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Partner Site ![]() Elijah Central Projects
Site Info ElijahFan.com is a unnoficial fansite.
It's run by fans, for fans. We're not affiliated with Elijah Wood
himself or anyone connected with him. We're fans ONLY! |
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THE MYSTERIOUS MR. WOOD Elijah Wood was a child actor. But he's never been in rehab, and he hates the spotlight. Very wierd. By Patty Adams I'm walking around The Library, a swanky New York lounge, looking for the star of The Lord of The Rings: The Two Towers. It isn't too hard to find him: The indie-boy spiky brown hair and black Chuck Taylor sneakers make him stick out among the gray suits like a BeDazzled 'NSYNC fan at Ozzfest. Though Elijah Wood, 21, has been acting practically his whole life, he wasn't super famous until until last year's The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. The movie earned more than $800 million worldwide and 13 Oscar nominations. And Elijah even got his own action figure. But the moment we knew he was huge? When he shook hands with Ozzy on an episode of The Osbournes. "Come sit down," says Elijah, gesturing toward a squishy leather couch at the back of the room. "How are you?" he asks. My first impression: He's shy, polite, and much cuter in person. Unlike most stars, Elijah (Elwood to his friends - as in Elijah Wood) actually asks about me- where I'm from, what kind of music I like, and how long I've worked at ym.
KINDERGARTEN DROPOUT When he was in kindergarten, his mom enrolled Elijah in a local modeling and talent school. Six months later, they visited L.A. for a model and talent convention, and he signed with an agent who got him some commercials and TV guest spots. His mom promptly packed up and moved to L.A. with Elijah and his older brother, Zach (now a 28-year-old video game producer). His sister, Hannah (an aspiring poet), 19, and his dad followed later. His father bounced between jobs with Federal Express and an air-purification company, while his mom helped manage Elijah's acting career. I suggest to him that some people might think he's got one of those controlling movie-industry mothers, but Elijah says he doesn't. "Stage moms generally force their kids into it, and have much more of a vested interest in their kids' careers," he says, sitting up in his seat and sounding somewhat defensive. (I would have loved to talk to his mom, but she declined to be interviewed, as did the rest of his family and most of his close friends. Elijah seems protective of them - and vice versa.) I did get to talk to Courtney B. Vance, though, Elijah's co-star from 1993's The Adventrures of Huck Finn. He remembers Deborah Wood as a loving mom on the movie's rural Missisippi set. "People had a tendency to treat Jah Jah [his nickname for Elijah] as an adult because he was always so professional," says Courtney. "But Deborah was there for Elijah, keeping him balanced and making sure no one forgot he was an 11-year-old."
GROWING PAINS Elijah was homeschooled and tutored on-set, so he never had to deal with school bullies or trying to fit in. "I'm grateful," he says. "I've heard enough from my friends to know that I didn't miss out. High school is a pretty brutal battleground." The same could be said of a family going through divorce. Elijah's parents split up when he was 15, but he feels he wasn't traumatized. Why? Because, he says, he never had a strong relationship with his dad. Hmm. The plot thickens. "Generally, divorce has a negative impact - you're close with both your mom and your dad, and you don't want to see them part," Elijah says very unemotionally, almost mechanically (that self-defence thing seems to work for him). "But I always felt closer to my mother; she's the one who really raised me, so [the divorce] was fairly easy for me." He's recently said that even though his father was physically present, he wasn't emotionally, and he wasn't nurturing. Now his father lives back in Iowa, they rarely speak to each other. It's wierd that Elijah brushes off his parents' divorce as no big deal, and even stranger that he doesn't seem to care about not having a relationship with his father. But as he goes on talking about his dad, Elijah's eyes get a little glassy. You don't need yo br Freud to see there are some unresolved issues there. Maybe that's why he began taking on darker acting-roles as he got older. In 1998, he was a class-ditcher in the sci-fi thriller The Faculty. The following year he played a hip-hop wannabe who smoked, did drugs, and had alot of sex in Black and White. By the age of 18, he'd been in more than 15 movies and even had fan clubs. As far as Hollywood was concerned, though, he still hadn't found his career-defining role.
