From
sniper to chef, Bradley Cooper gets 'Burnt' in Michelin
quest
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[October 30, 2015] By
Piya Sinha-Roy
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - In
the past five years, Bradley Cooper has played handsome
leading men, a perm-coiffed 1970s cop, a sniper and a
rogue raccoon. But playing a chef on a quest for a
Michelin star in "Burnt" really turned the heat up on
the actor.
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"I had a background as a cook, and I thought I knew that
world, but it scared me to pull off that level of a chef, and if
something scares you, it's usually a sign that you should do
it," Cooper told Reuters.
In "Burnt," out in U.S. theaters Friday, Cooper plays Adam
Jones, a bad boy culinary genius led astray by the excesses of
success. He's given a chance to redeem himself of his drug-laced
past and earn his third Michelin star with his own London
restaurant.
To prepare for the role, Cooper, who speaks fluent French and
showcases it in the film, spent time with top chefs including
Marco Pierre White, Gordon Ramsey and Clare Smyth, the latter
with whom Cooper did a service with one night.
The actor said he learned the art of plating food, and
recognized how the "chef is a conductor" in a kitchen.
A chef's quest for three Michelin stars is not like an actor
striving for an Oscar, according to Cooper, who has been
nominated for four of the honors in the past three years and is
earning awards buzz again with this role.
"The Michelin star actually is much more influential than an
Oscar," Cooper said. "The Michelin guide will allow restaurants
to sink or swim, they live and die by these stars."
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Unlike Adam Jones, whose fame came at a young age, Cooper had to
wait until he was in his mid-30s for his breakout year in 2009 with
"The Hangover" franchise. He was named People's Sexiest Man Alive in
2011, earned Oscar nods for "Silver Linings Playbook," "American
Hustle" and "American Sniper," and voiced a leading role in Marvel's
"Guardians of the Galaxy."
At 40, Cooper is just getting into the swing of things. He's
producing CBS' "Limitless" series based on his 2011 film and wants
to direct one day, as well as star in a Western.
"He brings an attention to detail and preparation and intelligence
to everything he does," said "Burnt" director John Wells.
The director added with a laugh that Cooper "has been a really
talented actor fighting through how damn good-looking he is for a
number of years."
(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Alan Crosby)
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