Is Jennifer Lawrence Sex Tape Real

Is Jennifer Lawrence Sex Tape Real




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Is Jennifer Lawrence Sex Tape Real
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As the third of the wildly popular Hunger Games movies hits theaters, Jennifer Lawrence has been dealing with the dark side of fame: a far more shocking invasion than the usual paparazzi onslaught. Talking for the first time about having her intimate private photos hacked—and splashed across the Web—the 24-year-old star tells Sam Kashner about her fear, her anger, and the call to her dad.
Jennifer Lawrence in Beverly Hills with a sulphur-crested cockatoo. “You expect paparazzi to be annoying,” she says. “You don’t expect them to be terrifying.”
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You wait for movie stars, but if it's Jennifer Lawrence you don't mind. It's like waiting for a comet to come hurtling into view. She was due to arrive by the pool on the roof of L'Ermitage hotel, in Beverly Hills. When she finally got there, half an hour late, you couldn't help but notice how young and delicate she looked, neither Hunger Games strong nor Silver Linings Playbook sexy, but young. She even breathed young, and in fact it was just before her 24th birthday.
We met on a balmy afternoon in August, two days after Robin Williams's suicide and a day after Lauren Bacall's death, at the age of 89, in New York City. It was a bad week for icons, and Jennifer Lawrence was “feeling dark.” But that seemed anomalous. With the wild popularity of the Hunger Games movies (the first two installments earned more than a billion dollars worldwide) and three Academy Award nominations (she's the youngest actress to have been nominated three times), with a win for best actress (for Silver Linings Playbook ), she has indeed arrived like a newly discovered comet, improvidently throwing out heat and light.
Jennifer, whom her friends call Jen, was wearing a blue cotton top and a very short skirt she kept tugging at, saying, “I should have worn pants.” Her knees were scuffed, as if she'd just climbed down from a hickory tree. Her blond hair was cut into a short bob, and she wore round, John Lennon-style sunglasses, which she removed when she sat down to talk. As Raymond Chandler might have said, she has a face like a Sunday picnic.
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“I must be nervous. Look at the sweat under my arms,” she said, holding up a long, slender arm to reveal an impressive circle of perspiration on her shirt. It was the kind of thing a guy might do, but then, Jennifer grew up with two older brothers, Ben, now 33, and Blaine, 28.
“Yeah,” she explained, “I'm the baby and the only girl born in my family in 50 years and the only girl born since. My brother just had two boys. My other brother's wife is pregnant. I said to my brother, ‘Dude, get ready. You're going to have a boy.’ Lawrences only make boys. I was a goddamn miracle.”
Girls who grow up with boys are often tomboys, and this clear-eyed daughter of Louisville, Kentucky, is no exception. Funny and explosive as a tagalong sister, she was called “Nitro” by her brothers. The nickname reflected a brash innocence she still has—a quality possessed by only a few movie stars. Louise Brooks had it. Carole Lombard had it. Frances Farmer—all too briefly—had it. Jane Fonda has it. Diane Keaton has it. Jennifer Lawrence was born with it.
Her appeal to men of all ages doesn't need explaining, but she also appeals mightily to young women, because she's unpretentious and spontaneous, and seems genuinely amazed at her celebrity status. She's one of us—a movie-and-celebrity fan. She described being awed when she spied Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt two feet away from her table at a Hollywood event. “They should be king and queen of America,” she told Jimmy Kimmel, when she appeared as a guest on his show. “I would pay taxes to them.”
She loves reality television. Her favorite shows? “ Shark Tank. Wait. Oh, Dance Moms —that is a good one! O.K., maybe my favorite is Dance Moms , but I do love my Real Housewives. But there's also—there's Doomsday Preppers. Hoarders is O.K. I find it gets a little boring after a while, but it's great. I love Intervention , New York Housewives —and Beverly Hills, New Jersey, and Atlanta Housewives. I mean, I love them all, but Miami—oh, my God! Miami is really special.”
It sounds as if her fame has put her a bit under house arrest, and it's true, she can no longer move unaccompanied throughout the world, so hounded is she by fans and paparazzi. As she says, “I mean, I have to do my job, and I love my job. Everybody can be like, ‘Well, you knew what you were signing up for,’ but you don't. You expect paparazzi to be annoying. You don't expect them to be terrifying.”
