Scott Eastwood
RISING SON IN THE LONGEST RIDE, BASED ON THE NICHOLAS SPARKS NOVEL, SCOTT EASTWOOD STEPS OUT OF THE SHADOW OF HIS FATHER, CLINT, AND GALLOPS ONTO THE A LIST AS A COWBOY IN LOVE. By Jeff Labrecque
AT ONE VALENTINEâS DAY screening of Fifty Shades of Grey in suburban Philadelphia, the loudest reaction rippled through the theater before the ïŹlm even started. Several women who came to see Christian Grey literally squealed at the bare chest of the bull-riding cowboy in the steamy trailer for The Longest Ride (out April 10), the latest Nicholas Sparks romance. The actorâs name is never mentioned in the two-minute preview, but more than one middle-aged member of the audience shout-whispered, âHe looks just like Clint Eastwood.â Scott Eastwood does look a lot like his father. Itâs the ïŹrst thing Sparks and director George Tillman Jr. (Soul Food) noticed when the 29-year-old marched in wearing boots and a cowboy hat to audition for the role of a champion bull rider who falls in love with a sophisticated art student (Britt Robertson). âI thought it was Clint Eastwood coming in to audition,â Tillman says. But the ïŹlmmakers want to be clear: Scott
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| EW.COM April 10, 2015
won the role on his own. âHe doesnât have a lot of airs about him,â says Sparks. âI often say that the actors who are in these ïŹlms select themselves, and in this case, that was absolutely certain.â Eastwood grew up around horses, and he loved the rodeo as a kid. Plus, heâs an adrenaline junkie, so the thought of riding an angry 1,600-pound beast actually sounded like fun. Before ïŹlming began, he headed to the Moorpark, Calif., ranch of the ïŹlmâs stunt coordinator, Troy Brown, with a case of beer and a determination to
Like FATHER Like SON
learn the ropes. âThey were like, âUnder absolutely no circumstances can you ride the bull,ââ Eastwood says, though he made Brown promise to let him try after ïŹlming was completed. âSo I did as much training as you could do, around the bull, sitting on the bullâjust not out-the-gate riding it.â Youâd think Eastwood would avoid playing a cowboy, simply to minimize comparisons to his father, who launched to fame in the 1960s in Westerns such as The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. And early in his career, Scott tried to steer clear of Clintâs shadow, working under his given name, Scott Reeves. (His mother, Jacelyn Reeves, was a flight attendant who had a relationship with Clint in the 1980s.) âI was sort of averse to trying to be âEastwood,ââ he says. âI wanted to do it myself, but as you navigate the business, it doesnât matter what your last name is if you canât audition. So ïŹnally I said, âThis is stupid. Itâs Eastwood.ââ Heâs currently filming Oliver Stoneâs Edward Snowden movie, playing an NSA boss, and he has been cast in Warner Bros.â Suicide Squad, but heâs not plotting some ïŹve-year career plan, nor is he afraid to say no. He declined to screen-test for Fifty Shades after he learned heâd have to commit before reading the script. âI thought the book was entertaining,â he says. âBut I didnât want to get dangling in that sort of situation. No thanks.â He does say yes to adventure, though. In February, long after the movie wrapped, he phoned Brown with a question: Now can I ride the bull? Brown agreed. âWith 99 percent of people, I wouldâve gone, âHell, theyâll never call,â â Brown says. âBut I knew Scott would.â When the day came, âI only lasted about two and a half seconds [on the bull],â Eastwood says, âbut it was pretty badass.â â
Clint Eastwood on the â60s TV series Rawhide and Scott Eastwood in The Longest Ride