Post-Lecter, Anthony Hopkins Takes Risks
The Oscar-Winning Actor Is Now Writing And Directing (And Even Composing Music)
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Play CBS Video Video Preview: Anthony Hopkins Anthony Hopkins talks about how he developed the infamous character Hannibal Lecter and how, in life, people should push themselves to do what is uncomfortable so that they never stop achieving.
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Having achieved success on stage and screen, the Oscar-winning actor has taken up duties behind the camera as well. "I just wanted to live more and broaden my horizons," he said. (CBS)
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Hopkins won as Oscar for "The Silence of the Lambs," for playing Hannibal Lecter, who gave cannibalistic psychiatrists a really bad name. (AP (file))
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With Emma Thompson in "The Remains of the Day" (1993). When asked to analyze his acclaimed performance as the repressed English butler Mr. Stevens, Hopkins remarked, "Well, I don't move much and speak quietly." (Columbia Pictures)
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Anthony Hopkins with Lisa Pepper in "Slipsteam," written, directed and scored by Hopkins. (Strand Releasing)
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"My friend Shelly, she says you go through past lives, incarnations, and you get in touch with everything that makes you do things in this life, like, say you were an addict or nuts or something, like you have fear of elevators and spiders and snakes and stuff, like clowns and opera singers and freaky stuff," he told Sunday Morning correspondent Rita Braver. "Well, it all comes up through past life aggression and you get pulled back into what she calls the slipstream."
With a stellar cast including John Turturo and Christian Slater, "Slipstream" is a kaleidoscopic film with fantasy and reality intermingled.
"In a way, the man I play is a screenplay writer, Felix Bonhoefer. It's not a standard part. He's an observer of these people around him and it is very much my take on the world," Hopkins said. "And in that sense it's autobiographical. Because he's a man who's really in his shell, never comes out of his shell. Nobody can reach him - his own wife can't reach him."
But that's no longer true of Hopkins. He says he has settled down and finally realizes that he has accomplishes everything he set out to do.
"I've had a wonderful career, and I started getting bored with it as an actor and I did this as an act of light rebellion," he said.
At almost 70 years old, Anthony Hopkins is entitled to a little light rebellion. He grew up in Wales the son of a baker, and knew as a little boy that he wanted to be famous.
"I wanted to escape from what I found was my own mediocrity," he said. "So I had a burning ambition to expand my horizons because I wasn't very bright at school. I was very slow. I sat in the back of the class for all my school years going, 'What are they talking about?' And my father used to say, 'God knows what's going to happen to you. I don't know, you worry me.'"Photos: 2007 Fall Film Preview
His father needn't have worried. Hopkins got a scholarship to study acting and music, and in 1965 was accepted at the prestigious Royal National Theatre in London, with Sir Lawrence Olivier at his mentor.
"He really liked me," Hopkins said. "But I was a bad boy in those days. I was badly behaved. I drank a lot, and I got in a lot of trouble. And he said, 'You know, you want to kill yourself. Go ahead, but you can't do it if you want to survive, you have to be really strong.'"
But Hopkins kept drinking and in 1968 he made his first film, playing Richard I in "The Lion in Winter" with Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hepburn. He and O'Toole became drinking buddies.
"So we both drank a little too much," Hopkins said. "We both know how to take a sherry before dinner, but he was a great character, charismatic, genius I think. And Hepburn she was the sort of den mother. She didn't like drinkers. She said, 'My God, if I smell booze on your breath, I'm going back home because I hate it. Drunks, I've known them all: Bogart and Spencer Tracy.' But she liked us all, you know. She said, 'You're drinking that? My God, you're going to die.' She was a busy body. But years later when I stopped I phoned her. I saw her one day. I said I stopped drinking. She said, 'Thank God for that. You're a fool.'"
It was in California where he moved to pursue his film career, that he knew he had to stop.
"I was dying," he said. "I was really lonely and there's a little tap on the head, saying, 'You want to die? What do you want to do?' I thought. So that's what I did: I stopped."
He concentrated on work, doing lots of TV and film and even some theater. But his career was a bit stalled when out of the blue he got offered a part in a film called "The Silence of the Lambs."
Before he read the script he thought it was a children's story and was surprised to find it to be a chilling tale of a cannibalistic psychiatrist, Hannibal Lecter. The character Hopkins created was later dubbed the greatest movie villain ever by the American Film Institute.
Hopkins won an Oscar for the role and got several more nominations: for playing John Quincy Adams in "Amistad," Richard Nixon in Oliver Stone's "Nixon," and a repressed butler in "The Remains of the Day." As usual, he downplays his acclaimed performance.
"People say, 'How do you play him?' I say, 'Well, I don't move much and speak quietly,'" Hopkins said. "So people put into their imagination that they're impressed, you know?"
