Current:Home > reviewsPaul Giamatti, 2024 Oscars nominee for "The Holdovers" -WorldMoney
Paul Giamatti, 2024 Oscars nominee for "The Holdovers"
View
Date:2025-04-17 13:10:56
Difficult characters are a Paul Giamatti specialty. He's portrayed a cantankerous John Adams and a brutal U.S. Attorney in "Billions," and, in his latest movie, "The Holdovers," Giamatti plays Paul Hunham, a bitter teacher at a New England boarding school.
Hunham is in charge of the students with nowhere to go at Christmas, and he forms a bond with a rebellious kid and the school's grieving cook, played by Da'Vine Joy Randolph, whose deceased son attended the school.
People have described the movie as a "Scrooge-like Christmas story," with Giamatti being Scrooge. He thinks that's apt.
"It has a 'Christmas Carol' thing," Giamatti says. "I think all three of the characters are Scrooge a little bit. They all need to kind of move out of a place that they're stuck in."
The 56-year-old's performance has earned him a nomination for best actor at the Oscars, and Critics Choice and Golden Globe awards. After his win at the Golden Globes, Giamatti says he took his award to a burger place before going out to parties and "fancy things."
Giamatti's role in "The Holdovers" was written for him.
"There's times when I think, 'Why was this written specifically for me, a man who smells like fish that nobody likes?'" he says. "Then I look at it and go, 'I think I know.'"
One reason: Giamatti, raised in Connecticut, attended a prep school himself.
"Most of it was pretty familiar to me," he says of "The Holdovers." "I had teachers like this guy. I think those schools are different now, but I had teachers that were the sort of strict, disciplinarians like this."
He was not a troublemaker in school, although Giamatti admits he would cut classes to read in the library on his own. That bookishness ran in the family, as Giamatti's mother, Toni, was a teacher, and his dad, Bart, was once president of Yale University and, later, Major League Baseball Commissioner.
Giamatti didn't act professionally until after he'd graduated from college, although he "did it as an extracurricular thing" before then. He began his professional career in plays and, later, movies.
"I started making a very small living at it," he says. "But I was deceived into thinking, 'Oh, I can do this. This is not too bad.' So, I think that's when I went, 'I should just do this. This is what I love to do.'"
Giamatti had one scene in his very first movie, a slasher called "Past Midnight," which he says he's never watched. After that, he quickly landed small roles opposite some big names in major films like "My Best Friend's Wedding" and "Saving Private Ryan."
He has a biopic to thank for his big break. It was about Howard Stern, and Giamatti played his put-upon corporate handler, Kenny "pig vomit" Rushton.
"It was a fantastic role," says Giamatti. "It is an incredibly energetic and kind of crazy role with lots of latitude to do crazy things."
Giamatti is known for playing curmudgeons, and he doesn't mind his work being described that way.
"I often think that, really, I just play kind of complicated people. People with a complicated relationship to the world," he says. One such character was Miles Raymond, the boozy failed writer and wine snob in the Academy Award-winning movie "Sideways."
Outside of acting, Giamatti records a podcast called "Chinwag" and plays the theremin in his free time.
"I feel like every theremin player in the world is so insulted by what I do," he says while recording "Chinwag" for an audience at the S.F. Sketchfest. Giamatti explains on "Sunday Morning" that his interest in "strange things" and "weird topics," from UFOs to Big Foot and beyond, is why he does the podcast.
Looking back on all of the roles he's played so far, one of Giamatti's favorites was a part where he played no human at all. He played an orangutan, which, he says, "was really fun."
"And so I was completely transformed, which, for an actor, is great," he recalls. "I'd look in the mirror and I was gone."'
Giamatti says he cannot explain exactly why actors like himself may be drawn to "hiding" behind their roles.
"It's a very strange way of connecting with other people. It's very weird," he says. "But I actually think it's a good thing. I enjoy being weird. It's OK to be weird. Weird is all right."
Produced by Reid Orvedahl and Kay M. Lim. Edited by Carol A. Ross.
- In:
- Academy Awards
One of America's most recognized and experienced broadcast journalists, Lesley Stahl has been a 60 Minutes correspondent since 1991.
veryGood! (96)
Related
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- NFL free agency 2024: Top 20 free agents still available as draft day looms
- Unticketed passenger removed from Delta flight in Salt Lake City, police say
- Conviction reversed for alleged ringleader of plot to kidnap and kill Minnesota real estate agent
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Megan Fox's Call Her Daddy Bombshells: Brian Austin Green, Machine Gun Kelly & More
- New York attorney general disputes Trump's claim that he can't secure $464 million to post bond
- In Final Push to Get Climate Legislation Passed, Advocates Call for Bold Legislative Actions
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Kelly Ripa Says Mark Consuelos Kept Her Up All Night—But It's Not What You Think
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Georgia lawmakers approve income tax cuts for people and businesses
- Ramy Youssef constantly asks if jokes are harmful or helpful. He keeps telling them anyway
- Bruce Springsteen setlist 2024: Every song he sang at world tour relaunch in Phoenix
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Georgia lawmakers approve income tax cuts for people and businesses
- A Georgia prison warden was stabbed by an inmate, authorities say
- A 'new' star will appear in the night sky in the coming months, NASA says: How to see it
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
NFL free agency 2024: Top 20 free agents still available as draft day looms
Mercedes-Benz recalls 116,000 vehicles for fire risk: Here's which models are affected
Mercedes-Benz recalls 116,000 vehicles for fire risk: Here's which models are affected
Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
Judge says Michael Cohen may have committed perjury, refuses to end his probation early
Homelessness, affordable-housing shortage spark resurgence of single-room ‘micro-apartments’
Bruce Springsteen setlist 2024: Every song he sang at world tour relaunch in Phoenix