Wilson Drawn to Flawed Hero

Tall, handsome and clean-cut, Patrick Wilson, who co-stars with Kerry Washington in “Lakeview Terrace,” seems born to play the romantic leading man.

But for his roles in “Angels in America,” “The Phantom of the Opera,” “Hard Candy” and “Little Children,” right up to “Lakeview”, Wilson looks for the cracks in guys with perfect facades.

“I’m certainly attracted to the fallen hero. That always interests me,” Wilson said in a one-on-one Herald sitdown earlier this week. “The emasculation of the male I get very into. We all want to get into that identity and what it means to be a man, a husband, a father.”

In “Lakeview Terrace” Wilson plays Chris Mattson, a man married to his college sweetheart, who “thinks he’s fine. He’s got little secrets here and there, but he doesn’t realize he’s on different pages than his wife. He has to consider what it means to be a man and be in this marriage and possibly a father. He’s not sure about any of those things.”

As Brad in “Little Children,” Wilson played an unemployed househusband with a disinterested wife, swept away by an adulterous affair.

Married to actress Dagmara Dominczyk with a 2-year-old son, Wilson graduated from Carnegie Mellon University majoring in drama. With time and much experience, he’s adjusted to the rigors of making love and getting naked onscreen,including a nude swimming romp with Washington for “Lakeview.”

“It’s always awkward filming,” he said. “It’s just as awkward as when you’re 15 and you have to kiss a girl onstage. It never changes. But after doing scenes like ‘Little Children,’ it doesn’t even faze me anymore. It’s just a day at the office, sadly,” he said and laughed.

source: bostonherald.com

Patrick Wilson Interview – Lakeview Terrace

Tell us about your character in the movie.
“I play Chris Mattson. I just moved down here from the San Francisco area with my wife who Kerry [Washington] plays and I am sort of an environmentalist. I work for this company closest to probably Whole Foods, and we move into this neighborhood and we’ve been together for a while and this is our first house. You sort of imagine we probably lived in an apartment or something before that and then we come to find out that sort of the racism that we have experienced, I guess, pales in comparison to our lovely neighbor Mr. Abel Turner who Sam [L. Jackson] plays. He really just makes… It’s very clear that he doesn’t like us together or the idea of us together. It becomes a real battle of old versus new, and then he just proceeds to not mince words with what he feels about us and how we shouldn’t be in his neighborhood and basically how we should just leave.”

It sort of becomes not just a battle of the race issue, because that’s sort of been done over and over, but what was interesting to me is just the idea of people’s values and people’s morals in their own sort of no matter how much your neighborhood acts like a neighborhood, everybody’s home is still their own community, I guess, with their own set of morals and values and traditions and ours are sort of challenged.”

Is your neighbor’s attitude targeted more toward just you or your character and Kerry’s?
“That’s interesting. Probably more towards me, just from the male perspective I would imagine. I mean that might be a question more for Sam. But, yeah, we sort of go into that a little. I think we do. There’s a few lines in there that Kerry says and I sort of just address [it], just so we can sort of get it out on the table. We’ve experienced this before – looks from black men. Whether it’s looks, whether it’s comments, a white man and a black woman is much different than a black man and a white woman so I think it’s very easy to target me.”

Are there any gray areas in the conflict?
“No. I mean, well, what’s interesting is it starts out by he sees us together for lack of a more detailed explanation. I mean we just moved in, we’re very much in love and have a great relationship. It’s not like we’re just starting out. You know we’ve been together for a few years, so we sort of know the protocol. We are not children. But it’s actually his kids who see us in the pool getting very comfortable in our new environment. And, again, it’s probably more of a question for him, but that’s what sort of pushes it over the edge. So you don’t know in the next day when he and I have a confrontation that’s what he [it's about]. He never says, ‘I don’t like you because of who you are.’ It’s, ‘I saw what you guys did and that’s going to leave a scar on my children,’ so that’s sort of the route through it. It’s not so black and white like, you know, ‘I don’t like you because…’ So I think that’s sort of the avenue it goes down when it becomes very clear, at least to me – maybe not to the audience – and that’s totally fine.”

