Jennifer Aniston Does ‘Entertainment Weekly’ Magazine
Jennifer Aniston is featured on the cover and in the pages of this week’s issue of Entertainment Weekly magazine and while much of the coverstory interview is devoted to Jen’s upcoming new movie Marley & Me (which co-stars Owen Wilson) there is, of course, mention of ex-hubby Brad Pitt, current paramour John Mayer, how she sometimes feels like Hannah Montana and Jen’s intense desire to have children:

Jennifer Aniston has a new outlook, and this week’s Entertainment Weekly takes a look at the journey she has been on and the fresh start she has now with a surefire hit in Marley & Me. It is certain that Aniston’s standard of what constitutes a private moment is not like most people’s. Paparazzi climb walls just to snap photos of her; her ex-husband and his lover stare out from magazine covers everywhere; and her slightest move sends ripples across the gossip universe. The latest involves a date she went on with her boyfriend, singer John Mayer, at which she supposedly abstained from alcohol. Ergo, according to the logic that rules the tabloid world, she must be pregnant. With twins. “Oh my God, it’s hysterical!” Aniston says. “You can’t do anything without it going to some extreme. It’s almost going to take away the fun from actually being able to say one day, ‘I’m pregnant!’ Everyone will be like, ‘Yeah, right.’ It’s the boy who cried wolf. Stop stealing my thunder, motherfuckers!” For now, Aniston would love nothing more than to keep the thunder focused on her upcoming Christmas Day release, Marley & Me, a three-hanky adaptation of writer John Grogan’s bestselling memoir, in which she stars opposite Owen Wilson and an unruly Labrador retriever. This film, with its built-in fan base and cute-as-a-puppy holiday appeal, represents her best bet to get her often wobbly movie career back on solid footing. “Sometimes you’re not always so thrilled about the movie you’re pushing,” she admits, whistling past a graveyard of flops like Rumor Has It and Derailed. “But this is a good one.” When you’re an actress whose personal life has fed an entire industry, the focus can all too easily drift away from your work. Early last month, excerpts from a Vogue profile of Aniston exploded across the Internet, and, with a single quote on the cover – “what Angelina did was very uncool” – a nation that had been fixated on presidential politics suddenly switched the channel back to the soap opera involving the actress, her ex-husband Brad Pitt, and his current girlfriend Angelina Jolie. “[Election night] was just so moving, so unbelievable,” says Aniston. “And now what do people do? Read my crap! Everything comes to a halt: ‘What did she say?’” She shakes her head, smiling wryly. “Good God. You have to laugh at it all at the end of the day.” Still, she clearly feels stung by the flap and insists the “uncool” quote was taken out of context. “I was just surprised that Vogue would go so tabloid,” she says. “I was bummed. But you almost expect it. Big Deal. Done. Next.” Aniston is still as funny and charming as one would hope, and she’ll quickly say that, as she approaches 40, she’s never been happier, never felt better: “I don’t know if I’m just a late bloomer, but I feel like everything is just beginning.” After nearly a decade and a half of massive fame, Aniston has become something more than just an actress. She’s a walking inkblot test and, depending on your perspective, you could see her as a wounded, jilted victim or a strong, independent woman, an actress who’s best suited to the small screen or one whose great charisma and natural comedic gifts are perpetually underappreciated. “Everyone projects their thoughts on you,” she says. “Everyone’s got an opinion. I wish they didn’t. I’ve gotten to the point where, if I focus on all of that stuff, I won’t make a move, you know?” She pauses. “There’s this character – it’s like my Hannah Montana,” she says. “That’s how I feel. There’s my Hannah Montana and then there’s me.” Aniston passed on Marley & Me the first time it came around, and the idea of playing a mother for the first time gave her some pause, but in the end, she embraced the challenge: “I feel like that’s in my future and I’m on the verge of it in some way—or it’s something I long for. So it was great to sort of dip your toe in it.” Ultimately, though, it was the chance to explore the ups and downs of married life that drew Aniston into the movie, turning the film into something more personal than it first appeared. “What was interesting was the story of these two people, how it doesn’t always look