her first love and battling Dustin Hoffman off-screen, found herself on the set of Kramer vs. Kramer.
Michael Schulman Vanity Fair Mar 2016 25min Permalink
Winona Ryder has always been trapped in her own anticipatory nostalgia, and the public has always wanted to keep her there.
Soraya Roberts Hazlitt Jan 2016 40min Permalink
Fargo, Damages, Cheers, and Leslie Nielsen’s fart machine.
Will Harris AV Club Dec 2015 15min Permalink
Being a Muslim-American actor often means being really good at yelling “Allahu Akbar!” before someone kills you.
Jon Ronson GQ Jul 2015 15min Permalink
The art of the voiceover.
Mac McClelland Medium Nov 2014 20min Permalink
An actor, fresh from prison, attempts to reconnect with his son in 1950s California.
"And he had believed it. Everyone had. Since the day he’d been cast as Lev, Alexi had been aware that he was getting away with something—though, he reasoned, he’d never explicitly lied about anything. He just never told the complete truth. He may have, when asked about his American accent, mentioned the pronunciation workbooks stacked on his family’s kitchen table, as if he, and not just his parents, had pored over them nightly. He may have once, a little drunk at a party, pretended to forget the English words for the pigs in a blanket being passed around. He may have, that night and possibly a few others, begun sentences with, In my country . . . He may have, when asked by the film’s very openly communist director one night over steaks at Musso’s what he thought about Truman, parroted back what he’d overheard at the writers’ table, that he was narrow-minded and ruthless, his doctrine a farce and an affront to civil liberties. He may have, at Stella and Jack’s invitation, attended a number of meetings in their Hancock Park living room, where there may have been some pretty detailed discussions about following their Soviet comrades down whatever path they took. He may have, on one of those evenings, filled out one of the Party membership forms being passed around, simply because everyone else was."
Molly Antopol Joyland Jan 2014 40min Permalink
An old crush is remembered via childhood memories and an unusual anecdote.
"Then he began wearing pastel skateboarding-themed shirts. SKATEBOARDING IS NOT A CRIME, one said. Wallace Marguerite is not committing a crime, Stella thought. It was novel and thrilling, true whether or not he was a skateboarder. She never saw a skateboard."
Lisa Locascio n+1 Jan 2014 Permalink