When she was in the middle of breaking up with her husband Brad Pitt last
year, Jennifer Aniston was asked to do a movie called "The Break-Up."
 Actors Vince Vaughn (L), portraying bus tour
guide Gary Brobowski, and Jennifer Aniston, playing the role of art dealer
Brooke Meyers, act in a scene from their new film 'The Break-Up' in this
undated publicity photograph. [Reuters] |
The
former "Friends" star says she loved the irony of the title and thought the
whole idea "funny." So she said yes to the movie which opens on Friday.
She says it was one of the best things she ever did even though she now has
another irony to ponder. Just days before the movie was to open, Pitt and his
new love Angelina Jolie became parents of a baby girl, touching off a tabloid
feeding frenzy that overshadows "The Break-Up" or any movie.
But the world of Pitt and Jolie seemed far away when Aniston met with the
press recently to discuss how one of the world's most celebrated divorcees could
take sheer joy in making a film called "The Break-Up."
Billed as a romantic comedy, "The Break-Up" is intentionally lacking in
romance and its comedy derives from the discomfort involved in two people
breaking up.
Some people wonder, why go to the movies to watch something you can see at
home? But others at a recent screening were convulsed with laughter at how
Aniston and co-star Vince Vaughn manage to destroy their on-screen relationship.
Off-screen, the couple are widely reported to be romantically involved.
Aniston said that her break-up with Pitt, her husband of five years, played a
part in helping her nail down her role.
 Actress Jennifer Aniston plays the role of art
dealer Brooke Meyers in a scene from her new film "The Break-Up" in this
undated publicity photograph. The film opens in the US June 2, 2006.
[Reuters] |
"At the time I thought, you can't believe this. When I got the phone call ...
I kind of laughed and thought that was funny. I thought (the title) was a sign
that I should do it. It was in a way a cathartic thing. I was lucky. If this had
come to me at any other time in my life, I don't know if I would have got it in
the way I would need to as an actor."
Reporters carefully avoided direct questions about Pitt, Jolie or Vaughn as
they tried to get her comments on what makes some relationships work and other
fail.
"Your movie ends on a positive note without the couple falling into each
other's arms," one questioner asked, adding, "Is it important for a relationship
to have closure?"
Absolutely, said Aniston. "I think that is important for any relationship,
romantic, friendship or work or otherwise to have a sense of closure and clarity
as to why it happened .... so that that you can move cleanly into your next
phase."
Clearly Aniston was in her next phase and she had some advice for the
reporters: don't try to compromise in a relationship; try instead to
collaborate.
"Compromise sounds like such a compromising word. Collaboration is a better
way of saying what you need and want so that it is not a threat to the other
person."