[Credits: Dave Lachance of Las Vegas, Nevada,
provided the audio tape for Julia's appearance with Larry King
on CNN. Thanks Dave for making the text of the interview
available.]
Larry: By the age of 22 this powerful Hollywood woman, who
prefers to be called an "actor" not an "actress,
was twice nominated for an Academy Award, seemed to have it all
but life on screen may have been easier than her private world,
now however happily married, and making back-to-back movies. She
seems cemented at the pinnacle. Julia Roberts now stars in an
action/comedy romance, styled from the classics of the thirties
and the forties. She plays a smart, sassy cub reporter in I Love
Trouble, from Touchtone Pictures, a division of Disney, what
else, they own everything. In theaters nation-wide now her
cohort in the battle of the sexes is Nick Nolte, with whom we'll
talk later on. The movie is both classic and contemporary, like
its star Julia Roberts.
You look pretty good Julia. Thanks for joining us; don't be
shy. Don't pull the shy thing on me we all know you're not shy.
Why did you pick this role and what is your role in role
selecting, how do you choose what you do?
Julia: I am very shy, very shy right now. I read a script and
it's pretty much just an immediate reaction to reading it that I
know whether or not that it's something that I want to do.
Larry: It's all gut?
Julia: Yeah, for the most part I'd say.
Larry: If you like it do you also think commercial, do you
also say this will be a hit?
Julia: No, how can you know that? If people could figure that
out, guess what, there'd be no bombs.
Larry: That's true, but does that enter into your thinking?
Do you say this could be a great commercial success or this is
wonderful but it's not going to be a commercial success.
Julia: No. I either like it or I don't. I want to do it or I
don't. And that's based on how the character appeals to me and
how the character translates into the story, or I just feel it.
Larry: Are there a lot of I wanna dos that never come out?
Julia: What do you mean?
Larry: Scripts you get, oh yes I love this and then something
in the transmission doesn't work.
Julia: From time to time.
Larry: Basically , if you're offered a script and you like it
you do it.
Julia: Yeah. I want to make one thing clear. No, just because
you mention at the beginning that I prefer to be called an actor
than an actress ...
Larry: Someone told me that.
Julia: No, it's true, but it sounds almost sort of like
anti-my gender or something, but if I were a poet you'd call me
a poet not a poetess. So, it's sort of like, we're all actors.
Larry: When is it -- actor is correct, you are all actors,
role players on a stage, you're all poets, you're all authors,
you write a book, so that's what you mean, you're not
anti-feminist. It was on your mind right? Through the whole
first two questions you were thinking, I've got to get this
straight.
Julia: No, I just thought it when I heard it and I just said
it.
Larry: Okay. Starting so young, was that, as you reflect
back, being in a hit early, good?
Julia: Well, I'm sure I prefer it to being a failure.
Larry: I know, but sometimes they say too much, too soon can
cause problems in any artistic business.
Julia: Well, I think everything for its purpose, I don't
think we're ever given anything that we can't deal with, that
we're not sort of meant to understand and act accordingly to
what we need to do. I mean, I've always felt a very even sense
of perspective for what and why I do what I do so I think that
lends itself to a balance when things around you sort of become
heady and overwhelming, that I just sort of stand still in the
center and maintain myself.
Larry: Where did you grow up?
Julia: Georgia.
Larry: Was Eric first in the business before you?
Julia: My parents.
Larry: What did they do?
Julia: They ran a theater school when I was a child.
Larry: So you were on stage all the time or around it.
Julia: Well, I was in the dirt off the stage, playing in my
diapers. Eric and Lisa actually, my other sister who is also an
actor, they did a lot of plays.
Larry: Did you open curtain setups, did a little help.
Julia: Just sat. I was a loiterer, I was the youngest, I was
just a kid you know so I would just sort of sit and watch
everybody, but I head great pictures of all of them sort of
doing this stuff.
Larry: Where along the line did Julia Roberts say, this is
what I want to do, this is what want, spend my life playing
other people?
Julia: I think all along the way I sensed it but not really
having to say anything about it cause I was in school and it was
not what I was doing or whatever. I was very reluctant to sort
of admit it out loud I think cause it seemed like just following
a sort of Roberts line, my parents, Eric and Lisa then me, like
that.
Larry: It was no news, Julia's going to be in movies.
Julia: Yeah, I sort of felt a little bit reluctant to do it
and didn't really sort of really profess it wholeheartedly until
I got my first job.
Larry: Which was?
Julia: Which was a guest part on an episode of Crime Story.
Larry: The television series.
Julia: Um hum.
Larry: You were how old then?