NOTHING LIKE POINTY EARS AND HAIRY FEET TO BRING A GUY FRIENDS AND FAME Frodo is his favorite role to date. "He starts out pure-hearted but the ring chips away at the innocence and purity of Frodo's soul in the second [movie]," says Elijah. "He starts to lose trust and faith in the people around him. Meanwhile, life offscreen was the exact opposite. "I don't think I've ever been so close with people I've worked with in my life," says Elijah. "I did alot of growing up; I probably aged 10 years," he jokes about his time filming LOTR. "But seriously, the person who went to New Zealand and the person who left there are significantly different." Filming in New Zealand kind of became Elijah's college experience: He joined a fraternity of sort with the guys on-set, and it was the first time he'd lived away from his mom for more than a few months. "I created a whole new life there," says Elijah. "I had a car, a house, and I did my own shopping. So it was far beyond just making a movie." The hobbits - Elijah, Sean Astin, Dominic Monaghan and Billy Boyd - because inseperable. They hung out, watched movies, hit the pubs. "We didn't get tired of each other," Elijah says. "That's a real testament to our relationships." As are their matching tatoos. The nine actors whose characters made up the Fellowship of the Ring each inked themselves with the symbol for nine in Elvish, one of the movie's fictitious languages. Did it hurt? "Like hell!" he says, wincing. "It's like a hot, searing blade sawing into your skin. I'd do it again, though."
THE SECRETS OF MAMA'S BOY It isn't just the home cooking that keeps him there. Elijah and his mom are close. "I wake up in the morning, go to Mom's house, have a cup of coffee and chat," he says. "She likes the same music I do, so she'll have the White Stripes on. How cool is that?" Very, but it must get a bit weird to live so nearby - what if he brought a girl back to his place? "I've never done that," he says. "I don't know how it would work, but my mom would probably be pretty cool."
TOO SWEET TO KISS AND TELL He doesn't have a problem talking about romance in general, though. "Anything is suddenly romantic when you're with someone you care about," he says. "Even something as simple as going out and getting take-away and watching a movie. Romance isn't about buying flowers or having a picnic. It's the little gestures - like a massage or an unexpected kiss." So what kind of girl makes him gaga whhile eating lo mein out of a carton? "I really enjoy women who have a strong sense of themselves, who aren't afraid to speak their mind," says Elijah. "On a superficial level, I like girls with dark hair - I'm a sucker for that. And I prefer accents. If a girl has an English, French, Italian or German accent, I go crazy. (Franka is German and has dark hair. Coincidence?)
VOTED LEAST LIKELY TO PARTY Maybe that's why he surrounds himself with people who love to talk, like Kelly and Jack. His sister Hannah - who met Jack at some concert - introduced them and they just clicked. "The Osbournes are insane, but I love them," says Elijah. Another one of Elijah's loudmouth friends is MTV's resident tattoed rocker Iann Robinson. They met when Iann interviewed Elijah last year, and realized they both liked music, video games, and horror films. "Elijah's just like me, only skinnier and more famous," says Iann. "When Elijah's in New York, we often stay up till 4 or 5 a.m. watching movies. A few weeks ago we watched The Extorcist III. He'd never seen it, and I was like, 'Dude, it's the best movie ever.'" Iann says Elijah often crashes at his place if it's late. "He doesn't pull that 'I'm a movie star so you must do everything for me' crap," says Iann. Most young people are arrogant by nature, so if you're talented and have money on top of that, you're usually an ass to a spectacular degree. But not Elijah. We can talk about politics, family problems, and music." Speaking of music, Elijah played DJ for Mandy Moore while filming Try Seventeen. "We both really like the Strokes and Björk, but he also turned me on to so much music I don't think I would've listened to on my own," says Mandy. Elijah, a big fan of Smashing Pumpkins, Radiohead, and the Beach Boys, says his latest obsession is Songs for the Deaf by Queens of the Stone Age (he even brought it to our cover shoot). He claims he owns between 1,200 and 1,500 CDs. "I know, it's insane," says Elijah. "I can't possibly listen to all of them." Well, the first step is admitting you have a problem, right? After our music tangent, Elijah checks his watch and politely asks how much longer we'll be. (What, am I boring him?) After he says thanks for the trek to meet him, he tells me, "I'm into girls, video games, and music. See, I'm like any other guy my age."
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