Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

The great thespian asked: Hasn’t the dear boy heard of acting?

September 28, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

The great thespian asked: “Hasn’t the dear boy heard of acting?”. On the set of Marathon Man, he was confronted with a haggard Dustin Hoffman, who had gone without food and sleep for two days to prepare for a particular scene. It is seen as a good thing and shows you are committed as an actor. It gets you talked about.”Perhaps the last word should go to the late Laurence Oliver. His health could suffer should he ever try this again.”The actors’ union Equity, which has issued guidelines to its members on eating disorders, says actors should always be wary of the hazards in taking any role and, if necessary, seek medical advice. Tom Hanks shed 50lbs for Castaway, earning him a Golden Globe in 2000.Ren?Zellweger, whose extra weight for Bridget Jones’s Diary became the subject of almost obsessive media interest won an Oscar nomination, while Charlize Theron took the award for playing a serial killer in Monster, for which she was required to add 43lbs.Chris Hewitt, news editor of Empire magazine, said he did not believe actors were generally concerned about sparking eating disorders in themselves or others “I think most of them know what they are doing. To play Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver, he lost 35lbs and won an Oscar nomination; while a few years and an extra 60lbs later, he won the 1980 Best Actor Oscar for Raging Bull.

“This type of thing is part of the background pressure about certain body shapes. It could mislead some people into thinking it is very easy to change the shape of their body.”Lynn Grefe, from the National Eating Disorder Association in the United States said the scale of the loss was “scary”. “I think the fact he lost such a tremendous amount of weight is terribly unhealthy I question what people will do for the sake of art. He said: “I was also intrigued to see how far I could take it I was told, if I got to 140/145lb that’s still fine. But I was intrigued by a perverse nature of mine just to see if I can go beyond what I’ve been told is actually safe and OK, and see if I could push the limits.”The actor conceded he had not been concerned about the possible health implications: “I think it is that kind of stupid sense of invulnerability you get on occasions and also the factor because I was doing it for a character. I am not going to do it twice, because I am sure that really would start to become not only dangerous but stupid.”Some have expressed unease about such extreme “method” acting.

Susan Ringwood, chief executive of the Eating Disorders Association said actors had to be cautious: “Very rapid weight loss can have all kinds of unexpected side effects and can cause quite insidious psychological effects. People can become quite unwell.”There were also concerns, she said, at the message such behaviour might have for those vulnerable to eating disorders. If they were not doing it in the name of art, they would be urged to seek medical help for their eating disorder. But since they are actors, they get awards and the respect of their peers.

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