Channing Tatum and Zoe Kravitz are still going strong as a couple!
05.09.2022 - 17:18 / msn.com
Jeremy Strong found his New Yorker profile to be a "pretty profound betrayal of trust". The 43-year-old actor discussed the lengths he goes to with his intense approach to his job in an interview last year and he admitted he felt "foolish" when the piece sparked scrutiny around the world. Asked how he felt about it, he told Vanity Fair magazine: "What do I say about it? It was something that, for me, felt like a pretty profound betrayal of trust.
"And maybe ultimately said more about the person writing it and their perspective, which is a valid perspective, than it did about who I feel I am and what I’m about. "The noise and the fog after it: I think it’s something that, I guess, what I care about ultimately is trying to feel as free as possible as an actor. Part of that is trying to insulate yourself from all of that, and what people might say about you or think about you.
"You have to free yourself from that. It was painful. I felt foolish.
"As an actor, one of the most vital secret weapons that you can have is the ability to tolerate feeling foolish. " The 'Succession' star doesn't think he can talk about his work without sounding "self-serious" so he tries to just focus on his job and ignores the "vapour and mist". He said: "Any day you walk onto a set, if you’re not in a place where you’re not risking that and you’re not wagering enough, I’m always feeling like I might be making a big, giant f****** fool of myself—with James’s film, with the show.
That’s part of the price of admission to doing good work, which involves risk and which involves getting yourself out there. I guess I’d say that it’s all fine. " Acting is something that’s hard to talk about without sounding self-serious, but it is something that I feel
.Channing Tatum and Zoe Kravitz are still going strong as a couple!
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Jeremy Strong has finally broken his silence on that infamous 2021 New Yorker profile. In a new interview with Vanity Fair from the Telluride Film Festival, where Strong is promoting his role in director James Gray’s “Armaggedon Time,” the “Succession” star didn’t hold back when discussing his feelings on the newsmaking profile, telling VF it amounted to a “pretty profound betrayal of trust” on the part of the publication and the article’s writer, Michael Schulman.
Jeremy Strong has finally broken his silence on that infamous 2021 New Yorker profile. In a new interview with Vanity Fair from the Telluride Film Festival, where Strong is promoting his role in director James Gray‘s “Armaggedon Time,” the “Succession” star didn’t hold back when discussing his feelings on the newsmaking profile, telling VF it amounted to a “pretty profound betrayal of trust” on the part of the publication and the article’s writer, Michael Schulman.
“On Succession, Jeremy Strong Doesn’t Get the Joke” quickly became one of the magazine’s top stories of the year upon its Dec. 7 publication. Reactions to the lengthy piece, which detailed his hard-earned career and intense relationship to acting, were polarizing: while many readers got a kick out of his eccentric, hyper-serious depiction, others lambasted the profile as a “classist” personal attack.
Jeremy Strong has won accolades and awards for his performance of ambitious scion Kendall Roy in HBO’s “Succession”, but took some heat from a December 2021 profile in The New Yorker that painted an unflattering depiction of his method-style acting.
Jeremy Strong is breaking his silence on the reaction to his New Yorker profile, in which his method acting was put in the spotlight.