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THE REBEL KING
There’s nothing conventional about Viggo Mortensen – not his quiet
committed career, not the pictures he paints and definitely not the way he
looks at the world. Chris Heath rides with the slightly strange star of
‘Hidalgo” as he deflects praise from his fans, squares off with his
right-wing foes and explains his lust for the East German Swim Team.
Photographs by Michael Thompson
THEY'RE ALWAYS KEEN TO TELL YOU that with great power comes great
responsibility; what they never get around to mentioning is that with
great success comes month after month of annoying obligations that can
really mess with your head. Recently, without the solitude Viggo Mortensen
values and needs, he has been struggling. "I'm forgetting things in a way
that someone who's 70 or 80 would do;" he says. Finally, last week, it
took its toll. Cruelly so.
Viggo, in a rush as ever, left his car on the street for five minutes.
When he returned, the window was smashed. At first he thought he had been
lucky. His computer was still there and so was his money and ... his
rucksack was gone. He had just gathered together all the writing he had
done during the past three years--maybe a dozen short stories, about
seventy-five poems, many written by hand at night, when he would stay
alone in his trailer in the Sahara while shooting his most recent movie,
Hidalgo. All gone.
He had no copies.
Evening after evening, he searched the area, hoping he might find his
discarded words. But no. He hasn't been able to sleep. Flashes of poems
fly into his head, briefly remembered fragments that serve only to taunt
him about what he has lost for good. "It just made me feel like, `You're
not paying attention to the things that matter to you,"' he says. "It's a
sign."
For a while now, Viggo Mortensen has been thinking that this is all too
much. That whatever it was he wanted and whatever it was he intended, it
wasn't quite this. He has been talking and promoting and talking and
talking for months on end--whenever the demands of the third Lord of the
Rings movie, The Return of the King, recede, those of Hidalgo step
in-and he has several more months of this to go. Viggo Mortensen is
solicitous and thoughtful in the days we spend in conversation, but
forever looming in the background is the strain he feels he is under. One
Sunday evening in January, speaking on the phone as he drives back to Los
Angeles after snatching a few hours in the countryside, he cracks just a
little.
"My life is completely fucked until the end of April," he despairs. "I
mean, today I was out driving in the desert, and I was with a horse for a
little while, and that was good. But by giving myself a couple of hours, I
completely screwed myself for two days. Endless bullshit, really that's
what it's become. I can't blame anyone. I'm the one who's said yes to do
these fucking movies, and now I'm having to, you know, pay the price for
it. I mean, if I had my druthers, I wouldn't do any movies anymore,
frankly. That's the way I feel right now."
We meet, for the first time, over lunch at a Los Angeles empanada
restaurant he likes. He sweeps in with style, a bundle of stuff in his
arms: a scarf from San Lorenzo, the Argentinean soccer team he supports
(for the restaurant owner); a pile of photography, art and poetry books
(for me); a small round bowl of maté tea with an old silver-color tube
through which he will drink in the traditional manner (for him); a bottle
of Argentinean wine, nearly but not quite full, with a cork stuck halfway
back into its mouth (for both of us). He orders a selection of empanadas
and shares each one, eagerly describing its contents; Argentina plays its
part in the tale he tells. The story will not remain simple, so perhaps it
is best to begin it that way.
Viggo Mortensen's American mother and Danish father met while skiing in
Norway, where his mother worked in the American embassy. The eldest of
three brothers, Viggo was born in New York in 1958 and given his father's
name. Viggo is, he says, considered in contemporary Denmark to be a
slightly archaic, eccentric name for a young man. "It would be like being
called Herbert," he says. "Oscar. That sort of name."
When Viggo was an infant, his father moved the family to South America.
They spent a year in Venezuela but were mostly based in Argentina, where
his father did various jobs, including managing a farm where crops grew
and cattle grazed. That was where Viggo learned to ride. As a child, he
loved comic books and was obsessed with adventure stories, tales of
Vikings and explorers. If he was not going to be a soccer player, he
wanted to be a gaucho. "I liked the whole cowboy thing, I suppose," he
remembers. "Being self-sufficient, living off the land. You know, a knife
in the back of your belt."
