What does beauty have to do with winning a tennis grand slam,
or empowering communities, or tracking jaguars through the wild heart of South America?
Hi there, I'm Isabella Rossellini, and I'm back with season two of This Is Not A Beauty podcast,
where I uncover stories that get to the heart of how beauty is woven through every facet of our lives.
Listen to This Is Not A Beauty podcast from L'Oreal Group on your favorite podcast platform.
From the New York Times, this is The Interview.
I'm David Marchese.
In so many of Sir Anthony Hopkins' greatest performances,
he's able to suggest captivating hidden depths to his characters.
That's true whether he's playing a murderer like Hannibal Lecter or a kindly doctor
like he did in The Elephant Man.
There's always a sense that these men are thinking and feeling things that,
for whatever reason, they're keeping to themselves.
The same can no longer be said for Hopkins.
In his new autobiography, We Did Okay, Kid,
the 87-year-old shares the details of his rough youth in Wales,
his painful estrangement from his only child,
a daughter from his first marriage, and his rise to Hollywood success.
The book also reveals a man who isn't content to merely recount what happened and when.
He's also given a lot of thought to the big questions, the why of it all, and what it all means.