Leonardo DiCaprio: The heartthrob is a kid at heart
 
philstar.com - 30.01.00
by :Ricky Lo


Titanic sank and Leonardo DiCaprio rose to
superstardom.

That's a fact.

Did Leonardo, 25 (Nov.
11, 1974), feel like the
"King of the World" that
Titanic director James
Cameron did (as he
announced for all the
world to hear when he
was named Best Director
at the 1996 Oscars)?

Hardly.

In fact, according to Leonardo himself, the backlash of the
Titanic success so frightened him that, sigh, he almost
turned into a hermit. Thank God, he didn't.

Otherwise, we would have been deprived of the great
talent which first shone side by side with the formidable
Robert De Niro in This Boy's Life, Leonardo's film debut at
age 14, followed by What's Eating Gilbert Grape (for
which he was voted Best Supporting Actor by the National
Board of Review), The Basketball Diaries, Romeo + Juliet,
Total Eclipse (probably his most daring performance as a
gay poet), The Man in the Iron Mask and, yes, Titanic.

When Leonardo wasn't even nomina- ted in the 1996
Oscars for Titanic, his millions (billions?) of fans all over
the world got that, uh, sinking feeling. But they soon rose
from the depths of despair when Leonardo himself
shrugged off that Oscar "snub" as, well, one of those
things.

Two weeks ago, I actually shook hands with Leonardo at
Kapalua in Maui, Hawaii, where the press junket for his
latest starrer, 20th Century Fox's The Beach, was held.
His hand (the right one) was a bit cold but his smile was
very friendly, very warm. His eyes are bluer than the
waters of Hawaii. He's lanky (about six feet) and he cuts
such a casual figure that if you didn't know who he was
,you would have simply thought when he passed by that,
you know, he's just a regular American guy, goodlooking
enough to merit a second look. Leonardo was so casual in
simple T-shirt and denims (after the TV interviews) that he
hardly called attention to himself. No star complex at all.

The Beach was based upon Alex Garland's best-selling
book which has attracted a cult-like following. The movie
was directed by Danny Boyle of Trainspotting fame, shot
in Thailand, the story's actual setting, amidst protest from
environmentalists that the shooting would do harm to
Thailand's natural resources. ("We didn't destroy
anything," said director Boyle. "We saw to it.")

Leonardo (said to have been paid a staggering $20 million
for the job) plays Richard, a back-packer who goes to
Thailand to look for his paradise, only to realize that his
paradise has turned into an island of nightmare.

The following Conversation kicks off on a light note
(about Valentine, love, etc.) and then tries to probe the
Leonardo DiCaprio psyche (his search of his own
"paradise," etc.) and encourages him to discuss lengthily
his life before and after Titanic.

It will be Valentine's Day in two weeks time. Who are
you spending the day with?

"My mother. We might spend it in Germany during the
premiere there of The Beach." (Leonardo's mom, Irmelin,
separated from his dad, George, an underground comics
writer and distributor, shortly after Leonardo was born,
according to a magazine story. Leonardo is an only child. --
RFL)

So your mom is your Valentine date.

"My mom was born in Germany during World War II. She
went to America right after the war. She had a really
messed-up life. She studied at City College in New York.
She met my father there."

You seem to be very close to your mom.

"My mother meant everything to me. When I was young, she
brought me to Germany to be with my grandparents and to
see what my German heritage was like. We travelled around
the world together. She made me the person that I am now.
She taught me honesty."

How was your life after your parents split up?

"I saw both my parents all the time but I lived with my
mother."

What about your father?

"He's a Buddha-like figure to me, the kind of person I would
like to be someday. He was in the underground comic book
world with the likes of R. Crumb and Robert Williams. I
grew up meeting those guys."

You're also close to your grandma (Helena Idenbirken,
83).

"Oh, yes, I am. I invited her to Thailand during the shooting of
The Beach. She was supposed to stay for only one week but
she loved it there so much that she stayed for one month."
(Leonardo's mother and grandmother appear in some scenes
in The Beach. -- RFL)

How old were you when you had your first love?

"How old was I when I had my first love? Oh, boy, I don't
remember, I can't remember! I suppose my first girlfriend
was my first love. First love? That's a strong word. I suppose
if I found a true love I would be married right now, wouldn't
I? Tough question. I don't know."

What's your most romantic moment ever?

"Most romantic moment? I can't remember any!"

What sort of girls turn you on?

