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W Magazine - The actress - February 2003
Jennifer
Aniston may be coming back for one more season of Friends (and that
seven-figure paycheck), but she's already made the leap to
big-screen stardom.
Were
Jennifer Aniston’s life a movie, she’d be on the verge of some
very big trouble. After all, as every filmgoer knows, it’s always
just at that glowing, warm-fuzzy moment when the heroine seems to
have found success, true love and a generally soft-focus,
montage-like existence that you can be sure all hell is about to
break loose.
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To
recap: The actress recently agreed to a 10th season of
Friends, thereby making the show’s 26 million fans very
happy and some NBC executives positively ecstatic;
she’s contentedly married to Hollywood’s number-one
golden-streaked princeling, Brad Pitt; she’s banished her
wicked (or at least, very ill-mannered) memoir-writing
mother from the proverbial kingdom until further notice;
she’s won over the fire-breathing critics with her turn as
a windbreaker-clad Madame Bovary in The Good Girl, and
she’s bought herself an enormous manse in Beverly Hills,
where she and Mr. Pitt plan to raise somewhere between two
and seven children, depending on whom you ask. In movie
land, storm clouds would be gathering fast.
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Of
course, Jennifer Aniston’s life is not a movie, and instead of
heading for a third-act reversal, she just keeps leaping from
mountaintop to mountaintop. While many small-screen stars move on to
roles in KFC commercials, watered-down spinoffs and
straight-to-video flops, she’s nabbed coveted starring parts
opposite two of Hollywood’s biggest box-office deities, Jim Carrey
and Ben Stiller, thereby finding herself in the tiny golden circle
of first-name-only stars like Cameron and Julia and Reese.
“Jennifer
just has 'it,'” says Tom Shadyac, who’s currently directing her
in the Carrey film Bruce Almighty. “If you look at the handful of
A-list actors that exist in Hollywood, you realize that the thing
they all share, in addition to being beautiful and talented, is this
amazing relatability. When you watch Jennifer, she manages to amaze
you and make you feel like she might be your next-door neighbor at
the same time, which, when you consider how much money she makes and
who she’s married to, is pretty incredible.”
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All
of which helps to explain why, despite letting herself be
dragged back to Central Perk for another round of lattes
next season, Aniston is just about ready for life after
Rachel. “I mean, I’m completely terrified about Friends
coming to an end, but I’m also dying for it to end, you
know?” she says cheerfully, sitting on the terrace of the
modest Hollywood Hills “love nest,” as it’s invariably
described, that she and Pitt will soon surrender in favor of
the $13.5 million six-bedroom French Normandy number they
recently
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purchased.It’s
a crisp, clear December afternoon, and the actress—who’s
dressed in faded Levi’s and a tight charcoal-gray
turtleneck sweater—looks terrific, her fabled honey-toned
hair tumbling casually around her shoulders.
“The
weird thing about The Good Girl was that suddenly all these
people were like, ‘Wow, look what you can do!’” adds
the 33-year-old actress, who had previously earned raves for
her roles in Office Space and Wendy Wasserstein’s The
Object of My Affection. “Like I’ve been doing work for
the last nine years or something. Suddenly they’re like,
‘Hey, she’s really an actress,’ as if I were just some
bulls- comedienne before.”
“People
who do comedy are always underrated because they make it
look so easy,” says Aniston’s agent, Kevin Huvane. “So
it was exciting to see Jen challenge herself with a film
like The Good Girl—which is pretty much the antithesis of
Friends—and get the sort of recognition she deserves. I
don’t think there’s any limit to what she can do.”
The
film has opened up a “whole new horizon” for her she
says. “It feels like this new set of opportunities.” For
instance, she’s been thinking about doing a Broadway
musical. “Singing scares me, so I think that might be
fun.”
Which
is not to say that she’s about to forgo her comedic roots.
