Natalie Portman Says She Set a ‘Strong Boundary' to Keep Private Life Private After Learning Fame Can Be ‘Really Hurtful'
Natalie Portman learned early on in her career the importance of a strong boundary.
While talking on Tuesday's episode of 'The Kelly Clarkson Show,' the 'Fountain of Youth' star was asked about where she drew the line between having a thin skin in her private life and thick skin in her public-facing one. Clarkson asked how she navigated that tight rope and she said boundaries were key.
'I think it is really a boundary, like a strong boundary, that you have to repeat over and over and over,' Portman said. 'I think I figured it out early because I figured out that it was really scary to have that boundary crossed – and also sometimes really hurtful if I let that energy come in that was negative.'
She continued: 'I had to kind of build those walls but then you have to be careful, like you said, with your art and not just art but personal relationships that you don't keep those walls up.'
Portman appeared on the show to support her latest film 'Fountain of Youth' which is streaming now on Apple TV+. The film stars her and John Krasinski as estranged sibling treasure hunters tasked with tracking down the titular fountain. TheWrap reviewer William Bibbiani found the movie to be more empty than harmless fluff.
'It would be nice to report that 'Fountain of Youth' is harmless fluff, a brisk escapist adventure with a game cast and a few fun set pieces,' he wrote. 'And I suppose it may be mostly harmless, unless you count wasting your time as a 'harm' (and I wouldn't fight you on that). But it's annoying fluff. It's tedious fluff. The only thing I wanted to escape was the movie itself. The cast is either trying too hard or not enough, and none of the action sequences blew me away. There's a bit on a boat that was probably expensive. There's a fight in a library that's competent. There's a shootout at the pyramids between characters we don't know or give a damn about. There's a big difference between 'fluffy' and 'empty.' 'Fountain of Youth' seems to have found it.'
You can watch Natalie Portman's segment on 'The Kelly Clarkson Show' in the video above.
The post Natalie Portman Says She Set a 'Strong Boundary' to Keep Private Life Private After Learning Fame Can Be 'Really Hurtful' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Zach Braff Joins ‘Scrubs' Reboot in Development at ABC
Zach Braff may soon be scrubbing back in at Sacred Heart. The actor is on board to reprise the role of J.D. in a reboot of 'Scrubs' being developed at ABC. The reboot was first reported to be in early development in December, with original series creator Bill Lawrence serving as executive producer but not showrunner. More from Variety Disney's Upfront Went Hard on Sports - With an Off-Key Manning Brothers Musical - but Hardly Mentioned ABC Jimmy Kimmel Takes On Bob Iger, Netflix and Gen Z's YouTube Habits in Upfronts Monologue: 'When You Have Kids, You'll Come Crawling Back to Disney Like Dogs!" ABC Unveils Fall 2025 Schedule: '9-1-1: Nashville' Joins Its Mothership on Thursday; 'Shark Tank' Moves to Wednesday As 'Celebrity Wheel of Fortune' Takes Its Place Lawrence, Braff and other 'Scrubs' alum have discussed the idea of a reboot for years, but it couldn't go into motion until after negotiations between Disney, which owns the IP, and Warner Bros. Television, where Lawrence has an overall deal. While working on 'Scrubs' at Disney-owned 20th Television, Lawrence remains under his deal at WBTV, where he produces the Apple TV+ comedy series 'Shrinking,' 'Ted Lasso' and 'Bad Monkey.' 'Scrubs' premiered in 2001 on NBC, which aired the series for seven seasons before cancelling it. It was then renewed by ABC for an eighth season, which was intended to end the series, though the network later greenlit a ninth season subtitled 'Scrubs: Med School' in which only John C. McGinley and Donald Faison stayed on as series regulars. Braff appeared in six out of 13 episodes. Alongside Braff as J.D. aka John Dorian, the original cast of 'Scrubs' included McGinley as Perry Cox, Faison as Chris Turk, Judy Reyes as Carla Espinosa, Sarah Chalke as Elliot Reid, Ken Jenkins as Bob Kelso and Neil Flynn as the janitor. The series was a single-camera sitcom set at Sacred Heart Hospital and narrated by J.D. as he and his friends advanced in their medical careers. Braff is the only cast member currently confirmed to be attached to the reboot. He previously spoke about his enthusiasm to join a 'Scrubs' reboot in a Variety interview about the 20th anniversary of his film 'Garden State': 'The idea of getting back together with my friends and doing like 10 or 12 episodes of maybe one or two seasons, and just laughing with everyone? That sounds like a dream,' he said. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Your Friends and Neighbors' Season 2 Will Explore Mel's Darker Side and How Far Coop Will Take His Criminal Lifestyle: ‘We're Not Going Down the Walter White Road'
