The Daily - How Charlize Theron Overcame Her Dark Family Past
Episode Date: April 18, 2026The Oscar-winning actress reflects on pain, healing and becoming an action hero. Thoughts? Email us at theinterview@nytimes.com Watch our show on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheInterviewPodcast For t...ranscripts and more, visit: nytimes.com/theinterview Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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From the New York Times, this is the interview.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.
I've never had an interview quite like this one with Charlize Theron.
I came in wanting to talk about her story career,
which began when she was discovered barely out of her teens at a bank in Los Angeles.
By her late 20s, she'd produced, starred in, and won an Oscar for the film Monster.
While she's been in dark comedies like Tully and big-budget fantasy films like Snow White and the Huntsman,
I was most interested in her latest turn as an action star
in films like Mad Max Fury Road, Atomic Blonde, the Old Guard franchise,
and her newest film Apex, where she kicks butt again,
this time while being chased through the Australian wilderness.
What we did talk about her roles past and present,
our conversation almost immediately took a revealing turn
into some of the most painful chapters in her life,
I think surprising us both.
That includes her experience growing up in a violent,
home in her native South Africa, her mother killing her father in self-defense, and the repercussions
she's lived with ever since. Here's my conversation with Charlize Theron.
So we're meeting the day after the Oscars, and I was watching your acceptance speech when you won
your Oscar for Monster in 2004. And, you know, you're standing on stage, you're tearing up. It's
clearly just this very important moment, which of course it is for any actor.
Your mom is sitting in the audience and you thank her for all her sacrifices.
When you look back now, what do you think about that young woman and what was happening at that moment?
The first thing that came to mind was just this is something that doesn't happen to girls in South Africa.
Like, you know, it's like, I remember looking at a map and I was like, God, we're all the way down here.
What's going on up there?
I remember, like, feeling very lucky that I made it out here.
And, like, my greatest dream, like, my, like, lottery win would have been to be able to support myself as an actor and not have a second job.
Like, that was literally what I was, like, aiming for.
And, like, not just aiming for it.
Like, that would have been, I just wanted to, like, be able to support myself, not depend on my mom or a guy, feel secure and get to do this thing.
that I absolutely love. But the thing with my mom is very, I'm going to try and talk about it very
professionally because I will tear up. She did sacrifice a lot. Yeah, and we're going to talk about that.
And you can tell just in that moment, you know, the connection, that just looking at each other.
Well, I couldn't look at her. I was like, I'm not going to look at you. Like the first part of the
speech, I handled it. Like, I was like, like, just really excited and shocked. And I was like,
do not look at her. Do not look at her. Because I knew that as soon as,
I looked at her, I was going to feel, I just knew that because it was somewhat of a shared experience.
Yeah, I can see you getting emotional now.
No, I'm not.
No.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Yeah, yeah, it's hard not to because it's so real.
You know, I'm a mom now, and I don't have to sacrifice the things like she did.
So I know what she did, and I'm very grateful.
I guess since we started here,
we'll talk about the movie, but since we're already talking about your family and where you came from,
you grew up in South Africa and a small farm.
Yeah.
Tell me about what you remember about growing up there and what your life was like.
I remember very vividly moving to that farm.
I was four years old.
I remember seeing it.
I remember it being feeling when I was that age, like, so vast.
It really wasn't. It was like 16 acres, but it just felt like this like vast because it had it had, I think they were growing alfalfa on it and one side they were growing corn on it. So it just had this kind of error of and they had these two big reservoirs on it. And there was this big, big tree. And I don't know what tree it was, but it was kind of like it greeted you as you were driving in. And I have very, very vivid memories of this tree. And I have very vivid memories of this tree. And I.
and climbing it and climbing it recklessly, fairfoot.
And just feeling, it was like a sense of freedom, for sure.
Were you like a tomboy?
Were you an athletic child?
Yeah.
No, I definitely liked adventure.
And I liked, I was, when I think back now, my every day was filled with kind of imagination.
Like, you know, I would go out and go to the garden.
I would imagine I was a chef and I was going to, it was always, there was always a story attached, you know,
The dogs came with me. I was like Sheena Queen of the Jungle. When I started watching movies,
I really kind of like started interpreting my movies into my everyday life. So yeah, I loved adventure.
I like getting into trouble too. You know, I like to do things that I knew I wasn't allowed to do.
But I was allowed to do so much. Like, you know, crazy.
You were like to kind of run wild. Yes. Crazy thing. Yeah, it was that, that, I mean, I could take my BMX out and go into like the closest little town to go rent.
movies. I mean, it would tell my mom. But I could do pretty much anything that I wanted to do.
Did that make you independent? Yeah. Growing up, you just felt like you had the run of the world.
Yeah, I was super independent. I feel like that's not unusual, though. I felt like my friends kind of
grew up that way too. I felt like my independence also had to just come from like an emotional
place. You know, my house wasn't always stable. And so I was, I felt very responsible.
to make sure that, like, I was taking care of.
Like, there was this kind of thing that by the time I moved out of the house,
I knew how to take care of myself on many levels.
Before we get to what was going on inside the house,
outside the house is also a lot of instability.
I mean, I was looking at your town,
and, you know, the mid-1980s in particular
were sort of a time of violent uprisings against apartheid.
That led to a state of emergency in your hometown, Bononi.
there was a lot of state repression, resistance.
I mean, you were a very young kid, but do you remember any of that?
Did that sort of play into how you saw things?
Yeah, you couldn't avoid it.
Violence and turmoil was something that was like everyday life in South Africa.
