***Special
thanks to SummerAngel for contributing these scans***
Looks Magazine
August 1999
Jennifer Aniston has struggled from hard-up
waitress to global superstar. And, believe it or not, she�s
managed to keep her head and her genuinely warm personality.
She looks tiny in a shimmering dress, her hair pulled up,
and, as we talk, her green eyes sparkle.
Rachel
has developed a lot since the first series of Friends. Do
you think she has become to new realisations?
Yes, the discovery of Ross� love was a big deal. She also
found independence and what it felt like to learn your own
dollar, while doing something you love. Before, it was all
about getting a man, a house and the white picket fence,
Once she realised she could do the career thing too, her
and Ross went awry because she didn�t know how to incorporate
both.
Is she going to get married?
I don�t know. She�s a mess. I�ve got to ask the writers.
They get themselves to these places at the end of the season
and then they have four months to figure it out.
Rachel is self-absorbed, as was the very
popular Seinfeld. Does that tell us anything about life
in the �90s?
You mean, it�s like �Me Generation� all over again? It�s
so funny, I don�t see them as self-involved. I�d love that,
though, because that�s human. Rachel�s definitely getting
better. It creeps in every now and then, but she�s evolved.
People are now really trying to figure life out with all
this self-discovery. We mock it because it can go too far,
but I think in essence it�s good.
Are you into New Age philosophies?
I�m into exploring and learning about everything. There
is nothing I can say no to.
What causes are you involved in?
Nothing hands-on. There�s the Rape Treatment Center for
young girls in Santa Monica, due to this wonderful woman
who took me there a couple years ago. It�s too easy to call
out all these charities you�re part of. So many people want
to stand up for something, but it can be dangerous. We have
a voice, but you have to educate yourself first. Truthfully,
I�d do it all I could, but I�ve just been finding things
I�m moved by.
Has your celebrity affected your life in
a negative way?
It�s hard. There�s a period when you just don�t know what�s
going on. Suddenly you have people camped outside your house
and it�s a little scary. Then you get angry and want your
privacy. So you start to incorporate it into your thinking.
You draw it into you if you�re afraid of it, and you hide
under the cap and the glasses. And then you just tune it
out. I�m determined to live my life. I don�t think about
it much now. I�m a sloppy thing and go out not worrying
how I look, but I�m not rude to people.
Do you want to continue doing romantic
comedies?
No, I�d love to do other kinds of films. A thriller or something.
I love comedy but I want to evolve and challenge myself.
It�s easy to get stuck in what people are comfortable seeing
you as. As you grow in the film world and become known,
you want to mix it up a bit. It�s hard-you�re under a microscope,
and if you make a mistake, they go, �See, you didn�t make
it�. But I�m an actor, I have to try something, and if it
doesn�t work, it�s all right. If Friends had never happened,
I don�t think the cast would get as much criticism for their
movies. Like any actor, if you get an opportunity to do
a movie, it�s wonderful, but because we�re so in the limelight
and known as Friends, we get a really hard time. It�s hard
enough to deal with rejection as it is, so you have to remember
why you�re doing it and block it out as much as you can.
How do you make people forget that you�re
Rachel?
You go in there, audition and show them you can do something
else. But you know what? I don�t feel it as much now. I
think people have been okay in accepting my movies, although
all you read is a comparison between Friends and our movies.
It�s like, �Come up with a new angle, for God�s sake!�
Are you working on another movie?
I�ve finished one called Office Space. Mike Judge (the man
behind Beavis & Butthead and King of the Hill) wrote and
directed it. I play Joanna, a waitress at TGI Friday who�s
a stoner chick. This guy, Ron Livingston, is fed up with
his job at a big corporation. He gets hypnotized, but the
hypnotist dies in the middle of his session, so he�s hypnotized
for the rest of the movie. My character is kind of always
in a hypnotized state, so that�s why we get along so well.
We show each other different sides of life. It�s a dark
comedy, not romantic at all.
Were you funny as a little girl, or was
it hard to find that side?
It wasn�t tough to see the comedy side of me. I was a clown
in school! I was not a good student and got kicked out of
classes for clowning around. Then, when I went to theatre
school, it was important to be a serious actor, but there�d
be chuckling during scenes. My mentor, this wonderful actor
teacher in the 11th grade, told me, �You�ve got the ability
to be funny, but be careful. It can be safe and prevent
you going to real places.� That threw me-I never thought
of myself as a comedienne.
Are you happy now you�ve accepted it?
Yes. I also think I�m better now-a lot of the TV shows I
did before were �ba-de-bing, ba-de-boom� comedy and weren�t
real. I love comedy when it comes from the truth of a situation.
That�s what I love about Friends. As funny as it is, they
work really hard not to make it cheesy and jokey-it�s based
on reality. Ultimately, that�s what you want to do in a
film.
Do you want to do serious theatre?
Oh, I�d love to and am sure I will. I did it in high school
and it�s intimidating, but I really want to go back. It
used to be the most comfortable place for me.
How did you start acting professionally?
I did theatre in New York, then moved to California and
got one sitcom after another. I did about six before Friends.
Why do you like romantic comedies?
It�s the characters and complexities of their relationships.
In The Object Of My Affection, it�s how they move through
the conflict they�re faced with at the end. It�s a wonderful
film, because it wasn�t wrapped up in a perfect tiny bow.
It was a gem, and it�s hard to find those.