SPOILER ALERT: If you haven't watched the Season 1 finale of Apple TV+'s 'Your Friends & Neighbors,' stop reading — because there is no way in a million years that you could've seen that storyline wrap-up coming and you must, you MUST go watch it! On the flip side, if you have watched that shocking conclusion, read on, as we've got some great Season 2 teasers for you. Heading into the finale, Coop (as brilliantly played by Jon Hamm) woke up in a pool of blood next to the lifeless body of his neighbor, Paul — who was also the estranged husband of Coop's frequent booty call, Sam (Olivia Munn) — and was contemplating taking a plea deal even though he proclaimed his innocence. Heart-to-heart talks with his kids and his ex, Mel (Amanda Peet), kick up the tears and anxiety. Terrified of losing him, a shouting match erupts. More from Variety Don't Forget About 'Your Friends and Neighbors' Stars Amanda Peet and Olivia Munn This Emmy Season 'Your Friends & Neighbors' Stars Jon Hamm and Amanda Peet on the Irresistible Pull Between Coop and Mel: 'I Want Them to Be Together, Even If They F- It Up Again' Zoey Deutch, Jon Hamm, John Slattery Starring in R-Rated Hollywood Comedy From 'Wet Hot American Summer' Director David Wain (EXCLUSIVE) Meanwhile, evidence shows that two of the three gunshots to Paul's body happened after he was already dead. Coop realizes that Sam has been using a burner phone, prompting him and Elena (Aimee Carrero) to search Sam's mansion for it. They not only find that but also proof that Paul killed himself and that Sam framed Coop so she could collect Paul's sizeable life insurance. Munn tells Variety that a little voice in Sam's head kept reminding her that she managed to climb the social mountain to establish herself as a prestigious figure in high society, which enabled her to give her kids a childhood that she never had. A fact of life she won't compromise. 'She created a life that she deeply craved, and I think always has feared losing,' Munn says. 'Being around people who put so much value on the external, that kind of value system really sticks to you and, before you know it, you are thinking that same way, walking that same way, judging other people by their shoes, their purse, their car, their zip code.' But she had real feelings for Coop — or so we were led to believe — and yet she framed him for murder? 'Yeah, she had a failed relationship with Coop, but he is a father, he is a son, he is a friend,' Munn says. 'He did not commit murder, and yet she was OK with setting him up that way. It's like, what is happening in [her] psyche? I do not believe Sam is a bad person at all. So why would she be so OK with that?' She rationalizes it this way: 'Some people are trying to always look for survival and any moment that is offered where you're like, 'For me to be able to feed my children, pay the utility bills, buy new clothes for school…' You're always keeping your eyes open at anything that could be useful to your family's survival.' Ultimately, Coop is cleared, and Sam is cuffed and taken away by the police. But because she hadn't claimed Paul's life insurance money just yet, she can't be charged with fraud. Her only certain punishment will be from those in her community that shun her. 'The joy of Season 2 is we can explore Sam independent of Coop and give her a new storyline,' Tropper says. 'What she's done is something far more opaque and far more complicated to process. And it's not just complicated for her to process, it's complicated for the neighborhood to process. For her, a lot of Season 2 is, a kind of awakening of, 'It's not yours if you can't keep it.' … And so it's how does she deal with the public scrutiny? How does she deal with reinventing herself in this community? And how does she deal with the emotional fallout of what she's been through?' Munn says the biggest lesson that Mel has learned is not to depend on anybody other than herself. 'Don't put the weight of your happiness into somebody else's hands,' she says. 'If she wants to be in this world, this society, it has to be on her terms and on her own two feet. … I want her to have realized that this path that she went on may have gotten her what she wanted for a period of her life, but if she wants to truly maintain it, she has to do it on her own.' Judging by this season's ending, has Coop learned nothing about right and wrong… and about how his frequently reckless decisions have a ripple effect on those around him? 'Oh, the opposite,' Tropper insists. 