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i just found it interestin

 

 

http://progressive.org

Viggo Mortensen Interview

By Nina Siegal

November 2005 Issue

 

Sure, he's cute. Well, not cute. Strikingly, jaw-droppingly

gorgeous. But the most intriguing thing about Viggo

Mortensen, who played King Aragorn in The Lord of the Rings

trilogy and who recently won critical acclaim for his

leading role in the latest David Cronenberg release, A

History of Violence, is how much he loves to talk politics.

 

When I called him in July to interview him for The

Progressive, he had returned from four months' shooting the

forthcoming Spanish historical epic, Alatriste. He sounded

exhausted, as though he could barely hold the phone, but

when we started talking about the war in Iraq, the Bush

Administration, and the role of actors and artists in

mainstream political discourse, he didn't feel like

sleeping. Eventually, I had to tell him I was tired.

 

Two days later, he called back. He wanted to clarify a few

things he'd said and to answer more questions. And he tried

me a few times after that. We spoke one final time in the

wake of Katrina. I might have flattered myself to think one

of the best-looking Hollywood leading men liked the sound of

my voice. But that clearly wasn't the case, since he did

most of the talking.

 

Born in Manhattan on October 20, 1958, to an American mother

and a Danish father, Mortensen spent his childhood in

Argentina, Venezuela, and Denmark. He went to school in

Watertown, New York, just south of the Canadian border. He

studied acting at the Warren Robertson Theatre Workshop in

Manhattan in the 1980s and then moved to Los Angeles. There,

he met Excene Cervenka, the lead singer of the punk band X,

and became a familiar face in the Los Angeles punk scene.

The couple had a son, Henry, together in 1988, and

subsequently divorced.

 

Mortensen made his feature-film debut in 1985 as Alexander

Godunov's Amish brother in Witness. After that, he had a run

as a villain in a series of films, playing a paraplegic

ex-con snitch in the 1993 film Carlito's Way with Al Pacino,

and Lucifer in The Prophecy with Christopher Walken, two

years later. In 1997, he played the tough-talking training

instructor to Demi Moore's G.I. Jane, and the following year

he appeared as Gwyneth Paltrow's home-wrecking paramour in A

Perfect Murder.

 

In recent years, Mortensen has been cast as much more heroic

figures, not only as King Aragorn but also as the lead human

in Hidalgo, the horse story in which a down-on-his-luck

postal carrier rides his mustang in a race across the

Arabian Desert.

 

Most recently, he won acclaim for his portrayal of Tom

Stall, an Indiana diner owner whose life is changed forever

after he acts against two robbers in A History of Violence.

The film, an adaptation of John Wagner and Vince Locke's

graphic novel of the same name, was a critical hit at

Cannes. He also plays the lead in Alatriste, portraying the

seventeenth century soldier and missionary Captain

Alatriste, based on the book of the same name by Arturo

Perez Reverte. The film is due out in the spring.

 

Mortensen is a part-time musician, a published poet, and a

photographer and painter who has had exhibitions at art

galleries such as the Robert Mann Gallery, Track 16 Gallery,

Fototeca de Cuba, and Museet for Fotokunst in Denmark. On

top of all that, he founded the independent publishing house

Perceval Press.

 

Even when he's not jet-lagged, he is soft spoken. He doesn't

like to talk about his personal accomplishments. But get him

going on politics and he's hard to stop. Below is a

condensed account of our many phone conversations.

 

Question: Why did you decide to go down to Camp Casey and

join Cindy Sheehan?

 

Viggo Mortensen: I went in the first week, when there were

only a few people down there. She was being so maligned and

dragged through the mud. I thought the best thing to do was

just to go and listen to her and make up my own mind. If

you're someone who is a public figure, if you make too much

of it, the risk is that you can be seen as just trying to

get attention for yourself. So I intentionally went down

without saying I was coming. No one even saw me getting out

of the car, and before anyone knew it I was just standing in

front of her. I stayed very briefly, and she was nice enough

to give me a little of her time.

 

Q: What did you talk about?

 

Mortensen: Well, first of all, I just said, respectfully,

I'm sorry about your son, and I said thank you for some of

the things you've said and for bringing attention to the

issue, for keeping this topic alive. I left there really

impressed with her, with her integrity and sincerity.