Despite the Oscar buzz swirling around her dramatic turn in
The Good Girl, she’ll return to comedy in both Bruce
Almighty and a new project by Meet the Parents writer John
Hamburg. “It’s a pretty big departure for her,”
Hamburg notes. “She plays this wild woman who draws Ben
Stiller out of his shell—someone who’s very loose, which
is not the way Rachel is at all.” Hamburg chuckles. “I
mean, I’m not asking Jennifer to wear a prosthetic nose or
anything, but it’s very different, and she’s very
conscious of that. I remember when she first came on the
set, she said, ‘If you feel like I start doing a Rachel
thing, just tell me, okay?’”
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As
is true of many comic performers, Aniston developed her
breezy charm to cope with a difficult childhood. Born in the
San Fernando Valley to struggling actors John and Nancy, she
spent her kindergarten year in Greece before the family
relocated to New York’s Upper West Side, where her father
found work playing the sexy devil Victor on Days of Our
Lives. But as the marriage disintegrated, Aniston found
herself trying desperately to ease the tension.
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“I
was always the mediator,” she says. “I was always trying
to smooth things over and get everybody to laugh.” Despite
her best efforts, her parents divorced when she was nine,
and she spent the rest of her childhood living with her
mother and unwittingly honing her comedic timing with a
steady after-school diet of sitcoms. “God, I loved Joanie
Loves Chachi,” she says with a grin. “We didn’t have a
VCR, so I used to sit by the TV with a tape recorder when it
was on, and then go to sleep singing along with the theme
song.”
Her
goal, in those days, was to be a soap star. “General
Hospital was my favorite,” she says, “because their
makeup was always perfect, and the hair, and the clothes—I
loved that.” Aniston takes a drag off her Merit cigarette.
“Looking back, of course, I realize it wasn’t a good
thing. I was always reading those beauty magazines and
wanting to become this unattainable thing. Then one day,
you’re in it—you’re the girl in the pictures, and
suddenly you realize it’s all smoke and mirrors,
airbrushing, lighting, stretching. No wonder people are
killing themselves. Starving themselves. Popping pills.
They’re all trying to achieve something impossible.”
That
may seem easy for her to say—especially if you believe the
press reports about how Aniston lost 30 pounds to become
Rachel. “It was actually 10,” she says with a laugh.
“I mean, I was huge, apparently.” She rolls her eyes.
“The idea that I got Friends because I got thin isn’t
true at all.”
Almost
as soon as the word “thin” comes out of her mouth,
Aniston checks herself. “I got healthy,” she says. “I
don’t think I got thin. I think I got healthy. I eat food
now.” She pauses, and it’s clear that food has not
always been a simple issue in her past. “Like a year
before I met Brad, I started getting to a place where I was
sick a lot, and my energy was low and I wasn’t happy,”
she continues, “so then I started taking vitamins and
exercising like a fiend, and maybe went too far on that,
because you get in that Zone Diet thing and you get kind of
addicted to that. But now I am kind of in a happy medium
where I just do what I do. If I can work out, I do, but I
don’t go crazy. I’m just healthy.” The past few years,
she adds, have brought a sense of self-acceptance with
regard to her body, which leaves room for indulgences like a
“killer” homemade Thanksgiving sandwich with plenty of
mayo and stuffing.
Aniston
glances out toward the Pacific sunset and shakes her head.
“But I mean, I just don’t get why anyone still cares
about this stuff,” she says. “Who starts the intrigue,
you know? Who starts the fascination? Let me tell you,
it’s not the actors. Never is there an actor who says,
‘I want to be everywhere! I want to be so disgustingly
everywhere that people are saying, Okay, that’s enough.
We’ve seen enough of her.’”
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In
Aniston’s case, despite the fact that her life has been
pondered and repondered from every conceivable angle, the
public thirst for her remains unquenched. “It’ll be
interesting to see if it dies down at all once Friends is
over,” says the actress, who was once approached in the
sauna at L.A.’s Burke Williams Spa by fans requesting a
group photo and who recently had to have a police escort
shuttle her home after being swarmed by paparazzi while out
shopping. “At the moment, there are those days when you
drive out of your driveway and there’s a car parked at the
bottom of the hill, just waiting for you, and you look at
them and think, ‘This is what your life has come to?
