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Secy SEXY How

"I have always said to myself, I will never stop being the observer; I don't want to be the one observed," said actress Penélope Cruz. "How am I perceived? That doesn't matter." She's a movie star who's spent three decades in the spotlight, but Cruz says she's not interested in her own image. 

 


 

Correspondent Holly Williams asked, "Has that helped you hang on to your sanity as a celebrity?" "Yes, and in terms of not believing either the great things that are said about you, [or] not believing the bad things, just going in your path, little by little, as a student of life, and that's what I consider myself." Since making her film debut as a teenager, in 1992's "Jamón, Jamón," Cruz (now 47) has been dubbed a "screen goddess" by critics, with three Academy Award nominations, including one win. She's the only actress from Spain to take home an Oscar. penelope-cruz-1280.jpg Actress Penélope Cruz. CBS News Williams asked, "Over the last few years, you've made fewer Hollywood films and more films here in Spain. Is that a creative, artistic preference?" "It's also because this is where I'm raising my kids," Cruz replied. "Of course, it 

 

 



 

 

 

 

makes me pass on a lot of things, and these years that are so important, I don't want to miss anything with them growing up." Her new film, "Parallel Mothers," is all about motherhood, with some jarring twists. It's already won Cruz the best actress award at the Venice Film Festival. It's Cruz's seventh 

collaboration with Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, who wrote the role for her. "Even if one of them was a cameo, but I count all of them. And I hope many more," she said.  parallel-mothers-cruz-almodovar-sony-pictures-classics-1280.jpg Penélope Cruz and director Pedro Almodóvar filming "Parallel Mothers." El Deseo D.A. S.L.U./Photo by Iglesias Mas, courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics He calls Cruz his muse. She told us it's the most important creative relationship of her career. Both of them, she said, are obsessive about their work. "Is that part of what binds you together? You're 

obsessive about the work, both of you?" asked Williams. "Yeah, I think so," Cruz replied. "You have to go all the way, and of course you have the safety net of knowing that it's a fiction, but have to really, really go there with no fear. But he's always there to pick me up, literally pick me up from the floor one time in one of these scenes, and I just could not come out of the scene. And when that happens, it is scary, but it's also a great feeling of, 'Okay, we really went to a place where we were supposed to go to tell this story.'" To watch a trailer or "Parallel Mothers," click on the video player below:

"I have always said to myself, I will never stop being the observer; I don't want to be the one observed," said actress Penélope Cruz. "How am I perceived? That doesn't matter." She's a movie star who's spent three decades in the spotlight, but Cruz says she's not interested in her own image. 

 


 

Correspondent Holly Williams asked, "Has that helped you hang on to your sanity as a celebrity?" "Yes, and in terms of not believing either the great things that are said about you, [or] not believing the bad things, just going in your path, little by little, as a student of life, and that's what I consider myself." Since making her film debut as a teenager, in 1992's "Jamón, Jamón," Cruz (now 47) has been dubbed a "screen goddess" by critics, with three Academy Award nominations, including one win. She's the only actress from Spain to take home an Oscar. penelope-cruz-1280.jpg Actress Penélope Cruz. CBS News Williams asked, "Over the last few years, you've made fewer Hollywood films and more films here in Spain. Is that a creative, artistic preference?" "It's also because this is where I'm raising my kids," Cruz replied. "Of course, it 

 

 



 

 

 

 

makes me pass on a lot of things, and these years that are so important, I don't want to miss anything with them growing up." Her new film, "Parallel Mothers," is all about motherhood, with some jarring twists. It's already won Cruz the best actress award at the Venice Film Festival. It's Cruz's seventh 

collaboration with Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, who wrote the role for her. "Even if one of them was a cameo, but I count all of them. And I hope many more," she said.  parallel-mothers-cruz-almodovar-sony-pictures-classics-1280.jpg Penélope Cruz and director Pedro Almodóvar filming "Parallel Mothers." El Deseo D.A. S.L.U./Photo by Iglesias Mas, courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics He calls Cruz his muse. She told us it's the most important creative relationship of her career. Both of them, she said, are obsessive about their work. "Is that part of what binds you together? You're 

obsessive about the work, both of you?" asked Williams. "Yeah, I think so," Cruz replied. "You have to go all the way, and of course you have the safety net of knowing that it's a fiction, but have to really, really go there with no fear. But he's always there to pick me up, literally pick me up from the floor one time in one of these scenes, and I just could not come out of the scene. And when that happens, it is scary, but it's also a great feeling of, 'Okay, we really went to a place where we were supposed to go to tell this story.'" To watch a trailer or "Parallel Mothers," click on the video player below:

"I have always said to myself, I will never stop being the observer; I don't want to be the one observed," said actress Penélope Cruz. "How am I perceived? That doesn't matter." She's a movie star who's spent three decades in the spotlight, but Cruz says she's not interested in her own image. 