If you got in the car, if I went to the bank with my mom,
that was something that you just saw on the side of the roads.
And for sure, I saw things that I shouldn't have seen at a very young.
age concerning violence because that was just the circumstances. So there was a lot of talk
constantly about apartheid. It was a hot topic. Like you'd go to a barbecue. That's what everybody
was talking about. They weren't really hiding it from the kids. When you say you saw violence,
what, do you remember anything in particular? Yeah. Yeah. Oh yeah. Like vividly. It's like tough
stuff to talk about. I was like very young. I saw, I saw a man.
burn inside a car on the side of the road.
God.
And a lot of people pulling over and trying to help and not being able to help.
I also then later, you know, I saw what HIV and AIDS was doing.
Like, I remember people being wheelbarrowed into our house because they knew my mom would take them to a clinic.
You know, you have spoken a lot.
lot about the turbulence outside, but also, as you mentioned, inside your family. And your father was
an alcoholic. As someone myself who's, you know, dealt with alcohol abuse in our family, it is an
incredibly difficult thing, especially for a child to deal with. When did you realize that your
own home life was maybe different than other friends of yours? That's a good question.
I'm pretty young, I would say, really young.
I have memories from when I was really young, seeing, and it scared me, seeing drunk people,
but like really drunk people, like people crawling on the floor kind of drunk, you know.
Yeah, and it was scary in the beginning.
You know, like, I remember vividly, like, seeing my uncle, like, really drunk,
and it was frightening. It was really frightening.
But that became so consistent that that was every Friday.
Saturday, maybe even every Wednesday.
Like, my dad had built this really big bar inside the house.
And, again, not very unusual.
Like, a lot of South Africans have a, like, they love to kind of create a space in their
house where they can drink.
And barbecue.
Exactly, exactly.
But it became kind of where he lived.
It was where you never saw him anywhere else in the house.
You always saw him there in the house.
And he was very, he was a full-blown functioning drunk.
But he had moments in his life where he would kind of like go missing.
Like we just wouldn't know where he was.
And he would usually kind of return in a state that was pretty severe.
And that's, you know, it would get messy and loud.
And my mom's not a wallflower either.
So she wasn't just like sitting and taking it, you know.
She was definitely, yeah.
I mean, she made it known that she wasn't happy about his lifestyle.
So it caused, because of both of them, it really caused a lot of, like, verbal abuse.
And they also just, honestly, personally, for me, the worst thing was they would ice each other.
They wouldn't talk to each other for, like, there was, like, a big fight, and then they
wouldn't talk to each other for, like, three weeks.
And I didn't have siblings, and my house just went silent.
It just went totally silent.
Like, no one would even say good morning to each other, and, like, I would be so scared to say something.
So they were like for three weeks, no one would talk inside the house.
Did you feel like you had to mediate that or you just wanted to not be included in that?
Yeah, I wouldn't because it's South Africa at that time when I was raised.
It was like children should be seen and not hurt.
You never said anything ever, ever.
I remember one time saying something to my dad and it was like I was made very aware.
Like you just don't do that.
It's gotten, it's none of your business.
Was he violent towards you?
I mean, violent, he was scary in a sense that wasn't like he didn't hit me.
He didn't throw me against a wall.
But he would do things like he would drive drunk and he would drive scary and they would get into a fight and he would like, you know.
You know, it was a lot of kind of verbal abuse.
He would become violent on things, you know.
But he, that was a lot of kind of verbal abuse.
also just a lot of threatening language, you know, that just became normal. It really became
normal. And so I never, I never, when I was younger, stepped in when I was around 12, I think I
remember my mom, or no, maybe even 13. I remember my mom using the divorce word for the first time.
And divorce is just, then was not, I didn't, we didn't know people who were divorced.
And my parents weren't religious, but it was just culturally one of those things, like you just didn't do that.
So that was never kind of even discussed. They had been married for 25 years. And so when she said, like, I think the best thing for us is for me to separate from him. And it doesn't make any sense, but it was so scary because I didn't know what that would look like. And so in a weird way, I was almost talking her back into like staying. Because the alternative felt so foreign to me.
but I think she knew and she was trying to figure out ways to I mean she sent me to a boarding school
specifically because she she wanted me to get out of the house she knew that she had to get me
out of the house I mean it was getting to that point where she was very aware what it was doing
to me it was a combination of all of those things just so strange to you know because all the
memories are there
And it's not that I don't try and think about it, but it's just weird.
You're kind of like going in such a linear manner that it becomes almost more clear when you talk about it that way.
Because people tend to just isolate it and want to talk about one thing.
But it helps to kind of explain that these things build and they build.
And it takes years sometimes for things to go as wrong as it did in my house.
The reason I actually wanted to go linear is because you have mentioned in other interviews
how everyone focuses on what we're about to talk about,
but that everything that came before was actually where the real trauma lay.
Yeah, I mean, there was definitely shock.
Yeah, there was shock because it's, you know, a tremendous thing to happen in anyone's life.
I'll just tell the part that we better talk about some fun things after this.
We are going to talk about some fun things.
That's all I have to say.
I didn't mean to start here.
No, no, you're not at all.
Not at all.
I was 15 years old.
And my mom and I, my mom would do this thing too.
Like she would take me to the movies.
And when I was younger, it was the drive in theater.
And again, like when I was older, I realized she was trying to get me out of the house, out of the house.
But we had gone to see a movie.
and my dad had taken the key to the front side, not even the front door, the front steel door.
Every room in our house had a steel door.
