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Magazine

TIME PACIFIC
November 20, 2000 | NO. 46

Playing the Margins
Philip Seymour Hoffman specializes in outcasts
By MICHAEL KRANTZ

Philip Seymour Hoffman knows how to make you wince. Remember his Scotty, the hapless gofer who desperately lunged to kiss porn star Dirk Diggler in Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie Nights? Or his wrenching portrayal of Allen, the obscene phone caller in Todd Solondz's Happiness? Now Joel Schumacher's Flawless, released in Australia this week, brings us Rusty, a transsexual who befriends a homophobic stroke victim played by Robert De Niro. It's a typically gutsy performance that tightropes between drag-queen camp and the pathos of a man who believes he's the butt of a biological practical joke.

The 33-year-old actor also knows how to keep audiences on their toes, recently flexing his talents as a compassionate nurse in Anderson's Magnolia and as an expatriate blueblood in Anthony Minghella's The Talented Mr. Ripley. What keeps moviegoers watching is, well, Hoffman himself, embodying these loners and misfits with a skill and conviction that are swiftly making him Hollywood's most unlikely leading man since that other Hoffman, Dustin, stammered through The Graduate the year Philip was born.

Not bad for a guy who went for his first audition at 15 to chase a girl, Amy, who was sweet on his older brother. Hoffman grew up in suburban Rochester, N.Y., a baseball jock who often attended regional-theater productions with his mother. "When I was in, like, seventh grade, I saw Robert Downey Jr. in Alms for the Middle Class," he recalls. "I loved it. Loved it." High school acting led to drama school at New York University, off-Broadway theater and, finally, Hollywood.

Directors exhaust superlatives extolling Hoffman's craft. "He's extraordinarily committed to infinitesimal detail," says Schumacher. "I don't think there's anything he can't do," raves Minghella. Adds Solondz: "Whatever genius is, he has it. He's fearless. I love him."

Hoffman simply talks about giving audiences common ground with the most ostensibly unlovable of souls. "Actors are responsible to the people we play," he says. "I don't label or judge. I just play them as honestly and expressively and creatively as I can, in the hope that people who would ordinarily turn their heads in disgust instead think, ŒWhat I thought I'd feel about that guy, I don't totally feel right now.' "

Next to hit the screen is David Mamet's State and Main, in which Hoffman plays his first romantic lead opposite Rebecca Pidgeon, but he scoffs at the notion of Hollywood stardom. He will, he says, continue living in New York City, doing theater (he made his Broadway debut earlier this year in a revival of Sam Shepard's True West) and worrying about his love life. "I date," he says. "But it's a nightmare. You're traveling all the time. I gotta figure it out, because I want to get married and have kids someday." Listening, Amy? There's still time to give this guy at least one happy ending.
 

Copyright © 2001 Time Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
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More Stories

November 20, 2000 | NO. 46

US   ELECTION 2000
STANDOFF 2000: The Cliffhanger
Nancy Gibbs tells the story of Al Gore and George W. Bush's never-ending election night and the constitutional trapdoors that may lie ahead for a country in political limbo

BACK TO SCHOOL: An Electoral College Primer
Why the winner will be chosen by 538 men and women

Public Eye: Margaret Carlson urges calm and patience

FLORIDA KEY: The Sunshine State Keeps Counting
The turbulent quest for the State's 25 electoral votes

CAPITOL HILL: The First Lady is a Senator
How Hillary Clinton won her race for Congress

HISTORY: No Surprises
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. on White House history repeating

Vote: Barbara Ehrenreich on why she's not sorry

SOCIETY
IDEAS: A Hardy Constitution
Australia's chief justice is a fan of the country's "rules"

T H E   A R T S
EXHIBITIONS: Pursuing the delusion of Utopia

MUSIC: PJ Harvey in a New York state of mind

CINEMA: Philip Seymour Hoffman, the prince of perversity

TRAVELER'S ADVISORY

PACIFIC OBSERVED: The legacy of Whitlam's dismissal