Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Jack Nicholson says he's looking for love, but 'can't hit on a girl in public like I used to'

Jack Nicholson, the legendary ladies' man, says he'd like to fall in love again.

"I never minded being a fool for love," the 70-year-old Oscar winner tells AARP The Magazine. "It's nice to have a place to be foolish. Ask any old friend of mine, they'll say, 'Jack's pretty smart, but in this area the man is beyond the pale. Don't ask him anything about love. Or if you ask him, don't listen to him.'"

Nicholson says getting older has changed the way he woos women.

"I can't hit on a girl in public like I used to," he says. "I never thought words like 'undignified' would come into my own reflections on myself, but I can't do it anymore."

Nicholson, whose past flames include Anjelica Huston and Lara Flynn Boyle, explains: "I feel uncomfortable. I don't think anybody cares what I do in these areas, but it feels a little bit off to me."

He says he'd date a woman close to his age — or younger.

"In fact, every year I like to cover a very broad spectrum," he says. "But you know? I've been single for quite a long time. I've been invested in my teenage children" with ex-girlfriend Rebecca Broussard. (He was married to Sandra Knight in the 1960s.)

Nicholson says nearly all his contemporaries tell him they want "that one last big romance."

"I don't do a lot of original screenwriting anymore, but if I were, I'd find a way to make this the dramatic narrative of a movie, because it's one of those silent yearnings of my own age group," he says.

Nicholson co-stars with Morgan Freeman in "The Bucket List," about two terminally ill patients on a final fling. The film is the winner of "Best Buddy Movie" in AARP The Magazine's Movies for Grownups awards, which will be presented Feb. 4 in Los Angeles.

Nicholson has received 12 Oscar nominations, winning for "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," "Terms of Endearment" and "As Good as it Gets."

The March/April issue of the magazine will be available the week of Jan. 24.

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On the Net:

AARP The Magazine:

http://www.aarpmagazine.org/

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Interview with Claudia Morgado Escanilla


Producer/writer/director Claudia Morgado Escanilla took home the PlanetOut Short Movie Awards Grand Prize for "No Bikini," a delightful -- and truly amazing -- short film about a little girl who abandons her bikini top and spends weeks in swim camp passing as a boy.

As the Grand Prize winner, Escanilla takes home a $10,000 cash prize -- the world's largest cash prize for a LGBT film competition -- and her film will screen at the Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival this April (all winning films will screen in Miami).

“I had a sex change once, when I was six or seven years old.” The opening line of No Bikini introduces us to a young girl who defies convention during her summer swim class. Filled with humour, this film is less about defining one’s gender than it is about discovering personal strength.

Escanilla is a Vancouver, B.C., filmmaker born in Santiago, Chile. We recently spoke with an excited Escanilla about the film, winning the Grand Prize and her future as a filmmaker.

"No Bikini" is incredibly original. How did you come up with the idea? Was it autobiographical?

I wish I could take credit for the idea, but about 10 years ago I read the short story "No Bikini" by Ivan Coyote. In 2004, I contacted her to get the rights. It was great to work with Ivan because she encouraged me to make it my own, went with the changes I made as I was writing the script; plus we collaborated on the VO, which she recorded.

Read the full interview here.

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