 

I also had a sense of just how threatening someone like this

would be to people who are used to running the show, in

terms of perception and media information -- or

disinformation. It's like she pulled an end around just by

being herself, a relatively ordinary woman displaying

extraordinary courage and being quite eloquent and brave,

knowing she's being savaged and hearing it and standing up

to it and having her say as an individual and as a woman.

The fact that she was a woman -- how could this little woman

do that to us? -- it just galled them. I thought, good for you.

 

Q: What was your reaction to Katrina?

 

Mortensen: Cindy Sheehan and how badly Katrina was bungled

are two shots to the heart. I hope the beast does fall down

soon. What's more shameful than the criminal negligence that

made a bad situation much, much worse is the arrogant

attitude after the fact. The outright lying -- even though

we've become accustomed to lying from this Administration --

has broken new ground in the field of dishonesty. They're so

clumsy in their attempts to come off well. And there is so

little heart in what they say. Even the sound of their

voices is so false.

 

Q: Are you anti-Bush, as the pundits say?

 

Mortensen: No, I'm not anti-Bush; I'm anti-Bush behavior. In

other words, I'm against cheating, greed, cruelty, racism,

imperialism, religious fundamentalism, treason, and the

seemingly limitless capacity for hypocrisy shown by Bush and

his Administration.

 

Q: What's wrong with pinning it all on Bush?

 

Mortensen: It's too easy, and it lets a lot of people off

the hook. I think impeachment proceedings need to be started

immediately but not just against him. God forbid we should

have Dick Cheney as President. No. Those two need to go, and

many of the others in the inner circle need to go.

 

Q: It seems much of the media has responded differently to

Katrina than they did to earlier screw-ups by the Bush

Administration. Why is that?

 

Mortensen: It's because it's here. You can see it. You can't

hide that. So all of a sudden these mousy, timid, go-along

reporters are finding some spine, and that's nice to see. I

hope it lasts. I hope they don't recede into their

self-congratulating, privileged little niches.

 

Q: Are you hopeful about political change?

 

Mortensen: I think most Americans will look back on this

period since 1980 as a morally bleak, intellectually

fraudulent period of history. There will be a certain amount

of shame, a feeling we were part of something wrong. People

standing outside of this country can see this because it's

very obvious. It's like looking at a spoiled brat, a kid

who's totally out of control, but because the parents are

really rich and because they own the school, you have to put

up with it. America is an empire in decay. But we don't have

to lash out and do damage on the way down. We can reverse

some of the damage we've done. It's possible.

 

Q: You have been criticized for wearing anti-war T-shirts

while promoting your films, particularly The Lord of the

Rings. Did you have a particular strategy?

 

Mortensen: I made use of an opportunity. The first time was

in the fall of 2002, when I happened to be on The Charlie

Rose Show. I went there wearing a shirt that I just

scribbled with a pen, " No More Blood for Oil. "

 

Q: But it was also connected to the politics of the movie.

 

Mortensen: Yes, I was getting tired of journalists presuming

that " obviously " the Fellowship of the Ring is America or

the West, surrounded by poor Oriental Islamic extremists.

Tolkien presents a complex and detailed and interesting set

of stories and ideas and archetypes. The Lord of the Rings

was appreciated around the world because it speaks to a lot

of universally understood truths and myths, not because it

justified the right wing of the Republican Party or some

kind of North American Protestant Christian fundamentalism.

 

Q: Following the Charlie Rose appearance, USA Today

contributor Michael Medved took you to task for ruining a

popular movie by politicizing it. " Political preachments, on

or off camera, only interfere with the entertainment value

of creative work by major Hollywood stars, " he wrote, in a

piece that got a lot of attention. What did you think?

 

Mortensen: It was a shoddy piece of journalism. I won't

descend to his level to call him an idiot or anything like

that, but it was obviously something he did to curry favor

with his fan base or the people he would like to impress in

religious political circles. He wanted to be able to say,

" Look, I slapped that guy down. " The only reason he took aim

at me at all was because the movie I was in had done very

well, so I was a visible person. The establishment media

will often do that; they'll see someone who has visibility

and they'll take them down. The risk is that the person

might actually be listened to. It poses a threat. I'm glad I

resisted the temptation to respond at the time. In the end,

it didn't mean that much to me.

 

Q: Should the average citizen care what a celebrity thinks

about politics?

