âTitanicâ theme song makes me want to throw up, Kate Winslet says
And the Oscar for the most refreshingly candid actress goes to ... âTitanicâ star Kate Winslet!
Check out the above video of Winslet making the media rounds in advance of the re-release of âTitanic,â the mega-blockbuster that made her a household name and earned her an Academy Award nomination for best actress. Winslet had two options going into this interview. She could have done the whole Hollywood-smiley-face thing and gushed on and on about how the 1997 movie changed her life, about how much she loves it, about the on-screen magic she shared with co-star Leonardo DiCaprio ... blah, blah, blah.
Or Winslet could have told it like it is.
Winslet said that she feels âlike throwing upâ when she hears the soaring theme song of âTitanic.â In fact, she said, the signature Celine Dion ballad âhauntsâ her.
âI wish I could say, âOh listen everybody! Itâs the Celine Dion song!â But I donât. I just have to sit there, you know, kinda straight-faced, with a massive internal eye roll,â she said.
Itâs no wonder she feels that way: âMy Heart Will Go Onâ follows Winslet wherever she goes.
âEvery time I go into either some kind of a bar in a hotel where thereâs a live pianist or into a restaurant where they are changing their music according to who walks in the door ... itâs thrilling for people to âsurpriseâ me with the Celine Dion song,â she said.
Winslet is so entwined with the âTitanicâ theme song that, during a recent appearance on an Italian talk show, the host urged her to go onstage and sing it with the live band.
âIt rather haunts me,â she said of the song. âBless you, Celine, but it does rather haunt me.â
Winslet said a similar thing happens âevery time I get on any boat of any kind.â People start cracking jokes. She said she now makes it a practice to walk on board and tell everyone to let their jokes rip once and for all: âLets get them out of the way ... and move on.â
And then there are all the people who want her to walk to the front of the ship and re-create her famous pose, arms flung wide.
All the half-joking and half-griping aside, Winslet said, âI am able to talk about [âTitanicâ] with ... great joy.â
Winslet said sheâs thrilled at the re-release of âTitanicâ to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the shipâs demise. The British passenger ship -- said to be unsinkable -- hit an iceberg and sank on April 15, 1912, during its maiden voyage from England to New York City. More than 1,500 people died.
âTitanicâ uses this tragedy as the backdrop for the epic romance between Rose and Jack, making them one of the most beloved movie couples in Hollywood history.
Sheâs grateful, she said, that âa whole new generation of people are going to be able to experience it on the big screen.â Among them: her children, who will be seeing âTitanicâ for the first time.
âItâs great, it looks spectacular,â she said, adding that over time, the experience of watching âTitanicâ has become âcompletely different.â
Directed by James Cameron, âTitanicâ was nominated for 14 Oscars and won 11, including best picture, best director and best original song. (It seems as if everyone but DiCaprio was nominated for an Academy Award for the film.)
For years, âTitanicâ reigned as the single most expensive movie in Hollywood history -- and its most successful. It made more than $1.9 billion worldwide, according to Box Office Mojo. Those records were surpassed in 2009 by Cameronâs sci-fi epic, âAvatar,â which raked in $2.78 billion.
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