Julia: Seven, Eighteen.
Larry: Did you like it right away?
Julia: Yeah.
Larry: Why? Talk about I Love Trouble.
Julia: Great Fun, the movie,
Larry: No, I want to talk about this -- what is the kick of
it?
Julia: Everything. Everything about it, even the bad things I
sort of like, like having to get up at the crack of dawn is not
my favorite thing to do, but there's something sort of strangely
great about, that you just have to. That you know I wake up at
4:30 or whatever, and I'm exhausted and the last thing I want to
do is get up, but I have to and there's something sort of great
about that, I guess I'm weird.
Larry: Is there something sort of great too about all the
time in between cuts, let's wait, back in an hour...
Julia: Yeah. You know you do things, either I have to work to
prepare for that's coming up or you know I sort of make lots of
things, I've made curtains, I'm knitting a sweater right now,
you sort of sit around...
Larry: You know some actors think about scenes, think about
the role or become totally in the character they are and they
have a tough time doing other things, you don't.
Julia: Well, it depends on what we're doing. You know, there
are times when I can go back to my trailer and sort of just sew,
do whatever I want, and there's times that I go back and like I
said, work on what's coming up or what's following.
Larry: Is part of the kick the fact that, as Anthony Quinn
once told me, it is for a lifetime, childlike to be an actor.
Julia: Yeah.
Larry: You're rolling down a hill as cowboys and Indians ...
Julia: Yeah, it's a bunch of adult people running around
pretending to be somebody else, I guess that's pretty childish.
You know, but it's sort of to me like being in a circus. Sort
of, travel around, you try to do things that are interesting and
entertaining, and you know, I particularly like shooting at
night because ...
Larry: Why?
Julia: Well, because it's so sneaky and everybody's sleeping
and you know, all these sort of adult people running around
doing all this crazy stuff and it's so silly ...
Larry: Like on the street.
Julia: Yeah.
Larry: Like with a great blow-up scene in Pelican Brief.
Julia: Yeah, we worked like ten days of nights I think and it
was so much fun -- well, I don't mean fun, it wasn't fun, you
know, all that stuff, but just the whole idea of it lends itself
to sort of, it has great dramatic appeal.
Larry: Why did you take I Love Trouble?
Julia: Because I really like this character, I liked her sort
of spirit and her the way she says things and her sarcasm and
her off-handed wit.
Larry: She's a reporter?
Julia: She is.
Larry: This is sort of in the Hepburn Tracy tradition?
Julia: Well, I think what we attempted to do is reminiscent
of the style of those movies of that time in that we tried to
have grace, energy and rhythm and a great sense of this equality
of this sort of toe to toe, these two people going at it
matching each other at every point and being very competitive
and so I think we tried to achieve a certain sense of that, that
is very reminiscent of ...
Larry: Comedy romance right?
Julia: Comedy, romance, action, adventure, drama, suspense
...
Larry: But not sexual.
Julia: What do you mean?
Larry: Someone told me it's no sex in it..
Julia: What do you mean by sex?
Larry: What do I mean by sex?
Julia: Yeah. I mean there's sex and then there's ....
Larry: I tell you what, we'll give a pause now, throw another
long on the air conditioner and be right back.
Larry: We're with Julia Roberts, later with Nick Nolte. Was
Nick cast before you, you before him ...
Julia: Me before him.
Larry: Did you have any say in who would be the co-star?
Julia: I did. I said we'd take Nick.
Larry: I mean, how does that work? Do they say to you here's
a list of people we're considering, or they were up to Nick
right away weren't they?
Julia: Yeah, we went to Nick and he was, you know we all sort
of met together and stuff and he sort of sat there and seemed
very Peter Bracket like and we said hey, what the heck, let's go
with
Larry: That's the name of his character? Okay. Working with
him, you work very differently, he's sort of one who engrosses
himself, he goes into six weeks of study, like you work more off
the top right? Is that difficult, easy, different?
Julia: No, in fact, the fact that we do come from completely
different
Larry: Schools
Julia: So to speak. He and also I had very little time
between Pelican Brief and I Love Trouble, and working with
Denzel was so perfect, I mean it just really could not have been
better, so you know off I go racing to Chicago to encounter this
stranger Nick Nolte, and he um, we really merged on the same
mind of, we both wanted the same kind of pace out of this whole
thing, we both had the same ideas for the energy of the
relationship and this sort of antagonistic spirit that these two
people had and the competition and stuff, so we worked on that a
lot and it worked out really well, you know we sort of, we both
had the same ideas, how we came about them I'm sure was very
different, but working on them together was quite easy.