 

Mortensen: I don't think special attention should be given

to an actor or a singer or a baseball player or a soccer

player more than anyone else, but they do have an opinion

like anyone else. When people say that entertainers should

" know your place, " they might as well say the same thing

about plumbers and teachers and cab drivers. We all should

be able to express our views.

 

Q: Do you think actors are particularly stymied when they

try to speak out?

 

Mortensen: It's almost a standard tactic, really, to try to

minimize any effort that people in the entertainment

business or in any public occupation make to express

themselves. Look, there are people that grandstand and seem

to be publicly politically engaged because they like the

attention, more than because they're genuinely concerned

about the world. But I don't think that's the majority. The

majority of those who take the risk -- and it is a risk

because it's much safer to keep your mouth shut and keep

making a living -- have something to say. They speak up, or

go on a march, or get involved in the political process

because they do care and they are concerned. I consider

myself very fortunate to have a platform. I don't take it

lightly, and I don't abuse it. I don't speak up about

something unless I feel strongly about it and until I've

researched a subject extensively and have an informed

decision about it. But I think if you don't say something

it's lying by omission. I personally think it's immoral.

Yeah, it might cost you a few fans, but you have to say

something.

 

Q: What has it cost you?

 

Mortensen: I don't know. There might be people out there who

wouldn't hire me because they thought I should keep my mouth

shut, but I'm not aware of that. Even if I saw evidence of

that, it wouldn't really concern me. Bertrand Russell said

one of the first symptoms of an approaching nervous

breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly

important. I take my work seriously, but it's not the only

thing that exists in the world.

 

Q: You've played a number of roles now -- in A History of

Violence, Hidalgo, and The Lord of the Rings -- in which you

are a type of cowboy, fighting the forces of evil. A Toronto

newspaper dubbed you " the New John Wayne. " What are your

feelings about portraying these types of heroes?

 

Mortensen: I don't know what the new John Wayne is. I'm not

consciously picking any type of role, even so-called hero

roles. And if some character seems very certain or very

courageous, I always try to find the other side of that.

When are they not courageous and when are they not certain?

 

Q: When you were asked to play Frank Hopkins, the pony

express carrier in Hidalgo, I read that you were concerned

about being cast as the American cowboy riding through the

Arabian Desert. How did you deal with that?

 

Mortensen: Yes, at first I had concerns about how the movie

would be made and also how the movie would be promoted. When

we were about to start shooting, it was early 2002 and

anyone could see that the Bush Administration was already

gearing up its PR machine to sell the U.S. public on its war

in Iraq. I was very anxious that I was going to be playing a

role as a mythic American cowboy participating in a race in

the Middle East. I met with the director and asked him,

" What do you want to say? Is this just going to be some

American that goes and kicks ass in some heedless way? Or,

are you going to show Wounded Knee? Are you going to show,

in some small way, that someone from the West and someone

from the East with seemingly opposite points of view can

come to understand each other? " He said that's what he was

going to do, and he also said a lot of other things that

made me feel the project was worthwhile. And, in the end, I

feel it was.

 

Q: What attracted you to your role in A History of Violence?

 

Mortensen: It was very thought provoking. It's very much

like a Western on a lot of levels. Plus, it was fun to work

with David Cronenberg. He's one of the best directors

working in the world today, and he has a lot to say, and

he's very clever about the way he says it.

 

Q: You have a lot of interests outside acting. You're a

photographer, a poet, a musician, a painter, and a

publisher. If, for some bizarre reason, you had to choose

just one medium in which to express yourself, what would it be?

 

Mortensen: That's like saying would you rather lose your

eyesight, your hearing, or your ability to speak. I would

rather not even think about it. I pursue the things I do

because I'm interested in them. And I'm grateful for the

opportunities I've had, putting one foot in front of the other.

 

Nina Siegal is a freelance writer based in Iowa City, where

she is writing her first novel at the Iowa Writers' Workshop.

 

http://progressive.org/mag_intv1105

 

 

The propagandist's purpose is to make one set of people forget that certain

other

sets of people are human: Aldous Huxley

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Me too :-)

 

Jo

 

, fraggle <EBbrewpunx@e...> wrote:

>

> i just found it interestin

>

>

> http://progressive.org

> Viggo Mortensen Interview

> By Nina Siegal

> November 2005 Issue

>

> Sure, he's cute. Well, not cute. Strikingly, jaw-droppingly

> gorgeous. But the most intriguing thing about Viggo

> Mortensen, who played King Aragorn in The Lord of the Rings

> trilogy and who recently won critical acclaim for his

> leading role in the latest David Cronenberg release, A

> History of Violence, is how much he loves to talk politics.