So if you got into the front door, the kitchen had a steel door that you had to unlock.
That's the kind of violence that we were living in.
Nonsensical violence.
Like violence that you couldn't reason with.
It just, I mean, our country was on the brink of civil war.
It was frightening.
So she couldn't get into the first block, and we always knew where he was.
His brother lived a couple of streets away, and if he wasn't home, he was always there drinking.
And nothing out of the usual.
I mean, we went over, and they were pretty loaded.
And I had to pee really badly.
So I ran into the house to get to the toilet.
And he took that as me being really rude because I didn't stop and say hello to everybody.
Big thing in South Africa, like the kind of respect that you have to have for elders.
And he was in a state where he just kind of like spiraled.
Like, why didn't you stop?
Like, who do you think you are?
And this kind of thing started.
But anyway, my mom had.
had a pretty bad couple of weeks with him.
And I think he felt like I was kind of going through a stage of not, you know,
I wasn't just going to my room anymore.
I was maybe getting involved or I would protect her in the sense that I would stand up for her.
And I think it had built.
And that's why he was spending so much time with his family.
And we left, but you could just tell.
I just knew that that was kind of the straw that broke the camels back for him.
I felt it.
I felt like something was different.
And when we got home, I sat down with my mom and I said, I think you're right.
I think you should separate from him.
I had never imagined that those words would come out of my mouth.
But leaving that house, I knew something was just different.
She knew it too.
I knew he was mad at me.
so eventually when he decided to come home
I said to her please tell him I'm asleep
and so I went into my room I turned my lights off
and because I just didn't I was scared
and I could always tell
like my window faced the driving I could always tell by the way he drove in
like the level of anger
frustration or unhappiness
and then the way he drove
into that property that night,
I can't explain it to you.
I just knew something bad was going to happen.
She knew it too.
To get to the point, he finally broke into the house.
He shot through the steel doors to get into the house,
making it very clear that he was going to kill us.
His brother was with him as well.
And, yeah, we knew it was serious.
And so by the time he broke into the first gate, my mom ran to the safe to get her gun.
She came into my bedroom.
And this is, again, one of those crazy things.
The two of us were holding the door with our bodies because there wasn't a lock on it.
And he just stepped back and started shooting through the door.
And not one bullet hit us.
It's insane when you think about it that way.
But the verbal, I mean, the messaging was very clear, I'm going to kill you tonight.
tonight. It was verbally very, very clear. You think I can't come into this door. Watch me.
And I'm going to go to the save. I'm going to get the shotgun. Let me show you how I can get through
this door, that kind of stuff. Encouragement from the brother. And my mom, he had walked to the safe.
And my mom pulled the door open while the brother was still standing there. And the brother ran down
the hallway. And she shot one bullet down the hallway that ricocheted seven. And she shied seven.
times and shot him in the hand.
It's stuff you can't explain.
And then followed my father, who was by then opening the safe to get more weapons out.
And she shot him.
Unfortunately, not an isolated story.
You know, these things are prevalent in a lot of families' homes.
And I feel like women really get a very, very unfair shake.
even in, I feel like in this country, women who nobody takes it seriously, the situation that
they're in. And I don't think anybody took my mom seriously.
In advance to this, you mean?
To how bad it was.
Right.
You know, when you're dealing with a charming drunk, like, who could be very charming and
was always looking for buddies to kind of like come join the party.
And also a culture that just accepted it.
Like it was a culture that that was part of being South African.
Like men drink.
And I remember my little tiny nephew saying like when people were like, what are you going to do when you grow up?
I'm going to drink.
I think that was part of the culture.
That's when you become a man.
That doesn't help either.
I just want to say I wasn't going to start here, but because I asked you before the interview
if it was okay to talk about it, I guess that's where, that's why we've ended up.
Yeah, and to be clear, I think these things should be talked about, you know, because it makes other
people not feel alone, you know, and I feel like I never knew about a story like that.
You know, when this happened to us, I thought we were the only people, my mom and I, that this
was going on with. And now the two of us look at it. I've had therapy around this.
She's had, she's also just, she's a tough, broad. So part of her,
is just like, it's part of my life.
It's not who I am.
I'm way more interesting than this.
Oh, is she more interesting than that?
So I know she won't mind this.
So, yeah, it's a good way to, I think, make people not feel alone.
And, you know, I'm not haunted by any of this stuff anymore.
And in fact, you've become a campaigner to prevent gender-based violence.
I mean, you've made it an important issue for you,
and you've been very clear that that trauma does not define you.
Yeah.
It does, though, as you mentioned, find you and your mother, though, and your story.
How would you say it changed your relationship to her that moment?
It's a very good question because it did.
It really did change our relationship.
We were always very close.
We felt like a team.
But that night changed it because, in retrospect, like once I got out of the shock of it,
I realized that she saved my life.
which is a big thing, you know.
Oh, my goodness.
It's the ultimate sacrifice a mother can give.
Yeah.
And then also the aftermath of, like, she picked right up.
Like, she, this is, I think, such a testament to her strengths
because the next morning she sent me to school.
She was just like, you're going to move on.
Not necessarily the healthiest thing, but it worked for us.
She wanted me to forget about it.
She didn't want me to, like, sit in it.
we didn't have therapists around.
It wasn't like she was going to say, like, go see a therapist.
We just didn't have access to those things.
So in her head, the best therapy was, we have move on.
We can't, like, sit in this.
And did you, I mean, in the sense that did you, like, lock it away?
I did, yeah, because there was a lot of shame kind of surrounding it as well.
Because I felt like everybody knew how bad it was.
