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2000 年度雜誌訪問

E! Online

E! Online

Q & A with Tobey Maguire
by Jeanne Wolf

Tobey Maguire is a rising young star who seems to maneuver Hollywood without a trace of attitude. His irresistible combination of laid-back, grown-up wisdom and boyish enthusiasm has attracted directors and given his performances a startling edge of reality.

The 24-year-old who quit high school to earn his living as an actor has left his low-rent past behind to live in the Hollywood Hills and pal around with Leonardo Dicaprio. (They became buddies while working together on 1993's This Boy's Life.)

This month, Maguire continues his nonstop string of big-screen appearances with big-name talents and directors - having recently been a Civil War soldier in Ride with the Devil and an orphan haunted by his past in Cider House Rules - to costar with Michael Douglas and Robert Downey Jr. in Wonder Boys. He plays a misfit whose brilliant fiction writing is equaled by his ability to invent his own life.

James, the college student you play in Wonder Boys, is one strange dude, to say the least. You're never sure where he's coming from.

I didn't really put a label on him myself. Some people think James is gay. I don't really know what he is - I don't know if James really knows. I think he lives in his own imagination and hasn't let anybody in, even though he's really searching to connect with people. He's also a bit self-destructive, suicidal, and at the core of that there is a lot of pain. But I think, underneath it all, James is a good kid who will come out okay in the end.

You make acting look painless, but does it put you through a lot to play emotionally demanding roles like this one?

Sometimes it does. But when things go well, it's very rewarding. On Wonder Boys, it was wonderful going to work with Michael Douglas every day, because he's so engaging. We both like basketball a lot, so I would come to his trailer and watch some games, and we would chat about basketball.

What about Robert Downey Jr.? Is there a cautionary tale in watching how he's spent his "wonder boyness"?

I'm not sure. I think Robert is a great guy, and I learned a lot from him on the movie. Whatever his struggles are, they are his to have. I don't judge him at all.

Do you ask actors like Michael and Robert for advice, or do you just learn by watching them work?

I just watch. Robert, for instance, is very relaxed. He has a sense of freedom. He's not afraid to try things - he's not afraid to fail. He really commits himself, and it's just great to be around that kind of energy and courage and creative freedom. Michael just keeps coming. I think he must wake up 10 minutes earlier than anybody else, and he does 10 percent more work. He would have idea after idea on how to play a scene. I have an acting teacher who says, "Never settle for the first five ways you think of doing a scene." Most likely, those are going to be the conventional ways. You have to break new ground, and Michael's just tireless in that way. I would feel like, "I better keep up with this guy, or I'm going to get left behind here."

People keep labeling your acting as minimalist. Are you comfortable with that?

It makes me think of the furniture I'm buying for my house more than acting. In The Cider House Rules, I was holding back very much on purpose. I wanted Homer Wells to be a very restrained person - and James in Wonder Boys is very similar in that way. Both of them reveal only so much of themselves to other people. It's not me, Tobey, being that way - it's the choices I made for the characters.

You and Katie Holmes are reunited in Wonder Boys after working together on The Ice Storm.

Yes, I think The Ice Storm was her first audition when she came out to L.A. from Toledo. Right after that, she got Dawson's Creek. Katie is great. She's become a very natural actress.

I know you're a friend of Leonardo Dicaprio. Have you learned anything about being famous from watching how he's dealt with the media and fan frenzy?

It's been beneficial watching him go through it. I think he's handled himself very gracefully. A lot of the press about him, he can't really control. You can't allow yourself to be affected by that stuff.

You've been getting lots of media attention yourself. Doesn't dealing with fame change you?

I think it can be whatever you make of it. It certainly helps strengthen my character and maybe forces me into positions where I have to help make decisions and set certain boundaries. I try to view it as a positive in my life rather then a negative.

Your father was a cook, and you thought about following in his footsteps. Do you get in the kitchen at all now?

I cook a little bit - for myself at home, for my friends or whatever. I make really strange food, because I'm a vegetarian, and I like tofu and nuts - so I'll make pasta, and I'll just start throwing nuts in there. It's strange.

Do you really like tofu, or is it just because it's good for you?

Tofu is great, but only firm tofu, I don't like soft tofu - the texture's really weird. I'm very particular about my tofu, because prepared the right way, it can be very tasty.

When did you first become a vegetarian?

A little over eight years ago. I just never really liked meat. I had a really tough time even eating chicken. I would start imagining what I was eating and the life of the animals and all that kind of stuff.

Okay, enough about food. What about fun? Do you go to movies and just have a good time?

I'm getting better and better at it. There was a time, probably five or six years ago, when it was tough for me because I was so critical and very picky. Only the best stuff was even worth being made as far as I was concerned. Now, I try to be less judgmental and just sit back and enjoy movies for what they are.

Anything you wanted to do in your personal life but felt that something held you back?

I've always been frightened of dancing. I'd get out on the floor and barely move my arms. Finally, I thought, "I'm just going to go with the band and do it." I was dancing my heart out and, afterward, one of my friends said, "That was great, but you were really joking, weren't you?" I was like, "I wasn't joking - I was dancing."

So, I guess we can forget about seeing you in a musical. But what drew you in to acting?

When I was about 12, my mom gave me 100 bucks to take drama instead of this home-economics food-preparation course I was going to take. That was sort of my introduction to it. My mom encouraged me to be an actor. The story is, of course, more complex than that, but basically, my mother was urging me to do it, so that's why I started.

You've made no bones about the fact that you grew up in a situation where your mom had to struggle to raise you as a single parent. Now that you're earning big bucks, does your past affect how you spend it?

Yeah, definitely. For a while, I wouldn't spend money at all. But it's weird to hoard it. It's actually like kind of bad energy. I think that now I have a pretty good relationship with money, and I'm finally learning how not to be worried about it. I have sort of unlocked that little block in my mind that has said, "I'm really poor." Now, I'm like, "Okay, I can drive a decent car. I can buy some nice furniture." I eat at nice restaurants. I travel.

How much does the size of the paycheck you're offered influence the roles you choose?

I haven't made any decisions based on money, at least in the past few years. There were times when I had to do a film because I needed to eat. I've been fortunate enough to get a little bit extra so I can really have patience and take my time and wait for the right role to come along. A big paycheck is tempting, but it's just not that important.

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