That is part of what appealed to him about his latest movie, Hidalgo—that
it is just such an adventure, the story of Frank Hopkins, an American
long-distance horse racer who is invited to enter Arabia's most famous
horse race on his mustang. It has many of the classic ingredients Viggo
learned to love in his youth: the underdog, the person who has lost
something in his past and hopes to redeem it in his future; the heroic
journey through strange places, facing unexpected obstacles. The movie
also allowed him to use the riding skills he learned as a child.
He rarely rode, though, after the family left Argentina. One night,
when he was 10, his mother told him that she and his father were going to
part. "I remember very clearly the day of leaving," he says, "and that was
pretty ugly. I mean, it didn't need to be. It just was. The behavior. The
words. That's unfortunate." He and his brothers landed in upstate New York
in 1969, in a country still reconfiguring itself after Woodstock and the
moon landing, and it was several months before he saw his father again.
Toward the end of the '80s, Viggo would marry and have a son, Henry,
with X singer Exene Cervenka, whom he met when they acted together in the
messy televangelist satire Salvation! Some years later, they would split,
and he was very aware of the echoes of his own childhood. "It bothered me
a lot," he says. "It reminded me." And he was determined that even as the
marriage failed, the other things would be different. "We have a good
relationship and friendship," he says. "It's good for him." Henry splits
his time between his parents. "And, I mean, it's good for us as well."
Henry exists in the background of many of our phone conversations:
practicing his bass guitar in the back of his father's car (he plays on
Viggo and Buckethead's most recent album, Pandemoniumfromamerica),
being consulted on scheduling, advising his father on how to use his cell
phone. Emptying Henry's pockets to wash his clothes, Viggo is used to
finding the detritus of his son's imaginings: rocks and pebbles and bottle
caps. Like father, Viggo concedes. He has always collected rocks and
stones. He speaks to me of that dilemma you face when you have collected
thirty or forty stones in a hotel room and you have to decide which one or
two are special enough to take home with you, as though it is a quandary
every guest routinely faces before checkout. Only two days ago, he found a
particularly interesting small rock by the road in Topanga Canyon. It is
almost perfectly round, except for a single small dent. The rock now sits
outside his back door, and other chosen rocks litter the house. A few more
favored rocks are in the corner of the kitchen, next to where Aragorn's
sword leans against the wall.
THE STORY HAS BEEN endlessly told of how Viggo Mortensen accepted the
role of Aragorn after the Lord of the Rings shoot had begun and it had
become clear that the original choice, Stuart Townsend, wasn't working
out; how Viggo had to commit to more than a year in New Zealand without
even having read the script or the book, doing so partly because of his
son's enthusiasm for Tolkien. What appealed to the actor going in, as with
many of his roles, including Hidalgo, was the ordeal. "Ordeal has a
negative connotation, I guess," he says, "hut I think mostly it's a
positive. I think of ordeal in terms of a test. The challenge of a long
and difficult journey. I do think that when you go for a walk by yourself
or travel, when you test yourself, all the distractions fall away.
Everything gets focused. Whether ordeals are brief or long, they clarify;
they purify your life."
That side of his Lord of the Rings experience—how he thought nothing of
sleeping outdoors and called for superglue rather than a dentist when he
broke a tooth in a battle scene—has been well documented and perhaps,
Viggo suggests, overmythologized. But he has another, very different,
side. On the set, he was king not only of Gondor but also of one makeup
trailer, a hive of subversive activity Viggo christened the Cuntebago. By
then, in the topsy-turvy behind-the-scenes world of these movies, the word
cunt had become an obsession, used so often and so inappropriately that
within their circle the cast and crew believed it to be drained of all
offensiveness. "Everything had cunt," he reminisces. "It was 'cunt this'
and 'cunt that’. We had a cuntmas tree, and we had cuntmas angels." As the
trilogy appeared, this was not the side of him the audience mostly
noticed. Amid the praise his portrayal of the detached, self-possessed,
darkly dreamy Aragorn has drawn, he has been pinpointed by many as an
object of desire. "That passes," he says, in the most Aragorn of ways,
"and they move on to another object." (But if your interest in Viggo
Mortensen is purely of this kind, my apologies for all these distracting
details. You may instead want to know that you can most thoroughly ogle
his naked rear when he seduces plain Lane in a waterfall during A Walk
on the Moon. You can best see his penis when he stands naked on a bed
for quite some time in The Indian Runner. And you may go now.)