Did you think this movie was good for you,
after being known as Rachel?
Yeah, because on TV you have an image and you don�t want
to limit yourself. But it�s flattering to be thought of
in that way. Especially for someone like me. The last thing
I�m good at is my hair, and the last thing I think about
is my physicality. It�s weird to be seen in that light,
because I don�t feel that way. I don�t want to promote the
idea that happiness comes from beauty-that if you�re beautiful,
you�re happy and successful; if you�re thin, you can do
all this. It�s not a message
I want to send out, especially to young girls who hang on
your every word. It�s totally wrong.
You weren�t thin when you started acting.
Didn�t losing weight help boost your career?
I�ve been everything, like everybody. It�s not easy for
some of us to stay thin, but I worked before I was thin.
Do you get frustrated when people only
talk about your haircut?
Oh, yeah, all the time, but al you can do is just focus
on doing good work.
Do you play tricks on each other on the
Friends set?
We were once obsessed with fart machines and that was for
a good half of the season, I�ve got to tell you! The sound
department started it, then Matthew Perry found a remote-controlled
one. You might not appreciate it, but it gets you every
time.
What are you doing during your break this
year?
I don�t know. I�m so excited! I haven�t had two months off
for years. Last year, I went to France on a bike trip and
there will be trips this year too, but I haven�t planned
them yet. Morocco might be fun. Somewhere they don�t see
Friends!
Are you looking forward to going back to
the show in August?
I can�t wait. It�s like going home.
In The Object Of My Affection you play
a woman who appreciates certain qualities of two different
kinds of men-her boyfriend, who�s confident and straight,
and her roommate, who�s gentle and gay.
But the composite is of the perfect man. Vince is a powerful,
strong, ballbuster who doesn�t demand much, and she likes
that at the start. She�s very in control of who she is.
She�s got a job, her boyfriend, and that works fine. Then
this other man comes along, who fulfils a whole new side
of her that she didn�t know a man could. I don�t think she
ever thought romantic love and friendship love could go
together, and she gets thrown by that.
How close are you to the character you
play in this film?
There are similarities. I guess I�m a bit of a control freak.
I like order, but I don�t think you can control when you
fall in love.
What kind of man would you like to find
for yourself?
A good man. Honest, real. He should be funny, kind, everything.
And good-looking would help. Nothing wrong with that!
We�ve seen a few movies where the woman
goes for the gay guy because he�s sensitive. Does that reflect
reality?
No, of course not. There are wonderful straight men who
are sensitive, and there are women who aren�t sensitive.
That�s just how we like to peg people. We like to put those
stereotypes out there. What is also nice t see in this movie
is a gay character represented as a human being. It�s not
a satire.
Were the dance scenes choreographed for
you?
It was very choreographed. I�ve got rhythm but when it comes
to the steps I am just a white girl. It�s a tedious process.
I wasn�t great and I get frustrated so that makes it worse.
You clown around and Paul�s such a good, it was impossible.
When your character gets pregnant, her
first thought is not to get married. Have alternative family
lifestyles become more common in America?
Definitely, especially in this generation that has come
from divorced families. How we create our chosen families,
which to me are the best families, just because you�re not
connected by blood, it�s not always a healthy, wonderful
thing. We don�t have to stick by the guidelines now. It�s
about being true to yourself.
Do you have a group of friends that you
consider your chosen family?
I have a group of friends that I�ve had since I moved here
ten years ago. Twelve of us just went away together. There
are times when I feel closer to these guys than I do my
own family.
Are any of the actors on Friends part of
this family?
No. They�re close to me and have been all along, but this
is a solid group that�s been together a long time, separate
from work. It�s very important to me. They�re my family
and we ground each other.
Did playing a young mother give you an
idea of what kind of mother you would like to be?
Oh, I don�t think you can predict that. I have some ideas,
as I�m sure all women do. I�d like to be the perfect mom,
but someone for whom it�s okay to be flawed and make mistakes.
We should allow for that and not shield a child too much.
Let them know it�s okay to run around naked and not be ashamed
of anything, I definitely believe in allowing them to see
the world as it is, but not exposing them to too much too
early.
How much TV would you allow your children
to watch?
Not a lot. When I grew up, I wasn�t allowed to watch television
or go to movies for the longest time. I think I was allowed
to watch Donny and Marie once in a while. That was my big
treat!
You never even watched your father John
on the soap Days Of Our Lives?
Never. My mom was very strict on not wanting me to watch
TV, which is another thing I want to do as a mother. We
have that video thing now, where you pop a kid in front
of a TV and they�re like zombies. You should throw pencils
and paper in their hands instead.
Do you still paint as a hobby?
Yeah, I do. I�ve been doing that a lot lately, actually.
I paint more charcoals.
Is painting something that you would like
to pursue professionally?
Yeah, why not? I�m sure I could if I wanted to. You can
slap anything in a canvas and sell it for a ridiculous price!
Wasn�t one of your sketches exhibited at
the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York?
Yeah. I was only nine, but it was a fluke. My school was
a Rudolf Steiner School, where they�re very artistic. They
picked ten Steiner students to exhibit at the Met, and that
was pretty cool. At the time, I was like, �So what?�
Do you still paint in that style today?
I used to paint with shading, colours and dimension, but
now it�s just freehand and whatever comes to mind. It was
a great thing to be exposed to as a kid. I also played every
musical instrument. I can�t play any well, but I�ve played
them all!