In May, Brad Pitt opened up to GQ Style in a bombshell of an interview, his first following a widely publicized and relatively nasty split from longtime partner Angelina Jolie. In the story, Pitt talked about the circumstances surrounding the divorce, admitting that he had quit drinking and was working toward becoming a better man. By nearly all accounts, the Michael Paterniti-penned profile was great for Pitt, who had taken a significant hit to his image with tabloid and TMZ reports of an alleged altercation on a private plane between Pitt and their son Maddox.
Jolie has kept quiet until now.
Today, Vanity Fair published a cover story featuring the 42-year-old actress, filmmaker, humanitarian and mother of six. For the profile, titled “Angelina Jolie Solo,” she sat down with longtime Vanity Fair contributing editor Evgenia Peretz and posed for photographer duo Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott after being styled by Jessica Diehl. Vanity Fair has been something of a go-to for Jolie. She’s been featured on multiple covers through the years, all with revelatory and intimate interviews. This new one is no different. Below are a few highlights.
Rumors
Jolie swatted down talk that the couple’s globe-trotting lifestyle got in the way of their marriage. “[Our lifestyle] was not in any way a negative,” she says. “That was not the problem. That is and will remain one of the wonderful opportunities we are able to give our children … They’re six very strong-minded, thoughtful, worldly individuals. I’m very proud of them. … They’ve been very brave. They were very brave.” As for the family unit, Jolie contends that everyone is on the upswing, though she prefers to keep it vague. “We’re all just healing from the events that led to the filing … They’re not healing from divorce. They’re healing from some … from life, from things in life.”
Emotions
“I was very worried about my mother, growing up — a lot. I do not want my children to be worried about me. I think it’s very important to cry in the shower and not in front of them. They need to know that everything’s going to be all right even when you’re not sure it is.” As for her relationship with Pitt and whether they’re able to communicate now, she offers: “We care for each other and care about our family, and we are both working towards the same goal.”
Home
She recently settled into a new home, the 11,000-square-foot estate once owned by Cecil B. DeMille. It was listed for $25 million and features six bedrooms and 10 bathrooms. “It’s just been the hardest time, and we’re just kind of coming up for air. [This house] is a big jump forward for us, and we’re all trying to do our best to heal our family,” she says of the purchase and how it fits into this year’s most talked about celebrity story.
Health
Jolie, who suffers from hypertension, reveals that she had developed Bell’s palsy, a condition that causes one side of the face to droop as a result to damage to the facial nerves. She fully recovered thanks to acupuncture, she tells the mag. Of the scare, she notes, “Sometimes women in families put themselves last … until it manifests itself in their own health.” The 42-year-old also opens up about finding more gray hairs. “I can’t tell if it’s menopause or if it’s just been the year I’ve had,” she says. “I actually feel more of a woman because I feel like I’m being smart about my choices, and I’m putting my family first, and I’m in charge of my life and my health. I think that’s what makes a woman complete.”
Film
Jolie’s next project, which was recently announced to be in the lineup at this fall’s Toronto International Film Festival, is the adaptation of First They Killed My Father, Loung Ung’s 2000 memoir of the Khmer Rouge genocide. Shot in Cambodia and presented in the Khmer language, the film is a Netflix original. Maddox, along with the rest of the brood, had active roles on set.
Family
Jolie has long had a challenged relationship with her father, actor Jon Voight. The two have been estranged for some time, but she has recently welcomed him back into her life. “He’s been very good at understanding they needed their grandfather at this time,” Jolie explains. “I had to do a therapy meeting last night and he was just around. He knows kind of the rule — don’t make them play with you. Just be a cool grandpa who’s creative, and hang out and tell stories and read a book in the library.”
The source of inspiration for her new movie, Ung, has also been her “source of comfort,” Peretz writes. “She’s that girlfriend who rolled up her sleeves, got on a plane, and helped me on Christmas morning,” says Jolie, who co-wrote the screenplay with her best pal. “She’s been my closest friend. I cried on her shoulder.”
