One big happy family. When it comes to parenting, Colin Jost is willing to go above and beyond to look after the son he shares with wife Scarlett Johansson.
12.10.2022 - 05:07 / etcanada.com
Scarlett Johansson opened up about feeling “hypersexualized” when she was a teenage actress, and how that left her fearing she’d be typecast in those type of roles.
Johansson appeared in the 500th episode of actor Dax Shepard’s “Armchair Expert” podcast on Monday, where she got candid about her early experiences as an actor.
“You got labelled ’15 going on 30′ early and I can imagine that being this really wild blessing and then this really weird curse in some way,” Shepard told Johannson, via People, confessing he was surprised to learn how young she was in some of her early screen roles.
READ MORE: Russo Brothers Say Disney’s Treatment Of Scarlett Johansson For ‘Black Widow’ Rollout Was ‘Disturbing To Us As Artists’
Revealing that she began filming her first movie at age seven, she noted how old she was when she shot some of her best-known early movies, such as “Ghost World” (she was just 15) and “Lost in Translation” (17).
“Do you think at times people overestimated how old you were and assumed you might understand more than you knew and how much were you trying to deliver on that?” asked Shepard.
Growing up in New York being surrounded by plenty of adults as a child, she explained, was a big help. However, she added, she “definitely was in different situations that were not age-appropriate” at times.
READ MORE: Scarlett Johansson Addresses ‘Outrageous’ Rumour About Elevator Sex
“Luckily my mom was really good about protecting me from a lot of that stuff, but she can’t do that for everything,” she said.
“Because I think everybody thought I was older and I’d been [acting] for a long time and then I got kind of pigeonholed into this weird hypersexualized thing,” she said.
“It was like, that’s the kind of
One big happy family. When it comes to parenting, Colin Jost is willing to go above and beyond to look after the son he shares with wife Scarlett Johansson.
Scarlett Johansson has revealed that she freaked out Joaquin Phoenix while recording a phone sex scene for the film Her.The actress, who played the voice role of an AI assistant called Samantha in the 2013 film, explained in a new interview that she had to record her scene in a studio with Phoenix after the latter had already filmed his camera scenes.“You definitely don’t want to hear what you sound like having a fake orgasm,” she recalled on the Armchair Expert podcast with Dax Shepard and Monica Padman.“I remember we came in that day. I’ve become that actor that’s like ‘let’s get dirty.’ I have to, because otherwise I’ll be petrified.
Scarlett Johansson got candid about her awkward and "bizarre" sex scene with Joaquin Phoenix. In the 2013 film "Her," the actress opened up about how gross it was listening to her fake an orgasm on set. Johansson revealed Phoenix had a difficult time recording audio for their sex scenes in Spike Jonze’s movie. The Academy Award nominee pointed out, "You definitely don't want to hear what you sound like having a fake orgasm." "I remember we came in that day," the "Black Widow" star began to explain in Dax Shepard’s "Armchair Expert" podcast.
Apparently, Joaquin Phoenix could not handle filming an intimate scene with Scarlett Johansson while working on the movie Her — even though they never touched!
An uncomfortable moment. Scarlett Johansson recalled her costar Joaquin Phoenix’s reaction to her “bizarre” orgasm scene in their 2013 film Her.
skeeved out by Scarlett Johansson having to record fake orgasms for the 2013 film “Her” that he would have to leave the set at times, she told the “Armchair Expert” podcast.“We tried to get through one take, and he was, like, losing it,” Johansson, 37, said of the film revolving around a man falling in love with a virtual assistant. “He left the studio.
With an acting career that goes back nearly twenty years, Scarlett Johansson is no stranger to being typecast. But EW reports that, when the actress sat down to talk with Dax Shepard and Monica Padman on their “Armchair Expert” podcast, Johansson opened up about how taking on more mature roles earlier in her career led her to be “hyper-sexualized” for most of her career.
Joaquin Phoenix and Scarlett Johansson ran into an issue recording for one scene in their 2013 release Her.
Scarlett Johansson is recalling how some orgasmic voice recordings she made for her role in “Her” caused co-star Joaquin Phoenix to leave the set because he couldn’t get through the scene without cracking up.
Zack Sharf Scarlett Johansson revealed on Dax Shepard’s “Armchair Expert” podcast (via IndieWire) that her orgasm recordings for the movie “Her” resulted in Joaquin Phoenix fleeing the set. Phoenix starred in the Spike Jonze-directed drama as a man who falls in love with his phone’s operating system, a Siri-like female voice named Samantha, played by Johansson. The two have a sexual relationship in the form of phone sex, which required Johansson to record herself fake orgasming. “We tried to get through one take, and he was, like, losing it,” Johansson said. “He left the studio. He needed a break.” Johansson added, “You don’t want to hear your voice ever. You definitely don’t want to hear what you sound like having an orgasm. You definitely don’t want to hear what you sound like having a fake orgasm — ew. It’s so gross. It was so bizarre.”
Scarlett Johansson says she became “objectified” as a young actor and was and pigeonholed into a “hypersexualized” career.
Zack Sharf Scarlett Johansson revealed on a recent episode of Dax Shepard’s “Armchair Expert” podcast that she felt her career would end early on because she was “hypersexualized” by the industry at a young age. The actor said she became so “objectified” and “pigeonholed” as a young actor that she didn’t think it was possible she’d be able to diversify her characters. “I kind of became objectified and pigeonholed in this way where I felt like I wasn’t getting offers for work for things that I wanted to do,” Johansson said (via Yahoo). “I remember thinking to myself, ‘I think people think I’m 40 years old.’ It somehow stopped being something that was desirable and something that I was fighting against.”
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Armchair Expert” podcast, host Dax Shepard said Johansson, 37, has what the calls “the X factor” — a natural likability that can’t be described.The “Black Widow” actress was grateful for the compliment, but went on to explain that how the public perceived her has been misrepresented since she was a child.“I kind of became objectified and pigeonholed in this way where I felt like I wasn’t getting offers for work for things that I wanted to do,” Johansson said. “I remember thinking to myself, ‘I think people think I’m 40 years old.’ It somehow stopped being something that was desirable and something that I was fighting against.”Johannson, who made her first on-screen appearance in the movie “North” in 1994 at just nine years old, explained that people assumed she was always older than she actually was.“Because I think everybody thought I was older and that I’d been [acting] for a long time, I got kind of pigeonholed into this weird hypersexualized thing.
She has what the host of "Armchair Expert," Dax Shepard, calls ‘The X Factor' - an inherent likability that cannot be explicitly described. Scarlett Johansson is flattered by the assertion, but explains that the perception of her by the public is often misconstrued. "I kind of became objectified and pigeonholed in this way where I felt like I wasn’t getting offers for work for things that I wanted to do," she told Shepard.
Scarlett Johansson has recalled how she was "objectified and pigeonholed" as a young actress. During an appearance on Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert podcast, the Lost in Translation actress recounted how she often felt as if she was being made to appear older than she was in the early days of her career. "I think everybody thought I was older and that I'd been (acting) for a long time, I got kind of pigeonholed into this weird hypersexualised thing.
Scarlett Johansson felt “pigeonholed” and “hypersexualized” during the early days of her career, but she sees positive growth in Hollywood.