>

> When I called him in July to interview him for The

> Progressive, he had returned from four months' shooting the

> forthcoming Spanish historical epic, Alatriste. He sounded

> exhausted, as though he could barely hold the phone, but

> when we started talking about the war in Iraq, the Bush

> Administration, and the role of actors and artists in

> mainstream political discourse, he didn't feel like

> sleeping. Eventually, I had to tell him I was tired.

>

> Two days later, he called back. He wanted to clarify a few

> things he'd said and to answer more questions. And he tried

> me a few times after that. We spoke one final time in the

> wake of Katrina. I might have flattered myself to think one

> of the best-looking Hollywood leading men liked the sound of

> my voice. But that clearly wasn't the case, since he did

> most of the talking.

>

> Born in Manhattan on October 20, 1958, to an American mother

> and a Danish father, Mortensen spent his childhood in

> Argentina, Venezuela, and Denmark. He went to school in

> Watertown, New York, just south of the Canadian border. He

> studied acting at the Warren Robertson Theatre Workshop in

> Manhattan in the 1980s and then moved to Los Angeles. There,

> he met Excene Cervenka, the lead singer of the punk band X,

> and became a familiar face in the Los Angeles punk scene.

> The couple had a son, Henry, together in 1988, and

> subsequently divorced.

>

> Mortensen made his feature-film debut in 1985 as Alexander

> Godunov's Amish brother in Witness. After that, he had a run

> as a villain in a series of films, playing a paraplegic

> ex-con snitch in the 1993 film Carlito's Way with Al Pacino,

> and Lucifer in The Prophecy with Christopher Walken, two

> years later. In 1997, he played the tough-talking training

> instructor to Demi Moore's G.I. Jane, and the following year

> he appeared as Gwyneth Paltrow's home-wrecking paramour in A

> Perfect Murder.

>

> In recent years, Mortensen has been cast as much more heroic

> figures, not only as King Aragorn but also as the lead human

> in Hidalgo, the horse story in which a down-on-his-luck

> postal carrier rides his mustang in a race across the

> Arabian Desert.

>

> Most recently, he won acclaim for his portrayal of Tom

> Stall, an Indiana diner owner whose life is changed forever

> after he acts against two robbers in A History of Violence.

> The film, an adaptation of John Wagner and Vince Locke's

> graphic novel of the same name, was a critical hit at

> Cannes. He also plays the lead in Alatriste, portraying the

> seventeenth century soldier and missionary Captain

> Alatriste, based on the book of the same name by Arturo

> Perez Reverte. The film is due out in the spring.

>

> Mortensen is a part-time musician, a published poet, and a

> photographer and painter who has had exhibitions at art

> galleries such as the Robert Mann Gallery, Track 16 Gallery,

> Fototeca de Cuba, and Museet for Fotokunst in Denmark. On

> top of all that, he founded the independent publishing house

> Perceval Press.

>

> Even when he's not jet-lagged, he is soft spoken. He doesn't

> like to talk about his personal accomplishments. But get him

> going on politics and he's hard to stop. Below is a

> condensed account of our many phone conversations.

>

> Question: Why did you decide to go down to Camp Casey and

> join Cindy Sheehan?

>

> Viggo Mortensen: I went in the first week, when there were

> only a few people down there. She was being so maligned and

> dragged through the mud. I thought the best thing to do was

> just to go and listen to her and make up my own mind. If

> you're someone who is a public figure, if you make too much

> of it, the risk is that you can be seen as just trying to

> get attention for yourself. So I intentionally went down

> without saying I was coming. No one even saw me getting out

> of the car, and before anyone knew it I was just standing in

> front of her. I stayed very briefly, and she was nice enough

> to give me a little of her time.

>

> Q: What did you talk about?

>

> Mortensen: Well, first of all, I just said, respectfully,

> I'm sorry about your son, and I said thank you for some of

> the things you've said and for bringing attention to the

> issue, for keeping this topic alive. I left there really

> impressed with her, with her integrity and sincerity.

