mileytwilightlover

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Av mileytwilightlover - 6 september 2011 17:17

  

Is Miley Cyrus just another spoiled starlet going off the rails? Joe Yogerst thinks not, and spoke to her about being stalked by the paparazzi, playing Demi Moore’s teenage daughter, and her dark sense of humour.

Call it coincidence, but sometimes life has a strange way of sending messages. Recently I undertook a pilgrimage to the Hollywood Bowl to see Dolly Parton in concert. Halfway through the gig, the country icon interrupted her songfest to talk about her god-daughter Miley Cyrus. “She’s a good girl. She’ll get through this just fine,” Parton said, suggesting that we should all remember what it was like to be young, impetuous and a little bit wild. There was no way for me to know that, just a few weeks later, I would be discussing that very topic with Cyrus herself.

Parton was referring to Cyrus’ public and often tumultuous attempt to morph from the child star of Disney Channel’s runaway hit TV Series Hannah Montana into a young adult actor and singer. While not in the same league as those of Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton, Cyrus’ early adult career has been fraught with controversy. There was Annie Leibovitz’s Vanity Fair photo shoot in which the then 15-year-old Cyrus appeared to be wrapped in only a bed sheet. Racy photos were hacked from her e-mail account and circulated on the web. Celebrity gossipmongers TMZ released a video showing Cyrus smoking from a bong. Thought she hit back saying it contained a legal substance, the footage was scandalous enough for her father, country star Billy Ray Cyrus (of “Achy Breaky Heart” fame), to scold her publicly. Critics say her concert outfits and music videos are too risqué. And even on and on it goes – all minor stuff in the annals of showbiz scandal, but shocking for those raised on goody-two-shoes Hannah Montana.

Gossip aside, what sets the 18-year-old apart from so many starlets of her generation is that she has talent. In addition to her television and film performances, when it comes to a song she can hold her own. Cyrus can also shift records; she’s had top-40 hits in at least a dozen countries and is the youngest artist of all time to chalk up four number-one albums in just three years.

With the “Queen of Country Music” as a godmother and a singing legend for a father, Cyrus – who was born and raised in Nashville – is descended from country-and-western royalty. Her birth name was Destiny Hope, but that didn’t stick. According to family legend, she grinned so much as a baby that people started calling her Smiley, later shortened to Miley. Another family table holds that she caught the showbiz bug at age eight, when she saw a stage performance of the music Mamma Mia! in Toronto.

What is known for sure is that Cyrus was a virtual unknown in 2006, when she auditioned for a daytime TV series about a young California girl with a double life as a pop star and schoolgirl. Despite her lack of acting experience, Cyrus’ country twang and down-home charm made her a natural for the role. A moder take on The Prince and the Pauper, Hannah Montana became the biggest hit in Disney Channel’s history, and made Cyrus as internationally famous as previous Disney creations Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake.

By 2007 she was on the concert circuit, touring first as her alter ego Montana, and then under her own name. But the teenage hormones were kicking in and Cyrus was growing up, evolving from the little girl – who had basically done whatever the Disney brass had asked of her – into a teenager with attitude and ideas about the direction her career should travel. While music remains her forte, Cyrus has two movies – LOL: Laughing Out Loud and So Undercover – set for release this year, and she has made it known that she wants to expand her acting career beyond the “singing girl next door” role that has dominated her path thus far.

With Parton’s words still ringing in my ears, I settled in to interview Cyrus about her roller-coaster life and work.

After even years in Los Angeles, are you a Southern or California girl these days?
I’m not a big fan of LA, I’ve got to be honest. I like being able to work here, but any chance to go back home [to Tennessee], I love it. People really take life for granted in California. It makes me sad sometimes. So I have to give myself that reality check every once in a while and go back home. Everyone [in LA] is so busy and everyone is trying to be better than the other person, and everyone has got so much going on. Nashville life is just so laid back and people enjoy every second of life that they have

Do you miss Hannah Montana?
No [laughs]. I miss the family vibe, but I don’t miss the routine at all. I was so bored doing the same thing every day. It’s a lot easier not being on a show, to live my life a little bit and do some of the others thing that I want to do, I don’t have to be back at a certain time. You’re not worrying about a cast schedule or what the producers are going to think. I’m so grateful that I was able to be on that show, but even my little sister, who’s 11, wants to go into acting. I just say, “Just wait, dude.” Because the way you’re going to be when you’re my age and the way you are right now are so different. Don’t put yourself in a situation where people re going to think of you as only one thing. You’re going to change a lot. It interferes with your growing up if you’re not strong enough and you’re not sure who you want to be. I’m glad I’m not a character any more and able to be me.