Nobody stepped in to help.
But everybody knew.
And then there was like, and like, I feel like kids had this kind of attitude towards me.
Like, even though their parents were in the same boat, I knew so many of them and their parents to be alcoholics.
There was this kind of energy that was like, oh, well, yours is like really bad, like that that happened, you know?
Not being aware that they were moments away from having the same experience.
Do you think it branded, like you felt like they judged you and it kind of separated you from them?
Yes, and I actually, there was only one time I became violent and it was a girl had kind of like taunted me with it.
And she was kind of walking around telling everybody how she had seen my dad drunk and, you know, this was something that was super sensitive to me because he would show up at school events really drunk.
And it was really embarrassing.
And not that a child, I mean, I know this now, but not that a child should.
ever take that on. That has nothing to do with you, but when you don't know that, you make it
very personal. I always felt like I had to make excuses for him. I always had to, like, tell some
story to soften the edges a little bit. And I think I did try to sweep it under the rug,
because I also, I hated people feeling sorry for me. I hated it. I almost feel like that was
the worst thing. It was like that now for the rest of my life, people are going to feel sorry
for me. So for the first couple of years, for as long as I could, I would have told this story
that he died in a car accident and that it happened then three years earlier. I couldn't tell
it to my school friends. But by the time I left South Africa, that's the story I told.
Because I just, I didn't want to like have people show pity. I didn't want pity. It made me so
uncomfortable. So you end up leaving South Africa. Yeah. And
You're young.
Yeah.
I had just turned 16.
Which is amazing.
And you go to model initially in Italy.
And I just wonder what it was like to be that person at 16 with everything that had happened.
It was amazing.
Really?
It was amazing because it was escape.
I wasn't expecting that.
Escapeism.
Oh, okay.
I could escape.
The only thing that was really, really hard for me was knowing that I was leaving my mom behind.
But she was the one that said, you have to go.
Like you have to go.
You got go.
Get out of here.
Go and make a life for yourself.
There's nothing for you here right now.
What was it like once you got that opportunity and you were out in the world sort of living at 16?
Yeah.
Did you feel equipped?
Yeah, I was so equipped.
I mean, I knew how to take care of myself.
That's just something my mom.
instilled in me, my lifestyle instilled in me, my country did. Like, you just, you know how to take care of
yourself. You know how to cook. And even in our school, they teach you how to sew. I mean, I know more
than my kids will ever know as adults, you know, about taking care of myself. And I also had this
real drive that I wanted to do it on my own terms. Like, I didn't want to go out there. She had given
me a credit card, but I was so determined to do this on my own and to not fail because I didn't
want to go back. I didn't want to go back. So I was running from a lot of stuff and I was happy to
escape it. And you come to America and you're a dancer and you're studying at the Joffrey Ballet
and you have a pretty serious injury or it was a built-up. A built-up thing that you just sort of
ended up not being able to dance anymore. Yeah. Yeah, it was like a consistent injury that showed up
my knees. I was too tall to be a dancer. And by the time I got to jaw free, I was mainly taking
class. I think I was in full denial because I didn't have another plan. I really didn't have a
plan for anything after that. It must have been scary. That was when it got scary, yeah. I went
into like my first depression. I lived in somebody's basement. I was renting a room in this
basement. It didn't have any windows. And I just remember it was like really cold winter.
And I was living in darkness, like complete darkness. And my mom came over. She was really worried about me.
And I'll never forget it. We sat on like this crappy couch that was covered with a blanket because it was so
disgusting. And we both had a pint of ice cream and we were just eating ice cream. And she just said,
she just said like you love movies you were always watching movies always that's all you did as a kid
you watched movies and then when you started dancing she's like newsflash you were not a great dancer
but you were the best actor like you would go on stage and you could tell the story she's like you
know how to do that and you had not thought about that no no i didn't even know how you went about it
I had no idea how you went about it, and neither did she.
I mean, it was like, I'll buy the ticket, you'll go to Hollywood, and we got the ticket,
and I was like, oh, it doesn't say Hollywood.
It says Los Angeles.
I mean, that is how naive we were.
I was thinking a lot about how much you'd experience from 15 to 18, which is this period
in which this all happens.
You have this traumatic event.
You go to Italy, then you go to New York, you don't know what you're going to do,
then you come to L.A., you get discovered.
You'd lost a career, you'd found a career maybe.
I mean, most people experience that in one lifetime.
Did you feel that, that already by the age of 18,
you'd sort of gone through this enormous change?
I just remember excitement.
I really, like, once I got, like, out of my dark hole,
there's something about your naivit.
that makes you not think about the alternative.
Well, for me anyway, I should speak for myself.
But I think that's true of young people generally.
You just think like anything's possible.
Yeah.
And nothing bad's going to happen.
And not to you, you know, you just think you're invincible.
And I had big dreams and I had this kind of clock ticking because I didn't want to
go back.
So I was constantly kind of like a hustler.
But I felt very, I just remember those years very fondly.
I was excited. I had found this like really great group of friends and I was going out and dance. These were all things that I didn't grow up with. You know, in South Africa, you don't go to a club. Like you don't go like during. I mean, we had, I don't think, I don't want to be like some South African is going to be like that's not true. But my experience was that there wasn't like concerts. I didn't go to concerts. And I think even if there were boycotts, right?
Yes, exactly. Sanctions kind of like stopped that, but even prior to the sanctions, and I think even if there were, my mom would never let me go because you'd hear of like crowd bombings and things like that.
So this was the first time you were able to really be young.
