Editing Interview:2020/10/20 “Cock!”: Nicolas Cage and Marilyn Manson in Conversation

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MANSON: You could not contain yourself from laughing through the whole end of it.
 
MANSON: You could not contain yourself from laughing through the whole end of it.
  
CAGE: That’s what I’m doing to keep myself amused. By the way, is it okay to talk about [[Lindsay Usich|your wedding]]? I thought your wedding was beautiful because that’s what you were doing while you were in lockdown. I got to see a little of it on FaceTime, and I thought it was very beautiful, the way you sang “Love Me Tender.”
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CAGE: That’s what I’m doing to keep myself amused. By the way, is it okay to talk about your wedding? I thought your wedding was beautiful because that’s what you were doing while you were in lockdown. I got to see a little of it on FaceTime, and I thought it was very beautiful, the way you sang “Love Me Tender.”
  
 
MANSON: You were the only guest at the wedding on FaceTime. And you definitely cock blocked me on singing “Love Me Tender,” because you mentioned you were going to sing it to us, but I had set up a karaoke machine to do it myself. We both sang it in the end, and your version was even more beautiful.
 
MANSON: You were the only guest at the wedding on FaceTime. And you definitely cock blocked me on singing “Love Me Tender,” because you mentioned you were going to sing it to us, but I had set up a karaoke machine to do it myself. We both sang it in the end, and your version was even more beautiful.
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CAGE: The last time I gambled was about 30 years ago. I was in the Bahamas, and I walked into a casino and felt like I had my mojo with me, like nothing could go wrong. My game was roulette. I went in with $200, and I didn’t miss a number, so much so that even the lady spinning the wheel said, “Nothing sweeter than a repeater.” In 20 minutes I turned $200 into $20,000, so I went and found an orphanage in the Bahamas, met all the kids and the headmistress, and said, “This is for you.” I put the 20 grand in her hand, walked away, and never gambled again, because if I did, it would ruin the power of that moment.
 
CAGE: The last time I gambled was about 30 years ago. I was in the Bahamas, and I walked into a casino and felt like I had my mojo with me, like nothing could go wrong. My game was roulette. I went in with $200, and I didn’t miss a number, so much so that even the lady spinning the wheel said, “Nothing sweeter than a repeater.” In 20 minutes I turned $200 into $20,000, so I went and found an orphanage in the Bahamas, met all the kids and the headmistress, and said, “This is for you.” I put the 20 grand in her hand, walked away, and never gambled again, because if I did, it would ruin the power of that moment.
 
MANSON: I’ve never heard that story.
 
 
CAGE: It’s true. And you can’t live in Vegas if you’re a gambler. I’ve seen it destroy people. Of all the addictions, I think it might be the worst.
 
 
MANSON: I find it hard to define addiction or obsession, or something that consumes you like a ghost. You’ve talked a lot about magic and numbers and fate and coincidence and different elements of the esoteric or occult or whatever word people want to use to identify something that’s unidentifiable. You’ve mentioned a shamanic element to approaching acting.
 
 
CAGE: What is magic but imagination combined with will to create effects in the natural world? Anything can be a work of magic. A great speech can be a work of magic. A scientific discovery can be a work of magic, because it takes imagination to come up with the solution.
 
 
MANSON: We live in a world where artists don’t lead the way in the traditional Greek sense, when artists dictated the way things go. Religion and politics have taken over, and that drives me. Does it drive you to keep doing what you’re doing out of frustration for the stupidity in the world?
 
 
CAGE: I don’t have a mission or an altruistic need to help or guide or create chaos. It’s more a mechanism within me that has to express something, because if I don’t, I can become very self-destructive. I have to get it out in a productive, creative way, and that’s where creating characters and expressing whatever’s happening in my psyche has been enormously therapeutic.
 
 
MANSON: That’s the mission I meant.
 
 
CAGE: But Manson, having said that, I do think that art can be like medicine. It gives people joy and nightmares, breaks up the monotony, even helps us get out of our own selves and take a break from whatever crap is going on. It goes both ways.
 
 
MANSON: But, more importantly, it’s good for your mental well-being.
 
 
CAGE: Exactly, which is why this period of time when so many of us can’t work—it’s been new.
 
 
MANSON: I’ve never taken a vacation. Have you?
 
 
CAGE: No, I haven’t. What I love about you is that you have so many talents. Your paintings are magnificent. I love the one you did of me, and I loved what your ingredients were, that you used tattoo ink and an ''Alice in Wonderland'' paint set. Who does that? That’s inspiring.
 
