Aaron Taylor-Johnson in the Season’s Best Plaid Suits

Over time, the gray suit has become the second skin of businessmen around the world. But in the competitive waters of corporate culture, the new move is to be the man with big, bold, bright ideas that stand out. Here, ‘Kick-Ass 2‘ star Aaron Taylor-Johnson shows how a sharply tailored suit can put you at the top of the food chain.

September 2013

World’s Youngest Super-Dad
Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s résumé has the logic of a Dalí painting. He works infrequently. His roles are extreme. He’s basically the inverse of typecast, having played a pubescent John Lennon, a comic-book nerd turned vigilante (Kick-Ass, the first and second), a polyamorous—with Serena van der Woodsen and Tim Riggins!—pot tycoon in Oliver Stone’s Savages, and a poodle-ish Count Vronsky (Anna Karenina). But it’s the quality of the young Brit’s personal life that contrasts most surreally with the roles. At 23, he holes up in London nearly full-time (“I’m trying to do just one movie a year; that’d be a luxury,” he says) with his 46-year-old wife, artist/director Sam Taylor-Johnson, their two young daughters, and her two kids from a previous marriage. (She poached him directly from the set of the Lennon movie, and they swapped surnames.) Accordingly, he seems to regard his career with a middle-aged evenness, dismissing the awesome parts of being an actor: “Turning down roles just means more family.” As though, say, training to fight a freshly conceived, freshly pissed Godzilla (his next film) is simply a vacation from family life: “We were assigned a Marine who’s worked a bunch of movies. That was very new to me.” Same as running up a body count in Kick-Ass 2 alongside foulmouthed, super scandalizing 16-year-old Chloë Grace Moretz: “I mean, when I first worked with her, she was 12. So she’s older now, yes, but she was already way more mature than most teenagers, anyway.” Or filming threesome sex scenes with Blake Lively and Taylor Kitsch: “If you agree to do a sex scene, you have to be willing to not be awkward about it. C’mon! I don’t think of it as anything other than a dance, really. I don’t see that person. I don’t think of me being me.” Oh, what men will do to support their families.

—Alice Gregory

SOURCE

Leave a comment