During the run of Hannah Montana, did you ever fantasise that you had a secret life as an ordinary schoolgirl, like your character Miley Stewart?
There were times, for sure, when I thought that – it would be amazing. There are some artists who get a chance to do that sort of thing – people who have such a different personality when they go onstage and when they take time off – and that’s kind of what I’m doing right now. But there were times during Hannah Montana when I wanted that, for sure.

What sort of things would you have done if you could have had that secret life?
People lose a lot of respect for other human beings when they find out you’re famous, because they’ve never experienced it. I’m with my boyfriend, for instance, and we’re walking around. We’re sure that no-one is taking our picture. We are sure of it. No one has followed us. No is here. And than, a few hours later, it’s life, “Miley Cyrus Alert.” She was seen with a fan in public, they were kissing and hugging, and you’re like, “What the hell? I didn’t see anybody taking our photograph that day.” I think that’s what I would have enjoyed most – just being able to be in public and not feel like I’m being watched. You know, my dad and me, we’re pretty good with fans. We don’t mind taking pictures if they ask. But when they don’t ask, that’s a whole different level of weird.

The Gypsy Heart Tour was earlier this year, and you went to cool places in South America and Australia. When you’re on tour like that, do you have time to be an ordinary tourist?
I make sure of that. I’ve wanted to go on tour for a while, get back on the road. But I did this tour mainly because I wanted to travel, I love to travel. I made it so that we had a show and then two days off, a show and then two days off. I got to enjoy places a lot. It was funny [because] some places were out of control and I couldn’t walk around. But other countries were really respectful and [people] wanted me to know that they wanted me to have a good time in their country. There are some places I’d really like to go back to and see more of, but be a little more incognito.

What are some of the spots that really stuck out from the tour?
I’m in love with Argentina. I would not mind staying there for a while because I had the best time in Argentina. We went out and just walked around one night and found some food, but not with a tour guide. Let’s find what’s fun, let’s meet cool local people. And the hotel we stayed at, I’ve never seen anything like it. It was so beautiful. Australia was one of my favourites too. My boyfriend is Australian, so getting to go there and perform for his family and friends was insane and really important. It was a really cool bonding experience.

You played to huge audiences in Australia – more than 25,000 people in several places.
Even though I’d never been there before, my albums have always been really successful in Australia. It’s one of the places that my albums kind of blow up, and my singles. It looks really good when your boyfriend is from there. It’s like, “Hey, I sold this place out.” That makes you feel pretty awesome.

You’ve been making movies lately. Tell us about So Undercover and LOL: Laughing Out Loud.
There are things I do for me, and there are things I do for the fans, and So Undercover was something I really wanted to do for the fans. It’s the kind of comedy that they’re used to seeing on my show. It’s more for the 13-, 14-, 15-, 16-year-old crowd. LOL: Laughing Out Loud is still for the younger kids, but we did it independently and we shot it with Demi Moore and me. It’s more like real life. It’s a really cool story about a mom and a daughter, and the girl becoming a teenager and the mom going through a midlife crisis, and how a lot of things that they are going through are actually the same. It’s funny how life kind of works like that.

Does Demi Moore make a great mom?
She was an awesome mom. In this movie she was so much like the way she is with her own daughters. She’s so amazing. She’s been in the industry since she was my age and has gone through a ton of stuff. She’s taking her time and gone away to raise her kids, and come back and shown you can still have a real life and be in this industry. Every day I would learn from her. Hopefully I can take what she did to the next step.

You don’t have any other movies fixed up right now, do you?
I’m in the middle of going back and forth on a couple of films and trying to figure out what I really want to do. Right now I just want to focus on the sort of movies that I would rush to go see. There have been a few films that have been brought to me that have been interesting, but nothing is definite. I just want a really good game plan right now. This is when I’m going to work and this is when I’m going to be off, that sort of thing. Hopefully, by the end of this year I’ll be working on something.

Do you want to do serious drama?
What I watch and the movies I like to do…I’ve got kind of a weird, dark sense of humour, really dry humour, so I would love to do more comedies, but not the comedies that people have seen me in. More kind of dry, that kind of style, independently shot, but also some laugh-out-loud funny stuff and drama as well. When you become a character, you want to make sure that it’s a part you want to open up and explore for yourself. So I think the next few things…there’s a comedy that I’m working on now and something a little darker.

I have two teenage daughters, about six years apart. Both follow your career after Hannah Montana. That suggests that you appeal to a broader base than many think.
People have very mixed opinions on me; I’m a great role model, or I’m completely inappropriate for anyone under 13 and I am controversial. I don’t know how I became this. There was this magazine article the other day, showing all the younger celebrities. I was the Girl Next Door or whatever, and I fell under the category of Good Girl Gone Bad. And I was like, “What the hell, man?” I stay in the house pretty much every day. I don’t go out. I’ve had same boyfriend for two years. So I think there are two very different reviews.