Yes, yes, yes.
So in fact, the opposite of what I thought.
No, I was like dancing until the sun came up.
And then I would go to auditions and be great.
Like I was like, I had no sleep.
I functioned on no sleep.
I ate terribly because that's what I could afford.
But I was so happy.
I was so happy.
So this brings me actually to your new movie.
Because you've been doing a lot of tough roles lately.
and you are what I consider to be our modern day action hero.
Oh, thank you.
Do you consider yourself to be an action hero?
I know about the hero part.
My words.
I'm making a kind of obvious assumption considering where we've started,
but I've heard you just say words like independent, self-sufficient, you know,
wanting to do things your own way.
And to me, there's just like a very clear through line
to this version of your career.
Yeah.
Why was that something that you were attracted to?
So I had had little moments in movies
where I had to like an action scene, you know?
It was like stunt people would come in
and it would be like, oh, we're going to like,
there was like a big fight scene that I had
in two days in the Valley, my first movie that I ever did.
But I made the connection pretty quickly
to my dance career.
And the thing that my mom said was in that moment became very clear to me, the fact that I am a natural storyteller.
And if I have to do it through my body, I'll do it through my body.
If I can do it through my mouth, I'll do it through my mouth.
And I had missed telling story through my body.
You know, you said in a recent interview, I have surgery after every movie.
You said you wanted to get to the fun stuff.
And so I just have to bring this up before we talk a little bit more about this because I actually looked into it.
Oh, boy.
Our whole team did.
And we were just, we went down a rabbit hole.
After this new movie Apex, you got elbow surgery.
Two elbow.
A revision.
Yeah, one and a revision surgery.
You also fractured a toe.
Yeah.
Please fill me in on the stuff that we've missed.
While making the old guard, you filmed through injuries and got three surgeries on your left arm afterwards.
Yes.
Is that right?
Yes.
Making atomic blonde, you cracked two teeth and got root canals?
Yeah, my teeth were replaced fully, yeah.
Fully?
Not my whole, I have all my own teeth, even though some people don't believe that.
I took care of my teeth.
Two in the back, they had to just, they had to remove them.
They were so crushed.
Hmm.
I'll also say that one of the ones that I left off is that you spent five days in the hospital
after laughing too hard watching Borat.
I didn't quite understand. Was that like a hernia that you got?
So I had herniated a disc in my neck making a movie. I landed on my neck and it was a really severe injury.
Oh my gosh. I was moments away from being paralyzed. It was actually that bad. I landed on a concrete floor on my neck.
What movie was this? On Eon Flux. Oh, God. And they had to shut the movie down and I had an injury that everybody was hoping my body could heal.
After, I mean, I was on bed rest and doing PT, but they were hoping that the disc, I was young enough, and the disc is really soft up there, that my body would absorb it. And so they didn't want to just do surgery straight away. And I think it was a big mistake because I suffered for eight years and had chronic pain, chronic pain. And my neck was, that disc sat so close to all of my nerves that if I did anything wrong with it,
anything it didn't like, it would just sit on nerves and I would just be locked, locked for weeks.
And I lived my life like that for eight years. And so the Borat thing is funny because I laughed so
hard that I locked that disc into the nerves. And it was actually really bad. I had to like...
Yeah, I was supposed to say it's not a funny story. That's a horrible story.
It's a funny story now. I mean, we still laugh about it. But I had to like get flown like on a private
plane that night and came back to L.A. And when I had my first baby, I just said to the doctor,
I want to have the surgery because I just don't want to live in this place where I have a child
and I can't pick her up because my neck is out. And so I kind of like, it was the best thing ever did.
I know a lot of people who've lived with chronic pain and it's really debilitating and really
hard to think about anything else. What was it like for you? It was horrible. It's horrible.
It's horrible, because it's constant fear of like, I don't know if I should do that.
And I'm like in the prime of my life.
And then it became so acute.
Like, I would just get out of the shower and reach for a towel and it would lock and I would be in bed for five days, not being able to move.
I think I was so worn down by the end of the eight years that if they weren't going to do it,
I was going to like go to a country and get it done where they would allow it to happen.
I was that desperate.
it. I was also, you know, I shared with my doctor because I was on a lot of opioids and things
like that. I was about to ask. And you would think with my dad as well, like the worry of addiction,
thank God I don't have an issue with addiction and that I didn't become addicted to them. But
I think back now and I just go like, that was just so irresponsible in a weird way with myself,
the fact that I was just thinking I can kind of,
I would be able to control this somehow.
You know, if that were my reality,
I would then probably not want to throw myself
and become an action star.
Yeah.
I would want to protect myself from injury
and those kinds of issues.
Why do you think you went in the opposite direction?
I think I wasn't going to let anything take away from my life.
There's a spirit about me that,
and I think some of it maybe has to do.
with the fact that I experienced so much death early on.
I'm very aware that time runs out really quickly and the time can run out as soon as I walk out
of this building.
I can cross a street and it's done.
I'm so hyper-aware of that.
I live my life every single day like that.
If I lay in bed one day, I'm like, I am missing a day in my life.
But I was never going to be, I didn't want to live like a safe life because of that.
I mean, I do live a very safe life.
I'm not a reckless person.
And I think people think I am, but I'm not a reckless.
I get scared.
I'm not reckless.
But I don't want to, I want to, if I get to be on my deathbed one day, I want to say I did everything that I really wanted to do.
Let's talk about apex.
Yeah.
Because I'm getting teared.
No, I'm not.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Let's talk about apex.
Tell me, but actually, before I move on, what made you emotional?