 


 

Correspondent Holly Williams asked, "Has that helped you hang on to your sanity as a celebrity?" "Yes, and in terms of not believing either the great things that are said about you, [or] not believing the bad things, just going in your path, little by little, as a student of life, and that's what I consider myself." Since making her film debut as a teenager, in 1992's "Jamón, Jamón," Cruz (now 47) has been dubbed a "screen goddess" by critics, with three Academy Award nominations, including one win. She's the only actress from Spain to take home an Oscar. penelope-cruz-1280.jpg Actress Penélope Cruz. CBS News Williams asked, "Over the last few years, you've made fewer Hollywood films and more films here in Spain. Is that a creative, artistic preference?" "It's also because this is where I'm raising my kids," Cruz replied. "Of course, it 

 

 



 

 

 

 

makes me pass on a lot of things, and these years that are so important, I don't want to miss anything with them growing up." Her new film, "Parallel Mothers," is all about motherhood, with some jarring twists. It's already won Cruz the best actress award at the Venice Film Festival. It's Cruz's seventh 

collaboration with Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, who wrote the role for her. "Even if one of them was a cameo, but I count all of them. And I hope many more," she said.  parallel-mothers-cruz-almodovar-sony-pictures-classics-1280.jpg Penélope Cruz and director Pedro Almodóvar filming "Parallel Mothers." El Deseo D.A. S.L.U./Photo by Iglesias Mas, courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics He calls Cruz his muse. She told us it's the most important creative relationship of her career. Both of them, she said, are obsessive about their work. "Is that part of what binds you together? You're 

obsessive about the work, both of you?" asked Williams. "Yeah, I think so," Cruz replied. "You have to go all the way, and of course you have the safety net of knowing that it's a fiction, but have to really, really go there with no fear. But he's always there to pick me up, literally pick me up from the floor one time in one of these scenes, and I just could not come out of the scene. And when that happens, it is scary, but it's also a great feeling of, 'Okay, we really went to a place where we were supposed to go to tell this story.'" To watch a trailer or "Parallel Mothers," click on the video player below:

"I have always said to myself, I will never stop being the observer; I don't want to be the one observed," said actress Penélope Cruz. "How am I perceived? That doesn't matter." She's a movie star who's spent three decades in the spotlight, but Cruz says she's not interested in her own image. 

 


 

Correspondent Holly Williams asked, "Has that helped you hang on to your sanity as a celebrity?" "Yes, and in terms of not believing either the great things that are said about you, [or] not believing the bad things, just going in your path, little by little, as a student of life, and that's what I consider myself." Since making her film debut as a teenager, in 1992's "Jamón, Jamón," Cruz (now 47) has been dubbed a "screen goddess" by critics, with three Academy Award nominations, including one win. She's the only actress from Spain to take home an Oscar. penelope-cruz-1280.jpg Actress Penélope Cruz. CBS News Williams asked, "Over the last few years, you've made fewer Hollywood films and more films here in Spain. Is that a creative, artistic preference?" "It's also because this is where I'm raising my kids," Cruz replied. "Of course, it 

 

 



 

 

 

 

makes me pass on a lot of things, and these years that are so important, I don't want to miss anything with them growing up." Her new film, "Parallel Mothers," is all about motherhood, with some jarring twists. It's already won Cruz the best actress award at the Venice Film Festival. It's Cruz's seventh 

collaboration with Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, who wrote the role for her. "Even if one of them was a cameo, but I count all of them. And I hope many more," she said.  parallel-mothers-cruz-almodovar-sony-pictures-classics-1280.jpg Penélope Cruz and director Pedro Almodóvar filming "Parallel Mothers." El Deseo D.A. S.L.U./Photo by Iglesias Mas, courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics He calls Cruz his muse. She told us it's the most important creative relationship of her career. Both of them, she said, are obsessive about their work. "Is that part of what binds you together? You're 

obsessive about the work, both of you?" asked Williams. "Yeah, I think so," Cruz replied. "You have to go all the way, and of course you have the safety net of knowing that it's a fiction, but have to really, really go there with no fear. But he's always there to pick me up, literally pick me up from the floor one time in one of these scenes, and I just could not come out of the scene. And when that happens, it is scary, but it's also a great feeling of, 'Okay, we really went to a place where we were supposed to go to tell this story.'" To watch a trailer or "Parallel Mothers," click on the video player below:

"I have always said to myself, I will never stop being the observer; I don't want to be the one observed," said actress Penélope Cruz. "How am I perceived? That doesn't matter." She's a movie star who's spent three decades in the spotlight, but Cruz says she's not interested in her own image. 

