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VI VOGLIO BENE...................

April 20 2004 at 8:18 AM
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April 20, 2004


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These days, Depp's favorite role is daddy
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Claudia Puig
USA Today
Mar. 12, 2004 12:00 AM


He watches hours of cartoons with his children, has taken up running and is working on his French to better communicate with his companion's parents.

With his fine-boned good looks, longish dark hair and slightly boho demeanor, he could still pass for 25, but Johnny Depp is 40. And his days of drugs, drink and trashing hotel rooms are a thing of the past.

Now, he sports three colorful bracelets made by his 5-year-old daughter Lily-Rose. He seems settled, content and, well, grown up.

"I just kind of stumbled around for 35 years," Depp says. "And then when my daughter arrived, it was like 'Now I see.' Suddenly everything else is just kind of shavings, morsels, little tidbits. And this is what it's all about. This is real life. Boy, it couldn't have come at a better time."

His new movie, Secret Window, opens today, capping a pretty great time indeed for Depp. He's happily settled down with Vanessa Paradis, a French pop singer, and their children, Lily-Rose and Jack, 23 months. He divides his time between homes in France and Los Angeles. He won a Screen Actors Guild award last month for his staggering, swaggering buccaneer in Pirates of the Caribbean. Although he lost the Oscar to Sean Penn, there was a sense that Depp had come awfully close, based on the fact that the onetime bad boy who's still taking chances is now one of Hollywood's most respected actors.

His performance as the irresistibly silly swashbuckler Capt. Jack Sparrow was the major reason for the success of the Disney film, which made $305 million.

"You put a genius in the middle of a pirate movie and it becomes effervescent," says Gary Ross, who directed another summer hit, Seabiscuit. "It would have made $100 million without Johnny Depp."

Depp will revisit Capt. Jack for the Pirates sequel, due in theaters in 2005.

He fused the cartoon Pepe Le Pew with the Rolling Stones' Keith Richards to fashion the slightly mincing, charismatic Jack.

"What I hoped was to create a character that could be as fun and as interesting to a 5-year-old as it could be to the most jaded, hoity-toity intellectual," he says.

Richards had no idea he was being studied by his friend until just before the movie was released.

"He sent me a message to cover his (behind)," Richards says. "I've known Johnny for a couple of years, and he'd always pay for dinner. Now I realize that was his way of paying me for modeling."

Depp's voice is soft and smoky. As he talks, he casually sweeps up his bangs and puts his hair in a ponytail in one smooth move. He asks permission to smoke.

"I cut down, I'll have you know," he says.

He has stumbled on a new way to relieve stress: Running.

"I started working with this guy I had trained with when I did Donnie Brasco. He said every human being should be able to run for 30 minutes. In any emergency, you should be able to pick up your kid and run, as fast you can, for a good length of time. And it just made sense to me."

As his life has grown calmer and more conventional, he still finds an outlet for outlandish behavior in his work. This week he began filming The Libertine, in which he plays a debauched, brilliant poet, John Wilmot, in a Restoration drama co-starring John Malkovich and fellow Oscar nominee Samantha Morton (In America). In June, he takes on the seminal role of Willy Wonka in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, teaming with Tim Burton for the fourth time. Later this year, he'll play Peter Pan author J.M. Barrie in Neverland.

In Secret Window, a psychological thriller based on a Stephen King story, Depp plays a blocked novelist.

"I'd never done a film like this. I read David Koepp's screenplay, and it really kept me on the edge of my seat," he says. "Also, it's nice to go from one extreme like Captain Jack, where the volume's kind of on 11, as it were, then go to something very subdued and internal."

Although it has been only a few months since Depp's last starring role in Once Upon a Time in Mexico, audiences can't seem to get enough of him.

"He's in this zone that every now and then an actor hits, where the audience completely identifies with him," says Koepp, who also directed Secret Window. "We saw it at the test screening. With the first shot of the movie, a close-up of Johnny in a car, the audience burst into applause."

