Transcript
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Lulu Garcia Navarro (0:41)
From the New York Times this is the Interview. I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro. I've never had an interview quite like this one with Charlize Theron. I came in wanting to talk about her storied career, which began when she was discovered barely out of her teens at a bank in Los Angeles. By her late 20s, she'd produced, starred in and won an Oscar for the film Monster. While she's been in dark comedies like Tully and big budget fantasy films like Snow White and the Huntsman, I was most interested in her latest turn as an action star in films like Mad Fury Road, Atomic Blonde, the Old Guard franchise, and her newest film, Apex, where she kicks butt again, this time while being chased through the Australian wilderness. While we did talk about her roles, past and present, our conversation almost immediately took a revealing turn into some of the most painful chapters in her life, I think surprising us both. That includes her experience growing up in a violent home in her native South Africa, her mother killing her father in self defense, and the repercussions she's lived with ever since. Here's my conversation with Charlize Theron. So we are meeting the day after the Oscars and I was watching your acceptance speech when you won your Oscar for monster in 2004, and you know, you're standing on stage, you're tearing up. It's clearly just this very important moment, which of course it is for any actor. Your mom is sitting in the audience and you thank her for all her sacrifices. When you look back now, what do you think about that young woman and what was happening at that moment?
Charlize Theron (2:28)
I feel the first, the first thing that came to mind was just this is something that doesn't happen to girls in South Africa. Like, you know, it's like I remember looking at a map and I was like, God, we're all the way down here. What's going on up there. I remember, like, feeling very lucky that I made it out here. And, like, my greatest dream, like, my, like, lottery win would have been to be able to support myself as an actor and not have a second job. Like, that was literally what I was, like, aiming for. And not just aiming for, like, that would have been. I just wanted to, like, be able to support myself, not depend on my mom or a guy, Feel secure and get to do the thing that I absolutely love. But the thing with my mom is very. I'm gonna try and talk about it very professionally because I will tear up. She did sacrifice a lot. Yeah.
