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QUOTE OF THE WEEK
You're damned if you're too thin and you're damned if you're too heavy. According to the press I've been both.
The Break-Up
on DVD since October, 17 2006
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I think of life as a continual learning process so it's difficult for
me to single out one specific moment when someone said something to
me that has made all the difference. I remember many moments where
my life has been turned around. The first one that comes to mind is
when my dad told me," You should become a lawyer." My
father, John Aniston, has been an actor on daytime television for
some twenty-five years now, and he has seen the ups and downs of the
business and how many of his friends have suffered the heartache of
rejection.
As a good father, he wanted to spare my heartache. When I look back
at that now, I see how complex his feelings must have been to say
that. He loves acting; he derives so much satisfaction from it- yet
the process can be emotionally brutal. Not just the audition and
rejection process, but once you're cast, going into sometimes dark
places to find a character. Of course as a good daughter, I took it
as a challenge. I wanted to prove to him that I could do it. I
thought he would then be unbelievably impressed and would love me
that much more. I think I had a little streak of rebelliousness too.
I didn't consider the hurtful end of it. And his advice really set
me on my path as an actor. I tell him sometimes, " If you
really didn't want me to become an actor, you should have told me to
be one because then I would have chose to be a lawyer." But
sometimes, a challenge from someone who we know really loves us can
be good, because we know he will love us regardless of the outcome.
As I began studying at the High School for the Performing Arts in
New York City, there was another turning point. I was doing what I
thought was a highly dramatic scene from The Three Sisters by Anton
Chekhov, and I could distinctly hear laughter in the audience. I
walked off the stage, thinking, Huh, laughing at Cheknov, not really
the reaction I was going for.
Later when my acting teacher, Anthony Abeson, was going over the
scene with me he said," You know Jennifer, they're laughing
because you're funny." And I said," But I don't want to be
a funny actress, I want to be a serious actress." "No,
you've got it wrong," he said. " This is a wonderful
thing. You should hone it, but please don't let it become your
crutch."
In performance I had a tendency to be funny instead of going deeper
into a scene. An in retrospect I realize that this was something I
had been doing most of my life. All through my childhood I had used
humor as a survival technique. Whether it was my parents' divorce or
trouble with my friends or any of a hundred problems or insecurities
that kids go through, I got by through being funny and making people
laugh. I think I just did what came naturally to protect myself from
hurt.
That's not to say that I didn't love making people laugh; I did. And
when I think about it, all the things that I loved to watch growing
up depicted these women who made me laugh. Yet when I thought about
acting I just always thought of myself as a dramatic actress. I
wanted to be the kind of actress who had made me cry as a kid when I
went to the theater. Being funny just seemed too easy for me. So
this incident in high school radically changed the way I thought
about acting.
I realized I had to accept this aspect of my personality- my natural
tendency to make people laugh- but place it into a larger context of
what I wanted to achieve. I realized I needed to strike a balance.
So instead of rejecting the funny side of myself, I embraced it. And
channeled it into something I love to so and that makes me
unbelievably happy and amazingly, makes other people happy too.
Another turning point in my life happened with the success of
Friends. Here I was in my twenties, and all of a sudden I had all
this perceived success, and people started thinking of me as being
fabulous and famous. But all the time I was thinking: How weird that
these people think this about me. If only they knew me.
I was really at a place where I felt undeserving. I thought about
the people out there who were really making a difference in this
world. I couldn't make the success and attention mean anything when
I compared it to others. I was thinking that my being an actress had
no longer value to anyone. Sure it gave me financial security and
validation as an actress and it was fun, but initially I thought,
How could it be enough?
I started feeling an overwhelming need to withdraw from the
attention when a friend of mine, Abhi, sent me this excerpt from a
Nelson Mandela speech written by Marianne Williamson. It was an
epiphany for me. Part of it reads: "It is our light, not our
darkness that most frightens us... There's nothing enlightened about
shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you... We
were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's
not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own
light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the
same."
So with those words I realized there was nothing gained by playing
small to make others feel comfortable. Who was I to deny myself the
light within me, the light that is within everyone? We all need to
celebrate who we are and what we have to give to the world. It
doesn't matter if you're driving a truck or making television shows
or movies. We all have something unique to offer.
In reading Mandela's words, I realized that I did have a value and a
place in the world, and part of that was making people laugh on a
grand scale. Making lots and lots of people laugh, people I would
never know, but perhaps people who needed to laugh. Now I'm grateful
for my achievements and happy in giving what I have to offer as a
human being.
Although I feel that I am at a good place right now, I'm sure there
are more turning points to come. I guess that's what makes life so
damn interesting.
--Jennifer Aniston