Because life is so valuable.
I think life is so beautiful.
Stop it.
No, this is not in the interview.
You are not putting this in the interview.
It's so sappy and stupid.
It's not.
It's so stupid.
It's really stupid.
But I feel like I'm getting the real you, which is a person who still doesn't want to, like, be in touch with their emotions.
It's so funny because people are always like, they think I'm a tough bitch, you know.
Like, I think a lot of people think I'm, like, very cold.
Because I come across as, like, self-fit.
Like, I can take care of myself.
Like, I don't need, like, and I'm also, I'm sometimes a little brash.
And I think people take that as she's so tough.
Like, she's so cold.
And it's the complete opposite.
My kids are so embarrassed by me, because I will cry at the drop of a hat.
My kids are always, like, stop crying.
So I have access.
And I think it's not to be like, but I think it's why,
I'm okay at acting.
I can go to those places very easily.
As you can tell,
I have like an ability to really feel deeply.
Sometimes like, you know, it's not nice,
but it works for my job.
And it works in my life.
Like, I really appreciate,
I do appreciate things.
And I'm not perfect at that every day,
but I aim for that, definitely.
Okay.
We keep on losing, going in a different direction, which I've enjoyed, but I want to talk about the movie.
In this new movie, you play a mountain climber who ends up being chased through the Australian jungle.
Rock climber.
Rock climber. Do your research. Thank you. Seriously.
Oh, my God. But I'm wondering about the mental challenges of doing movies like that.
I mean, what are they for you? Because it's not just a physical game, it's a mental game.
Dance. Dance is probably one of the hardest.
things I ever did.
Dancers are superheroes.
What dancers put their bodies
through in complete silence.
Sorry, Timothy Shalmay.
Oh boy. I hope I run into him one day.
Yeah, I feel like that was a very reckless comment.
On an art forum, two art forums, that
we need to lift up constantly because, yes, they do have a hard time.
But in about 10 years, I think AI is going to be
able to do Timothy's job.
but it will not be able to replace a person on a stage dancing life.
And we shouldn't shit on other art forms.
How about we start with that?
I think that it's one of the most disciplined things that I've ever done.
It taught me discipline.
It taught me structure.
It taught me hard work.
It taught me to be tough.
It's borderline abusive.
You know, I mean, I remember having to dance with,
I had so much.
There were several times that I had blood infections
from blisters that just never healed.
And you don't get a day off.
I mean, I'm literally talking about bleeding through your shoes.
And that's something that you have to, like, practice every single day.
You practice it every single day if you're a dancer at that level.
You mean you practice the mindset of it.
You don't give up.
And there's no other option.
Like, you're going.
And you keep going.
I was just wondering what you think about being a woman in an action role.
Because in this particular film, the tension doesn't only come.
come from the thrills and I don't want to give too much away. And, you know, you in sort of
physical extremes, it also comes through you as a woman feeling threatened, as many women feel
threatened by the circumstances around you, whether there are men who are actually wishing you ill
or is a wild animal going to come and overpower you. Do you think female action heroes get dramatic
tension or need to get dramatic tension from other sources than men? For sure, yeah. I think it's hard
for some men to understand that when we go down into a parking garage, it's one of the most
fright. I mean, for me it is, like especially at night. Like, I get the, I get like a horrible
feeling in a, like, one of those like deep parking garages and underground parking lots. I mean,
I'm constantly looking over my shoulder and then I'm trying to get into my car as quick as possible.
I don't know how many men think about that.
We just have a different mindset for sure.
I think we have to.
And that's what makes us interesting.
And that's what makes us, I think, interesting action stars or action subjects.
You know, I think we attack action differently.
You know, we can't fight like men.
But that doesn't mean we can't fight.
So our tagline on Atomic Blonde was always, fight like a girl.
Because that's good.
That's good.
Fight like a girl.
It's different.
I don't ever aspire to go into these movies trying to, like, outdo, you know, the male counterpart.
Like, I was sitting opposite Terran, and I was like, he was working out.
So I was like, there's no way.
You would totally overpower me.
Like, if we got a coaster.
Exactly, Terran Edgerton.
I was like, he would totally overpower me.
So we have to, like, figure out other things.
Like, maybe under certain circumstances, by element of surprise, I could do it.
But I'm a bit of a stigler for reality, like when I make movies.
Like, I want to know that you can really do something.
Like, I'm always kind of like on everybody's back.
Like, can that happen?
But what would happen?
I want to see that happen because I don't believe that.
Because I love movies because I believe it.
Like, I want to go in there and believe it.
So I like kind of attacking action movies in that sense that I want to be.
make something that feels very realistic. I'm not playing superheroes. In 2017, I interviewed David
Leach, who directed you in Atomic Blonde. And something he said to me was that indeed,
it's different to fight as a woman. And he is obviously someone whose background is in being a stunt
man. Yeah. And he said it's not about punching with brute force, but it's about using leverage.
It's just a different way to engage in physical conflict. Can you fight in,
real life? Are you someone who now feels like you could take someone down? I mean, how many times do we
think about that, Lulu? Like, I don't think about can I take people down, but I always think.
I do if I'm in a dark parking lot. So there's that part of my brain that always... It's about defending yourself.
Yes. And I also think, just given my history, I'm hyper aware, like, of those things.
Little things like fight with your elbows. Oh, weirdly. See, that's maybe why my elbows are so busted.
We're getting to some stuff here.
But in general, we have a lot of force in our elbows, and we can swing really hard from our elbows, not so much from our wrists.