But he says his all-time favorite character is Burt Munro, the aging motorcycle rider in "The World's Fastest Indian." Munro said that danger is the spice of life and you have to take risks. Hopkins seems to have embraced that philosophy and recently took up painting. He's already had several shows, giving the sales money to charity.
"Because I do it all for fun," Hopkins said. "I'll come in the door with all kinds of colors, dark blues, reds, greens and purples and just pour it on and sometimes in liquid form and then make a mess of it. It's like painting with kids, you know - you daub it on and stand back."
And he took another risk: Using music he composed in his new film.
Hopkins credits much of his current happy state to his wife of 4 years, Stella Arroyave, who plays his wife in "Slipstream."
Human beings, none of us are perfect. Can't be saints. We make our mistakes and I made mine.
Anthony HopkinsIn the past Hopkins has said he was not a very good husband. But that has changed.
"I was just thoughtless," he said. "Human beings, none of us are perfect. Can't be saints. We make our mistakes and I made mine. Over, done, past, closed, through the next door."
Hopkins has gone through many doors. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1993 and in 2000, Hopkins decided to become an American citizen.
"I love it here, it's so liberating and beautiful," he said.
Today, Hopkins says he still marvels at what he has achieved as he looks out over his expansive career.
"I just wanted to live more and broaden my horizons," he said. "I've got a bigger life. I don't mean it's about money or success. It has nothing to do with that. It's just to have a more full life."
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- "Can someone tell me the name of that movie-Hopkins played in, where he had that Doll that talked, and he was a ventrilquist, and the doll killed people,, what was that movie ?? Made about 1978 or so,, ??? Thanks !!"
- Posted by JetRanger7 at 11:43 PM : Oct 28, 2007
"Magic" (1978)
Netflix synopsis:
"Acclaimed director Richard Attenborough helms this unconventional horror-thriller that reveals Anthony Hopkins"s penchant for creepiness years before his Oscar-winning turn as Dr. Hannibal Lecter. After bombing in his first solo performance, a magician"s assistant (Hopkins) holes up with a ventriloquist"s dummy named Fats and eventually hones his act into something spectacular. But when Fats starts talking back, his master"s at his mercy." - Reply to this comment
- Can someone tell me the name of that movie-Hopkins played in, where he had that Doll that talked, and he was a ventrilquist, and the doll killed people,, what was that movie ?? Made about 1978 or so,, ??? Thanks !!
- Reply to this comment
- that''s one less drunk on the road. thanks from
sober nations. prohibition now. sugar
is not good for your teeth. life is a raw lemon.
driving in a ''blackout'' can be a frightening
but narcicisstic experience. so many stories told.
unfortunately all true. why was i spared?
bridge over san luis rey. near camp pendleton.
by thorton wilder. and there is thorton burgess. - Reply to this comment
- why be one person all your life? when in acting
you can be so many others. you should really
ask the characters if they wish you to play them.
especially when playing in historical fiction?
what would the ''real'' characters think of your
performance? the nightmare? the wrong guy
got the part, and the woman, and the money,
and the full life. and it had to be done,
over and over and over and over again, because
no one got the scene right the first time.
and production schedules were destroyed.
and it all ended up improvised and ad libbed.
and scripts? to heck with writers. will
the actors join them in the strike against
who? the Big Moron Himself. the case for
moron design is very well taken. if He''s like us,
heaven help us. key of e minor. - Reply to this comment
- "But I was a bad boy in those days. I was badly behaved. I drank a lot, and I got in a lot of trouble" Hopkins said."
I think it was more the fava beans than the chianti. - Reply to this comment
- I want to tell you about a major fire, my friends. Our Constitution is on fire. And it''s currently being burned in Congress. See H.R. 1955, a.k.a., Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act of 2007. I couldn''t believe it. Apparently, activists with Web sites are really begining to anger the elite insofar as they are publically holding them accountable for their evil. Here''s a part of the bill, which passed the house on Oct 23, in spite of Congressman, Ron Paul''s opposition thereto. The right to free speech on the Internet is gone, my friends. Look it up for yourself, and weep for your country that our rights have eroded this far. Here''s a short excerpt from the bill''s DEFINITIONS statement: "The development and implementation of methods and processes that can be utilized to prevent violent radicalization, homegrown terrorism, and ideologically based violence in the United States is critical to combating domestic terrorism." Here''s another excerpt from the bill''s FINDINGS statement: "The Internet has aided in facilitating violent radicalization, ideologically based violence, and the homegrown terrorism process in the United States by providing access to broad and constant streams of terrorist-related propaganda to United States citizens." And guess who get''s to decide what is "terrorist-related propaganda?" You got it! The Department of Homeland Insecurity, an agency that''s answerable ONLY to The President. If Ron Paul isn''t elected, our country is doomed!
- Reply to this comment
- Something about eyes that blue...don''t know what it is...
- Reply to this comment