"The same as what most people find attractive -- you know,
something genuine, somebody basically good, maybe
somewhat funny."

And what turns you off?

"Pretentious women really turn me off, I would say.
Vindictive women turn me off. Opportunistic women turn me
off, too."

Speaking of The Beach, of all the offers that came after
Titanic (The Man in the Iron Mask was shot ahead but
released later), why did you choose it?

"I really wanted a project that I could connect to. I just didn't
want to listen to what other people were saying; I didn't want
to do a project that to them was a good choice. I wanted
something that was interesting to me. So when Danny Boyle
talked to me about The Beach, I got interested right away.
The Beach has a comment on society as a whole and I just
love it."

In one scene, you press the nose of a wounded character
to make him die. I find that scene very emotional and
very touching. Very dramatic.

"That scene shows the sacrifice that the character (Richard)
has to make, you know. Richard understands that there's no
way for (the wounded character) to survive, so he makes him
die. Richard actually feels that he's doing a heroic thing by
doing that."

You can't seem to get out of the water and the sea.
Titanic was shot mostly in the water/sea, and so was The
Beach. It's a good thing you're not hydrophobic.

(Laughing) "As far as water is concerned, it's mere
coincidence. There's no connection whatsoever, I swear."

What sort of preparation did you do for The Beach?

"I just love the collaborative feeling that I have with Danny
Boyle. I love thei surreal moments in the movie, too, and the
rituals that the character is made to go through for the
audience to understand him better. I just love working with
Danny Boyle."

It's very obvious.

"One of the things about Danny Boyle's style of filmmaking
that I like is the fact that, you know, he sort of presents to
you the character, you're not given a back story, you're not
given the character's history or his past. Danny Boyle just sort
of throws the character into the elements and you see what
kind of character he is in the process of the movie. You go
along with the transformation of the character as the story
goes on."

In the movie, Richard is obsessed with his search for
paradise. What about you, what's your idea of paradise?

"Well, I think that in a lot of ways people have a wrong
concept of paradise. I don't think that there is really a
paradise out there. You know what I mean? Not in this day
and age where everything is sort of rediscovered. There's not
too many places left that could exist like paradise. The whole
notion of paradise is basically a place that could solve all your
problems and I think that's a false concept. There's no place
out there that can rid you of your demons, you know. It's
something that you have to find internally, within yourself, in
your own life."

You mean to say that paradise is a mere fantasy?

"We can certainly gain knowledge and experiences from
places that we visit but it all comes back to who you are as a
person. I admire Richard's courage in seeking out a place like
that within his almost robotic life. So he goes out there and
searches what he perceives as his paradise."

And he doesn't really find that paradise...

"Richard finds that the human animal in a lot of ways is not set
up for surviving paradise. We never believe we own it.
Wherever we go, we can't survive in a place like that. The
whole book and the whole story is very symbolic of our
relationship with the earth we live on, too, you know. We
don't respect our surroundings and all we do is consume
everything within our path to make it comfortable for us but
with complete disregard for other places and other living
things and for the whole environment."

Did you feel the way Richard did in the story? You know,
seek your own paradise, a world all your own away from
the maddening crowd?

"I think everyone feels that way sometimes. You know, get
away from it all. But you know what happened to me these
past couple of years. I chose to face it head-on rather than
run away from it. I could have become a hermit, but I didn't
choose to."

You must have totally identified yourself with the
Richard character.

"Richard discovers that the whole world is becoming
westernized and he can't escape it. Everything is becoming
more and more pre-packaged and pre-digested. He's
desensitized and he can't really find many things that he can
connect with on a one-to-one level. Everything is pre-packed
out for him. He goes to the far reaches of Thailand and
discovers that it's all set up for the tourists. There's
McDonald's at every corner and there's no way to escape
that. Also, the story says a lot about the difference between a
tourist and a traveller. You know what I mean? The tourist
just sort of goes along with what's given to him while a
traveller wants to experience the place that he visits on a
more one-to-one basis and really get into its culture."

The video-game scenes are interesting. They speak well
of Richard's playful and adventurous nature, and yours,
too.

"The video-game sequences were partly my idea. I knew it
was something Danny Boyle would find interesting, he being
one of the few directors here on earth who would listen to
suggestions. Not all directors are open to suggestions."

What did you learn from doing the movie?