so pretty,” she says. “You have your ideas and your dreams when you start out and you’re sort of wide-eyed and bushy-tailed as a young married couple. Then life unfolds and it doesn’t always take you in the directions you hope that it will.” Aniston seemed to be living out her wide-eyed dreams from the moment she landed the role of a lovable ditz on NBC’s smash hit Friends in 1994. The next decade passed in a blur of stories about her status as America’s sweetheart, her much imitated hairstyle, her eye-popping salary, her story-book marriage to Pitt, her burgeoning movie career. And then, in 2005, the wheels came off with the dissolution of her marriage and the revelations about Pitt’s relationship with Jolie. “’The Hollywood fairy tale romance’—that’s what’s put onto it,” Aniston says of her marriage to Pitt. “It’s Luke and Laura. But if you strip away all of the glitz and the glamour and the headlines—the shock and awe of it—it’s just people living their life. Shit happens, and it’s as normal as any other human being if you take away the headlines. It’s just not as interesting without the headlines.” Still, when Entertainment Weekly brings up the fact that Marley & Me is opening the same day as Pitt’s new movie, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, she sighs and says “I want [Button] to do great. I’ve seen about an hour of it. It’s amazing. Amazing.” Meanwhile, Aniston’s career continued to lose altitude. In 2006, New York Times critic Caryn James wrote a blistering piece on the actress, asking, “How did her career go haywire so fast?” and criticizing everything from her film choices to her taste in men. “It was so venomous,” Aniston remembers. “It was like, who fucking shit in her Wheaties? How do these people get the opportunity to just spew s—t? They don’t know anything. You know, career choices—you just do what you do. Not everyone’s a winner. Not every episode of Friends was great. Not every guy you choose is great. Just across the board, there’s so much expectation.” Aniston’s offscreen private drama continues to drag on, but while the public may continue to grope toward some as-yet-unseen climax (a wedding, a birth, an epic catfight, a cathartic group hug), Aniston says she’s ready to take her final bow as the gossip world’s anointed Queen of Pain. “It’s my history,” she says. “It’s my memory. That’s all it is to me: something that happened, something that was really quite poignant and good in the long run.”
My, my … there’s an awful lot of cursing in this new interview with Ms. Aniston. I must admit that I am not familiar with the storyline of Marley & Me (I understand, tho, that there is a cute puppy involved) but I believe it is the first major movie that Owen Wilson made since he attempted suicide last year. I suppose it’s a good thing that the focus is on Jennifer Aniston and her omnipresent personal life rather than Owen Wilson’s attempted suicide — the movie is supposed to be the feel-good hit of the season. After the jump, check out a couple pics of Jen from this issue of EW magazine along with a pic of Jen with Marley the pooch from the movie …

It’s so interesting that there is all this excited talk about Jen’s desire to have children … I can’t even imagine the hoopla to come if she ever does get pregs. I suspect that if she is serious about giving birth she’s gonna have to get started really soon. Maybe 2009 will see the birth of the Mayerston baby? Heaven help us all.
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December 4th, 2008 at 11:19 am
i cant wait for this movie..i loved the book. hopefully the movie is just as good. and these pics are cute..i like them
December 4th, 2008 at 11:24 am
Marley and Me is a great book.
December 4th, 2008 at 11:31 am
marley & me is a great book! you should read it (especially if you plan on seeing the movie) it will def. make you laugh out loud. can’t wait for the movie!
December 4th, 2008 at 11:32 am
Marley & Me is a very “well-written” book, but I refuse to call it a good book… I couldn’t finish reading it and layed on the floor crying and hugging my own lab. I’ll have to wait for the movie on DVD, I’d disrupt the theatre with my sobs!
December 4th, 2008 at 11:38 am
A great book and I can’t wait for the movie too. And a baby Mayer would be nice.
December 4th, 2008 at 11:56 am
I love how candid she is in the interview. An the dog(s?) in thepic are so adoreable. I didn’t realize the movie was based on a book, I’ll have to check it out!!
December 4th, 2008 at 11:56 am
She rocks!! I don’t know what there is not to like about her. She is so cool and pretty!!