As a child, Viggo Mortensen was unusually curious about injuries. In
lieu of bedtime stories, he would press his mother to describe any
injuries she knew of in her family. Then, when she'd exhausted her tales
of damaged kin, he'd ask her to tell him of injuries to anyone she knew.
Then even of any injuries she'd merely read about. "One person in the
family was swimming and accidentally got too close to the propeller of a
boat," he recalls. "I always think of that."
In time he would have many of his own, for instance, he has broken both
legs twice: playing soccer, skiing and in an accident at a Danish smelting
plant where he once worked. But the most visible evidence of injury is the
scar that runs between his nose and lip, above the left side of his mouth.
He was 17 and drunk and at St. Lawrence University, and it was Halloween.
"It was just one of those things," he says. "Just sort of clowning around.
I grabbed somebody's deerskin rug from his house where this party was, and
I think I grabbed some beer. Like, a six-pack. Maybe it was a case. It was
just for a lark. And I was running through the bushes and being chased.
Then I got shoved into a barbed-wire fence. Stupid, really. Nothing very
spectacular or glamorous."
Once the barbed wire had done its work, there was just a film of skin
holding his lip together. His friend took him to a clinic, where the
doctor realized Viggo was too drunk to need an anesthetic. He was quite a
sight. For Halloween he had dressed as David Bowie on the cover of
Aladdin Sane, with a red-and-blue lightning bolt painted down the
center of his face where the barbed wire had done its damage. "It made a
fucking mess," he says. "The blood and the smeared lightning bolt."
THE EARLY DAYS OF Viggo's film career were marked by an epidemic of
raised hopes and false starts. He was flown to England to screen-test
on-set for the lead role of Tarzan in Greystoke, "in a loincloth,
sitting up on this tree branch, pretending to be a monkey," and flew home
believing that he had the part. He didn't.
He was cast, however, in Jonathan Demme's Swing Shift, playing a
brash young sailor trying to pick up an emotionally fragile Goldie Hawn in
a movie theater. He felt it went well, but when he saw the movie lie
discovered that they had reshot the scene with Goldie Hawn in the movie
theater alone.
Onward he went. In Woody Allen's The Purple Rose of Cairo, he
was given the role of a young movie actor just starting out, chatting to
another actor at a Hollywood party in the '30s. Woody Allen whispered some
instructions to the other actor, then said, "Let's shoot it."
"Well, what am I doing?" Viggo remembers asking. "What do you want me
to do?" "Whatever you want," Allen told him. "Just react to whatever he's
doing."
The other actor asked Viggo what he'd been up to recently.
"I sort of made this joke," he recalls: "'Oh, I've just been working on
this movie, a big break, a Cecil B. DeMille movie,' and he asked, `What
were you playing?' And I said, `Oh, this guy, he's got this beard and he's
on a cross and stuff...' Some silly fucking thing where the actor's so
ignorant he doesn't know it's Jesus that he was playing." (By way of
clarification, I ask him: "Let's get this straight. In one of your first
roles, you were cast in a Woody Allen movie, and you tried to do the
jokes?" "He told me to," Viggo shrugs, laughing.)
Woody Allen seemed happy enough, so this time Viggo suggested to his
family that they see the movie—and their son—when it opened. So they did,
and they reported back that the one did not include the other.
There would be further disappointments along the way. Oliver Stone cast
Viggo as a sergeant in a war movie he was making. Platoon. Then the
financing fell through, but Viggo knew that Oliver Stone would get the
movie made in the end, and he would be as ready as an actor had ever been.
For the next year, Viggo read every book on Vietnam he could lay his hands
on. "I researched that part as thoroughly as I fucking could," he
remembers. "Mentally and in every way. Physically."
One day he heard that the film was going into production and that
Oliver Stone had recast his role, giving it to Willem Dafoe. About ten
years later, Viggo met with Stone again, when the director was looking to
make a movie about Manuel Noriega. "Oh, it's great to meet you," the
director told him. Viggo pointed out that they had met several times
before (Viggo had also auditioned for a part in Salvador, in
Spanish, for Stone).
"He didn't seem to remember much of any of it at all," Viggo reflects.
"Pretty shocking, because I took it pretty seriously."
Slowly, in between the letdowns and heartaches, a career took shape.
From the beginning--a small part in Witness, as the brother of
Kelly McGillis's Amish suitor, which offered him only modest time on
camera but six weeks of freedom to cycle around Lancaster County,
Pennsylvania—he has been more interested in the experiences that a role
could offer him than in the finished film.