>

> I also had a sense of just how threatening someone like this

> would be to people who are used to running the show, in

> terms of perception and media information -- or

> disinformation. It's like she pulled an end around just by

> being herself, a relatively ordinary woman displaying

> extraordinary courage and being quite eloquent and brave,

> knowing she's being savaged and hearing it and standing up

> to it and having her say as an individual and as a woman.

> The fact that she was a woman -- how could this little woman

> do that to us? -- it just galled them. I thought, good for you.

>

> Q: What was your reaction to Katrina?

>

> Mortensen: Cindy Sheehan and how badly Katrina was bungled

> are two shots to the heart. I hope the beast does fall down

> soon. What's more shameful than the criminal negligence that

> made a bad situation much, much worse is the arrogant

> attitude after the fact. The outright lying -- even though

> we've become accustomed to lying from this Administration --

> has broken new ground in the field of dishonesty. They're so

> clumsy in their attempts to come off well. And there is so

> little heart in what they say. Even the sound of their

> voices is so false.

>

> Q: Are you anti-Bush, as the pundits say?

>

> Mortensen: No, I'm not anti-Bush; I'm anti-Bush behavior. In

> other words, I'm against cheating, greed, cruelty, racism,

> imperialism, religious fundamentalism, treason, and the

> seemingly limitless capacity for hypocrisy shown by Bush and

> his Administration.

>

> Q: What's wrong with pinning it all on Bush?

>

> Mortensen: It's too easy, and it lets a lot of people off

> the hook. I think impeachment proceedings need to be started

> immediately but not just against him. God forbid we should

> have Dick Cheney as President. No. Those two need to go, and

> many of the others in the inner circle need to go.

>

> Q: It seems much of the media has responded differently to

> Katrina than they did to earlier screw-ups by the Bush

> Administration. Why is that?

>

> Mortensen: It's because it's here. You can see it. You can't

> hide that. So all of a sudden these mousy, timid, go-along

> reporters are finding some spine, and that's nice to see. I

> hope it lasts. I hope they don't recede into their

> self-congratulating, privileged little niches.

>

> Q: Are you hopeful about political change?

>

> Mortensen: I think most Americans will look back on this

> period since 1980 as a morally bleak, intellectually

> fraudulent period of history. There will be a certain amount

> of shame, a feeling we were part of something wrong. People

> standing outside of this country can see this because it's

> very obvious. It's like looking at a spoiled brat, a kid

> who's totally out of control, but because the parents are

> really rich and because they own the school, you have to put

> up with it. America is an empire in decay. But we don't have

> to lash out and do damage on the way down. We can reverse

> some of the damage we've done. It's possible.

>

> Q: You have been criticized for wearing anti-war T-shirts

> while promoting your films, particularly The Lord of the

> Rings. Did you have a particular strategy?

>

> Mortensen: I made use of an opportunity. The first time was

> in the fall of 2002, when I happened to be on The Charlie

> Rose Show. I went there wearing a shirt that I just

> scribbled with a pen, " No More Blood for Oil. "

>

> Q: But it was also connected to the politics of the movie.

>

> Mortensen: Yes, I was getting tired of journalists presuming

> that " obviously " the Fellowship of the Ring is America or

> the West, surrounded by poor Oriental Islamic extremists.

> Tolkien presents a complex and detailed and interesting set

> of stories and ideas and archetypes. The Lord of the Rings

> was appreciated around the world because it speaks to a lot

> of universally understood truths and myths, not because it

> justified the right wing of the Republican Party or some

> kind of North American Protestant Christian fundamentalism.

>

> Q: Following the Charlie Rose appearance, USA Today

> contributor Michael Medved took you to task for ruining a

> popular movie by politicizing it. " Political preachments, on

> or off camera, only interfere with the entertainment value

> of creative work by major Hollywood stars, " he wrote, in a

> piece that got a lot of attention. What did you think?

>

> Mortensen: It was a shoddy piece of journalism. I won't

> descend to his level to call him an idiot or anything like

> that, but it was obviously something he did to curry favor

> with his fan base or the people he would like to impress in

> religious political circles. He wanted to be able to say,

> " Look, I slapped that guy down. " The only reason he took aim

> at me at all was because the movie I was in had done very

> well, so I was a visible person. The establishment media

> will often do that; they'll see someone who has visibility

> and they'll take them down. The risk is that the person

> might actually be listened to. It poses a threat. I'm glad I

> resisted the temptation to respond at the time. In the end,

> it didn't mean that much to me.

