CHRIS
Esquire US
|September 2025
Oscar-winning actor Chris Cooper is a master of his craft who brings a secret weapon to every role
Coat ($10,400), shirt ($1,090), and trousers ($1,600), Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello; Portugieser Automatic watch ($7,300) by IWC. Opposite: Coat ($5,100), trousers ($1,590), and loafers ($1,200) by Prada.
CHRIS COOPER WAS THE TALK OF THE Upper East Side. When he first moved to Manhattan in the mid-1970s to pursue acting, he brought his tools with him. And between auditions, he began to pick up home-renovation and handyman jobs-installing custom shelves, building a wet bar, putting in a kitchen, wallpapering, painting. Soon the quiet young man from Missouri with carpentry skills and a toolbox on wheels was a hot commodity in one of New York's toniest neighborhoods. "The thing that worked was I did one job at a time, from beginning to end, right to their satisfaction," says Cooper, pointing his finger at me for emphasis. "And my name spread like wildfire. Wildfire."
In the decades since, the now-seventy-four-year-old Cooper has built his career in much the same way-as a skilled craftsman who brings methodical preparation and total commitment to every project he takes on. That professionalism has long endeared him to directors, casting directors, and his fellow actors. But there's another rare quality about Cooper that resonates with both filmmakers and audiences. Onscreen, he has a certain ineffable intensity that grabs you no matter how deeply submerged he is in his character, how big the part is, or what kind of project he's in.
"The main thing that I felt about him as an actor is, this is a guy who can play a subtext," says the screenwriter and director John Sayles, who gave Cooper his first movie role, as a fiery union organizer in 1987's Matewan, and has subsequently worked with him on four more films. "He'll do the lines, and he'll do them well. And you'll feel like he's really connecting with the people in the scene with him. But there's something else going on there."
このストーリーは、Esquire US の September 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Esquire US からのその他のストーリー
Esquire US
The Meaning of Life
Advice, Wisdom, and a Few Hard Truths
41 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
HOW THE DUFFER BROTHERS CHANGED THE WORLD
IN 2016, A PAIR OF SCI-FI-OBSESSED TWINS CREATED A TV SHOW: STRANGER THINGS. IT REIGNITED CAREERS, MINTED NEW STARS, AND SET THE MOLD FOR THE STREAMING HIT. BUT THEY KNOW NONE OF THAT MATTERS IF THEY CAN'T STICK THE LANDING.
20 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
Sports On the Holidays
SHOULD YOU FIND YOURSELF AROUND SO-CALLED CIVILIZED discourse this holiday season, you'll likely encounter a well-worn idea about televised kickoffs and tip-offs on Thanksgiving and Christmas. Which is: They should not be happening.
3 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
Perfecting Preppy
At J. Press, Jack Carlson is working to keep things current while honing the small details that fans of the 123-year-old brand care about so deeply
1 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
The BEST New
IT’S SELDOM SILENT IN MIAMI. THE AIR IS FULL OF CRICKETS AND the mm-tss, mm-tss of house music and the staccato backfires of souped-up whips gunnin’ down the causeway. But in the neighborhood of Little River, another welcome sound can be heard: the oceanic murmur of folks enjoying themselves. You hear it when you approach Sunny’s, a vast steakhouse where inside and outside blend together, Miami style. Sunny’s is a party. Like, the best party in town. The vibes are impeccable, and the food is so good that you make that face between disbelief and disgust that somehow conveys ecstasy. This year at Esquire, we’ve seen dozens of new restau
14 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
Welcome to the CAMERONVERSE
On the eve of the new Avatar release, Esquire spent time with James Cameron in his fun-house studio, surrounded by some of his most famous and fearsome creations. We talked about technology, grief, loss, Al, and whether he can save the box office. Step this way!
7 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
BIRTH OF THE COOL
NOWADAYS, IT'S A NO-BRAINER THAT BOX-OFFICE STARS MAKE unbeatable ambassadors for fashion brands. It wasn't always that way. In the mid-1990s, when cell phones were good for phone calls and not much else, actors would show up for premieres but rarely for fashion shows—and never in an ad campaign.
2 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
DEPTH OF FEELING
Omega's much-loved technical diver, the Planet Ocean, just got a major refresh
1 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
Rian Johnson Can Make Anything Entertaining. (Really.)
With a third deliriously enjoyable entry in the pretzel-logic Knives Out franchise, Wake Up Dead Man, the writer-director defies expectations once again.
5 mins
Winter 2026
Esquire US
Animal Instinct
The Panthère de Cartier ring takes any look for a walk on the wild side
1 min
Winter 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

