Being the theater lover that I am and having anticipated Les Miserables for the whole 2012, this discussion is too close to home to pass. I fell in love with Les Mis at the tender age of 7, read it back in the day when publishing classics on comics was the norm. Eventually I grew up to join theatre, and Les Miserables still holds the spine-tingling magic as I first read as a child.
A controversial interview by veteran entertainment columnist Ricky Lo of A-list Hollywood actor Anne Hathaway as she talks about her film, "Les Miserables," has taken the social media networking sites by storm. The interview didn't go as candid as expected, as it was filled with awkward pauses, unfinished sentences, lack of rapport and a seeming endless round of questions previously asked by the interviewer. Hathaway, wearing what seems to be variations of black throughout the "Les Mis" promotion, steered away from the touchy questions, while Lo egged on comparisons to previous stage Fantine, Lea Salonga.
Anne composed herself so well, and she has every right to answer sarcastically since the writer didn't seem to be paying attention to what she was saying. I can sense that she sincerely wanted to talk about the movie, her character and what she brought into the film, and was trying to give something meaningful to the lone press representative from the Philippines. However, Lo chose the most obscure, annoying and repetitive questions that he can possibly think of.
Lo is respected in his field and has gone down this road so many times. He has practically interviewed all of my Hollywood hunk crushes including George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, he usually asks the right questions and get the most fruitful answers. He's published a lot of well-written articles of international celebrities and musicians. However on this particular interview, he chose to endlessly annoy Hathaway-- an A-list actor people stand in the line for hours to see-- who he had solo with undivided attention for a full 5 minutes (and that's including him dropping his phone with a loud thud!, that's like precious interview seconds) I can think of so many questions to ask Anne-- and how I wish I could! This is definitely not putting Anne in a pedestal but considering it's Lo's job to ask the right questions and not harass the person he interviews like some TMZ reporter. And not to compare, but Boy Abunda did a better job at interviewing Zac Efron amidst an SM Arena-ful of screaming teenagers.
A controversial interview by veteran entertainment columnist Ricky Lo of A-list Hollywood actor Anne Hathaway as she talks about her film, "Les Miserables," has taken the social media networking sites by storm. The interview didn't go as candid as expected, as it was filled with awkward pauses, unfinished sentences, lack of rapport and a seeming endless round of questions previously asked by the interviewer. Hathaway, wearing what seems to be variations of black throughout the "Les Mis" promotion, steered away from the touchy questions, while Lo egged on comparisons to previous stage Fantine, Lea Salonga.
Anne composed herself so well, and she has every right to answer sarcastically since the writer didn't seem to be paying attention to what she was saying. I can sense that she sincerely wanted to talk about the movie, her character and what she brought into the film, and was trying to give something meaningful to the lone press representative from the Philippines. However, Lo chose the most obscure, annoying and repetitive questions that he can possibly think of.
Lo is respected in his field and has gone down this road so many times. He has practically interviewed all of my Hollywood hunk crushes including George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, he usually asks the right questions and get the most fruitful answers. He's published a lot of well-written articles of international celebrities and musicians. However on this particular interview, he chose to endlessly annoy Hathaway-- an A-list actor people stand in the line for hours to see-- who he had solo with undivided attention for a full 5 minutes (and that's including him dropping his phone with a loud thud!, that's like precious interview seconds) I can think of so many questions to ask Anne-- and how I wish I could! This is definitely not putting Anne in a pedestal but considering it's Lo's job to ask the right questions and not harass the person he interviews like some TMZ reporter. And not to compare, but Boy Abunda did a better job at interviewing Zac Efron amidst an SM Arena-ful of screaming teenagers.
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