In some of the leaner years, this may have been wise. For a while, he
seemed fixed in place as the rough bad guy--the vengeful con in Renny
Harlin's trashy psychodrama Prison, a jovially homicidal lunatic
family member in Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III
and the no-good older husband in the ill-fated Molly Ringwald-Andrew
McCarthy post-teen mess, Fresh Horses. (This is how long Viggo
Mortensen has quietly been around: long enough not only to have threatened
Molly Ringwald's '80s innocence but also to be blown to pieces on an
episode of Miami Vice.)
Fresh Horses was at least where Sean Penn supposedly spotted him
and cast him as the bad brother in The Indian Runner, the first
film Penn wrote and directed and the first place many people noticed
Viggo. Of the many movies that followed, as Viggo's star gently waxed and
waned, the ones he mentions off the top of his head as sources of pride
are his persistent wooer of Nicole Kidman in The Portrait of a Lady;
his wheelchair-bound sniveling ex-con in Carlito's Way; his two
turns in Philip Ridley's pair of haunting fables, The Reflecting Skin
and The Passion of Darkly Noon; a small Spanish-speaking role in
La Pistola de Mi Hermano; the breezily seductive garment seller in
A Walk on the Moon; his nasty mustached Demi Moore-assaulting Marine
master chief in G.I. Jane; his brief heart-chewing appearance as
Satan in The Prophecy; and his most recent work. "I mean,
there are aspects of Aragorn that are interesting, I suppose," he says,
"and, I hope, in Hidalgo."
But he is honest about not always having been able to pick and choose.
"I mean," he says frankly, "I'm someone who has done a lot of mediocre
movies." For years he repeated the pattern, waiting and waiting for
something special he could cherish and embrace, but then, if nothing
arrived in time, accepting whatever he could get when his money ran out.
One day we are driving down the freeway together, and I am quizzing
Viggo about girls. Suddenly, he asks me: "Were you someone who, as a
teenager, if you liked a girl or were dating a girl, then you'd
automatically think of being together, that you had those romantic ideas
about?" Viggo says he did. "A lot. Almost every time."
As for the physical side of things, "H was pretty eager to try it," he
recalls when pressed. "I was really young. Too young." When you first did
it? "Well, sort of tried to, yeah." How young is too young?
"I don't know if I want to get into that." But prelegal?
"Oh, way prelegal, yes. Years prelegal. But it didn't amount to much."
He shares a different thought instead. "In high school, I remember
thinking that the East German swimmers were quite attractive," he says.
"Seriously," he says, after he sees that I seem slightly amused by this.
"Not all of them. Maybe it had more to do with their advanced Lycra
bathing suits. Do you remember that? I mean, it's probably just an
adolescent thing for a boy with heterosexual inclinations, seeing women in
bathing suits that until that time had been one way, and then all of a
sudden these Germans were wearing quite sheer suits. Do you remember any
of their names? I remember one." The name rolls off his tongue, echoing
with half-buried memories. "Kornelia Ender," he says.
LAST YEAR a stiff disagreement blew up between the Lord of the Rings
cast and the film company New Line Cinema over the issue of the actors'
compensation, particularly regarding the many months of promotion the
actors were expected to devote to each new film in the wake of the movies'
huge success. Viggo took a primary role in banding the cast members
together and spearheading their collective negotiation for an
across-the-board payment, though he is reluctant to confirm or discuss his
leadership role in this. "I don't know that I did," he says uneasily. "I
made it easier for everybody to communicate. Sometimes it was me,
sometimes it was someone else." (He characterizes the discussions as
simply persuading New Line to stop dragging their heels over something
they had already committed to and says that in the end "they were
generous.")
Elijah Wood supplies a broader context. He describes how, in New
Zealand, Viggo "became Aragorn before our eyes" and captivated them all
with his approach and his manner. "It’s interesting, because Viggo is such
a humble individual.... We sort of viewed him as our king and as an
inspiration, and I think that he certainly wouldn't see himself as that.
There is a quiet leadership to him, and it's not intentional, and I think
it's simply because he takes care of the people around him."
