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American actress and fashion icon Chloë Sevigny is one of Hollywood's boldest and most gifted actors. Known for her many indie film roles, Sevigny has garnered much critical acclaim since her 1995 debut, most recently a Golden Globe for her performance on HBO's Big Love. Sevigny is also widely revered for her sense of style, and recently launched her fourth collection for the hip NY label Opening Ceremony.

Chloë Sevigny stars
as transgender
assassin Mia in the upcoming
British miniseries Hit & Miss.
Premieres May 22 on Sky Atlantic!

News | Info | Photos | Official Site

Chloë Sevigny’s Resort 2012
collection for Opening Ceremony
is in stores now! Get it while
you can!

News | Info | Photos | Official Site

Merry Christmas, guys (and gals)! Chloë Sevigny is featured in the January 2011 issue of US Playboy.

In the issue, Chloë answers Playboy‘s 20 Questions and is also featured in two photos. Although the pics are few, the interview is quite terrific (no, really!), with some great, honest quotations from Chloë regarding e.g. the new season of Big Love, growing up, The Brown Bunny and its infamous Chloë scene, the annual Emmy snubs and winning her first ever Golden Globe, and the 1994 article in The New Yorker that crowned her the “It girl”. The interview under the cut + a couple of scans in our gallery.

New Photo Albums:

Magazines in 2011 > ‘Playboy’ (US) January 2011 Scans


20Q: Chloë Sevigny

The ‘Big Love’ star and indie darling talks about what happens when you bad-mouth your hit show, the downside of sex scenes and how she’s getting tired of boyfriends who text instead of show up.

Q1: You’re known for your Oscar-nominated performance as the girlfriend of transgendered Hilary Swank in Boys Don’t Cry, and last year you won a Golden Globe for playing a sour, scheming polygamist fundamentalist Mormon wife on Big Love. You front a hip fashion line, you’re a much-photographed club scenester and you’ve made risky indie films that sometimes involve nudity. But no matter what your accomplishments, some people can’t get over that scene in the 2003 flick The Brown Bunny in which you give writer-director Vincent Gallo a blow job.
“What’s happened with that is all very complicated. There are a lot of emotions. I’ll probably have to go to therapy at some point. But I love Vincent. The film is tragic and beautiful, and I’m proud of it and my performance. I’m sad that people think one way of the movie, but what can you do? I’ve done many explicit sex scenes, but I’m not that interested in doing any more. I’m more self-aware now and wouldn’t be able to be as free, so why even do it?”

Q2: Sex has been among the more fascinating aspects of Big Love, on which you, Jeanne Tripplehorn and Ginnifer Goodwin play wives of Viagra-popping Mormon businessman and political aspirant Bill Paxton. Why has Paxton exposed more skin on the show than any of you three?
“Bill likes to get his kit off, and he looks great. The first season, my character was aggressive in bed, but that changed by the second and third seasons, and there was no sex on season four. I don’t know why, and I was confused by that. This season, aside from some stuff with the teen characters, sex is still on the back burner. And although I have done nudity on the show, the other girls won’t do topless. I don’t want to be the show’s Samantha, like on Sex and the City — the only woman who’ll do nudity. So I refused to do any more and there was a lot of back-and-forth about it.

Q3: The show’s plots have always been packed with rivalries, feuds, betrayals and backbiting. Does any of that spill over offscreen?
“I wish I could do scenes with Jeanne Tripplehorn and Ginnifer Goodwin all the time. We’re really tight, and it’s always us against the director or the other actors. Bill is professional, very boyish, very charming. I think being just ‘the stupid actor’ on the show is sometimes hard for him because he’s not directing, and he’s a great director. His movie Frailty is a spooky psychological thriller.

