Movies / Once Upon a Time In Hollywood (2019) / Photocalls /London Photocall
Author: Natalia Airoldi
Leonardo DiCaprio & Quentin Tarantino Break Down Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’s Main Character
Source: Vanity Fair
Quentin Tarantino, Leonardo DiCaprio, Margot Robbie and Brad Pitt discuss their latest film, ‘Once Upon A Time In Hollywood’
To celebrate Quentin Tarantino‘s ninth film, Entertainment Weekly gathered the writer-director and three of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood‘s stars for an exclusive roundtable interview.
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Leo, tell us about your character in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
It was interesting to play this sort of guy that in a way has reached this expiration date. The ’60s have come along and — as Quentin eloquently puts in the movie — he’s an actor that has spent his career combing his hair and creating a pompadour his whole life. That’s what he knows. And he’s not making this sort of transition into this new era of Hollywood and he’s also feeling sorry for himself. He’s a working actor but he kind of missed out on that television-to-film transition that actors like Steve McQueen did, where they were able to make that jump and have these sort of amazing careers. He’s stuck in this rut.
What’s so interesting is that Quentin puts this all in this sort of two-day time span and gave this amazing backstory to all of us. But so much of these characters and what they’re going through emotionally, this transition that Rick Dalton is going through, accepting his sort of fate but also realizing that if he gives a little more and tries a little harder and stops feeling so damn sorry for himself, there are some possibilities out there. What was so great was to be able to have all that knowledge and all that wealth of our backstory in this two-day time span.
How did you prepare to play an actor full of self-doubt? Was that a reach?
I think that it’s implicitly in all of us. There’s not an actor out there that would not identify. It’s just a matter of letting the 12-headed Hydra come out.
Leo, you have this amazing scene with Luke Perry, who plays a TV actor like your character is, essentially. And sadly, we lost him since the film was completed. Can you talk a little bit about working with him?
I was immediately struck by his kindness. And talking about being a native of Los Angeles, being around this industry my entire life, and really having it in a lot of ways shape who I am, there was this immediate excitement in seeing Luke Perry on set. I remember being in my teens and he was the manifestation of the new [James] Dean on television and everyone was crazy about him. And I felt this overwhelming feeling of being star-struck. Then he and I got to sit down and talk about Los Angeles, the ’90s, his life, where his career had gone, where my career had gone, where his life had gone, where my life…and I was just so, how do I say this, the kindness of his character, I don’t know, it really affected me. When I heard that news it was really heartbreaking.
Leo, you have a musical moment in the film as well, when your character appears on the real show Hullabaloo and you do a bit of singing. What was that like?
Well, thank God I wasn’t hired for my voice for this movie. We had a couple different songs that we tried. One of them was “Green Door” and the other one was “Don’t Fence Me In.” We ended up using “Green Door,” but, you know, it was great. It was a lot of fun. And Rick Dalton isn’t sort of hired either for his acting talent for most jobs and most certainly not his singing voice and this is a good display of that.
[To Pitt and DiCaprio] You do in the movie seem to have a very easygoing relationship. Did you know each other particularly well beforehand? Did you just fall into it?
You know you go to locations for eight months at a time and the guy that’s your security or your stand-in they become your best friends. That’s what I loved about this screenplay, this partnership of these guys that are on the outskirts of this industry and trying to sort of pave their way and find their footing still. And survive as working-class actors in a transitional time in Los Angeles and in America, but they rely on one another, they have one another. It may be a professional relationship but it becomes like family.
Source: Entertainment Weekly
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood UK Premiere
The glamorous Hollywood trio gathered in London on July 30, 2019 to celebrate the UK premiere for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
Movies / Once Upon a Time In Hollywood (2019) / Premieres / 07.30.19 | London Premiere
New look at Rick Dalton
Julia Butters,the 10-Year-Old star of “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” talks about what it was like working with Leonardo DiCaprio

Julia Butters in a Once Upon a Time in Hollywood scene with Leonardo DiCaprio
Esquire: How was it working with Leonardo DiCaprio?
Julia Butters: He was very protective. And when all the other guys were swearing, he would say, “Whoa, hey, whoa.” And then he turned to my mom and I and he said, “I’m going to keep these guys in line.” So he gave them a talking to about not swearing in front of the child.
Esquire: There’s a scene where he has to throw you to the ground, was it scary?
Julia Butters: It was the best day of my life, honestly. I’d never done anything like it, so it was a really new and awesome experience.
Esquire: You tell Leo’s character in the movie that it was the best acting you’ve seen in your whole life. Was it really?
Julia Butters: It was the best day of my life. So I basically wasn’t acting when I said that. That’s the best acting I’ve ever seen in my whole life. He was so nice. On every take, he would say, every time, “I’m going to ask you if you’re okay, because I’m throwing you on this floor. I don’t want, I would never forgive myself if I ever hurt my princess.” And I was just like, “Okay.”
Read more here: Esquire
Leonardo DiCaprio talks about working on Quentin Tarantino’s film and the age of streaming at the premiere of “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”
“I know there’s ebbs and flows in everybody’s career. Sometimes you’re a little hotter, sometimes you’re not. Sometimes you may not be hot at all, but if you love what you do, you gotta just keep doing it.”
After this inspirational advice, Leonardo DiCaprio says he’s nervous about the age of streaming and what it might do to films like ‘ Once Upon a Time In Hollywood’ :
“We’re entering this age of streaming where things are so immediate and all of a sudden you have a new show, eight episodes of a new brilliant show that comes on that you can watch almost every other day, So when you’re talking about a movie that’s shot on film where you have all of Hollywood Boulevard that like physically transformed into 1969 with no CGI, this is kind of a real throwback to an era of filmmaking we’re not going to see anymore, In a way it is a bit of a dinosaur. I just hope we’re going to have this communal theatrical experience of going to see a great piece of art all together and enjoy it.”
Then he continues talking about his character in this movie:
“ Honestly I felt like I knew who this guy was. I’ve grown up in LA, I know these stories, I know I hit the lottery very early on but the struggles and insecurities of this actor trying to remain relevant and the torture of that was something I just knew who this guy Rick Dalton was and I knew about this relationship too, between the professional that becomes your family when you’re off on set for nine month, they become like therapists. So Quentin got you know hit the nail on the head with this hollywood story. ”
Source: Variety
Leonardo DiCpario attends ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ premiere
Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie and Quentin Tarantino arrive for the premiere of their movie “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood on July 22, 2019.
Movies / Once Upon a Time In Hollywood (2019) / Premieres / 07.22.19 | Los Angeles Premiere