Wood points out that their negotiations were "a team effort, but
certainly, it was... I won't say led by Viggo, because I think he'd hate
that. He would absolutely hate that. But we looked up to him in that
situation, as I think we always have." Wood points out that by banding
together and demanding a group settlement, Viggo (along with Wood) was
negotiating for a smaller personal settlement than they, as two of the
film's main stars, could have demanded. "We definitely sacrificed," he
says, "but that didn't matter, because it meant that everyone else was
going to be honored in the way they deserved, and that mattered most to
Vig and to everyone else."
Wood praises Viggo for quite some time, in these and other ways. Then
he interrupts himself, concerned that he is not doing justice to the full
complexities of his colleague's character. "We're talking about how much
integrity he has and how brilliant he is," says Wood. "He's also
completely insane."
In his life, Viggo looks for those moments, happened upon through
ordeal or trance or accident, when "you are right where you are and there
isn't a need to explain anymore-you are just there. I mean, you're never
very far from it," he argues. "You can just sit and be looking at a
curbstone, and all of a sudden that's the whole world. I think five
minutes can be an eternity if it's well used, you know. There are periods
of time that are gems, but you don't have to go into a blizzard in South
Dakota or into the rain forests of New Zealand or the middle of the
Sahara. You can find that just walking down the street. You can do it in a
roomful of people. There are times during these press days when I'm just
answering the question and I'm sitting there and I'm looking at the person
... and I see that the rug is blue or yellow. God knows what I'm saying to
the person at that point, but I don't really care."
One day he suggests we go to a beautiful place he knows, Huntington
Botanical Gardens, in Pasadena. He picks me up in his hybrid, clearing a
scattering of CDs and a small ornamental dagger of Henry's from the
passenger seat. Only later, when we park, do I notice the full-size
fencing saber across the shelf by the back window.
We wander our way to the Japanese garden, where the cherry blossoms
bloom, and sit on a steep grass bank. As is his wont wherever and whenever
possible, Viggo wears no shoes. He spots an oval-headed balding man, with
wisps of gray hair, walking with two younger women.
"Is that Arthur Miller?" he whispers. "Wait till we see his face."
We watch, and even before we see his face, we agree there is something
about the way this man walks that is not the way we somehow know Arthur
Miller would walk. And the women are somehow not the women Arthur Miller
would walk with in a Japanese garden.
"Let's just say it was," Viggo says, and by this I don't think for a
moment he is suggesting that we should conspire to lie about it. Just
that, with some willpower and a creative refusal to join the dots and draw
a line we will no longer be able to cross, we can delay even this small
disappointment and keep alive our moment in the park with Arthur Miller a
little while longer.
AT MIDNIGHT SPECIAL bookshop in Santa Monica, Viggo is the final,
unadvertised attraction at a series of readings from the book Twilight of
Empire: Responses to Occupation, a compendium of reports and photos
concerning postwar Iraq, published by his own Perceval Press. H He talks
briefly, littering his remarks with phrases like "Bush-Cheney junta," and
then reads a poem called "Back to Babylon" that he completed in February
2003. His delivery is soft but firm and low on theatrical flourishes.
We make had ghosts, and are last to know or believe we too will
fade...
When he finishes, there is applause, keen enough to show appreciation
but muted enough, I think, for the audience members to prove to one
another that they are more impressed by the serious business of ideas than
by the silly congratulation of celebrity.
Viggo is wearing a green jacket on which he has stitched with light
blue thread a vintage United Nations patch. "I just like both the words,"
he says to the audience, explaining this clothing choice. "United and
Nations. I think they go well together. A lot better than separately."
There is some laughter.
These can be harsh and judgmental times for anyone who chooses to
express contrary political views, particularly if you are primarily known
as an actor. (One of the many finely tuned contradictions thrown up by
today’s overheated celebrity culture is the way entertainers are revered
beyond all sense and yet are readily assumed to combine ignorance and
arrogance in monumental quantities.) As an interview subject, Viggo
certainly doesn't go out of his way to impose his political opinions—we
only talk about such matters when I bring them up, and he doesn't
encourage me to come to this event—but he is clearly interested. He had
planned a visit to Iraq in winter 2002, to take photographs and to see for
himself, but under pressures from movies and family life he ran out of
time.