 
MANSON: We have the ability to step outside of ourselves and talk to each other as regular human beings, despite the fact that I adored everything you’d done before I met you. It’s a very difficult relationship to find in Hollywood. Do you find it difficult to get along with other people? You put your heart and soul into what you’re doing. Do you bring it home with you?
 
 
CAGE: My character in ''Color Out of Space'' was oscillating all over the place in terms of his emotions. He went from being a kind and gentle father to an abusive and terrifying father within a matter of seconds. That kind of a character, if you’re really trying to tap into the psyche of it so that you’re not faking it, can start to take over. I was not in the best mood when I was making that movie, so I would just go to my room and try to stay away from people. Red wine has been helpful in that when I finish a movie and need a weekend to take the character out of me, it helps blur the line so that I can start to forget about it. But you have to be careful, because that’s a slippery slope.
 
 
MANSON: Do you only drink Coppola wine?
 
 
CAGE: I like his wine. He has a beautiful wine called Inglenook. It’s very buttery and I like that. The other one I like is Rubicon. But I’m primarily interested in Italian wines. There was a time when I was collecting French, Californian, and Italian. Now, if I’m going to have red wine, I’ll drink an Italian, some great Barolos, some great Super Tuscans, some Sassicaia, Masseto, and Solaia.
 
 
MANSON: I’m going to try to tie together wine and romance. When you’re playing a romantic role, is it difficult to not actually fall in love with someone who you’re supposed to be in love with in a movie?
 
 
CAGE: It was when I was younger. I had a very powerful crush on Deborah Foreman when we were do- ing ''Valley Girl''. I felt a lot for Bridget Fonda when we were doing ''It Could Happen to You'', and for Penélope [Cruz] when we were doing ''Captain Corelli’s Mandolin''. But as I got older, I no longer was interested in that. I was all about the work.
 
 
MANSON: Is it difficult to be romantic without having romantic feelings? That’s a tough emotion to fake.
 
 
CAGE: Well, you feel it, and that’s the weird thing about filmmaking. Everybody is so close. There’s a bubble over the whole set. And then, as soon as the movie is wrapped, no one talks to anybody anymore. It’s almost like we’re embarrassed that we were ever that close, like there was something artificial about it and now we don’t know what to do with our feelings. But I’ve remained friendly with most of my costars, and sure, you get feelings and use those feelings in the work, but you know that those feelings will be poison if you bring them home to your wife.
 
 
MANSON: Does that scramble up your reality?
 
 
CAGE: My reality with women has been mystifying ever since I was born. I didn’t have any sisters, and my mother did the best she could, but she wasn’t really in a state of well-being where she could be there for me, so I never really had female energy growing up. I had two older brothers, and my father was the caretaker, so I had a lot of masculine energy around me. Women have always been the most beautiful and the most amazing and the most mystifying and the most compelling of creations, so I tend to have a vulnerability toward them.
 
 
MANSON: What was it like working with Werner Herzog on ''Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans''?
 
 
CAGE: I’m not going to put anything on record in terms of what I did or didn’t experience, but I did buy the most haunted mansion in New Orleans, which is known as the LaLaurie Mansion. We had a big party, Werner came over, and, at the time, I owned a two-headed snake, which I had spent a lot of money on and subsequently donated to the Audubon Zoo. But I brought it out, and everybody was freaked out by it. Werner said, “Now, Nicolas, we have to put that into the movie.” I said, “No, I’m not putting it into the movie because this is personal.”So he filled the movie with snakes, iguanas, and alligators, but he never got the two-headed snake. But anyway, I was completely dry back then. I hadn’t been drinking for, like, four years, so I call that my impressionistic film performance, because I had to recall from deep in the recesses of my memory those decadent days I may have had years ago, when I was 26, to find that feeling of what it was like to be on all those stimulants.
 
 
MANSON: It’s so convincing, but it doesn’t come across when you watch the film that you’re watching Nicolas Cage. That goes for pretty much every role I’ve ever seen you in. You are never the same character.
 
 
CAGE: Thank you. I would like to be known that I thought your version of “[[The End (The Doors song)|The End]]” by the Doors is probably the most powerful thing I’ve heard in the last ten years, so thank you for that.
 
 
MANSON: It was great letting you get a sentence in, Nick.
 
 
<center>———</center>
 
 
''Grooming:''Pamela Warden
 
 
''Fashion Assistants:'' Abi Arcinas and Bin X. Nguyen
 
  
 
[[Category:Interviews]]
 
[[Category:Interviews]]

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