Jennifer Aniston and Paul Rudd cover GQ March 2012. The two longtime friends and 'Wanderlust' co-stars sit down for a chat with the magazine and talk about their relationship that goes back a long way, their hippie experiences, major age crisis, kissing on-screen, movies they would love to do, twins rumour, and many more.
Jennifer Aniston
and Paul Rudd cover GQ March 2012. The two longtime friends and
'Wanderlust' co-stars sit down for a chat with the magazine and
talk about their relationship that goes back a long way, their
hippie experiences, major age crisis, kissing on-screen, movies
they would love to do, and many more.
The two have known each other since they were 21. In 1998, Rudd and
Aniston co-starred in 'The Object of My Affection'. Aniston recalls
that, "The first time I saw Paul Rudd was from a distance. I was
living in Laurel Canyon, and my friend, who's now my producing
partner, Kristin Hahn, lived in a house across the way. And Paul
came to pick her up on a first date."
In 'Wanderlust' (watch movie trailer below), their couple take
refuge on a hippie commune down south. On her hippie experiences,
the actress says that, "In Laurel Canyon, we were very familiar
with hippies. I mean, I bathed. But I also wouldn't call myself a
Beverly Hills person in any way. I was a more earthy girl for
sure."
As for Paul, he admits that, "In my freshman year of college, I
started growing my hair long. I thought, it'll be kind of cool to
be crunchy. But that was pretty short-lived. And that kind of
morphed into wearing thrift-store clothes - the next step of
hippiedom. I got very poetic about it: 'Clothes should be
transitory, man. We should pass them on to others...' Then somebody
older than me said, 'Oh God, I would never go in a thrift store. I
don't want to wear pants that somebody else has farted in.' It was
like a thunderbolt. I thought, you know what? I don't want to,
either! And that was it."
On relationships and marriage, Aniston says that, "It's a
growing, literally living thing. There's going to be growing pains,
there's going to be awkward moments - your lanky phase, your
pimpled phase. I think that's the beauty of a relationship. But if
the road starts to... and one person is growing this way and the
other is growing that way... Sometimes that can happen and you can
stay together, and sometimes you can't."
Speaking about being the "walking definition of 'husband
material,'" Rudd told GQ that, "I think if my wife was at this
table right now, she'd do a spit take."
On movies she would want to do, Jennifer confesses that, "Ugh. I
have no desire to do a Shakespearean movie. Action would be fun,
though you don't want to be in front of a screen going, [feigns
seeing something large coming at her] 'Ohhh, s***!!!"
Both Aniston and Rudd recently passed 40. On whether she faced
major crisis, the actress says that, "Forty's great! Oh, my God, my
thirties blew! Forties are great!"
Jennifer, who bought an apartment in New York, also speaks about
tabloids and photographers standing outside every day. "I bought an
apartment, but I didn't buy the right apartment. There were
photographers outside every day. To the point of embarrassment,"
the actress says. And even though she has been living with it for a
long time, Aniston still tries to accept the situation. "I have.
I'm still trying really hard to be friends with it. It's just a
weird time, I think. The tabloids, instead of being about alien
babies and stuff, it's my triplets, quadruplets, marriages,
feuds..., she told GQ.
Recently, tabloids trumpeted the rumour that Jennifer Aniston
was pregnant with twins by Justin Theroux. "I'm not having
triplets. Not having twins. Nor am I having one baby. [lifts up
sweater and gestures to belly; it appears flat] I did not elope,"
she says.
On how the twins rumour started, Aniston told GQ that, "Well, I
recently quit smoking, and you do put on some extra pounds. It
makes a difference, especially if you're not 20. I think people
maybe want me to have a kid now." She than adds that, "I still kind
of go with, if it happens, it happens. I'm calm and peaceful with
whatever the plan is. It's not something where I'm going, 'I gotta
have a kid!'"
But does she feel annoyed by the fact that marriage and pregnancy
are considered as being an essential part of her narrative? In the
interview with the magazine, Aniston confesses that, "Part of the
picture-perfect life? I think that's sort of cliché, isn't it?
Like, if you want to be happy, you should have the house, the
husband, the kids... Kids are messy!"
Read Aniston and Rudd's full interview in the March 2012 issue of
GQ Magazine.


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