Earlier in the week, he was attacked on the editorial pages of USA
Today by the conservative film critic Michael Medved, in an essay titled
"Actors' Politics Pollute 'Ring.'" Medved argues that Viggo has been
spoiling the movies' pure entertainment by using his role "to trumpet his
antiwar and anti-Bush views. Taking him to task for his "pacifist
preening," Medved says Viggo has turned up "for numerous interviews
wearing a NO MORE BLOOD FOR OIL t-shirt" and appeared at an antiwar rally
in Washington, D.C., where he "read an interminable original poem about
exploding bombs, burning flesh, flattened huts and American guilt" (this
is a farcically inaccurate characterization of the poem Viggo has just
read).
Mortensen counters that the rally had nothing to do with his film
career and that he doesn't conflate the two. Ironically, Mortensen
considers the one occasion on which he deliberately did bring up current
events in the context of the movies—handmaking the NO MORE BLOOD FOR OIL
T-shirt with a Sharpie to wear on The Charlie Rose Show; (and his other
interviews on that one day)—as a response to others imposing what he
considered an unacceptable political interpretation on movies he felt
should he left free of such pollution. The particular instance that fired
him up was a review by Time magazine film critic Richard Corliss: It is
hard to miss connections with a new struggle. The Fellowship can be seen
as Western democracies now besieged by the lunatic faction of Islamic
fundamentalism. (Saruman, as played by the tall, lean, bearded Lee, looks
eerily like Osama bin Laden.)..."So much death," King Theoden says. "What
can men do against such reckless hate?" Aragorn replies, "Ride out to meet
them."
Incensed, Viggo wrote to Time, taking issue with what he
considered a crass and inappropriate interpretation. In his letter, which
Time did not publish, he replied, in part: Your comparisons display the
simplistic, xenophobic & arrogant world-view that often makes the
government of the United States of America feared and mistrusted around
the globe. Please consider the following from Tolkien himself: "Good and
ill have not changed since yesteryear; nor are they one thing among Elves
and Dwarves and another among Men. It is a man's part to discern them, as
much in the Golden Wood as in his own house."
That was more than a year ago. Viggo is clearly a little perturbed by
this recent attack, which he characterizes as both crude and shoddy. "I
mean, it was very clear what lie was saying to me: `Shut up. And do what
you're supposed to do. You're an actor. Act.'”
He's not too bothered, no matter how he may be branded. "I've been
around a long time," he says. "I'll probably still be able to make a
living if I feel like being in movies of some sort. That's not the reason
to say or not say something. The reason to say something is as a human
being. If I can remember it, Joyce said something about the time he was
living in and the place he was living in that can certainly be applied to
the time we are talking in and the place we are talking in. Something to
the effect that: When a man's soul is born in this country, nets are flung
at it to hold it back from flight. You speak to me of nationality,
language, religion. I shall try to fly by those nets."
VIGGO MORTENSEN has a TV he watches videos on, but he watches no TV. To
take a measure of his detachment from modern popular culture, I give him a
brief test. He can name two Simpsons, Homer and Bart, from reading his
teenage son's comics and catching the odd moment on TV at his ex-wife's
house. Unprompted, he also mentions King of the Hill. But lie can name
none of the characters on Friends.
"I know it's Brad Pitt's wife," he says. "What's her name?"
Jennifer Aniston.
"Yeah. I mean, I know what they look like." (He asks me whether I know
their character names and seems slightly surprised, and maybe a little bit
disappointed, that I do.) He has never watched an episode of The Sopranos,
though he’s heard it is good and thought highly of James Gandolfini when
they acted together in Crimson Tide.
He last watched an Academy Awards TV broadcast in the mid-80s in New
York. For a couple of years, he went to a friend's house for pizza and
Oscars, but lie found that the spectacle troubled him, the wrong films
being nominated and the wrong films winning in a weird business-driven
popularity contest. Later, he would also learn to dislike the way the lure
of such awards would affect the way some actors did their job opposite
him, grabbing attention for themselves to the detriment of the scene, the
story and the character.
A couple of years back, at his brother's house, lie was curious enough
to watch a little of the ceremony once more, but after ten minutes he had
all he could take and retired to the kitchen. "It just seemed absurd," he
says.
The opportunities and rewards lie seeks lie elsewhere. And if they do
not readily present themselves, he will find them, and find within them
the ordeal that makes them of value to him. That is but one more of Viggo
Mortensen's many diverse talents.
"However simple the task," lie says wryly, "I always turn it into an
ordeal."
CHRIS HEATH is a GQ writer-at-large. This is his first piece for the
magazine. |