Julianne Moore is featured in the April 2012 issue of More Magazine Canada.
She recently played Sarah Palin inHBO’s Game Change that premiered March 10.

Photo: More Magazine Canada
Julianne Moore is featured in the April 2012 issue of More Magazine Canada.
She recently played Sarah Palin inHBO’s Game Change that premiered March 10.

Photo: More Magazine Canada
Julianne Moore is featured in the Spring 2012 issue of Capitol File Magazine.
In the issue Julianne talks her new role as Sarah Palin in the new HBO TV film Game Change:
“I basically had two months to prepare, so I cleared my schedule of everything, literally. I cleared everything that didn’t involve my family—I just let go of it and spent all of my time doing the research. It was total immersion. The trickiest thing is to take all these physical and vocal characteristics and somehow filter the character’s essence through them. And then you personally have to meet them somewhere, too. There’s this melding that has to happen.”
She also talks learning to run a political campaign:
“I had no idea what really goes into making a candidate. I was actually shocked by how close it was to the way Hollywood markets an actor or a film or any idea. It’s about a very careful kind of exposure, and putting candidates on with one anchor and then another anchor, and limiting appearances and using everything very strategically.”
Game Change airs March 10 on HBO.

Photos: Tesh/Capitol File
Julianne Moore is featured in the July/August 2011 issue of Health Magazine.
In the issue Julianne talks looking fab and staying fit at 50:
“Let me tell you something: The big thing about being 50 is the bar is much lower. People are like, “Oh my God, you look great!” So that’s sort of good. [Laughs.] I have very strong hair, that’s just genetics. And I credit my mother for keeping us out of the sun.”
She talks being a member of the Children’s Health Fund’s Advisory Council:
“When I was a kid, I moved all over the country, and the thing that really struck me is that a lot of us are under the illusion that we all get a fair shake growing up in this country, and it was pretty clear to me at an early age that you don’t. To be poor in this country is to kind of hide in plain sight. Health care is very uneven in places where there are just no doctors and no hospitals. And the Children’s Health Fund has wonderful mobile-health units, which go to those areas.”
Julianne also talks her director hubby Bart Freundlich:
“He’s a great cook. And he’s incredibly sensitive to other people, to the emotional temperature of a room. He’s very, very sensitive that way, which is kind of extraordinary, and really unusual in a man, I think.”
Her new film Crazy, Stupid, Love. co-stars Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. The film releases July 29.

Photo: Health Magazine
Julianne Moore is featured in the Summer 2011 issue of Gotham Magazine.
In the issue Julianne talks working with Steve Carell in her new film Crazy, Stupid, Love:
“I worship at the altar of Steve Carell. I love him on The Office and had such high expectations of him, and he did not disappoint. This whole entire movie was such a great experience. The director, Ryan [Gosling], Emma Stone—I mean, everything just worked, and I was so happy to be able to do it.”
She talks working close to home:
“Having two kids changes the location of what I do, that’s the trickiest thing. You try and work at home during the school year.” Even if their mom is an Academy Award-nominated actress, Moore is cool enough to admit, “Kids don’t care what their parents do.”
Julianne also talks what films she’s interested in making:
“The older I get, the more I want to do comedy. Tragedy becomes less alluring. I think comedy is infinitely more interesting.”
Crazy, Stupid, Love opens in theaters July 29.

Photo: Warwick Saint for Gotham Magazine
Julianne Moore is featured in the May 2011 issue of InStyle UK.
Her new film Crazy, Stupid, Love co-stars Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. The film opens July 29th 2011.

Photo: InStyle Magazine
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