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Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio and Quentin Tarantino reflect on their struggles to make it in Hollywood

  • Pitt lived off McDonald’s meals, DiCaprio was a break dancer and Tarantino slept in his car while writing the script for Reservoir Dogs
  • Their film Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood considers the idea of which actors become blessed and the others who remain on the periphery

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Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio being filmed by director Quentin Tarantino on the set of Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood. Photo: Photo12
Tribune News Service

“I swear to God, I had to hide a tear,” Brad Pitt says, looking over at Quentin Tarantino and Leonardo DiCaprio, remembering the first time Tarantino played him the José Feliciano cover of California Dreamin’ on the set of Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood.

“Look,” Pitt continues. “I’m not ashamed to say it. I got a little misty.”

We’ve settled onto a couple of sofas inside a bungalow at the Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles, because where else would we meet to talk about Tarantino’s wistful elegy to a bygone Hollywood? As the song declares, it’s a winter’s day, though the (palm tree) leaves are green, not brown, and the sun setting just beyond the swimming pool is making the sky periwinkle blue, not a dismal grey.
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But otherwise, yeah, we’re California dreamin’, sitting back, talking about a movie that earned 10 Oscar nominations – three for Tarantino as a director, writer and producer, and acting nods for DiCaprio and Pitt – and also considering the good fortune that has graced their lives over the last few decades.

Pitt accepting the award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role for Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles, California, the US. Photo: AFP
Pitt accepting the award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role for Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles, California, the US. Photo: AFP
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“You know, when I first moved out here, it was the summer of ’86 and I didn’t know [expletive]-all about Los Angeles, other than what I’d seen on The Beverly Hillbillies and Dragnet,” Pitt says. “I landed in Burbank at a house I could crash at for a month or so. It was just me and a maid from Thailand who couldn’t speak English. Man, I was just so up for the adventure, and so excited when I’d drive by a studio where they make movies. It meant the world to me.

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