Interview
View more issues: Sept 2003, Oct 2003, Dec 2003
Articles in Nov 2003 issue of Interview
- Sarah Drew: her character may troll the sidelines, but in her first big role she scores a touchdown
by Juan Morales - Rachael Yamagata: she ditched her band and found her voice
by Ray Rogers - Boy, oh, boy! Women take another look at the darker sex's closet
by Richard Dorment - Jonathan & Phellipe Haagensen: these boys from Brazil have nothing to hidethey bare all in their raw, gritty performances
by Katia Lund - Daniel Craig: many consider Sylvia Plath's suicide one of poetry's greatest losses. In a new film, this actor brings Plath's husband, the complex man behind the tragedy, to life
by Vince Passaro - Pink: Try This
by Dimitri Ehrlich - Hedi Slimane: Brassai's Paris and Larry Clark's Tulsa intersect and take on new dimensions in Hedi Slimane's brilliant vision of Berlin
by Ingrid Sischy - A fresh coat: a grand coat makes for a grand entranceor exit. Here we introduce the season's fiercest, finest coats, as modeled in tandem by actors Phellipe and Jonathan Haagensen, last seen stealing scenes in the unforgettable City of God
by Robert Forrest - Emily Grace: a diamond-in-the-rough role turned her into an art-house Cinderella
by Scott Lyle Cohen - The Desert Sessions: Volumes 9 & 10
by Jonathan Durbin - And the award goes to …: the Bennifer wedding aside, here's the latest proof that not all Hollywood marriages are doomed
- Jessica Biel: she's frightened of big spiders, but that hasn't stopped this actress from slashing her way to the top of the horror-film genre
by James Van Der Beek - Patricia Clarkson: she doesn't need a big budget or a brand-name leading man. This indie maverick makes movie magic all on her own
by Stanley Tucci - The Strokes: Room on Fire
by Stephen Mooallem - Shots in the dark: when the stuff dreams are made of turns into nightmares
by Graham Fuller - Hayden Christensen: he wrestled with the forces of darkness in Star Wars, and now he's taking on the dark side of journalism in Shattered Glass
by Richard Dorment - Make that truth and dare
by Rose Bothomley - Charles Busch: why let a little thing like gender stop you from becoming a movie diva?
by Michael Musto - Basement Jaxx: Kish Kash
by Michaelangelo Matos - Days between stations: thirty years ago, Randy Newman satirically sang, "it's lonely at the top." Today, this composer-performer tops his professionand it turns out he was right
by Greil Marcus - Veronica Guerin: the anti-Stephen Glass
by Scott Lyle Cohen - Better late than never
by Lisa Sensabaugh - A hero on the seven seas, ten sets of lovers, three tortured souls, and a lion of the fourth estate
- Outkast: Speakerboxxx/The Love Below
by Stephen Mooallem - All the dish: as if channeling the spirit of Virginia Woolf, a number of rising whisks are whipping up restaurants of their own
by Brad Goldfarb - Andre Leon Talley: the fashion guru gets to the bottom of what makes the fashion maven tick
by Andre Leon Talley - Halifax fights back!
- Jet: classic rock cutups who are bluesy, woozy, and Keith Richards-approved
by Dimitri Ehrlich - Ryan Adams: Rock 'n" Roll
by Ray Rogers - Letter from the editor: November 2003
by Ingrid Sischy - Bring on the night: in his new collection of photographs, interview contributing photographer Patrick McMullan reveals just how much more there was to the '80s than glitz, greed, and big hair
by Anita Sarko - Higher education gets a report card
- Bonnie McKee: the ingenue who turned her messed-up life into music
by Stephen Mooallem - The Thrills: So Much for the City
by Milena Selkirk - Lisa Kudrow: she's got one of the quickest wits in Hollywood, but in her new film, she's taking a walk on the somber side
by Sara Switzer - Our kind of subscription drive
by Patrice Fiorentino - DFA: the soon-to-be jukebox juggernauts with a notion for motion
by Matt Diehl - Beth Gibbons & Rustin Man: Out of Season
by Jarret McNeill - John Robinson: gunshots stilled the halls of Columbine High School four years ago. This month, Gus Van Sant's film Elephant makes us look again at our schools. Here's the actor who helps explain the madness
by Sara Switzer - Tom Guiry: he contends with Dirty Harry at work and spongebob at home
by Susan Johnston - Azure Ray: these ethereal southern rockers are scratching out their own niche
by Milena Selkirk - Fall's bright idea: why more and more men are turning to the bottleof bleach
by Richard Dorment - Nelly Furtado: she crossed more musical borders on her first album than most singers do in their whole careers. Now she has a new album that's once again full of surprises
by Stephen Mooallem