Koepp admires Depp's edgy portrayals and the actor's integrity.

"He's made choices that sort of float his boat and that's what people respect about him," Koepp says. "He's never seemed to pursue stardom."

Depp was shooting Secret Window when Pirates opened, and Koepp says Depp was bemused by the surge of attention.

"To have a performance acknowledged on this scale is something I'm not used to," Depp concedes. "Sometimes five people see my movies, sometimes 20. It feels a little strange because I really didn't do anything different than I've ever done."

Depp says the Oscar nomination was a great honor but beside the point.

"Though it would have been flattering and as equal an honor 10 years ago, I don't think I would have been able to appreciate it the way I can today, because of where I am in life," he says. "But I never will understand the idea of awards per se. I don't believe any actor or any artist is in competition with another."

It didn't land him an Oscar, but Pirates brought him a new legion of fans - mostly young and female - typified by 13-year-old Oscar nominee and Whale Rider star Keisha Castle-Hughes, who says Depp was the one person she wanted to meet at the Oscars.

For Secret Window, Depp insisted on looking disheveled, as a writer deserted by both his wife and his inspiration.

When he spotted a torn, frayed bathrobe in an early costume fitting, "he lunged across the room and said 'This is it,' " Koepp says. "He wanted to wear it for the whole movie."

With the robe, nerdy spectacles and a severe case of bed head, Depp pulls off a witty performance.

"You can rumple him, but you can't make him unattractive," Koepp says. "You can try, but it won't happen."

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(Login DEPPANGEL)

Grascie

April 20 2004, 8:26 AM 

scister Ly...ke bello...il nostro amore speciale...tvtrb!!!BaciDepp!!!

*****************************************
"My name is Sheldon Jeffrey Sands. I work for the Central Intelligence Agency.
I throw shapes and they catch. I set them up, I watch them fall. I'm living la vida loca."
*****************************************

 
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(Login CloSparrow)

Re: Grascie

April 20 2004, 9:14 AM 


 
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(Login pinkphoebe)

grazieeeeeeeee!!!!!

April 20 2004, 9:28 AM 

grazieeeeeeeeeeeeee LY!!!!!!TI VOGLIO TANTO BENEEEEEEE!!!

LA PERFEZIONE ESISTEEEEEEE!!

...and now...bring me that horizon...

--------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------
wherever we want to go, we'll go, that's what a ship is.
it's not just a keel and a hull, and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs but what the Black Pearl really is...is freedom.
---------------------------------------------

 
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(Login DOLCEROMANTICA)

E PENSARE

April 20 2004, 12:10 PM 

.................CHE IO LO AMO PER L'OPPOSTO..PERCHE' E' IMPERFETTO E NON FA NULLA PER DIMOSTRARE IL CONTRARIO..CHE UOMO..FULMINEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
LY VVTRBhttp://www.network54.com/Realm/tmp/1082039184.JPG

 
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lavy
(no login)

Re: E PENSARE

April 20 2004, 12:32 PM 

Certo Ly...lui θ PERFETTO nella imperfezione....ed θ cosμ SPECIALE perchθ ci riesce solo LUI,il nostro ANGELO!

Grazzzzieeee per l'articolo stupendo!!!!

VVTRRRRB!!!!

 
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(Login DOLCEROMANTICA)

LUI E' IMPERFETTO...

April 20 2004, 12:37 PM 

E PERFETTO NELL'IMPERFEZIONE..PERCHE' LO SENTO COSI' VICINO A ME...VI VOGLIO BENISSIMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
LY

 
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Come

April 21 2004, 3:17 AM 

ho detto ank'io...lui θ nel non essere...e non θ da tutti!!! Viv oglio bene, tatine...BaciDepp!!!

*****************************************
"My name is Sheldon Jeffrey Sands. I work for the Central Intelligence Agency.
I throw shapes and they catch. I set them up, I watch them fall. I'm living la vida loca."
*****************************************

 
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