Q4: You once told a reporter that a previous season of Big Love was “awful” and played like a “telenovela.” Now that the show is in its last season, do you regret that?
“I got into a lot of trouble. It was a huge thing on the Internet. Yeah, I got a little talking-to. [laughs] I don’t want to bite the hand that feeds me. I loved being on the show; I love my character and my co-stars. The whole experience has been great. I just felt it was a weaker season than others. I shouldn’t have said it. I don’t want to offend anybody.”

Q5: What can you say about the upcoming season to give hope to fans who may have agreed with you?
“The writers are concentrating a lot more this year on the politics within the family. For viewers who keep asking why Bill and the family keep getting away with everything they do, this season the characters start having to face consequences. Since HBO said that viewers respond to how conservative my character is, she becomes stricter and more conservative. They’re dressing me like Hillary Clinton in the 1980s.”

Q6: Has the show’s polyamorous theme made you reevaluate real-life relationships?
“Just being around Jeanne Tripplehorn has, because she has a beautiful marriage, a wonderful husband and child. That’s something I aspire to after seeing someone with that lifestyle. I want a guy who is masculine, good with his hands and able to build stuff and who has survival skills. Facial hair is a bing turn-on. Most of the kids I hang out with in New York are hipster arty types, but I like a stronger, more physically imposing man — like a lumberjack. I’m also into a little hair pulling. I like boys to be aggressive and allow me to be a little aggressive back.”

Q7: What type of guys have you been seeing recently?
“I’m dating, but I’m starting to feel a little discouraged, actually. I’ve been texting for a year with a couple of guys, without even going on a date with them. The other day I got a text from a boy, but it wasn’t hot. I mean, if you’re going to text me every day, you haven’t seen me for months and you’re trying to seduce me, you’d better spice up that text and make it more exciting than ‘How was your day? I hope you’re having a beautiful one.’ Sadly, I haven’t been doing a lot of kissing lately.”

Q8: If a guy isn’t living up to your standards of seduction, how do you heat things up?
“It’s so stupid, but putting on red lipstick, having a martini and getting a flirt on always makes me feel great. I have crushes on everybody. I’m always flirting with the personal assistants on the Big Love set, boys and girls. I’m open to all ages, all economic backgrounds at this point. I’ve kissed only two actors in my whole life. People would hate me so much more if I dated a celebrity.”

Q9: What’s your pick for the most sensual place to make love?
“Nature is the best aphrodisiac. I get turned on in the woods or on the shore, like at a beach house, or where you’re isolated. Risky situations don’t excite me at all, though. I feel inhibited. It’s harder for me to get excited and let go if I’m afraid of someone hearing me or if there’s a roommate nearby.”

Q10: Having grown up in conservative, wealthy Darien, Connecticut, how would an edgy indie-movie icon advise would-be cool teens growing up in similar environments?
“The kids I grew up with were into going to Ivy League schooles and playing field hockey and lacrosse. I’d encourage poor children like me to go into Manhattan and broaden their horizons as much as possible, which is what I did as a teenager.”

Q11: What were you leaving behind when you went on those weekend escapes?
“I was kind of a depressed teenager. I pierced my nose, and my parents thought, Why is she desecrating her body? But they encouraged me to go into Manhattan, make my own clothes, dress the way I wanted and do all the weirdo things I was into. My mom found my bong, which she and my father confiscated and strongly discouraged. There was regular teenage drama at home but nothing extraordinary. I was into hippie culture, but I was pretty responsible and open with my parents.”

Q12: How big into hippiedom were you?
“Enough to have a Volkswagen bus decorated with batik curtains, which is so embarrassing. I’d drive it with my girlfriends up to Burlington, Vermont for the weekend. Looking back, I can’t believe my dad let me do that, but he was so sweet, always saying there is much more good in the world than bad. I was pretty smart and could read people easily, but I had friends who were attracted to skeevy bad boys. I’d always say, ‘No, he’s not coming in the bus with us. He’s got to sleep outside.’ I was the voice of reason.”