Future
Apart from promotional duties on the Netflix film, she’s got nothing on her upcoming schedule work-wise. So she’ll stay home and focus on the family. “I’m just wanting to make the proper breakfast and keep the house. That’s my passion. At the request of my kids, I’m taking cooking classes. As I go to sleep at night, I think, ‘Did I do a great job as a mom or was that an average day?’ ” she asks. Still, it seems that living a big life filled with globe-trotting travel and major work commitments isn’t gone for good. “I never woke up and thought, I really want to live a bold life. I just can’t do the other. It’s the same as I can’t make a casserole. I cannot sit still,” she admits. “I’ve been trying for nine months to be really good at just being a homemaker and picking up dog poop and cleaning dishes and reading bedtime stories. And I’m getting better at all three. But now I need to get my boots on and go hang, take a trip.”
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson held his first public event in five days Wednesday — a meeting with the visiting Lebanese prime minister — as aides try to quell speculation over whether he is considering resigning.
Speculation about the possibility of a Tillerson resignation has been mounting as the secretary’s frustrations with life in the Trump administration have been increasingly on display. His top aides deny he is considering resignation, but that has not stopped the guessing game.
CNN even gave it a clever name: Rexit.
Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), the chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Wednesday he had spoken with Tillerson on Tuesday night and encouraged him to hang on.
State Department blame the White House for the talk of Tillerson quitting, believing that the rumors are a trial balloon being floated as a way for President Trump to warn Tillerson to keep in line — Trump toying with his secretary of State similar to the way he is publicly tormenting Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions.
On Wednesday, standing before cameras for a brief meet-and-greet with Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri, the normally taciturn Tillerson seemed to take pains to show how active he has been, going into unusual detail about his day so far.
“So I had a very good working breakfast this morning with [House] Speaker [Paul] Ryan,” Tillerson told reporters. “We covered a number of important topics, had a lengthy meeting with the vice president at the White House on some important policy issues today, and now I’m pleased to welcome prime minister of Lebanon Hariri here at the State Department. …
“And I know the prime minister had a very, very positive meeting with President Trump yesterday, and we look forward on kind of building out on some of the details from that meeting.”
Later, appearing with the foreign minister of Qatar, Tillerson responded to a question about whether he was staying in his job.
“I’m not going anywhere,” he said. Asked for how long, he said: “As long as the president lets me.” He added that his relationship with Trump was “good.”
Before Wednesday, Tillerson’s last appearance was an unannounced speech at the Boy Scout Jamboree in West Virginia on Friday. The State Department public schedule in recent days listed “no public appointments” for Tillerson.
A spokeswoman, Heather Nauert, let slip on Tuesday that he was “out for travel for a few days,” possibly to his home state of Texas. Nevertheless, his staff apparently thought it important for him to be back at Foggy Bottom on Wednesday as they were being called on repeatedly to knock down resignation rumors.
Other officials said Tillerson appeared determined to stay in office at least long enough to conduct the wide-ranging organizational overhaul of the State Department that he launched in response to President Trump’s orders to slash the budget for diplomacy, foreign assistance and international development work by nearly a third.
To the chagrin of many in the department, the former CEO of Exxon Mobil has embraced the budget cuts and vowed to create a leaner, more efficient bureaucracy.
But Tillerson has also revealed a deep frustration with the mission and the office. Returning earlier this monthfrom a long, grueling trip to Europe and the Persian Gulf region, Tillerson gave a series of surprisingly candid remarks to two reporters on board his private jet.
“Well it is a lot different than being CEO of Exxon because I was the ultimate decision-maker,” he said of his current job. “That always makes life easier.”
He went on to speak somewhat wistfully of the “efficient,” “disciplined,” streamlined decision making of a corporate world where he knew all the players and could be confident of the process, by contrast to being an aide to a volatile, inexperienced boss.
The trip to the Gulf, for example, was in large part to smooth feathers ruffled by Trump, who publicly contradicted Tillerson by siding with one ally, Saudi Arabia, in an angry dispute with another ally, Qatar. Trump has also contradicted Tillerson on issues from NATO allegiance to ties with Mexico.
Tillerson also had to fight tooth and nail to get Trump to sign off on certifying that Iran was compliant with the 2015 nuclear accord; failure to do so could have serious international consequences, straining U.S. alliances. Just this week, Trump again publicly threatened to overrule Cabinet members and break the accord.
tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com
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