So, you know, coming forward with your finger, yeah, but this is a full force arm move, and it can take somebody down if you hit it in the right way.
I feel like I'm scrappy.
I'm scrappy, and I'm a survivor, and I feel like sometimes that's the thing that sets you apart from actual skill.
You know, I think there are people that would probably take somebody down way better than I can.
But if my life depended on it, I'm going to bet on me.
All right.
Well, we're going to speak again, but thank you for your honesty and also for engaging with me.
I really appreciate it.
Oh, my gosh.
You're so welcome.
And talk to you soon.
After the break, I talk to Charlize again.
I do worry sometimes that I love having conversation.
And then, you know, I go home and I'm like, oh, I share too much.
I didn't have to go into that detail.
Why did I say that?
Hi.
Hi.
I was thinking about everything that we've talked about in our first conversation about the independence that you found in an early age and then the tough characters you've played and the physical challenges that you've taken on to play them.
And I know from other interviews that you've given that you've really.
not wanted your story to ever be distilled to its most simplistic version, and I really don't want to do that here.
So I'm wondering, when you think about your career, what connections have you made between your life and the choices that you've made and your career writ large?
First of all, thank you for saying that. I think it's like, I do worry sometimes that I love having conversation. And then, you know, I go home and I'm like, oh, I share too much.
I didn't have to go into that detail.
Why did I say that?
The stakes are really high for someone like you.
I get it.
I appreciate you saying that.
I feel like when we were talking, I was thinking about this yesterday, when we were talking, and by the way, your conversation is so natural.
So I want to thank you for that too.
And it made me think about things that I haven't thought about in a while.
But I had a thought that I don't feel like we talked about.
And that is that, you know, the opposite is so true of my life and of South Africa, the country that I grew up in.
And I think we covered the hardship.
But I really truly feel blessed that I came from there, that I was born there, that I have that soil and my bones.
I feel like I'm from there.
I feel like I share something with the people of South Africa.
And the reason I do is because they're the most resilient, beautiful people that you will ever meet.
And they've been through all this hardship, but they have literally come out on the other side with hope.
And it's when I go there, that's the most incredible thing to see. Yes, there are a lot of things that need to get fixed.
But the heart of that country is so unbelievably beautiful on every level. It's truly the most beautiful
country that I've ever been to and I've been lucky enough to travel a lot. And it's a place filled with joy.
And so I just wanted to kind of talk a little bit about that because that is such a time.
an important part of the one side that we covered yesterday. It's not all doom and gloom,
you know? And we got into a place. Sometimes that's the way it goes. But that's why this is good,
because you kind of get to reflect, right? And that doesn't happen usually in interview. So I'm
grateful for that. So I know in our first interview, we talked a lot about your personal life.
So I want to talk about some of your work.
You founded a production company in 2003,
and that was long before female actors,
at least were sort of doing that.
We're taking that kind of ownership.
Why did you think it was important to have
that kind of power behind the scenes too?
You know, I've reflected on this a lot.
I think I've always kind of jumped to a simple answer,
which was I wanted to produce.
Felt like I was interested in movie making,
like the whole thing, the whole part of it,
the development part of it.
And that is true.
But, you know, if I had to be really honest,
I feel like there was a constant fear
that I didn't have control over my own work.
And especially when you're young,
it happened when I made Monster.
I remember the people who feel,
financed it, just thinking we were making such a different movie. And they were really upset with
us with me and Patty Jenkins. And I think that if we didn't have any kind of producing power
over that movie, it would have been a completely different movie. It would not have been the movie
that Monster is today. And it made me realize that it is good to sometimes have a little bit of
that control where you can say, listen, we were what, we start this road together and we're
going to finish this road together. But we told you what road were going on when we started,
you know, and standing up for that and being able to protect that. You know, it's funny because
when you made Monster, you and Patty Jenkins, and it's obviously a very pivotal part of your own
story of how you had this vision and really kind of created it. But there is something about
it was you and another woman who did that. So when I'm hearing you say like it wouldn't have
been made in the same way, what do you mean exactly? I think, uh, I'm assuming. I'm a
assuming here, obviously, a lot of these people are not around anymore and can't speak for themselves.
The feeling that I got and Patty and I discussed was that I think they thought that they were
going to get some kind of a more of a sexy version with me and Christina Ricci. I think they were
really leaning on kind of that relationship part. And I think they were not expecting. And I honestly
don't think they had done a lot of research on Eileen. I think they read the script. I was attached
and they just kind of said yes to financing it. But if you really do your research, it's pretty,
I mean, you don't have to explain it. You know, you can look at all the documentaries out there
on her and why would you not try and kind of go for the truth? I don't know if they thought that
I would just kind of be me, maybe, because I'd never done anything like that. So I think that was
maybe another part too. They didn't think I was going to do the full transformation.
I remember when I started gaining weight and we went to one of the producers through a party for us and we went to his house.
And I very kind of like, just jokingly, I was like, oh my God, I have a donut.
And I was like squishing my stomach and showing this lady in front of me.
And it turned out it was his wife.
And I just remember her face.
And she was like, I'm not going to say the guy's name.
But she was like, John?
Like, you should come see this.
Like this kind of concern just came over her.
And I think that was maybe the first sign.
But when they started seeing the first dailies, I remember they were just like, you don't look that great.
You're not smiling.
You're not friendly.
I mean, it was evident that they really were not very happy with a movie that we were making.
I mean, some of your most well-known roles are about transforming, right, into real people.
Monster, it run you an Oscar.
