Wednesday, November 23, 2011

CURTAIN CALL : Ploy Jindachote


CURTAIN CALL

It’s been two years since 2magazine last caught up with Ploy Jindachote, in which time the young actress has made headway towards that ultimate goal: breaking Hollywood. Tina Hsiao


Are you here for the 2magazine interview?” I hear unawares as I sit in the pleasant environs of Face Bangkok on Sukhumvit 38, well prepared for the hour-long wait that usually precedes a celebrity interview. I stare at my laptop clock, amazed it’s only two minutes after the scheduled appointment time. Looking back up I see Ploy (whose name means ‘gem’ in Thai), extending a hand and apologizing for her tardiness – or lack of it. “You don’t mind if I put on makeup while we talk?” she asks, before amiably launching into a monologue about her power outage ordeals at home.

It’s been over two years since 2magazine last caught up with Ploy, and since that time her career has blossomed. In 2010 she was involved with three feature films, including the thriller Shadows alongside Academy Award-winner William Hurt, Cary Elwes (of Robin Hood: Men in Tights and Saw fame) and home-grown talent Paula Taylor. “During the filming,” she says, “William Hurt would give me pointers, and together we’d run through the scene before shooting.”

Ploy says her skills were constantly praised by Hurt, and after production wrapped up, she decided to enroll in an intensive acting course at the Lee Strasberg Theater & Film Institute in Los Angeles. Thanks to her past work as well as glowing recommendations from Cary Elwes, she was able to bypass the stringent admissions process for the three month course.

Upon returning to Thailand, she started filming Friday Killer, a Thai action/drama movie in which she played the role of a police officer, starring alongside top comedian Thep Pongam. Ploy then went on to film The Impossible in Phuket, a thriller based on the 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami. In the movie, slated to be released at the end of the year, she plays the role of a Thai volunteer translator, alongside Ewan McGregor and Naomi Watts.

Ploy admits to her initial nervousness working with the Hollywood darlings; “At first I was intimidated, but at the end of the day we’re just all doing our jobs and they’re all very nice and easy to work with.”I ask her thoughts on the differences between Thai...International film sets are very different in the way they are run, but being in unfamiliar environments gives me opportunities to learn.”

In addition to her silver-screen credits, Ploy is currently in discussions with a certain five-star hotel in Bangkok to set up a wine bar at the property during Thailand’s ‘winter’ months, starting at the end of this year. The planned bar reflects her newfound interest in sparkling wines, which were introduced to her by her business and life partner.

Do we have to talk about him?” she asks with a smile. She knows we do, and without much prompting, reveals that ‘OJ’ is not in the entertainment industry. “He noticed me on a plane to Macau about four years ago,” she says. “He must have told his sister about me, because a few years later she approached me while I was out with friends and asked me for my number.”

Despite objections from her friends, Ploy obliged. “I usually never give out my number,” she says, “but she was so adorable, and clearly loved her brother.” She giggles and exclaims, “It took him about a year to call after that!” But about one year ago, he finally did, and they have been together ever since. She adds, “If I see myself with someone for a long time, it’s him.”

I’ve never had an acting role which came close to the way
I am in real life… I’m not the goody two shoes
I portray on-screen”

When she’s not working, Ploy is a selfproclaimed homebody, preferring to stay at home on school nights, with the exception of visiting Mellow restaurant and bar on Thonglor, whose owner she’s friends with, or catching the latest movie at the cinemas (her all-time favorite actor is Robert De Niro). Now in her late twenties, she claims “I get tired easily now, so I don’t go out as much as I used to.” On most weekends she leaves for nearby seaside destinations like Hua Hin and Pattaya with her high school friends and her boyfriend. She also likes to scuba dive, having been to the Similan Islands in Thailand, Sipadan in Malaysia, and Palau in the Pacific Ocean. “I try to take a diving trip at least once a year,” she says. “This year I want to go to the Red Sea.”

Ploy is very down to earth and curious, at times turning the tables and firing off questions at me. Much of her grounded nature she credits to friends (who tease her about her fame), and her tight-knit family, especially her mother. When she started landing acting jobs in high school, Ploy started to lose interest in attending classes, thinking she was able to earn an income without studying. “If it wasn’t for my mother,” she says, “the industry would’ve gotten to my head.” Her mother instilled the importance of education, even putting a halt to Ploy’s career for one-and-a-half years in preparation for her college entrance exams. The sacrifice paid off, and Ploy was accepted into Chulalongkorn, one of the country’s top universities.

My mom wanted me to have a solid degree,” she explains about her business accounting degree. “I wasn’t too keen at first, but I did it because it was one of the few things I could do for my mom.” She goes on to describe her mother as a tough woman, saying, “She’s pushy,” before quickly adding with a smile, “but in a good way! She wants me to commit a hundred percent to whatever I do, and to do it well. It’s not enough to just pass or finish something – I have to succeed and be good at it.”