Is there a point toward the end where you cross over and abandon your principles and go at it?
“Yeah, I think we certainly take a more physical and maybe brutal, maybe base, maybe childish [approach to the problem]. Yes, there’s much more sort of a guttural reaction to it than, say, you know other films. It’s much more of like a very sinister behind the lines. I think that’s what it is. It’s just much more sort of aggressive. Again, it really sort of balances that line between being very brutal…and I don’t mean just violent, but I just mean very physical and then very childish and very sort of stupid, looking at these sort of two men. She sort of points that out to us.”

So Sam kicks your ass?
“You could say that.”

How was it working with Samuel L. Jackson?
“It’s great. You know I try and remember what my perceptions were, I guess. Of course we’ve all seen him in quite a few films but the biggest thing that stuck out to me were the first couple of days of shooting, you know? I’d never seen him with a pair of sides – like whatever preparation and whatever he does is so much in his world. I think that’s the fascination, at least I have with other actors, is how each person sort of prepares and I sort of love that. You know, he comes in and it’s never, ‘Uhhh, what is the scene?’ That’s just a different kind of preparation, but I sort of love that. Like he walks in and he does it. He’s just a consonant pro, and it’s sort of obvious. But, you know, for someone that will do it one take or two and if you ask for three and four there’s no sense of, ‘Argh okay,’ you know? It’s never that. He’s great. After our first few scenes of getting at it and going toe-to-toe it was really fun. We sort of slapped hands afterwards and it was great. It was fun.”

source: movies.about.com

All My Sons Begins Previews 9/18

The eagerly anticipated production of Arthur Miller’s ALL MY SONS starring John Lithgow, Dianne Wiest, Patrick Wilson, and Katie Holmes, directed by Simon McBurney, will begin previews on Thursday, September 18th at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre (236 West 45th Street), with official opening set for Thursday, October 16th . It is produced by Eric Falkenstein.

The first Broadway production of a Miller play since the author’s death three years ago, ALL MY SONS has an advance of $3.5 million.

The limited engagement plays through. January 11 2009.

Tickets are available by calling Telecharge at 212-239-6200 or visiting www.telecharge.com.

The cast of ALL MY SONS will also feature Becky Ann Baker (Sue Bayliss), Christian Camargo (George Deever), Jordan Gelber (Frank Lubey), Danielle Ferland (Lydia Lubey), Damian Young (Dr. Jim Bayliss), and Michael D’Addario (Bert).

Tony Award® nominee Tom Pye will design sets and costumes (Top Girls, Cyrano de Bergerac, The Glass Menagerie).  Tony Award® nominee Paul Anderson will design lights (Mnemonic, The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui, Stuff Happens).  Christopher Shutt (Moon for the Misbegotten, Coram Boy, Mnemonic) and Carolyn Downing (A Winter’s Tale & Pericles at RSC, The Overwhelming) will design sound.  Finn Ross for Mesmer will design projections (Silverland at the Arcola, A Disappearing Number, Measure for Measure).  Special Tony Award® winner Paul Huntley will design wigs and hair (Hairspray, Gypsy, Young Frankenstein).

Arthur Miller’s first successful play, All My Sons won the Tony Award for the author in 1947 and ran for 328 performances on Broadway.  Miller took his inspiration from a true story about a successful business man who knowingly sold the government defective airplane parts during World War II with tragic consequences.  The truth comes out and his life unravels when his son prepares to marry his business partner’s daughter.

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE:

The playing schedule for ALL MY SONS will be as follows:
Tuesday at 7pm
Wednesday – Saturday at 8pm
Wednesday and Saturday at 2pm
Sunday at 3pm

TICKET INFORMATION:

Tickets for all evening performances and all Saturday and Sunday matinee performances are $66.50 and $116.50.  Tickets for all Wednesday matinee performances are $61.50 and $111.50.  All prices include a $1.50 facility fee.  Tickets will be available at the Schoenfeld Theatre Box Office (236 West 45th Street) beginning August 21st, and by calling Telecharge at 212-239-6200 or visiting www.telecharge.com.

For more information please visit www.AllMySonsOnBroadway.com

source: broadwayworld.com

The Watchmen Video Journal #6 Online

Passengers Trailer

An english trailer for Passengers has been released.  Check it out here!:

Current Projects

A Gifted Man (2011 - ??)
Patrick as ... Dr. Michael Holt
Friday's at 8PM on CBS

Young Adult (2011)
Patrick as ... Buddy Slade
Theater's December 16th, 2011

The Ledge (2011)
Patrick as ... Joe
On DVD

Prometheus (2012)
Patrick as ... Unknown
Released 2012

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