And then you also played Megan Kelly in the movie Bombshell.
And you were nominated for that role, too.
What is the difference between creating a character versus playing someone who already exists in the world?
It's such a good question because I don't know if I have the answer yet.
I feel, I don't know how to play Eileen without looking like Eileen.
Like I don't think I'm the actor that you should hire for that.
I also don't think I'm the actor you should put in the bombshell to play Megan Kelly because if I,
looked like this, like me, and maybe attempted, like, her cadence, I just, I don't know what that is.
Like, I would look at the monitor and just kind of feel like it's missing. Like, something's wrong,
right? I don't know how to do it. So I think it's kind of like a necessity for me. Now, when I play
non, you know, fictional characters, I don't have to kind of obey by that, right? But there are
moments where you read something and you kind of feel like there's a physicality that,
that you think is maybe necessary,
you talk to your director, you start thinking about things
that can help you not be you, right?
I'm always trying to just not look like
I'm crossing a street like me when I'm making a movie.
I'm always like, am I opening this door
and is it like Charlize is showing up?
It's hard, you know, I've made many movies,
people know who I am,
and you don't wanna start overusing it
in a way where it feels like
you're just becoming caricatures, you know. So it takes a lot of thought and a lot of collaboration
to kind of figure out what that is, what the balance is. And that's why I started. I don't really
truly know the answer yet. You know, I've talked to actors and they sometimes say that there's
like a little key that unlocks something for them, you know, whether it's putting on a wig or
figuring out the way they walk or just something that opens up a character. Do you have something
like that for you? For me, I wish I could reshoot the first three weeks of every movie I make.
Is that true? Yes, I feel like the first three weeks, I am not, I am, I'm scared, I'm still
thinking, I'm overthinking, I'm doing it and it passes, but I am not in that flow that you hear
actors talk about, or athletes, that moment where you're not thinking about anything. You're just
in it. Yeah, three weeks. That's usually, so I tried to shoot stupid things for like as long as I can.
And then you just have to put your big girl panties on and do it. Like, yeah. Speaking of big girl
panties, Mad Max Fury Road is, of course, one of your most well-known roles. And it was famously
grueling to film. My colleague, Kyle Buchanan, wrote an oral history of
of the movie that brought to light, you know, how tough the set was, the filming conditions,
the dynamics with your co-star, Tom Hardy, the director George Miller. But one of the things that I
found most interesting was how you described your relationship with the female actors on the set,
including Riley Keough and Zoe Kravitz. You said in that interview that they turned to you
as someone who could problem solve for them. And I'm wondering what that kind of looked like.
It was tough. You know, it's an environment that's really,
hard. It was, we were in a desert for six months and I think mentally it really challenged all of us.
It really did. And these poor girls were in, they were wearing bandages and it was so cold. And I
remember Abby Lee one day just turning blue. And I just, I was, with the rig was just driving.
And I was like, like, stop. Like everybody stop. And like trying to take like some of my, I think
I'd try to take my pants off or something to like put.
pants on her at least. Like things like that that I think was just kind of, you know, I had just
become a mom. My first kid was like, I think, two months old. And I think I was just in like hyper
mom state too. You know, I loved all of those girls. And I felt like I felt like I was somewhat
responsible for them because I was of another generation. And like, I knew what it was like to
sometimes not feel like you had a voice. I also want to add, they were all bad bitches. Like,
honestly, they were really strong, capable curls. Like, they were not wallflowers. So I just want to
say that as well. They didn't need saving. All right. Last few questions. Looking ahead,
you're going to be in the next Christopher Nolan film, The Odyssey. I was literally on that movie
for, like, four breaths. It was so quick.
But they were amazing breaths.
To have, you know, Chris Nolan say, I would like to meet you for my next movie is like, do we even need to meet?
Because I'm in.
Like, whatever it is, I'll do it.
And, yeah, I just spent, like, the last five days with him, and it was tremendous, really, really tremendous to just kind of see a director of that caliber work.
And also to see my friend, Matt Damon, like, have this part.
it's like the part of a lifetime and what he put himself through and how hard he worked.
So it was a lovely five days.
You're going to be playing The Witch, Circe.
I mean, what can we expect?
I don't play her.
You don't?
What do you play?
I just gave you some insight.
I'm not going to tell you, but there, you have insight now.
You know that it's not her.
Everybody thinks it's her, but it's not.
Everyone thinks it's her.
Oh, my goodness.
Okay.
Any injuries, though, on the set?
No.
No injuries.
No.
came out alive and well, yes.
All right.
Charlize Theron, thank you so much.
This has been, it's been wonderful.
Thank you.
The same year, it's definitely been wonderful.
It's very rare to have conversations like this.
So thank you.
That's Charlize Theron.
Apex starts streaming on Netflix, April 24th.
To watch this interview and many others,
you can subscribe to our YouTube.com at at symbol
the interview podcast. This conversation was produced by Seth Kelly. It was edited by Alison
Benedict, mixing by Sophia Landman, original music by Dan Powell, Alicia Baitoup, and Marian
Lazzano. Photography by Devin Yalkin. The rest of the team is Priya Matthew, Wyatt Orm,
Paola Newdorf, Joe Bill Munoz, Amy Marino, Kathleen O'Brien, and Brooke Minters. Our executive
producer is Alison Benedict. Next week, David talks with actor and comedian Bob Odenkirk.
Anybody should write their memoir when they get around 50.
And you may see what I saw.
We're like, this guy's like a, and we all are, but this guy's like a broken toy.
I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro, and this is the interview from the New York Times.