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And for Jennifer, it's gone beyond terrifying. Two weeks after our meeting, nude photographs of the actress were hacked and posted on several sites, including 4Chan, Reddit, Twitter, and Tumblr, adding to the already considerable pitfalls of her intense fame. Other celebrities, such as Kate Upton, Kirsten Dunst, and Mary Elizabeth Winstead, also fell victim to the hacking, and the F.B.I. is now investigating. “I was just so afraid,” Jennifer now says. “I didn't know how this would affect my career.”
She says her first thought was to write a public statement, “but every single thing that I tried to write made me cry or get angry. I started to write an apology, but I don't have anything to say I'm sorry for. I was in a loving, healthy, great relationship for four years. It was long distance, and either your boyfriend is going to look at porn or he's going to look at you.”
She tells of her shock when the private, intimate photos surfaced on the Internet. “I can't even describe to anybody what it feels like to have my naked body shoot across the world like a news flash against my will. It just makes me feel like a piece of meat that's being passed around for a profit.”
She's particularly angry at celebrity blogger Perez Hilton, who posted the photographs on his Web site, then took them down. As Jennifer says, “He took it down because people got pissed, and that's the only reason why. And then I had to watch his apology. And what he basically said was ‘I just didn't think about it.’ ‘I just didn't think about it’ is not an excuse. That is the exact issue itself.
“Just because I'm a public figure, just because I'm an actress, does not mean that I asked for this. It does not mean that it comes with the territory. It's my body, and it should be my choice, and the fact that it is not my choice is absolutely disgusting. I can't believe that we even live in that kind of world.
Part of Jennifer's anger and frustration is that there's so little she can do about it. She can't become un-famous. She can't quit her job. “I can't not act. It's what I was made to do, and I swear to God, it's the only thing that I'm good at, but that does not mean that I deserve to live like this. When I have to make that phone call to my dad and tell him what's happened . . . I don't care how much money I get for The Hunger Games . . . . I promise you, anybody given the choice of that kind of money or having to make a phone call to tell your dad that something like that has happened, it's not worth it.” She allows herself to joke a little about that terrible moment: “Fortunately, he was playing golf, so he was in a good mood.”
She feels just as strongly about the way the entire incident has been reported. “It is not a scandal. It is a sex crime. It is a sexual violation,” she says. “It's disgusting. The law needs to be changed, and we need to change.” Jennifer has a hard time understanding the mentality of those who so violently hacked into her private life. “That's why these Web sites are responsible. Just the fact that somebody can be sexually exploited and violated, and the first thought that crosses somebody's mind is to make a profit from it. It's so beyond me. I just can't imagine being that detached from humanity. I can't imagine being that thoughtless and careless and so empty inside.” Nor can she forgive those people who were so eager to view the photos. “Anybody who looked at those pictures, you're perpetuating a sexual offense. You should cower with shame,” she says. “Even people who I know and love say, ‘Oh, yeah, I looked at the pictures.’ I don't want to get mad, but at the same time I'm thinking, I didn't tell you that you could look at my naked body.”
She is trying to move on with her life and hopes that something positive can come from the incident. It already has. The world is still very much interested in Jennifer with her clothes on, so much so that it was announced that in the spring of 2015 she will be co-hosting the Met Ball, titled “Chinese Whispers: Tales of the East in Art, Film, and Fashion.” “Time does heal, you know,” she says. “I'm not crying about it anymore. I can't be angry anymore. I can't have my happiness rest on these people being caught, because they might not be. I need to just find my own peace.”
She does have a message for the entertainment-tabloid community, though: “You have a choice. You don't have to be a person who spreads negativity and lies for a living. You can do something good. You can be good. Let's just make that choice and—it feels better.”
She can still find some humor in the situation: “It could have been worse,” she says. “At least I'm not a hermaphrodite. I could have been outed—‘Jennifer Lawrence, hermaphrodite!’ And there's your silver lining.
“All I want to focus on now is speaking out and hopefully helping anyone who's been violated in this kind of way,” she says in conclusion.
Toward the end of our conversation, I felt as if I had to apologize for dragging her through it all again.
“You don't need to apologize,” she said, “because I think it's right to speak of it. It didn't feel right to make a public statement, but it does need to be talked about. And I was afraid that by sitting and doing nothing, that made it seem O.K. for other women and girls to just let it happen to them, because it isn't.”