December 4th, 2008 at 12:23 pm
I love love love Jen Aniston.
she is my one girl crush lol
December 4th, 2008 at 12:46 pm
i will forever and always be on team aniston. love this lady!
December 4th, 2008 at 12:47 pm
I’m def gonna get the book and see the movie. From the previews, Marley totally reminds me of my old dog, Toby, who was a real pain in the ass but we loved him anyways.
December 4th, 2008 at 1:13 pm
I love the book. you should def read it, its a pretty quick read, its simple but just WONDERFUL. I can’t wait to see the movie.
December 4th, 2008 at 1:18 pm
I have never laughed as hard as I did when I read Marley and Me. It is one of the cutest and most entertaining books I have ever read and I *can’t* wait for the movie :) It only makes it better that Jennifer is in this movie.
December 4th, 2008 at 1:31 pm
She’s such a classy lady ;) Any who, the movie sounds like it’ll be really great, and I can’t wait to go see it.
December 4th, 2008 at 1:44 pm
She still seems like a sit-com actress to me, I can never take her seriously in movies. And she’s just not beautiful, too sculpted and tense….stick with the sit-coms, Jen.
December 4th, 2008 at 3:57 pm
Trent pick up the book to read for one of your upcoming flights…its such a sweet, lovely, light read….although anyone who is a dog lover like me will sob, there’s just no getting around it. Can’t wait for the movie, will def have the tissues ready.
December 4th, 2008 at 4:01 pm
I just love her. Absolutely just love her!
December 4th, 2008 at 4:14 pm
It’s funny - People have discussed Britney’s meltdown forever … but Owen Wilson’s personal meltdown seems to be off limits??? He’s not constantly being reminded about that by the press and I bet he won’t have it held against him for the rest of his life. Interesting …
December 4th, 2008 at 4:15 pm
[...] Vote Jennifer Aniston Does ‘Entertainment Weekly’ Magazine [...]
December 4th, 2008 at 4:24 pm
I am surprised too at all the cursing in the interview. But she looks pretty, I like her, and I really hope this movie is a hit for her! I will be out of the country when it comes out but I hope a ton of other people will go watch!!
December 4th, 2008 at 4:29 pm
Jen has been saying she wants kids since her days on Friends. I really don’t believe that she wants kids, though. I just don’t see her as the “mom” type. Which is OK for a woman to choose…we don’t HAVE to have them. I don’t see her pregnant at all. Maybe she can adopt.
She’s cussing like John Mayer. He must’ve prepped her, just joshin’!
December 4th, 2008 at 5:31 pm
Very cute pics! Can’t wait to see the movie!
December 4th, 2008 at 6:44 pm
She is SO gorgeous.
December 4th, 2008 at 6:53 pm
she looks great in these pictures
December 4th, 2008 at 6:54 pm
Awwww….I just love her….<3
December 4th, 2008 at 10:42 pm
that is an adorable cover.
December 5th, 2008 at 2:58 am
Wonderful book and SO looking forward to this movie :)
December 5th, 2008 at 6:59 am
Loved the book also. Although I have a basset hound, it will touch the heart of any dog lover. I hope the movie is just as good and follows it without giving too much of a “hollywood” spin just to make it more interesting.
Definitely take tissues with you though.
December 7th, 2008 at 7:53 am
Lessee– a book written by an idiot, for idiots, is made into a movie. Golly gee, we got ourselves a huge, unmanageable dog, and we have no idea how to train it. Sounds great. Oh, and then we leave our terminally ill dog at the vet while we go on vacation. You know what this is? The moron author feels GUILTY for how he treated that damn dog. What makes it WORSE is this: he’s sucking money for his guilt and incompetence as a pet owner out of dimwits like you. If you can’t handle a dog, DON’T GET A DOG. The same thing applies to kids: IF YOU CAN’T AFFORD THE STUPID THINGS, DON’T HAVE THEM. My God, it’s the twenty-first century: we do know something about dog training– and birth control– at this point in history. Don’t we…?
December 8th, 2008 at 6:46 am
Oh, kim, you’re so smart. Thank you for your insight.