Larry: The process is not what's important, what's important
is the finished product right? What process you use or he uses
is really not, so what.
Julia: Yeah, what you have to do to get on the set is your
own business, you know, and what you do once you get there is
everybody's business. The actor is a story teller. I mean you're
involved in the telling of a story that I'm going to be caught
up in and accept.
Julia: Hopefully.
Larry: The willing suspension of disbelief. Cause I know
you're Julia Robert, I've got to accept that you're this woman.
How important is it that the two people get along?
Julia: At work? I think it's not vital, it's not fatal if you
don't. But certainly it makes working a whole lot more fun, I
mean and I really like to go to work, I really like my job, I
like to have a good time, I think that this is a great thing
that we get to do we might as well really enjoy it while we're
there.
Larry: It is a hoot isn't it. It doesn't seem a bad way to
make a living.
Julia: No, it's great, it's really good, so yeah
Larry: So it's better if you do but not fatal if you don't.
Julia: Well no, cause sort of like getting up at 4:30, you
have to.
Larry: You gotta do what you gotta do. I mean, if you are
antagonists might it help if two people don't get along?
Julia: Well, I think that Nick and I in our friendship
that we have that element to it like he'll make a joke and I'll
make a comment, or I'll make a joke and he'll make a comment,
it's all very, but I mean it's all in a sense of fair play and
nothing is sort of mean spirited, it's all sort of very funny in
the same way that they are.
Larry: Lot of slap stick in this movie? Lot of movement?
Julia: Yeah, I think it's sort of like screwball at time. I
mean we cover a lot of ground in this movie as far as different
ideas of what's funny.
Larry: Like what happens, I'm told there some scenes where
you do your own physical scenes?
Julia: Yeah, for the most part I do
Larry: You went sliding down something?
Julia: Yeah, a catwalk. That was hanging 60 feet in the air
above broken glass.
Larry: Why did you do that?
Julia: Because I'm stupid.
Larry: Did they say, "Let's have a stand-in do
this?"
Julia: Well, no in fact, they didn't. That's what was so
weird.
Larry: What was there motive?
Julia: That's the thing I couldn't believe - they asked me to
do it. That was first and foremost my thought. I am surprised
that they would even, I was sort of expecting a fight, oh let me
try it and if it doesn't work out then Tabby Hansen who was my
stunt double, then Tabby can do it, I thought I was going to
have this conversation so I get there and I say so catwalk
stunt, so yeah, basically you'll be up there and sliding down
here and
Larry: Who's the director?
Julia: Chuck Shyer, but I'll tell you the only reason I'm on
that catwalk was our stunt coordinator, a man named Jack Gill
who is the smartest, safest, most cautious man, and uh, it was
only because of his sort of painstaking explanation and showing
me everything and all, like this is how you're hooked on, and
this is this, you know, cause it was really high and I don't
like to be that high.
Larry: So you had faith in him.
Julia: Yes.
Larry: Now, you're coming down this catwalk
Julia: Right.
Larry: Are you acting or just plain scared?
Julia: Well, it's one of those non-acting kind of days Larry,
you know they say we want you to look really terrified and they
say cut -- that was brilliant! I mean, I'm scared of heights, I
don't want to be up there, it's really, I would have never been
able to do it if I was suppose to make it look like fun.
Larry: How long did it take?
Julia: Twenty minutes.
Larry: Not a bunch of shots.
Julia: We did a bunch of different ones but for the most
part, the really sort of particular scary things, we did as
quickly as possible. But it's not just be suspended in mid-air
sort of sliding as fast as I can down this catwalk, there's also
a camera sort of mounted on a spool of string and five guys
hanging off of it, and I mean the whole atmosphere was -- but
then you look over and there's your director sitting in their
cast chairs drinking their coffee and you know saying "oh
that was great - let's try that again"
Larry: Was all exteriors in Chicago?
Julia: Yes.
Larry: We'll be back with Julia Roberts who stars with Nick
Nolte in I Love Trouble that just opened and this is the big
July 4th weekend and Nick will be with us later, we'll be right
back.
Larry: We're back with Julia Roberts. Is comedy harder?
Julia: It's all specific to the moment. Sometimes I find
comedy excruciating and other times drama is. It sort of
depends. It's always what you're doing is hardest.
Larry: Some people are not comfortable in comedy though. As
Tony Randall said "Comedy is a serious business." Of
course you can't play it funny right? The person is serious.