Q13: Did drugs play much of a role in your liberation?
“It wasn’t like I was a big druggie; it was just kind of a side thing, something that went hand in hand with me falling in with that crowd, the rejects. I don’t think I ever bought anything; it was just sort of there.”

Were you interested in acting early on?
“I went to summer theater camp every year and was in a lot of plays with Topher Grace, who is four years younger than I am and also from Darien. He says he has tapes of those shows, which makes sense because he is very organized and type A. When I was eight or nine I did a couple of local commercials and catalog modeling. Acting was something I aspired to, but in high school I lost all aspiration. I took drama, but I didn’t get along with the teacher. Senior year they were doing West Side Story, and I had a shaved head at the time so I auditioned to play one of the gang boys. I didn’t get a part, so I was just like, whatever.”

Q15: In a 1994 Jay McInerney New Yorker article you were crowned the “It girl” and “the coolest girl in the world.” Did having style help or hurt?
“I guess it helped me more than anything else. I’m glad I grew up during the last vestige of cool, in the 1990s, when everything wasn’t blogged and on the Interwebs, when things were more on the downlow and underground. I guess I am stylish, but I would rather have people come up and say ‘I really liked your performance in this or that’ than ‘I really like the way you dress.’ That irks me. Anyway, the term It girl gets used too loosely.”

Q16: How do you mean?
“Today the term is used to describe, say, Peaches Geldof — a girl who doesn’t do anything but is just sort of around. The original It girl was the 1920s movie star Clara Bow; then, in the 1960s, with Edie Sedgwick and Warhol, It girls turned into socialites, ladies of leisure — people who had ‘it’ just for being ‘fabulous.’ But Edie was just a rich drug addict, and when I got called the It girl everyone thought I was that too. I looked like a junkie because it was the 1990s and grunge was the fashion. But I felt I was doing stuff, not just being a socialite.”

Q17: Did any interesting sexual propositions come your way after playing Hilary Swank’s girlfriend in Boys Don’t Cry or Michelle Williams’s motorcycle-riding lover in If These Walls Could Talk 2?
“By the time of Boys Don’t Cry I had already spoken in interviews about my sexual experimenting as a young person. It sure seems that I have a pretty strong lesbian fan base because when I’m out, everybody responds to those films. I get letters. Last year I got a weird note on my car: ‘If you’re bored, me too. Let’s meet. Your new neighbor,’ signed with the person’s initials. It’s kind of creepy. Does this person see me in my rented backyard, smoking and lonely?”

Q18: What vibe do you get from fans when you meet them?
“I always feel nobody likes me. When I see people on the street looking at me, I get really shy, as if they think I look ugly, but then it always turns out positive. I used to be paranoid I was going to get heckled, and of course that’s never happened. Last year I was at a fun dance party in a downtown L.A. club where it’s drinking and dancing and you’re sweaty and hot. These kids I thought were cool superfans wanted to take pictures with me, but they turned around and sold the photos. I never saw the pictures, but people told me I looked drunk. The next day, everyone was calling me, like, ‘What were you doing last night? You’re on TMZ.’ “

Q19: What about your colleagues in the industry? Do they like you?
“I’ve never even been nominated for an Emmy, goddamn it. There’s no justice. [laughs] Actually, the Golden Globe felt like a little bit of justice, a real confidence booster, having never felt embraced by the industry. It wasn’t a Sally Field thing — ‘You like me! You really like me!’ — more like, ‘Yeah, good. I showed them.’ “

Q20: Now that Big Love is coming to an end, what’s next on your professional and personal agendas?
“I can get back to work in pictures. I have a new indie movie with Jena Malone, called The Wait, that I think could go places. On the personal side, I’d like to find someone to procreate with — as sexy as that sounds. If you’re out and about and fit the description, come up and say hi. I won’t bite. Well, maybe a little, if you’re lucky.”