You’re going to follow someone to the market and to the
doctor and to get their hair colored? This is how you’ve
chosen to spend your day?’”
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Paparazzi aren’t the only ones who’ve sought to profit
from Aniston’s personal life. In 1999, her mother
published her memories of Jennifer’s childhood—including
the gory details of the divorce—in a stomach-turning
tell-all called From Mother and Daughter to Friends. “I
don’t think my mother understood how it would make me feel
to have all that stuff broadcast,” says Aniston, who is
clearly still emotionally bruised by the experience. “But
then, of course, when I told her, she still didn’t get
it,” she continues, her tone twisting slightly in anger,
“or she just didn’t care how I felt.”
Still,
Aniston seems certain that the two will reconcile
eventually. “It’s just a matter of time,” says the
actress, who credits “years of therapy” with helping her
understand the situation. “I don’t need an apology
because I already know the truth, and if I approach her with
an expectation of an apology it could just lead to
disappointment,” she says. “I just, at some point I’ll
just have to let go and decide to forgive her, which I
can’t do yet.”
She
shakes her head sadly. “The bummer is that we were so dirt
poor when I was growing up, and now there’s plenty of
money, and I feel like we should be able to enjoy it
together.”
Indeed,
Aniston says she’s still routinely floored by the paycheck
she takes home every week for Friends. “That’s not
something I’ll ever get used to,” she says. Not that she
and Pitt aren’t having an awfully good time trying. In
addition to the Beverly Hills house—complete with
waterfall pool—the couple also purchased a sprawling
oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara that Aniston refers to as
Brad’s Baby.
“Brad’s
a land man,” she explains. “He wants land, land,
land.” And land isn’t Pitt’s only domestic interest
either. He and Aniston have been renovating the Beverly
Hills house since they purchased it in June 2001 and are
still “not quite there yet,” she admits. “We were just
going to do the floors,” she says drily. “But Brad has
such an incredible eye, and he gets in there and sort of
says, ‘Well, how high can this ceiling go?’ and
‘What’s behind that wall?’
“He
definitely has strong opinions about aesthetics, and I
admire that so much,” she goes on. “It’s hard, though,
because the one thing I thought I could do well was put
homes together, but it’s something that really matters to
him, so we’ve learned to make decisions that we both feel
good about. And I actually think our marriage is even better
now because we’ve been through this stuff. We’ve settled
in; we’ve survived the whole house-construction aspect,
and that’s a big thing. It’s not always easy. It takes
work.”
And
yes, even the occasional dustup. “We do fight,” admits
Aniston, a self-confessed “conflict avoider.” Then she
clarifies, “Well, we have discussions. I am not a fan of
fighting when it is screaming. I like accomplishing
something. But I don’t trust a couple that says they
don’t fight.” Nevertheless, she remains in awe of what
she refers to as her husband’s general kindness.
“He’ll hate me for saying that,” she chuckles, “but
when you grow up in a family where people are not always
very kind to each other, you realize how important that
is.”
Asked
how it feels to have found the love of her life, Aniston
offers a rather cryptic answer: “Is he the love of my
life? I think you’re always sort of wondering, ‘Are you
the love of my life?’ I mean, I don’t know, I’ve never
been someone who says, ‘He’s the love of my life.’
He’s certainly a big love in my life.” She pauses.
“And I know that we have something special, especially in
all this chaos. In this nutty, brilliant, wonderful, hard
business that we have, it’s nice to have somebody who’s
anchored and knows you, really knows all of you.”
That
sort of unconditional acceptance, Aniston adds, seems
gradually to be helping her to come to terms with herself as
well. “If there’s one thing I’m proud of, it’s that
I’ve finally gotten over not liking myself,” she says.
“It’s took me 10 years to really notice, Wow, you’re
not really nice to yourself, are you? You really don’t
like yourself very much. And then it took a long time to get
to the point where I do like myself, but I actually do now.
I’m a pretty happy person these days.” She smiles that
sad, beautiful smile. “I think too much, but otherwise,
I’m happy."
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