Julia: You know, I'm just naturally funny you see. I'm just
kidding. No, but I do think that I appreciate the pace and the
timing of jokes. I can't always do it but I can appreciate it
and recognize it. Like to me a lot of the stuff that was funny
in this movie sort of moves like a rocket, you know, and there's
a definite rhythm that I was completely devoted to that I
thought was really important.
Larry: Have you turned down anything you regretted?
Julia: No.
Larry: No. Took anything you regretted?
Julia: No.
Larry: Every film you've done you wanted to do and were happy
with the way it turned out?
Julia: Right.
Larry: It doesn't always turn out the way it reads though
right?
Julia: No.
Larry: But you're glad you did it?
Julia: Because it all, ultimately good or bad serves a
greater purpose and I can recognize that purpose.
Larry: Which is/
Julia: Which is mine, which is my experience of having worked
on it, the things that I learned, the things that I would like
to apply to my life, the things that I learned to avoid, you
know, all kinds of stuff. It's all in there, you just have to
look for it.
Larry: Do you worry or think about how well a film does after
you've done it?
Julia: No. No point in that.
Larry: So on Monday you're not reading the box office
receipts of the weekend.
Julia: In fact, I wanted to be in town when it comes out.
Larry: We're taping this the week before, you'll be in
London.
Julia: I will be.
Larry: What are you filming in London?
Julia: A movie called Mary Reilly.
Larry: Is this the Jekyll and Hyde thing?
Julia: Yeah.
Larry: She's Jekyll and Hyde, she's Dr. Hyde's...
Julia: She's Dr. Jekyll's house maid.
Larry: And who plays
Julia: John Malkovich.
Larry: Oh boy.
Julia: I'm scared already and Stephen Frears is directing and
it's so fantastic and this is, it's been really incredible
working on this movie.
Larry: And she knows that Jekyll becomes Hyde?
Julia: No, she doesn't, she's just doing her work.
Larry: Malkovich. Have you ever worked with him?
Julia: No, it's great.
Larry: Have you started already?
Julia: Um hum.
Larry: What's it like when you work, I mean every actor's
different. Nolte obviously is - his presence is obvious right?
The intensity. How about Malkovich?
Julia: He's tremendous. He's really tremendous. We had a
couple of weeks of rehearsal and just his ideas and the way he
thinks things through, he's very smart and Steven is incredibly
smart and so I just sort of walk around, sort of, you know, in
awe of these men.
Larry: Good acting is intelligence. It would be pretty hard
to be a terrific actor and not be fairly bright about what's
around you in the world.
Julia: I don't think so.
Larry: Wouldn't you say that most of the good actors you've
met are bright.
Julia: Yes.
Larry: Did you know Pretty Woman, I know you don't think
about whether it's going to be a hit or not, were you surprised
it was?
Julia: Stunned.
Larry: Stunned.
Julia: Stunned.
Larry: No one expected it to go through the roof.
Julia: We all sort of left that movie thinking well, we had a
really good time and that's what counts.
Larry: We had low expectations.
Julia: Um, well, I really don't have expectations because for
me it is the uncontrollable. But I do think that, and I've
worked with people that since then that worked on Pretty Woman,
and we all sort of sit around laugh and say who would have
thought? I mean because it was, it was great fun to work on, it
was the most fun you could ever want to have at work, but it was
total chaos. I mean it was sort of like, okay, we're rolling,
anybody got anything funny to say? It was, and the only person
who could have, I'd say that in the filming of Pretty Woman we
made about 10 versions of a movie and one of them was good
Larry: And that's the one that came out.
Julia: Garry Marshall is the only person that could have
weeded through all that stuff.
Larry: Cause he's certifiable.
Julia: And found the one good movie and he did it.
Larry: Was Gere fun to work with?
Julia: Great. That movie, I'm telling you, that movie was so
much fun to make, it was almost sickening.
Larry: When you saw the finished version, did you say
"hey, this is good?"
Julia: I probably laughed louder than anybody in the theater.
Larry: At the movie or with it? You had fun.
Julia: Yeah, I thought it was great you know, because it
just, I mean it's very difficult to watch a movie that you're in
that way, but you know, for whatever it's worth, I sat in there,
I was so surprised, I was cracking up I thought this is so funny
I can't believe how funny it is. It was hysterical. And at one
point Richard was in the theater, I was sitting next to him and
I said can you believe this and he said, you are really funny,
but we were stunned. We just couldn't.
Larry: So in other words had they taken another one of those
10 versions this could have been disastrous.
Julia: I might not be here right now.
Larry: How do you, we keep, there's all these stories, the
mysterious Julia Roberts, she disappears, she doesn't talk to
anyone. You're very easy to talk to.
