Audio By Carbonatix
George Clooney has been immersed in the glitz and glamour of Hollywood for decades, but he didn’t want the same for his children – and for good reason.
The two-time Oscar winner, who lives on a farm in France with his wife Amal and 8-year-old twins, Alexander and Ella, shared his joys and concerns regarding his family life in an interview with Esquire, published Monday.
“I was worried about raising our kids in LA, in the culture of Hollywood,” Clooney said.
“I felt like they were never going to get a fair shake at life. France – they kind of don’t give a sh*t about fame,” the 64-year-old continued.
“I don’t want them to be walking around worried about paparazzi. I don’t want them being compared to somebody else’s famous kids,” he added.
In fact, Clooney doesn’t even want his children to be compared to him.
“The only thing I feel lucky about is that I’m so much older that the idea that my son would be compared to me is pretty unlikely, because by the time he actually will have done anything, I’m gonna be gumming my bread,” Clooney said humorously.
The actor and director’s big onscreen break came in his 30s when he starred as a series regular in the medical drama “ER,” portraying Dr. Doug Ross between 1994 and 1999.
Clooney, who admitted that he did drugs in the 1980s and that it’s “hard to not make a mistake that could really – not ruin your career but certainly stall it,” said that is it likely for the best that he garnered fame later in life.
“I think probably, again, because I was older, I’d sort of done all my dumb things when nobody knew who I was,” he reflected.
The movie star, who is a major Democratic donor, is also a recognised name in the world of politics.
Last year, Clooney penned a New York Times op-ed calling for then-US President Joe Biden to bow out of the presidential race.
It came after Biden reportedly no longer recognised Clooney when he saw him at a June 2024 fundraiser. The op-ed marked a watershed moment, with Biden later exiting the race.
Clooney said he wrote the piece “because I’d been a personal witness to things.” However, he is unlikely to pen such thoughts again. “I think people have heard enough from me.”
Latest Stories
-
UK social media campaigners among five denied US visas
4 hours -
BP sells stake in motor oil arm Castrol for $6bn
5 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Asante Kotoko beat Eleven Wonders to go third
7 hours -
Algerian law declares France’s colonisation a crime
7 hours -
Soldiers remove rival Mamprusi Chief Seidu Abagre from Bawku following Otumfuo mediation
7 hours -
Analysis: How GoldBod’s operations led to a $214 million loss at the BoG
7 hours -
Why Extending Ghana’s Presidential Term from Four to Five Years Is Not in the Interest of Ghanaians
7 hours -
Young sanitation diplomat urges children to lead cleanliness drive
8 hours -
Energy sector shortfall persists; to balloon to US$1.10bn in 2026 – IMF
8 hours -
Gov’t secures $30m Chinese grant for new university of science and technology in Damongo
8 hours -
Education Minister commends St. Peter’s SHS for exiting double-track, pledges infrastructure support
8 hours -
ECG to be privatised – IMF reveals in Staff Report
8 hours -
Accra Unbuntu Lions Club impacts 500,000 Ghanaians in 5 years of social service
8 hours -
VALCO Board holds maiden strategic meeting with management
8 hours -
African Festival: Nollywood star Tony Umez joins Nkrumah musical in Accra
9 hours
