|
Articles
New Star Hartnett Takes a Step Back From Spotlight
By
Bob Tourtellotte
LOS
ANGELES (Reuters) - For a young actor who shuns the spotlight in
Hollywood, Josh Hartnett is basking in it a lot these days.
The
23-year-old opened the summer over Memorial Day holiday as good
guy pilot Danny Walker in the mega-hyped World War Two drama "Pearl
Harbor',' and he'll end it this Labor Day weekend playing villainous
Hugo Goulding in "O,'' a retelling of William Shakespeare's
"Othello'' set in a modern-day high school.
While
many young actors might take that kind of fame and use it as a calling
card for the hottest nightclubs on Sunset Strip, Hartnett would
prefer to spend his time at home outside St. Paul, Minnesota.
"I'm
not going to ditch my family and friends,'' Hartnett told Reuters
in a recent interview. "Also, when you get done with a movie,
the last thing you want to do is go back to a movie-saturated city
where you work all the time.''
Hartnett
said he's trying to buy a house back there, but if his career continues
on the starry trajectory of recent years, he ought to at least think
about renting a place in Tinseltown.
He
only started acting in 1997, but a year later was asked to star
in "Halloween H20: 20 Years Later''. His recognition grew as
an ultra-cool high-schooler in 1999's independent hit ''The Virgin
Suicides'', and he hit the big time with "Pearl Harbor''.
It
remains the No. 3 film at U.S. box offices this summer with about
$195 million, but critics in general skewered it.
"When
you have that kind of press beforehand, when people actually see
the movie, they are bound to want to rip it apart,'' he said.
Shot
on a small budget, "O'' is far different from the $135 million
"Pearl Harbor'', and critics will see a much different side
to Hartnett's acting than they did in the All-American Danny.
Hugo
Goulding, son of the school's basketball coach Duke Goulding (Martin
Sheen), is a cruel manipulator who longs for the kind of love and
attention his dad sheds on the team's star player and his best friend,
Odin James (Mekhi Phifer).
OTHELLO'S
GOT GAME
Much
like Iago plotted the demise of Othello and Cassio in Shakespeare's
classic play, Hugo devises a vengeful scheme that will eventually
hurt both his dad and his best friend.
Odin,
an African-American teenager, has been recruited to play ball for
an upscale, all-white private school that routinely fields a championship
team. Odin is on his way to a big-time college scholarship and behind
his talent, Coach Goulding is destined for the college ranks, too.
But
Hugo, who also plays on the team, doesn't believe he's getting his
fair share of recognition. And on awards day, when Odin shares the
most valuable player trophy with a third player, it's Hugo who mutters,
"I'm the MVP on this team.''
For
revenge, Hugo puts into motion a series of events that lead Odin
to question the loyalty of his white girlfriend, Desi Brable (Julia
Stiles). As in Shakespeare's play, the love between Odin and Desi
in "O'' is tainted by an undercurrent of racism, and Hugo's
scheming eventually leads to murder.
The
soft-spoken Hartnett seems about as far removed from the icy manipulator
Hugo as a person could be. Not only does he prefer plain ol' Minnesota
over glitzy Hollywood, he feels more comfortable in denim and a
ball cap than designer clothes.
During
the media interviews for "Pearl Harbor'', he hung out in the
steamy press tent in shorts and Hawaiian shirt eating the same hot
dogs and potato chips as the press corps, while some of his co-stars
stayed put in their air-conditioned trailers.
Hartnett
never set out to be an actor, but rather went to New York to "live
on the streets and paint''. The way he tells it, he fell into acting
with one part leading to another and another. "I still don't
know what I want to do,'' he said.
But
this summer, he finished making "Black Hawk Down,'' a big-budget
military movie directed by Ridley Scott (''Gladiator'') and produced
by Jerry Bruckheimer (''Pearl Harbor''). It's about the 1993 skirmish
in Somalia in which two Army helicopters were shot down and 18 Americans
were killed.
So,
while he may not know exactly what he wants to do and even though
while he may not exactly be "Hollywood,'' his star is shining
brightly, these days, high overhead.
-
www.yahoo.com
Thursday August 30, 2001, 4:43 PM ET
|