Julia: Thank you. I think I am too.
Larry: Where do these stories come from that you're
difficult, do you think?
Julia: I think that the actuality of my life is so simple and
at times can be as far as newspaper copy goes, somewhat boring,
you know. The reality of my life is not going to sell off a
newsstands like hotcakes, let's get real.
Larry: If we followed you around for a day, it's be boring.
Julia: I have my sort of more exciting days.
Larry: Newspapers are interest in that exciting day though
right?
Julia: Right and since that day is rare, or that day is
private, then they just sort of stir their own pot.
Larry: And do you dislike that or do you know just accept it.
Does it go with the territory as the term goes.
Julia: I don't think there's any reason why it has to go with
the territory. I don't see why you have to sacrifice a sense of
privacy or a since of pride in your life because you're given an
opportunity to do what you love. There's no equation there for
me.
Larry: Then in a sense it is none of my business who you are
married to.
Julia: It's not, but at the same time I don't try to hide
that. All I'm saying is that don't camp outside my house and
attack me when I come in. Don't knock my sister down trying to
jump into my face. Is that too much to ask? New York City is not
the safest city in the world and when men come running after you
in New York City, guess what, you run. That's what you do.
Larry: Back with our remaining moments with Julia Roberts,
the film is I Love Trouble co-starring Nick Nolte from Touch
Tone.
Larry: We're back with Julia Roberts. How is Lyle Lovett by
the way cause I love him.
Julia: He's very well.
Larry: He is a great guy. Is he as much fun to be around as,
I only meet him as an interview subject.
Julia: No, he's great, he has a great sense of humor and
that's the thing about Lyle that's, he's got this sort of like
slanted very ironic sense of humor about things which I think is
just hysterical.
Larry: How many movies ahead are you? I mean you are doing
this one now, the Jekyll and Hyde thing, then what?
Julia: Then I'm doing a movie in the fall called "Grace
Under Pressure" and I do a movie next spring called Alice
Ocean.
Larry: Grace Under Pressure is Hemmingway's definition of
class. What's it about.
Julia: There you go. It's about a young woman named Grace who
at the beginning of the movie she is you know, set in the south,
and she's married and has a young child and has she works in her
family business which is horse breeding and come to find out on
this particular day that her sort of whole life is unraveling,
she didn't really notice it, and so she goes a little nuts and
it's very funny, it's an incredibly clever written script.
Callie Khouri wrote the script. She wrote Thelma and Louise and
she has a great sense of women and life.
Larry: Is this a movie, are there major players in it?
Julia: This just sort of started so now it's just me.
Larry: And that other one you've got to go to Australia to
shoot that. Looking forward to that.
Julia: I am very much.
Larry: Now, do you space this, how much time do you work, how
much time you don't, how much time you get to be by yourself?
Julia: Well, you try. Sometimes its hard cause a lot of the
movies need a certain time of year and so you think can't we
just wait a few months and they need something or other and
there's lots of schedules to take into account so you do the
best you can.
Larry: I have to ask you this since everyone has some
thoughts on it. The OJ Simpson matter, the abuse, any thoughts?
Julia: My own real take on it cause I have to be honest, I've
been away and I haven't kept up to the minute on it. The very
little that I've seen I think has been handled in a very
irresponsible, sensationalistic movie of the week kind of manner
on the television.
Larry: Overdone?
Julia: Completely overdone.
Larry: You've got a major star driving along a highway. It is
like a movie.
Julia: But I just feel like the news has turned it into this
sort of, that they're selling it, that they're selling news,
that they're selling tragedy, that they're selling the complete
despair and destruction of people's lives you know.
Larry: Do you think in the press there's a kind of perverse
enjoyment in this.
Julia: I don't think you have to sell the news. It's the
news, give the facts, keep people informed, keep people up to
date and then let it go. I see like ratings points flashing
across, you know, the news at night and it makes me sick and I
think part of it is having been living in Europe I watch the BBC
news when I come home at night and even though that's about as
dry as it comes, at least there's, they seem respectful, what
they're offering up is a respectful way, they're talking to
people in a manner that has a certain amount of decency and
decorum and the things that they're talking about, no matter how
tragic, no matter how horrible, they're dealing with in a manner
that is clean and clear and accurate and here are the facts, not
here's what we think, not here's the body, not we got as close
as we could to it, not here are the faces of all the people who
are affected by this, you know, just what you need to know.
Larry: Great seeing you again Julia. Good luck with Jekyll.
No good luck with Hyde. Julia Roberts, the picture is I Love
Trouble co-starring Nick Nolte and Nick is next.
End Of Interview