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Fit and fiftysomething, Dennis Quaid's in great shape



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Published Date: 16 May 2008
YOU know you're ageing well if, at 54, you have to don a fat suit and a grey beard to play a slightly dishevelled college professor.
The ever lean and chiselled Dennis Quaid is clearly quite chuffed that he needed help to look middle-aged for his new film Smart People.

"They put a tyre around my middle section because this is a guy who is sleepwalking through life and hasn't pa
id any attention to taking care of himself, or grooming himself," he says. Unlike Quaid, who still looks every inch the Hollywood hero.

In fact, with his sunny smile and simple Southern charm, he couldn't be less like a pompous, jaded professor – and he admits the role was a stretch.

"I'll tell you the truth. When they offered me this part I was considering not taking it because I couldn't see myself in it," he says. "I'm not really the literary sort at first glance. I don't usually get offered things like this and I thought there were some people out there who were more obvious choices who could do such a great job with it," he adds.

An hour-long meeting with first-time director Noam Murro changed his mind. "From then I really wanted to work with Noam and I knew it would be really interesting - and it was.

"It was a small movie, but such a great script. It was a little bit like guerrilla film-making because we shot it in 29 days. I love shooting that way. My least favourite part of film-making is sitting in my trailer."

Quaid plays Lawrence Wetherhold, a widower who has lost his passion for teaching. He's also struggling to relate to his teenage children, played by Ellen Page (of Juno fame) and Ashton Holmes.

"In order to get back there we have to change and I find I have to be dragged kicking and screaming into change. It's called Smart People, but I feel the movie is about emotional numbskulls - something this guy has become."

Wetherhold's world is turned upside by the arrival of his adopted brother Chuck, played by Sideways star Thomas Haden Church, and a chance encounter with Janet – a former student who once had a crush on him, played by Sarah Jessica Parker.

"Sarah was fantastic," says Quaid of the Sex And The City star. "We actually started the film without her role cast, although she looked like she was going to do it. She came on in the middle of the movie, which was a daunting task because everybody else was already on board and we had a way of working, and she just jumped right in with both feet."

Quaid has an impressive film career spanning more than three decades, but it hasn't all been plain sailing. In the 70s he appeared in Breaking Away and Our Winning Season, and in the early 80s received acclaim for his performance in The Right Stuff, but he had to wait until 1987 to hit the big time with Innerspace, The Big Easy and Great Balls Of Fire!.

After battling a cocaine addiction he went clean in 1990 and appeared in Postcards From The Edge, cropping up again in Wyatt Earp in 1994. Although he was always busy, his other roles were far from blockbuster, until, aged 50, he managed to resurrect his star status with The Day After Tomorrow in 2004.

He says he's enjoying riding high again: "I did four films in a row last year. I did Vantage Point, Smart People and another film called The Horseman, which I call a horror movie with heart. And then another film, The Express, a big studio film which I would liken to a film I did called The Rookie, and it's written by the same guy.

"I must say, at this time in my life, I'm just having more fun now, acting, than I did when I was in my 20s. So I feel very lucky for that," he adds.

But it's not all work and no play. He managed to squeeze in two months off last year and reveals: "Basically my day Monday through Friday is to take my older son to school, drop him off, and go right to the golf course, get out there with my mates, go pick him up from school, come back and spend some time with my young kids, the twins.

"My handicap's gone up because of work. Right now, it's a seven. I'll tell you the better it gets, the more frustrating it gets as well," he laughs.





The full article contains 770 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 15 May 2008 6:16 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: The Guide
 
 

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