It seems Ploy’s mother’s teachings have paid dividends, as her recent breakthrough into Hollywood has already prompted several more offers. But despite a string of recent roles, there’s one part yet to come Ploy’s way: “I’ve never had an acting role which came close to the way I am in real life,” she says, mischievously adding, “I’m not the goody two shoes I portray on-screen.”


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Source : 2 Magazine



TEEN DREAM : Jirantanin 'Guzjung' Pitakporntrakul

TEEN DREAM...

Barely 18 and with a leading role against Hollywood veteran Kevin Bacon already on her list of accomplishments, here’s a young Thai actress who’s tipped for even bigger things…Richard Mcleish

The notion of the child star has become acultural cliche but all celebrities have their origins, humble or otherwise. Jirantanin ‘Guzjung’ Pitakporntrakul is a newcomer on the big-screen scene who came to prominence in last year’s Elephant White feature film, which grabbed local headlines when veteran Hollywood player Kevin Bacon came on board the project. She landed the lead female role and launched a movie career that stands on a precipitous juncture of chance, talent and fair wind. But Guzjung gets plenty more than Warhol’s 15 minutes of screen fame in Elephant White, so perhaps a star has been born.

The youthful actress graced us in the cosy surrounds of Italian eatery Grossi at InterContinental Bangkok. Her entourage consisted of her best friend, shopping buddy and general partner in crime – her mum. She spoke in clean, articulate English, and translated freely for her mum, who was consulted many times.

“I wanted to become an actress since I was three or four years old,” she said in her bubbly tone over an orange juice. She realized language would be an integral part of her career and learned English at Ekamai International School, which prepared her for her first feature.

Elephant White was shot entirely in English, which proved a challenge for Guzjung. “It was fun but it was my first movie and quite hard because I needed to speak English, so I practised with my acting coach a lot. Acting is already difficult, but it becomes even harder if I have to speak English.” Directed by the man behind Ong Bak and Chocolate, Prachya Pinkaew, the film tells the story of a mercenary hired to take out a gang of Thai sex traffickers by a father whose daughter – Guzung’s character – has been kidnapped.

Guzjung spoke highly of Kevin Bacon, her co-star of Elephant White. At such a tender age, role models can be integral to navigating the streets of Hollywood successfully. “Kevin Bacon is very nice, not rude like some superstars,” she said. “He is like an ordinary person and was very friendly to everyone on set. For example, at lunch the crew would try to get him food, but he would tell them he can line up like everyone else. Many famous people have people to take care of them but he says he can look after himself. I want to be like that.”

Movies for her are the ultimate career path, she said. Off the back of Elephant White, she went on to a larger-budget feature. “Trade of Innocents [starring Mira Sorvino and Dermot Mulroney], my second film, was a bigger production but I didn’t have such a big role. Everyone was so nice on set. There was less pressure because my role wasn’t that big, so people weren’t so focused on me.” The film is set for imminent release in US cinemas.

It seems that despite – or rather, because of – Guzjung’s young age, she has already fallen victim to type casting, as the film once again deals with the subject of sex trafficking on the Asian subcontinent. This time the plot revolves around a couple who, after the loss of their daughter, set out to rescue girls caught up in the sex trade.

To her credit, the movie’s director, Christopher Bassette, and American casting agents were baffled at how she managed to perfect the Vietnamese, Khmer and English accents required of her role in just two days. After one audition she was hired immediately, with the director proclaiming that casting would be complete if he could only find five more of her in different ages. Unbeknown to Guzjung at the time, it later transpired that she was the highest paid Thai actress on set.

So, given Guzjung’s burgeoning Hollywood credentials, who does she want to work with in front of the camera? “There are so many great people in Hollywood... I particularly want to work with Leighton Meester from Gossip Girl. She looks so mean, but so cute. Her acting is perfect.”

As to whether Guzjung’s own lifestyle matches that of a real-life Gossip Girl, she says she can’t complain. She works for cable TV as a VJ to help pay the bills, but still has plenty of time for the rest of teenage life. “I go shopping when I wake up, around lunch time. I mostly have breakfast at noon. I can be lazy…”

When she’s not shopping, working or eating, she likes to see her friends. “I’m not [officially] old enough to go out partying yet, but sometimes I go anyway, mostly to Ekamai or Thonglor, maybe once a month. I go to Tease at J-Avenue sometimes. It’s a private club that fits about 15 people. It’s chill. I don’t see my guy friends often because they don’t go shopping. So I go to a club or party to meet them.”

Although deeply entrenched in the indulgences of teendom, she showed maturity beyond her years when talking about other pursuits. “I love to make money. Anything that can make money, I will do in my free time. We have a family business that at first sold clothes on the internet. Right now we are planning to open a boutique store.”

And our time was up. So the daughtermother duo was off to Siam Paragon for some more shopping. Guzjung is living the teen dream for now. Only time will tell if the starlet’s luminosity will be more enduring than her contagious cuteness.

I love to make money.
Anything that can make money,
I will do in my free time”

Guzjung is represented by Asia Sports and Entertainment Associates (ASEA)
(www.angelandbearproductions.com)

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Source: 2 Magazine , August 2011 Issue 58