Hawke Flies
High For Training Day
Exclusive Ethan Hawke, Training Day Interview by Paul
Fischer from the Toronto Film Festival
Ethan Hawke may be one of Hollywood's hottest stars, but as hot as he
is, he has resisted the lure of the Hollywood blockbuster. With Training
Day - in which he plays his first ever cop opposite a villainous Denzel
Washington - that may well change. Following the film's North American
premiere at the recent Toronto Film Festival, Paul Fischer caught up with
a very affable Mr Hawke.
There was a time when Ethan Hawke, shunned the media.
"Yeah, I've often said I didn't like doing this, but if I really
hadn't liked it, I could have stopped, right? I could have gone off and
been a shopkeeper. They don't do any press junkets." Once ferociously
shy, Hawke seems happy enough touring world film festivals such as Toronto,
to talk about his new film, the darkly violent Training Day.
Hawke is the idealistic cop at odds with Denzel Washington's almost evil-to-the-core
mentor, in this amoral look at police corruption in inner Los Angeles.
Hawke, best known for playing introspective and poetic types in smaller
cinematic fare, had never played a cop on screen until this project came
his way.
No wonder, he says, he was anxious to give it a shot, no pun intended.
"I always wanted to do something that people might actually see",
the thoughtful 31-year old muses, half-smilingly. "I wanted to do
it in a way that wasn't offensive to me, you know what I mean?
Denzel Washington is one of the best actors in the world, plus this script
was an intelligent, fun cop movie, in keeping with some of the cop movies
I grew up on. In comparison with many of today's movies, this has very
little action it.
It's a high intensity movie and I like it a lot." Hawke, who made
his screen debut at age 15 in Explorers, went on to play many thoughtful
characters in the likes of Dead Poets Society, Reality Bites, Before Sunrise,
Snow Falling on Cedars and even the latest screen version of Hamlet.
In Training Day, as often thoughtful and idealistic as his character
is, he is a cop. "My wife calls it my first boy movie", Hawke
adds laughingly. "Everyone plays cops except me - I never have",
which has its drawbacks, the actor adds. "I had to do all this research
for it, unlike Denzel, who's played like SEVENTEEN cops." Maybe this
won't be Ethan's last cop movie. "Who knows? I go where the most
challenging and interesting material is. In this case, I wanted to do
this particular movie.
I just hope it doesn't confirm my worst fears, which is that all you
need to do to be a successful male actor is carry a gun." Hawke laughingly
adds that Training Day has led to numerous offers to play cops. "I've
never been asked to play a cop in my life and here they are coming out
of the woodwork."
Hawke is more than just a talented actor. Following in the footsteps
of many of his contemporaries, Hawke can now add 'director' to his extensive
resume. But the film which he directed is as far removed from Training
Day as you can get. It stars his real-life wife, Uma Thurman, plus Kris
Kristofferson, Natasha Richardson, Steve Zahn and Vincent D'Onofrio. Chelsea
Walls was shown at Cannes this year. "We shot it digitally, which
is so fun. It's like water colouring alone in your room.
It really opens doors for people. I can't wait for people to see it."
He is excited about his directing debut but scoffs at the idea of directing
a big studio movie such as Training Day. "Are you kidding? I wouldn't
know where to start? Let the big boys do those kinds of movies; Chelsea
Walls is a small, intimate film that I did for myself, not the studios.
My interest would never carry me through a movie like this; I know nothing
about this world. The movie I directed is about Bohemian artists living
in a Chelsea hotel, you know what I mean?" As an actor, Hawke had
three other films screening in Toronto: Tape and Waking Life, both from
director Richard Linklater ["both great experiences, hopefully more
than my friends will see them"] and The Jimmy Show. And while most
of his A-list pals like Leonardo Di Caprio are off making A-list piles
of money, Hawke continues to fuel his passions for acting by returning
to the stage, this time in New York in Sam Shephard's new play The Late
Henry Moss. "If I could survive on theatre alone, plus do the odd
small movie, I'd be happy." Hawke is not only an accomplished actor
and director, but author as well. Ethan has already completed his second
book, which will be published in about six months. "I love to write,
it's an affirming experience." His first book, The Hottest State,
was published in 1996.
Hawke is an unassuming presence, one who takes fame in his casual stride.
He is well aware of his good fortune in having found something he likes
to do and having found it so young. "It is luck, knowing what you
want to do in life. The older I get, the more grateful I am that I had
something I loved." That professional life brought with it personal
happiness as well. It was during the filming of Gattaca that Hawke and
co-star Uma Thurman met and fell in love. They were married in 1998 and
have a daughter, Maya, and are expecting a second child in January.
Ethan has grown up a lot, he says. His once dismissive attitude towards
publicity he now describes as "a young man's attitude; it's a ridiculous
one to have had." Now as a filmmaker, actor\, author and father,
young Ethan is willing to do what he can to get people to see his work
- big or small. "The truth is, I'm a fan of movies and I like reading
about them; I know OTHER people like reading about them, it's part of
our culture. Oh, and it helps me get other jobs, I find", he adds
laughingly. Those jobs are certain to keep coming for the talented Mr
Hawke.
About: Ethan
Hawke
Birth Name: Ethan Hawke
Born: November 6, 1970
Upcoming
Movies
Training
Day (2001 ) Release October 5
Waking Life
(2001 ) Theatrical Release In Limited Release October 19
A imaginative animated film about a man (Wiley Wiggins) whose dreamlike
adventures in an alternative reality bring him into contact with a series
of bizarre characters. The movie's most interesting feature is its use
of "rotoscoping" animation that is "drawn"
on top of digitally shot live-action footage.
Starring Wiley Wiggins, Julie Delpy, Ethan Hawke, Nicky Katt, Timothy
"Speed" Levitch, Peter Atheron, Steve Brudniak
Directed by Richard Linklater
Written by Richard Linklater
Studio Fox Searchlight
Genre: Animated
Tape
(2001) Theatrical Release Opens Limited On November 2
Ethan Hawke, Robert Sean Leonard;
The Jimmy
Show (2001 )
Based on the Jonathan Mark Sherman play Veins and Thumbtacks,
this film, set in the 1970s and '80s, is about Jimmy (Ethan Hawke), a
failed New Jersey inventor who abandons his work to become a standup comedian.
Audiences on the amateur comedy circuit aren't known for their gentility,
and following several disastrous shows Jimmy takes up a new "profession,"
boozing, which further strains his relationship with his family.
Starring Ethan Hawke, Carla Gugino, Frank Whaley, Lynn Coen, Robert
Whaley
Directed by Frank Whaley
Written by Frank Whaley
Filmography
- Hamlet (2000 )
- Joe the King (1999 )
- Snow Falling on Cedars (1999 )
- Great Expectations (1998 )
- The Newton Boys (1998 )
- Gattaca (1997 )
- Before Sunrise (1995 )
- Floundering (1994 )
- Reality Bites (1994 )
- White Fang 2: Myth of the White Wolf (1994 )
- Alive (1993 )
- Rich in Love (1993 )
- A Midnight Clear (1992 )
- Waterland (1992 )
- Mystery Date (1991 )
- White Fang (1991 )
- Dad (1989 )
- Dead Poets Society (1989 )
- Explorers (1985)
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