Tale of a Dark Horse
Ryan Gosling isn't worried about being typecast as "the weird guy"
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I can't wait until I'm a 50-year old man—that's when the good parts come! That's when you can do more. You really can't start playing around until you have time on your side,” says Ryan Gosling.
That's not the kind of statement you'll typically hear from a 22-year old actor on the rise, but Gosling is not your average Hollywood newcomer. For several years he has been quietly committing a collection of fearless performances to film, and doing it opposite some of the industry's most respected talent. In the process, he's gained a reputation as one of Hollywood's most promising young players—but not without raising a few eyebrows in the process.
First gaining attention as a small-town football player in Remember the Titans(2000), it was Gosling's powerful turn as a conflicted Jewish neo-Nazi in Henry Bean's The Believer that proved his acting chops. Though he didn't think he was quite “appropriate” for the role, Gosling felt compelled to read for it, knowing what a challenge the character would be. “I guess I was the last guy that auditioned for it, and I'm sure they were tired and finally just said ‘Okay, him. Fine. Cast him!'” he says, laughing. But Gosling is quick to acknowledge his debt to Bean: “The only reason that you're even talking to me is because Henry Bean picked me out of a crowd. He likes the dark horse; he likes a challenge. Whatever his reasons, he gave me most of the opportunities I have right now.”
Though Gosling received an Independent Spirit Award nomination
for The Believer,other parts have not always come so easily.
In fact, he had to do a bit of selling to land his title role in
Matthew Ryan Hoge's The United States of Leland, the story
of a young man who commits a crime in the name of mercy. After
reading the script, Gosling's longtime manager, Carolyn Govers,
contacted Hoge to let him know that she had his Leland. “She sent
him
The Believer and he watched it and e-mailed back saying ‘No, you
don't!'” Though selling himself may be one of the most uncomfortable
parts of the business for Gosling, he knows that it's sometimes necessary. “It
was basically me going in there and letting them know what I could offer—that
I was going to be a soldier for them. I take it pretty seriously, maybe
too seriously at times. But I wanted to let Matt know that I would go
to war with him on his first movie and I'd do anything in my power to
get it right.”
Though Gosling knows that his choice of material has treaded a darker path, he is more concerned about working with good material than worrying about his image. “It's occurred to me that if I continue to do the types of projects I've been doing, there's the whole risk of being typecast as ‘the weird guy.' But at the same time, I have to do the best of what's out there. If I play that hand and try and be a part of the best thing that's out there, then 20 years from now—if I'm lucky enough to have 20 years—I'll look back and see how this all played out.” MM
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This story was published in the Summer 2003 MovieMaker Magazine. The headline was:
Tale of a Dark Horse / Ryan Gosling isn't worried about being typecast as "the weird guy"
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