One Response to “Chloë featured in US ‘Playboy’ January 2011”

  1. Comment posted by Chloë Sevigny For Playboy Magazine January 2011 | LA Fashion Trends on February 20th, 2011 at 6:43 am

    [...] no nudie shots. Chloe’s over it, frankly, according to the Playboy interview accompanying the image featured above, traumatized as she was to some degree by the fall-out following her infamous [...]

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Events:
» May 15: Hit & Miss London Premiere
» May 7: Women Behind Bars Special Reading
» Mar 26: 2012 Jeffrey Fashion Cares
» Mar 9-13: Film on the Rocks Yao Noi

Magazines:
» Attitude (UK): Summer
  inside feature » photos, scans
» Elle (UK): June
  1-page feature » photos, scans
» Guardian Weekend (UK): May 12
  inside feature » photos, scans
» Interview (US): February
  inside feature » photos, scans
» New York Magazine (US): May 7
  cover + inside feature » photos, scans
» Psychologies (UK): June
  cover + inside feature » photos, scans
» Radio Times (UK): May 19-25
  inside feature » photos, scans
» Spectrum (UK): May 6
  inside feature » photos, scans
» The Daily Telegraph (UK): May 12
  inside feature » photos, scans
» The Independent Magazine (UK): April 24
  cover + inside feature » photos, scans
» The Sunday Times (UK): May 13
  inside feature » photos, scans

Radio:
» May 14: Richard Bacon (BBC Radio 5 Live)
» May 14: Woman's Hour (BBC Radio 4)

Television:
» May 22: Hit & Miss (Sky Atlantic)
  Episode 1 - May 22
  Episode 2 - TBA
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  Episode 4 - TBA
  Episode 5 - TBA
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» May 14: Boulton & Co (Sky News)
» Apr 18: Law & Order: SVU (NBC)

Active & Upcoming Projects

Television: American Horror Story (2012)
Season 2 premieres October.
Genre: Drama, Horror
Network: FX
Role: Shelly the Nymphomaniac
News | Info | IMDb | Official Site | Photos

Television: Big Love (2006-2011)
Series complete.
Genre: Drama, Comedy
Network: HBO
Role: Nicolette "Nicki" Grant
News | Info | IMDb | Official Site | Photos

Television: Hit & Miss (2012)
Premieres May 22.
Genre: Drama, Miniseries
Network: Sky Atlantic
Role: Mia
News | Info | IMDb | Official Site | Photos

Television: Law & Order: SVU (2012)
Episode 13.18 aired Apr 18.
Genre: Crime, Drama
Network: NBC
Role: Christine Hartwell (S13E18 guest)
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Television: Lizzie Borden (2012)
Announced.
Genre: Drama, Miniseries
Network: HBO
Role: Lizzie Borden
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Film: Barry Munday (2010)
Out on Region 1 / US DVD.
Director: Chris D'Arienzo
Genre: Comedy
Role: Jennifer Farley
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Film: Black Dog, Red Dog (2012)
Currently filming in NY.
Director: NYU students
Genre: Drama
Role: Ali
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Film: Innocence (2012)
In pre-production.
Director: Hilary Brougher
Genre: Drama
Role: Pamela (rumored)
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Film: Lovelace (2012)
In post-production.
Director: Rob Epstein, Jeffrey Friedman
Genre: Bio, Drama
Role: Rebecca
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Film: Mr. Nice (2010)
Out on Region 2 / UK DVD.
Director: Bernard Rose
Genre: Bio, Drama, Comedy
Role: Judy Marks
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Film: Panarea (2013)
In pre-production.
Director: Adam Bhala Lough
Genre: Drama
Role: Linnea
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Film: The Wait (TBA)
In post-production.
Director: M. Blash
Genre: Drama
Role: Emma
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Other Projects:
• Documentary: Beautiful Darling (2010)
• Short: All Flowers in Time (2010)
• Short: Fight for Your Right Revisited (2011)
• Theater: Black Mirror (2011)

• CS for Opening Ceremony: Resort 2012
• TOMBOY: Spring/Summer 2012

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