"When I first read the book, I didn't have an idea that there's
a whole culture of travellers called back-packers going
around the world searching for something. That was the most
amazing thing I learned from the book and from the movie. I
didn't have an idea that there are so many Westerners going
to far places searching for that sort of hippie-like nomadic
kind of existence. Meanwhile, the ironic things is that they're
making it more set-up for the tourists. I love to travel, I get a
lot from it, but at the same time, you know, it's the whole
concept of paradise. Again, as I've said, there's no place out
there that can give you everything. You can learn from your
travelling and bring home a lot of things but, you know, you
have to be happy with yourself internally before anything else
can solve your problems."

I wonder, what have been the changes in your life after
Titanic?

"I see that the key question is, 'What changed me?' And the
answer is, everything changed in a lot of ways; my whole life
changed! You know, becoming a public property is
something I didn't choose to be. Nothing's normal now. I
have to watch everything that I do or say. It's a learning
experience. It has also helped me understand the media
better."

You sound like the tidal wave of attention and popularity
generated by Titanic was overwhelming, something
scary?

"Oh yes, it was!"

Then, even a Titanic-like popularity and success doesn't
mean complete happiness, after all.

"I don't take it as something that would solve all my problems
because no matter where you go, you still have to deal with
yourself."

How did you cope initially with the impact of Titanic on
your life?

"I dealt with it in a different way. I told myself I wouldn't let it
affect me or overwhelm me. I was going to defy it. I was
going to be who I was, I was going to lead a life as normal as
possible. I was going to do what made me happy no matter
what other people would say."

Fame and fortune don't equal paradise after all.

"The biggest myth of fame and fortune is the misconception
that it is paradise. What fame has given me are unbelievable
opportunities to do career-wise, which is a huge gift. You
know what I mean? I'm more in the driver's seat now. I do
the type of films that I want to do along the direction that I
want to go as an actor."

And how do you deal with superstardom?

"As hard as I can, as well as I possibly can. Sure, there are
some annoying moments, like when things are printed about
you that are outright lies or imitations of the truth."

Such as?

"Such as millions of things!"

Do these "millions of things" affect you in a negative
way?

"I can get frustrated but I just have to adopt to the situation
because I realize that I don't have any control over it. I just
tell myself, 'Look, the only thing that can represent who you
are is the work that you do and what you put into it.'
Performances that I give my art form are all that can
represent who I really am. All the other stuff is out of my
control. You don't have control over people who want to
label you this and that."

Do you want to do another Titanic?

"You know, I think it would be utterly boring if I were to
repat the same type of film over and over again. Titanic in a
lot of ways was a departure for me. I took the chance to do
the kind of film that I'd never done before. It was an
experiment in a lot of ways and thankfully, it was a big
success. I'm still a young actor experimenting with different
types of roles that I really like to do. I think it would be
underestimating an audience to think that they would like to
see the same film over and over again."

What sort of roles do you prefer?

"Basically, I like films that say something different or films that
experiment. Certainly, growing up with my father. I was
constantly surrounded by all kinds of artists, not only actors
and filmmakers but also cartoonists, poets and writers. My
father was part of the whole hippie generation. I have vivid
memories of all kinds of crazy things happening which could
have affected the choices that I am making now."

Do you get engrossed in your movie character that you
carry it with you even after the shooting is done?

"You know, I'm the kind of actor who can disconnect myself
from the character as soon as the director says, 'Cut!' As
soon as the camera stops grinding, I'm myself again; I'm not
anymore the character I'm playing. That's why I love to play
on the set in-between the shooting. If they say in my contract
that I can invite my friends over to the set and they'd give my
friends free tickets, why not? I would love that."

Do you still keep the same friends you had before
Titanic?

"You know, it sounds like a cliche, I'm sure it does. But the
truth is that my friends and especially my family are an
environment where I could hone myself. But it doesn't mean
to say that I don't make new friends or talk to other people,
or anything like that. What I'm trying to say is that my family
and friends have kept me grounded in the way that they help
me laugh about all this. We constantly joke a lot about the
'image' which is supposed to be me but from which I'm
actually completely detached. You know what I mean? The
'image' has become its own thing, its own life, but I have
completely separated myself from what that is."

By the way, how do you see yourself 10 years from now?

"Ten years from now? I can't even see myself 10 minutes
from now! But I hope that 10 years from now, I will still have
the same excitement and enthusiasm for my work. I don't
ever want to grow up; I don't want to be an adult. I want to
be a kid forever!"
 






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