Sandra Bullock put in a call to the
astronauts on the International Space Station for tips on how to play
her latest role in space drama 'Gravity', but America’s 'Miss
Congeniality' says she will never give up playing comic roles.“I
will do comedy until the day I die: inappropriate comedy, funny comedy,
gender-bending, twisting comedy, whatever comedy is out there,” Bullock
said on Thursday in an interview with Reuters Television.
“Even a bad TV show - if that’s where I have got to go at the end I
will go there if it’s comedy,” she said the day after “Gravity”, in
which she co-stars with George Clooney, got its world premiere at the
Venice film event.Bullock and Clooney reportedly were not
Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron’s first choices for the roles of space
scientist Ryan Stone and her country music-loving mission commander Matt
Kowalsky, but Bullock went at the part with a vengeance.
One of the ways she prepared, she told a news conference on
Wednesday, was by putting in a call to the astronauts on the
International Space Station. She left a message and, she said with a
hint of surprise in her voice, they called back.
“I was asking silly questions, ‘Where do you go to the bathroom?’ and
in the end I got a viewpoint of these people who we’ve idolised, these
astronauts,” Bullock said.
“And the viewpoint is that they care about life, our life and what
we’re doing with it so much - that’s why they’re up there. But I was
really honoured that they would call me back, and you know they are
normal people who do extraordinary things.”
Bullock said she has suffered setbacks but sees them as a learning experience.
“I’ve handled adversity and I’m sure there’s a lot more to come,” Bullock said.
“I haven’t always acted or reacted in a way that made me proud but I
didn’t make that same mistake twice and I think that’s what I love about
adversity is that it always reminds me of what’s really valuable in
life.”
She said her performance in Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron’s
“Gravity”, which required that she spend time in an LED-lighted box to
help produce the film’s stunning special effects, had been demanding
physically and mentally.“It wasn’t a walk in the park for anyone involved, especially Alfonso,” Bullock said.
“I mean the immense pressure that he was under, technicians were
under, no one knew if this would work until the day I got into the first
contraption.“Even then they didn’t know if it would work technically or if the
actor in the contraption could pull it off, it was a great unknown every
single day because we were all in the same boat.“Everyone was in it together. There was no one-upmanship on this film.”
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