'He learned something really vital because, when I started writing [the first season], that I wanted Coop to be presented with the keys to his old life back at the end. And after everything he's been through, he's sitting in his old boss' office being offered back everything he's lost, and the last few months could literally just be a bad fever dream. Now, he can have his office back and his wealth and his status, and his future and his financial security. He's being offered all of it. I think in that moment, he's actually planning to take it. And in that moment, what you can see is this is a guy who has been shaped by his experience to the point where he's a much tougher negotiator. You could almost see that the things he's learned being a little bit of a criminal, have made him better at what he does out in the financial world.' But for Tropper, he questions when, exactly, was the epiphany for Coop when he decided that he doesn't want to ever go back to being that person he was as a hedge fund manager. 'To me, that is his real evolution in the season: Has he been woken up? And even though what he's doing may not be sustainable, he knows that to go back to where he was would be to put trust in the system that he now knows can't be trusted, and he can't trust himself in that system to be the person that he feels he should be. Really just to wake him up to the notion that he's been sleepwalking for the last 10 or 20 years. No matter what else happens, he's not gonna go back to sleep.' And therein lies the endless opportunities to explore for Season 2, which became a reality before Season 1 even premiered. What can we expect? 'Coop is never gonna become a criminal kingpin. We're not going down the Walter White Road,' Tropper says, referring to Bryan Cranston's drug lord on 'Breaking Bad.' 'So, it's never gonna be about building a big criminal enterprise. But what it is about is the risk and reward ratio, what it takes both to make him feel alive and to do what at least he tells himself in his mind, what's the exit strategy? Right now, we've only caught him after a season at the point where he's figured out what he's not gonna be, but I don't think he's yet figured out what it is he is going to be.' Both women in Coop's life, Mel and Sam, are also heading into Season 2 at a crosswords. There have been sprinklings of a dark side of Mel, whether it be keying a car, beating the living daylights out of Sam in a self-defense class or even petty theft of a jar of jam. And with her relationship with Nick on the fritz at the end of the first season, there is a lot to explore. 'Basically, everyone is confronting their great emptiness,' Tropper explains. 'But the emptiness in Mel is leading to anger and rage and lashing out that she hasn't reckoned with yet. And for us, Season 2 is gonna be to really dig into that reckoning.' 'There is a weirdly dark part of Mel — stealing and some of the self-destructive behavior,' says Peet, whose character lost her job as a therapist because of that side of her personality. 'She's not the most stable therapist in the world. I think probably she is really afraid to face the music in her own life. I feel like she's kind of blindly going forth without that much intentionality or self-reflection.' At its core, Peet think it comes down to Mel's unresolved feelings for Coop. 'I think she can't stand the fact that she's still in love with him. She's running away from reality —her own dissatisfaction with what happened in her marriage and her dissatisfaction from Nick.' And 'what is lurking under the placid suburban dream' and what is ultimately going to happen to her and Coop is what intrigues Peet the most about the upcoming season. 'I'm very curious what Jonathan [Tropper] is going to do with those two,' she says. 'The other thing that's interesting is, she has her own kind of dark and transgressive instincts. I think that it would be interesting for us to see more of that. … just like shoplifting at age 50. It's a very weird part of her that, if he wanted to go down that road a little bit more, I would be excited.' Best of Variety What's Coming to Netflix in June 2025 New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts?


Newsweek
8 hours ago
- Newsweek
New on Apple TV+: Full List of Movies, Shows Hitting Platform June 2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors Apple TV+ has unveiled the full slate of shows and movies releasing throughout June 2025. Keep reading to see everything it has to offer. Taron Egerton continues his run as the streamer's golden boy, following up previously acclaimed Apple TV+ originals Black Bird and Tetris with all-new detective drama, Smoke. Inspired by true-crime podcast Firebug, Smoke casts the Rocketman star as Dave Gudsen, an arson investigator teaming up with troubled detective Michelle Calderone (Jurnee Smollett) to track down a prolific arsonist in the Pacific Northwest. Smoke's two-episode premier drops June 27. Taron Egerton stars in Smoke Taron Egerton stars in Smoke Apple TV+ That's far from everything you'll want to discover on Apple TV+ in June 2025, however, so read on for the complete rundown. What's Coming to Apple TV+ in June 2025? June 4 Stick June 13 Not a Box Echo Valley June 18 The Buccaneers Season 2 June 23 Easy Money: The Charles Ponzi Story June 27 Smoke