Hollywood legend John Malkovich visits Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan
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20:01 2017-10-10

Hollywood legend John Malkovich visited the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute today.

Museum’s Deputy Director briefed the guest on the history of the Armenian Genocide.

John Malkovich wrote a in the Museum’s guestbook: “A painful lesson”.

He later laid flowers at the eternal fire and paid tribute to the memory of the genocide victims with a moment of silence.

“I’m not sure whether I can say more than it has been said. This is just a painful lesson about what people do, what terrible thing they are able to do for absolutely stupid reasons. Everything is touching, I cannot separate any part of the history from the other. That was terrible”, John Malkovich told reporters, adding that he is shocked by what he has seen and heard.

About John Malkovich

John Gavin Malkovich was born in Christopher, Illinois, to Joe Anne (Choisser), who owned a local newspaper, and Daniel Leon Malkovich, a state conservation director. His paternal grandparents were Croatian. In 1976, Malkovich joined Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre, newly founded by his friend Gary Sinise. After that, it would take seven years before Malkovich would show up in New York and win an Obie in Sam Shepard’s play “True West”. In 1984, Malkovich would appear with Dustin Hoffman in the Broadway revival of “Death of a Salesman”, which would earn him an Emmy when it was made into a made-for-TV movie the next year. His big-screen debut would be as the blind lodger in Places in the Heart. (1984), which earned him an Academy Award Nomination for best supporting actor. Other films would follow, including The Killing Fields (1984) and The Glass Menagerie (1987), but he would be well remembered as Vicomte de Valmont in Dangerous Liaisons (1988). Playing against Michelle Pfeiffer and Glenn Close in a costume picture helped raise his standing in the industry. He would be cast as the psychotic political assassin in Clint Eastwood’s In the Line of Fire. (1993), for which he would be nominated for both the Academy Award and the Golden Globe. In 1994, Malkovich would portray the sinister Kurtz in the made-for-TV movie Heart of Darkness (1993), taking the story to Africa as it was originally written. Malkovich has periodically returned to Chicago to both act and direct.

Personal Quotes

“I did a million things. I worked in an office supply store, I drove a school bus, I painted houses, I worked for a Mexican landscape gardening company, picking out weeds. And generally when I was doing something it somehow took my interest. In fact, it must be a kind of shallowness. When I did office supplies mostly I thought about office supplies, and then when I got on the train I’d think about theatre, and then I would do theatre. But the next morning I would go in and, you know, reorganize the paper clips.” – On menial jobs he held before becoming a successful actor.”

“Film is about what appears to be. You can’t fake theater, but you can fake anything in movies. You can fake chemistry between people. You can fake sex, love, explosions, special effects, horror…”

“I’m drawn to a character with a lack of humanity. People give reasons for being cruel or sadistic but I think it is just a lack of humanity and concern for others. I think I’m good at them because I don’t like them. Audiences are attracted to them but I hate them. It’s strange.” – On why he enjoys playing evil characters.

“I wasn’t really raised to be the type of person to have doubts.”

“I’ve always felt that if you can’t make money as an actor, you`re either incredibly stupid or tragically unlucky.”

“I still don’t know if I made the right decision when I went into acting. I have driven school buses, sold egg rolls and painted houses, and I have often wondered what my life would have been like if I hadn’t gone into acting. Mind you, it’s a great life, going around pretending you’re other people and getting paid ridiculous sums of money for it.”

“I’m not cynical. I’m merely stating a fact. Most filmmakers’ entire body of knowledge is of other movies. When they describe things, they describe them in relation to other movies. That’s why we have so many cyclical movies that look like other movies. But I’m not cynical. I even go to some of those movies.”

“I probably have more female friends than any man I’ve ever met. What I like about them is that almost always they’re generally mentally tougher, and they’re better listeners, and they’re more capable of surviving things. And most of the women that I like have a haunted quality – they’re sort of like women who live in a haunted house all by themselves.”

Photos – Armenpress