Friday, November 19, 2010, Zulhaj 12, 1431 A.H  
   HOME
   News in English
   News in Urdu
   Program Profiles
   GEO TV
   GEO UK
   GEO USA
   GEO ME
   GEO CANADA
   GEO EUROPE
   GEO JAPAN
   GEO SUPER
   AAG TV
   Corporate Profile
   Geo Tariff
   News Archive
   Contact Us
   FAQ
   FAQ Distribution
   Feedback
   GEO SKINS
   GEO RINGTONES
   GEO NewsAlert
   GEO Wallpapers
   Transcripts of Program
   Team GEO
   Exam Results
 
 
 GEO Entertainment

 Anne Hathaway talks of ‘Love and Other Drugs’

 Updated at: 2257 PST,  Friday, November 19, 2010
Anne Hathaway talks of ‘Love and Other Drugs’ NEW YORK: Anne Hathaway teams up again in romantic comedy drama "Love and Other Drugs" with her "Brokeback Mountain" co-star Jake Gyllenhaal.

Her performance as Maggie, an sexually overt free spirit who meets a pharmaceutical sales rep and finds herself surprisingly falling in love, has garnered Oscar talk heading into the Hollywood awards season.

Hathaway, 28, talked about the film -- based on the nonfiction book, "Hard Sell: The Evolution of a Viagra Salesman" -- about topics ranging from pharmaceuticals to the movie's main drug: love.

Q: How much has changed in both yours and Jake's lives since 'Brokeback Mountain'?

A: "Gosh, I think everything except for our families and friends have changed in our lives since then. We are basically the same people, just older and wiser."

Q: Apparently in shooting this movie, you cried every day?

A: "I did, I had a bit of a roller coaster experience on this movie...I was playing a character way out of my comfort zone. All that overt sexuality is just not me."

Q: Your character has Parkinson's disease, is emotionally complex and not a typically one-dimensional female romantic comedy character. Is that what appealed to you in the script?

A: "The script that I was sent was a story about a man who was changed by the love of a woman. And the script that we wound up making is a story of two people who are changed by love. What I brought to it was probably a sense of entitlement, that my character ought to have emotional parity with Jake's."

Q: Were the sex scenes the most exposed you have been?

"It's weird to think of one sex scene being exposed more than the other, because it's all the same bits. But I think they were the most involved sex scenes I have ever done, yes."

Q: How difficult was it?

A: "We didn't want to lose the film's energy in these scenes. And I think that is what resulted in the film. It's less of nudity and more of intimacy."

Q: How did you try to not overplay the Parkinson's tremor?

A: "I researched it. I spoke with people who have it at different stages of their diagnosis. About how I got the physical, I watched a lot of videos on YouTube.

"There was always an awareness to keep it authentic . . . we had to be really specific about when her symptoms manifested themselves and when they didn't."

Q: How differently would you feel if you were sitting in the Oscar audience this year as a nominee, compared to last time?

A: "You are so sweet to ask me to go on that magic carpet ride! I believe I am one of about one of 37 actresses with Oscar buzz this year so I am actually going to keep my feet on the ground and say 'I will wait and see what happens.'"

Q: The movie also touches on the pharmaceutical industry. Is it correct you once overcame depression when you were younger without drugs? What do you think about the industry?

A: "That comment was taken out of context."

Q: Ok, the depression or overcoming it without drugs?

A: "I think we can avoid the whole topic."

Q: No problem. So what about the drugs industry then?

A: "I am wary of the industrialization of medicine. I think like most people I am actually pretty frightened of it. I also think in a lot of cases, the drugs are needed."

Q: So you don't reach for the quick-fix headache pill?

A: "I am not someone who reaches for the Advil easily."

Q: Moving onto love, how does one know when one is past the initial "drug" high of love and onto the real thing?

A: "Plato attempted to answer that question and people are still struggling for the proper answer. I don't know anything. All I know is that it requires vigilance of oneself to be worthy of love. When you have found the right person and you are in a place to accept it, I think it is a lot of work to accept love.

"I heard someone say the other day, some people are naturally brilliant at giving love and some people are naturally brilliant at receiving love...and if you are not brilliant at both, then that is part of the journey. And if it's the right person, it will be someone who wants that transition to happen for you."

Q: You joked about your former relationship with Raffaello Follieri on 'Saturday Night Live'. How important was it to keep a sense of humor about that experience?

A: "I think sense of humor is a personal thing. It comes naturally to me. I am naturally self-deprecating. I will go to my favorite Indigo Girls quote...You got to laugh because you would cry your eyes out if you didn't."
 
ShareThisBack     |    Send this story to friend
» GEO Pakistan
PM faces volley of questions during Dadu visit
Drone strike kills three in Miranshah
Fate of Dadu changes prior to PM visit
Minor tremors jolt parts in Karachi
Malik calls on PM
   
» GEO World
Suspected bomb in Namibia was security test: Germany
25-30 miners missing in NZ mine blast
Afghan exit in 2014 an aspirational goal: US
'Unpredictable' cholera to afflict Haiti for years: US
Ahmadinejad blasts Nato policy making
   
» GEO Business
Turkmenistan says wins backing for gas to Europe
Oil prices up in Asian trade
FBR extends sales tax returns submission date
ECB head has 'grave concerns' on eurozone governance
Oil rebounds in Asian trade
   
» GEO Sports
Pakistan win women's cricket gold
Sohail’s double strike helps Pakistan floor Japan
Waqar wants separate teams for Test, ODI, T20
Sania praises husband Shoaib for victory
Players’ SMS going public is serious issue: Tafazzul
   
» Geo Entertainment
Anne Hathaway talks of ‘Love and Other Drugs’
Aamir Khan goes bald again
'Devastated' Eva Longoria files for divorce
Happy 82nd Birthday Mickey Mouse!
Russell Crowe fussy about roles
   
» GEO Health
Swazi life expectancy halved by AIDS, TB: health charity
Sugar, cardio patients advised not take meat in huge quantity
New laser surgery frees eye patients from clumsy glasses
First Haiti cholera case found in Florida
Caffeinated alcoholic drinks unsafe: US watchdog
   
» GEO Amazing and Interesting
MySpace deepens ties with rival Facebook
Lotus set to join IndyCar enginemakers: report
First glimpse of a planet from another galaxy
Scientists claim breakthrough in antimatter hunt
Twitter looking to friend Facebook
   
 
Copyright © GEO TV. All rights reserved.