I think the ones who do look up to me as a role model… I think it’s because I’m so real. If they tell you that I haven’t tried this or haven’t experimented with that, they’re lying. And I’ll never do that because personally I can’t, because there will be some proof on the internet. It’s weird…two complete extremes. I’m not some crazy lady who’s gone off the deep end, because I definitely haven’t. I just always try to be real. Every 18-year-old explores sexuality and experiments and tries things. For me there’s no reason to change that. You have to be true to yourself. [Veteran rocker] Joan Jett has been in my life over the past year and has taught me a lot about that. She got locked down for talking about sexy and drugs or whatever. They were life, “How dare a woman say that. How dare a girl come out admit those things,” when every other girl her age was doing the same thing. She just went on stage and sang about it.

My last album, Can’t Be Tamed, was such a statement for women everywhere. The song “Liberty Walk“, I wrote it about abuse and women but put down. I think the last album is what made the older fans follow me. Who I am now is very different from who I was when I was 11. I had to grow up extremely quick. When you live in LA you see a lot. You are exposed to a lot more than people in other places. That’s just LA, especially in show business.

Is there anything that people don’t know about you that might surprise them?
I think people who meet me, especially if you come into my space where I live – it’s weird describing myself this way – I think it’s kind of how simple my life is. I’m really driven, obviously, I’ve always been that way, but my life is just really mellow, and I like hanging out. I think if they walked into where I live, they’d realise how the [public] perception of me is so different from who I really am. My dad is Native American, so I spend 90 percent of my time outside, going on hikes. That’s my lifestyle right now. The press seems to think that I’m trying to make this big turn and become a bad girl, and really I’m trying to be more connected with the Earth, more connected with myself and figure out who I am, try to understand the world a little more. I’m not doing this for anyone else but me. I just had this talk a few nights ago with my mum – just about looking at life in a completely different way. I’ve obviously been very blessed, but with every blessing there’s a curse. I’m very content with where my life is right now. People would be shocked to know that I’m very thankful for what I have, but my career is not my main priority, it’s not my life anymore. I really just want to enjoy life and explore nature and become who I am to the fullest.


credit

Av mileytwilightlover - 6 september 2011 16:56

  

The actor talks behind the scenes of the fourth movie, a movie which is going to be as crazy as its filming. It was an intense experience that changed the star.
'We spent two whole months filming in the same room in front of a green screen.'
As Breaking Dawn part 1 comes out in a little less than two months, Robert Pattinson, in a long interview with Premiere Magazine, goes back to the filming of the fourth film of the Twilight saga. What could only have been an unusual shooting (green screen, honeymoon scene in Brazil, fans going crazy...), turned out to be an intense experience. Indeed, Twilight part 4 took a serious turn and doesn't hesitate in dealing with sex and blood. You read it right. What some would take for a corny teenage movie, became 'a weird drama that ventures sometimes towards the horror', confides Pattinson to Premiere before warning 'the audience is going to get their money's worth.'
In this interview, he admits being surprised everyday by the turn of events, shooting took. One that lasted eight months but the end product is going to be worth it. 'No movie this size dares taking those kind of risks.', valuies the actor who jokes about becoming an expert in 'oral Caesarean' (those who read the book will understand) and why he felt like the guinea pig of a weird experiment. Something David Cronenberg didn't disapprove of.

The 25 years old gets loose and multiples anecdotes and secrets , as if the way shooting turn and the near end of the Twilight saga freed him. Rob talks about the most improbable scenes, the last day of filming and Kristen Stewart. The actress who was too interviewed by our magazine. She also confirms the feeling of eeriness on set. 'I sometimes felt like Bill Murray in Groundhog Day''

In this interview Pattinson also breaks the bland image, the movies seem to have stuck on him. He still causes crowds to show up everywhere he goes. (He talks about a little misadventure in Brazil that could have made a movie on its own.) But he did put some distance between him and the hysteria of fans and doesn't want to be trapped anymore in a phenomenon that escapes him.

Thus, when he recalls the filming of Breaking Dawn, he doesn't spare the Twihards that will most likely be outraged by the liberties the movie took from Stephenie Meyer's book. Liberties, that Bill Condon, at the helm of this movie, granted himself. Something that his predecessors never dared doing.
'Too bad' for the fans, tells Rob. They'll have to follow anyway.The movie seems so crazy he asked often the crew 'Are you sure we're filming Twilight?Isn't it supposed to be harmless and PG-13?'

Av mileytwilightlover - 3 september 2011 12:18

  

Nydligen intervjuade Sveventeen Liam och han fick en fråga om Miley och så hära svarade han:

 

You’ve been spotted with your ex Miley Cyrus. Are you officially back together?

Who knows? Might be. The main thing is that we know how we feel. We know what’s going on. It can get complicated bringing the rest of the world into it.

Av mileytwilightlover - 24 augusti 2011 15:28

       

 

(klicka för större bilder) 

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