When the Julia Roberts and George Clooney-starring “Ticket to Paradise” opens in theaters later this year, it will mark Roberts’ first time leading a romantic comedy in just over 20 years. The genre made Roberts a global superstar in the 1990s, from her Oscar-nominated performance in “Pretty Women” to rom-com classics “My Best Friend’s Wedding” and “Notting Hill,” among others. One would have to go all the way back to 2001’s “American Sweethearts” for the last traditional rom-com led by Roberts (she had small roles in the ensemble rom-coms “Valentine’s Day” and “Mother’s Day,” plus turns in romance dramas like “Eat Pray Love” and romance crime movies such as “Duplicity”).
Why the two-decade wait for another Roberts rom-com? As the actor recently told The New York Times, she was never purposefully avoiding the genre that made her a superstar. Quite the contrary. Roberts said her extended hiatus from the rom-com genre was not her choice but a result of there never being a script or idea good enough.
“People sometimes misconstrue the amount of time that’s gone by that I haven’t done a romantic comedy as my not wanting to do one,” Roberts said. “If I had read something that I thought was that ‘Notting Hill’ level of writing or ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’ level of madcap fun, I would do it. They didn’t exist until this movie that I just did that Ol Parker wrote and directed.”
The Ol Parker film is “Ticket to Paradise,” which pairs Roberts opposite longtime friend and collaborator Clooney. The film almost became yet another one of Roberts’ rejected rom-coms because she thought it would only work well with Clooney starring opposite her. This was before Clooney came on board.
“Lo and behold, George felt it only worked with me. Somehow we were both able to do it, and off we went,” Roberts said about returning to the genre.
When asked by The Times if she stayed away from romantic comedies for 20 years because “there wasn’t a single good script, not one,” Roberts answered, “Yeah.”
“Here’s the thing: If I’d thought something was good enough, I would have done it,” Roberts said. “But I also had three kids in the last 18 years. That raises the bar even more because then it’s not only ‘Is this material good?’ It’s also the math equation of my husband’s work schedule and the kids’ school schedule and summer vacation. It’s not just, ‘Oh, I think I want to do this.’ I have a sense of great pride in being home with my family and considering myself a homemaker.”
Roberts added, “As they get older, and particularly with my daughter, I do have a sense of responsibility for showing my children that I can be creative and that it’s meaningful to me — so meaningful that for periods of time I will choose to focus on that almost more than my family, which has been hard for me to come to terms with.”
One of the biggest rumors to emerge out of Roberts’ tenure as a rom-com icon was that her trademark smile was insured for $30 million. The Oscar winner shut down that speculation in her New York Times interview, saying, “No. What am I insuring it against? How would you do that?… I mean, if my smile was insured, there would be someone at my house on a nightly basis saying, ‘You need to floss longer.’”
“Ticket to Paradise” is set for release on October 21 from Universal Pictures.
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