In light of this, her publicists' nervousness at our interview is understandable. They're concerned with protecting Jennifer not just from the world outside our cabana but also from her own outspokenness. “My publicists were like, ‘We think that you should stick to coffee or tea. No wine during the interview,’ ” she explained, “ ‘because sometimes when you drink, you know, you get a little loose.’ ”
The Hunger Games franchise is about to come to its epochal conclusion with the release of Mockingjay 1 and Mockingjay 2 , the final two installments of the saga based on Suzanne Collins's hugely successful young-adult trilogy. On Jennifer's slender shoulders rests this empire. “When people look at you differently and talk to you differently, like even just walking into an elevator, it's a very isolating feeling—they don't look at you like a person anymore. It's one of the most lonely, icy feelings in the world.”
Her way of dealing with this overwhelming fame is to stay close to family and a small circle of old friends. “When these movies came out, everybody else was looking at me differently, and the whole world was changing, but my world wasn't changing. Everybody I was surrounding myself with was honest and real and telling me the truth. I don't like yes-people. I don't like lackeys. I don't like people when they fake-laugh at my jokes.”
Keeping a tight circle, perhaps, partially explains the public's attraction to her. “She's just constantly hounded by paparazzi,” said Woody Harrelson, who co-starred with her in all four Hunger Games movies. He was speaking over the telephone from Maui, with his Texas drawl sounding even more laid-back than usual. “She's an amazing girl. She's one of my favorite people on the planet.”
Having been in the public glare for 30 years, ever since playing the lovable, hayseed bartender Woody Boyd on the television series Cheers , Harrelson is not unfamiliar with the kind of fame that can turn into gilded persecution. When he first met Jennifer, he explained, “she'd done a movie, and people in the industry knew her, but she wasn't really famous. And so I watched her grow into, amazingly, the biggest female star in the world. And it's staggering to me how much she's been able to just hold on to her basic decency and her amazing, marvelous spirit. You know, it's not terrible, people telling you you're great; what's terrible is when you start believing it. She never got fucked up.”
Woody and Jennifer first met when she went aboard Woody's “sustainable bus,” which he uses to promote environmentally responsible living. He calls it “the Mother Ship.” “I can't remember what I was doing,” he recalled, “but, anyway, I was in there, and I hear someone coming up the steps. And I hear her voice before I see her. And she says, ‘Hi, Woody. It's Jen Lawrence. I just wanted to say … ’ And then she comes into view, and she sees immediately that I have a yoga swing in there. She goes, ‘Is that a sex swing?’ ”
Woody still laughs at that. “I said, ‘Well, I guess it could be.’ But that really is, actually, a great illustration of who she is, because she's incredibly vulnerable, but she's got all these wonderful contradictions. She's just very forthcoming. It's almost shocking how much she'll say, you know. That's super-fun, and also it's shocking sometimes because it's so on the edge. It's like she doesn't have a censor. I really love that in people. I guess there are some people I don't love it in, but in her it's wonderful.”
The Danish film director Susanne Bier, who directed Jennifer in the dark drama Serena , due out early next year, sees her in the same way. “You can compare it to the young royals, who are groomed to be in that position, but with Jennifer it's been only two years that she's [become] one of the biggest stars in the world right now. But she's so smart, she's so bright, and there is a solidness to her that saves her, that makes her able to handle it.”
“After [the second Hunger Games movie], Catching Fire , things reached a new frenzy of Jennifer being approached, and her photos being taken, and paparazzi following her,” observes Francis Lawrence, who directed her in the final three Hunger Games installments. “I mean, it's hard for her to go to dinner without having five or six people interrupt, to have their pictures taken with her.”
Jennifer read all of Collins's novels when they were first published, “in three days,” but she never saw herself as their teenage heroine, Katniss Everdeen, the plucky survivor who changes the Games. “My brothers always say the same thing. They're like, ‘When we read the book, we didn't picture you.’ I was like, ‘I didn't, either.’ ” For one thing, she always felt that she was “too much of a klutz” to play a skillful archer, but her self-described klutziness is part of her charm. Wearing a stunning off-pink Dior gown when she won the best-actress Academy Award, in 2013, she tripped going up the stairs to the stage and fell headlong—into America's heart.
“It was one of the most embarrassing momen
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