Take, for example, the longtime reliance of Hollywood on the movie junket. Some years ago, I watched Tom Hanks move from table to table at once of those affairs, answering the same couple of dumb questions literally scores of times. His smile never cracked for a second but, as those things piled up over a lifetime, it must have sucked away a part of his soul. On another occasion, at the peak of the fame of “The Sopranos,” I watched Lorraine Bracco do a series of TV interviews in Florida, answering repeated questions about her own mental health and experience with psychologists, for goodness sake.
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
Column: Naomi Osaka’s protest will succeed — because celebrity is changing fast
Previous ArticleESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit ‘still can’t taste or smell’ five months after testing positive for COVID-19
Next Article Loretto Hospital in Chicago's Austin community