 


 

Correspondent Holly Williams asked, "Has that helped you hang on to your sanity as a celebrity?" "Yes, and in terms of not believing either the great things that are said about you, [or] not believing the bad things, just going in your path, little by little, as a student of life, and that's what I consider myself." Since making her film debut as a teenager, in 1992's "Jamón, Jamón," Cruz (now 47) has been dubbed a "screen goddess" by critics, with three Academy Award nominations, including one win. She's the only actress from Spain to take home an Oscar. penelope-cruz-1280.jpg Actress Penélope Cruz. CBS News Williams asked, "Over the last few years, you've made fewer Hollywood films and more films here in Spain. Is that a creative, artistic preference?" "It's also because this is where I'm raising my kids," Cruz replied. "Of course, it 

 

 



 

 

 

 

makes me pass on a lot of things, and these years that are so important, I don't want to miss anything with them growing up." Her new film, "Parallel Mothers," is all about motherhood, with some jarring twists. It's already won Cruz the best actress award at the Venice Film Festival. It's Cruz's seventh 

collaboration with Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, who wrote the role for her. "Even if one of them was a cameo, but I count all of them. And I hope many more," she said.  parallel-mothers-cruz-almodovar-sony-pictures-classics-1280.jpg Penélope Cruz and director Pedro Almodóvar filming "Parallel Mothers." El Deseo D.A. S.L.U./Photo by Iglesias Mas, courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics He calls Cruz his muse. She told us it's the most important creative relationship of her career. Both of them, she said, are obsessive about their work. "Is that part of what binds you together? You're 

obsessive about the work, both of you?" asked Williams. "Yeah, I think so," Cruz replied. "You have to go all the way, and of course you have the safety net of knowing that it's a fiction, but have to really, really go there with no fear. But he's always there to pick me up, literally pick me up from the floor one time in one of these scenes, and I just could not come out of the scene. And when that happens, it is scary, but it's also a great feeling of, 'Okay, we really went to a place where we were supposed to go to tell this story.'" To watch a trailer or "Parallel Mothers," click on the video player below:

"I have always said to myself, I will never stop being the observer; I don't want to be the one observed," said actress Penélope Cruz. "How am I perceived? That doesn't matter." She's a movie star who's spent three decades in the spotlight, but Cruz says she's not interested in her own image. 

 


 

Correspondent Holly Williams asked, "Has that helped you hang on to your sanity as a celebrity?" "Yes, and in terms of not believing either the great things that are said about you, [or] not believing the bad things, just going in your path, little by little, as a student of life, and that's what I consider myself." Since making her film debut as a teenager, in 1992's "Jamón, Jamón," Cruz (now 47) has been dubbed a "screen goddess" by critics, with three Academy Award nominations, including one win. She's the only actress from Spain to take home an Oscar. penelope-cruz-1280.jpg Actress Penélope Cruz. CBS News Williams asked, "Over the last few years, you've made fewer Hollywood films and more films here in Spain. Is that a creative, artistic preference?" "It's also because this is where I'm raising my kids," Cruz replied. "Of course, it 

 

 



 

 

 

 

makes me pass on a lot of things, and these years that are so important, I don't want to miss anything with them growing up." Her new film, "Parallel Mothers," is all about motherhood, with some jarring twists. It's already won Cruz the best actress award at the Venice Film Festival. It's Cruz's seventh 

collaboration with Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, who wrote the role for her. "Even if one of them was a cameo, but I count all of them. And I hope many more," she said.  parallel-mothers-cruz-almodovar-sony-pictures-classics-1280.jpg Penélope Cruz and director Pedro Almodóvar filming "Parallel Mothers." El Deseo D.A. S.L.U./Photo by Iglesias Mas, courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics He calls Cruz his muse. She told us it's the most important creative relationship of her career. Both of them, she said, are obsessive about their work. "Is that part of what binds you together? You're 

obsessive about the work, both of you?" asked Williams. "Yeah, I think so," Cruz replied. "You have to go all the way, and of course you have the safety net of knowing that it's a fiction, but have to really, really go there with no fear. But he's always there to pick me up, literally pick me up from the floor one time in one of these scenes, and I just could not come out of the scene. And when that happens, it is scary, but it's also a great feeling of, 'Okay, we really went to a place where we were supposed to go to tell this story.'" To watch a trailer or "Parallel Mothers," click on the video player below:

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