>

> Q: Should the average citizen care what a celebrity thinks

> about politics?

>

> Mortensen: I don't think special attention should be given

> to an actor or a singer or a baseball player or a soccer

> player more than anyone else, but they do have an opinion

> like anyone else. When people say that entertainers should

> " know your place, " they might as well say the same thing

> about plumbers and teachers and cab drivers. We all should

> be able to express our views.

>

> Q: Do you think actors are particularly stymied when they

> try to speak out?

>

> Mortensen: It's almost a standard tactic, really, to try to

> minimize any effort that people in the entertainment

> business or in any public occupation make to express

> themselves. Look, there are people that grandstand and seem

> to be publicly politically engaged because they like the

> attention, more than because they're genuinely concerned

> about the world. But I don't think that's the majority. The

> majority of those who take the risk -- and it is a risk

> because it's much safer to keep your mouth shut and keep

> making a living -- have something to say. They speak up, or

> go on a march, or get involved in the political process

> because they do care and they are concerned. I consider

> myself very fortunate to have a platform. I don't take it

> lightly, and I don't abuse it. I don't speak up about

> something unless I feel strongly about it and until I've

> researched a subject extensively and have an informed

> decision about it. But I think if you don't say something

> it's lying by omission. I personally think it's immoral.

> Yeah, it might cost you a few fans, but you have to say

> something.

>

> Q: What has it cost you?

>

> Mortensen: I don't know. There might be people out there who

> wouldn't hire me because they thought I should keep my mouth

> shut, but I'm not aware of that. Even if I saw evidence of

> that, it wouldn't really concern me. Bertrand Russell said

> one of the first symptoms of an approaching nervous

> breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly

> important. I take my work seriously, but it's not the only

> thing that exists in the world.

>

> Q: You've played a number of roles now -- in A History of

> Violence, Hidalgo, and The Lord of the Rings -- in which you

> are a type of cowboy, fighting the forces of evil. A Toronto

> newspaper dubbed you " the New John Wayne. " What are your

> feelings about portraying these types of heroes?

>

> Mortensen: I don't know what the new John Wayne is. I'm not

> consciously picking any type of role, even so-called hero

> roles. And if some character seems very certain or very

> courageous, I always try to find the other side of that.

> When are they not courageous and when are they not certain?

>

> Q: When you were asked to play Frank Hopkins, the pony

> express carrier in Hidalgo, I read that you were concerned

> about being cast as the American cowboy riding through the

> Arabian Desert. How did you deal with that?

>

> Mortensen: Yes, at first I had concerns about how the movie

> would be made and also how the movie would be promoted. When

> we were about to start shooting, it was early 2002 and

> anyone could see that the Bush Administration was already

> gearing up its PR machine to sell the U.S. public on its war

> in Iraq. I was very anxious that I was going to be playing a

> role as a mythic American cowboy participating in a race in

> the Middle East. I met with the director and asked him,

> " What do you want to say? Is this just going to be some

> American that goes and kicks ass in some heedless way? Or,

> are you going to show Wounded Knee? Are you going to show,

> in some small way, that someone from the West and someone

> from the East with seemingly opposite points of view can

> come to understand each other? " He said that's what he was

> going to do, and he also said a lot of other things that

> made me feel the project was worthwhile. And, in the end, I

> feel it was.

>

> Q: What attracted you to your role in A History of Violence?

>

> Mortensen: It was very thought provoking. It's very much

> like a Western on a lot of levels. Plus, it was fun to work

> with David Cronenberg. He's one of the best directors

> working in the world today, and he has a lot to say, and

> he's very clever about the way he says it.

>

> Q: You have a lot of interests outside acting. You're a

> photographer, a poet, a musician, a painter, and a

> publisher. If, for some bizarre reason, you had to choose

> just one medium in which to express yourself, what would it be?

>

> Mortensen: That's like saying would you rather lose your

> eyesight, your hearing, or your ability to speak. I would

> rather not even think about it. I pursue the things I do

> because I'm interested in them. And I'm grateful for the

> opportunities I've had, putting one foot in front of the other.

>

> Nina Siegal is a freelance writer based in Iowa City, where

> she is writing her first novel at the Iowa Writers' Workshop.

>

> http://progressive.org/mag_intv1105

>

>

> The propagandist's purpose is to make one set of people forget that

certain other

> sets of people are human: Aldous Huxley

>

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Oh Fraggle, you are just sooooo good to me! You really know how to

turn a girl on! lol

 

I love Viggo. I absolutely admire him. Not just because he is

unbelievably good looking but because of things like this. He seems

like an individual with some great ideals and passions and I have

always admired him.

 

Not to mention the butt shot in Psycho was pleasant too. ;)

 

I'm not really one to go ga-ga over celebs, but Viggo would definately

make me lose all functions of speech in person. Of course then I would

hopefully quickly recover because I would love to have a conversation

with the man.

 

 

Nikki

 

 

, fraggle <EBbrewpunx@e...> wrote:

>

> i just found it interestin

>

>

> http://progressive.org

> Viggo Mortensen Interview

> By Nina Siegal

> November 2005 Issue

>

<<SNIP>>

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Hi Nikki

 

Isn't the other chap from LOTR a vegan - Orlando Bloom. I'm sure I read he

is.

 

> Not to mention the butt shot in Psycho was pleasant too. ;)

 

So the new film is absolutely nothing like the original then!

 

BB

Jo

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apparantly he isn't vegan anymore

 

 

jo <jo.heartwork

Oct 21, 2005 9:06 AM

 

Re: Re: Viggo Mortensen

 

Hi Nikki

 

Isn't the other chap from LOTR a vegan - Orlando Bloom. I'm sure I read he

is.

 

> Not to mention the butt shot in Psycho was pleasant too. ;)

 

So the new film is absolutely nothing like the original then!

 

BB

Jo

 

 

 

 

To send an email to -

 

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That's silly of him then.

 

Jo

 

, fraggle <EBbrewpunx@e...> wrote:

>

> apparantly he isn't vegan anymore

>

>

> jo <jo.heartwork@g...>

> Oct 21, 2005 9:06 AM

>

> Re: Re: Viggo Mortensen

>

> Hi Nikki

>

> Isn't the other chap from LOTR a vegan - Orlando Bloom. I'm sure I

read he

> is.

>

> > Not to mention the butt shot in Psycho was pleasant too. ;)

>

> So the new film is absolutely nothing like the original then!

>

> BB

> Jo

>

>

>

>

> To send an email to -

>

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He's been quoting as saying he is and saying he isn't and the latest from

International Vegetarian is that he isn't

http://www.ivu.org/people/actors/bloom.html

 

Lynda

-

" jo " <jo.heartwork

 

Friday, October 21, 2005 9:06 AM

Re: Re: Viggo Mortensen

 

 

> Hi Nikki

>

> Isn't the other chap from LOTR a vegan - Orlando Bloom. I'm sure I read

> he

> is.

>

>> Not to mention the butt shot in Psycho was pleasant too. ;)

>

> So the new film is absolutely nothing like the original then!

>

> BB

> Jo

>

>

>

>

> To send an email to -

>

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Hi Jo

 

> Isn't the other chap from LOTR a vegan - Orlando Bloom. I'm sure

I read he

> is.

 

I believe so - he is either Vegan or veggie.

 

> > Not to mention the butt shot in Psycho was pleasant too. ;)

>

> So the new film is absolutely nothing like the original then!

 

 

Yes and no. Same basis, same shower scene, but a few differences.

There is more of Viggo in it than you would expect though. I fell

asleep right before the end of it though.

 

It was good, but I think could have been a bit better. But then it

is always hard to re-do the classics in my opinion.

 

BB

Nikki :)

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Hi Nikki

 

I agree - if you have a classic it probably is not worth re-doing - but I

expect it is an exciting challenge to try to better it.

 

BB

Jo

-

" earthstrm " <nikkimack

 

Saturday, October 22, 2005 2:30 PM

Re: Viggo Mortensen

 

 

> Hi Jo

>

> > Isn't the other chap from LOTR a vegan - Orlando Bloom. I'm sure

> I read he

> > is.

>

> I believe so - he is either Vegan or veggie.

>

> > > Not to mention the butt shot in Psycho was pleasant too. ;)

> >

> > So the new film is absolutely nothing like the original then!

>

>

> Yes and no. Same basis, same shower scene, but a few differences.

> There is more of Viggo in it than you would expect though. I fell

> asleep right before the end of it though.

>

> It was good, but I think could have been a bit better. But then it

> is always hard to re-do the classics in my opinion.

>

> BB

> Nikki :)

To send an email to -

>

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