Friday, May 14, 2010

Full Transcript from ''Oprah'' TV Show

Full Transcript from ''Oprah''

ANNOUNCER: Today, all new. For the first time, the world­wide Twi­light phe­nom­e­non comes to “Oprah.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): They are the hottest thing on the planet. Robert Pat­tin­son. You know there are all these rumors about the two of you dat­ing. Is it true? Kris­ten Stew­art, Tay­lor Laut­ner, and Dakota Fan­ning. We sent them knock­ing on doors.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Hello.

GROUP (GIRLS): (scream)

FATHER: Oh, my god.

GIRL’S MOTHER: He’s so hot.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Walk­ing into your houses.

GROUP (GIRLS): (scream)

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Why grown women say this has revved up their love lives.

ANNOUNCER: Next.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Okay, So I just want to say this. Unless you’ve been liv­ing under a rock, you already know this, but it is really the hottest thing going on in the world right now. It defines the word “phe­nom­e­non.” Eighty-five mil­lion books sold. Can you believe that?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Eighty-five mil­lion books, which so excites me that peo­ple are read­ing. Box-office records just shat­tered, crushed, and it has unleashed a world­wide yearn­ing for romance. View­ers tell us that it’s lit­er­ally changed their rela­tion­ships. Moms are bond­ing with their daugh­ters. Wives are recon­nect­ing with their husbands.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): “The Twi­light Saga” is more than a best-selling sen­sa­tion or billion-dollar blockbuster.

GROUP (FANS): Edward. Edward. Edward.

FAN: We’ve been here since 4 A.M.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): It is the phe­nom­e­non that sparked a frenzy around the world. “Twilight’s” explo­sive pop­u­lar­ity is giv­ing Beat­le­ma­nia a run for its money, turn­ing its stars–Robert Pat­tin­son, Kris­ten Stew­art, and Tay­lor Lautner–into the most pop­u­lar actors on our planet.

KRISTEN STEWART (AS BELLA SWAN): Kiss me.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): This epic love story has grown women swoon­ing like schoolgirls.

STEPHANIE (41): I’m a mother of two, a cor­po­rate attor­ney, and a closet “Twi­light” junkie.

WANDA (45): It just makes me want to ooh ahh.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): They are yearn­ing for every detail of the tor­tured romance between a sexy vam­pire, his girl­friend, and a were­wolf with abs of steel. For those who have a thirst for action, pas­sion, and heart-stopping suspense…

KRISTEN STEWART (AS BELLA SWAN): No, Edward. Don’t.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): …”Twilight’s” vam­pires and were­wolves do not disappoint.

ROBERT PATTINSON (AS EDWARD CULLEN): You’re my only rea­son to stay alive.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Ho ho ho. Okay. The stars of “Eclipse” are here. Robert Pat­tin­son, Kris­ten Stew­art, Tay­lor Laut­ner. They are here.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Hello. Hello. Okay. Okay. You just want to do that for an hour, or can I talk? All right. Wel­come, wel­come, wel­come. So does this hap­pen every­where you go?

ROBERT PATTINSON: Not everywhere.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Not every­where. I will say this: every­body in the audi­ence saw “Eclipse” last night.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I didn’t even know that.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You didn’t know that?

ROBERT PATTINSON: I had no idea.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): That’s because you were going around knock­ing on doors. You didn’t. Every­body saw the movie last night, and I guess we liked it, right?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You guys joined forces. That was good to see. Good to see. So, what does it feel like, Tay­lor, to be in the midst of this phe­nom­e­non? It really is a phe­nom­e­non, and you know, the clos­est thing that I can recall, my gen­er­a­tion, was the Bea­t­les. And I was one of those peo­ple scream­ing for Paul McCart­ney, and now peo­ple are scream­ing for you.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: It’s really unlike any­thing else, I mean, obvi­ously, but it’s amaz­ing. I mean, I know over the past two years, I’ve had the time of my life, so I mean, I couldn’t be more thankful.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): But what does it feel like? Does it feel like being in the–I can’t imagine–like in the eye of a storm or some­thing? I don’t know.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah, it’s dif­fer­ent. It’s almost like you live two dif­fer­ent worlds.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: You go into that world, and then you com­pletely van­ish and you go back to your reg­u­lar life.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah. And for you, sir, you really do go into a dif­fer­ent world and come back, yeah?

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah. I mean, that’s a good way of putting it. I mean, I think–it’s weird. I think as we’ve been so sort of cen­tral to the whole thing since the begin­ning, and it started really when no one knew any­thing about it.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Right. Right. Right.

ROBERT PATTINSON: And so now it does feel like you’re in a kind of eye of the storm, and I don’t know. I still, to this day, can’t really con­nect to all the craziness.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Wrap your brain around it? Yeah.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah. And it’s a great posi­tion to be in because you can appre­ci­ate it. All of a sud­den, you walk into a room, and everybody’s scream­ing, and, like, it doesn’t–and it’s not really about you, so it never really goes to your head, and it’s kind of–and you can kind of par­tic­i­pate in it.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Because it doesn’t feel like it’s about you? Does it feel like it’s about Edward? Does it feel like it’s about the char­ac­ter, it’s about the phe­nom­e­non itself?

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah, and it’s about the fans them­selves as well because I think a lot of the peo­ple, you know, they just like doing “Twilight”-related things.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yes.

KRISTEN STEWART: And, like, doing it together. I mean, the other thing is, you know, I’ve done movies that I’ve put every­thing that I am into, and then, you know, it feels like 10 peo­ple get to see them, and they prob­a­bly love this movie. I mean, I don’t want to say more than me, because it’s, like, some­thing that’s so per­sonal and some­thing that I’ve worked so hard on. It feels like a part of my life, and, like, most people’s favorite book is not a part of their lives. So, like, I’m never going to have an oppor­tu­nity to share some­thing like that on such a level. I mean, it’s never going to hap­pen again.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You never know.

KRISTEN STEWART: Prob­a­bly not.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You could be a part of two phe­nom­e­nons or three in your life­time, but it is a phe­nom­e­non. And you seem to be, you know, there’s so much writ­ten about you being shy, so does it feel over­whelm­ing to you? Is it dif­fi­cult for you to just fully embrace it?

KRISTEN STEWART: I get so ner­vous, and…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Okay, let me give you a hug.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Let me give you a hug. It’s okay. It’s okay. Yeah. Really? Okay, and you’re ner­vous why? Tell me why.

KRISTEN STEWART: Well, you know, this means a lot to you guys, and it’s the same deal for me. I under­stand that your words have weight, and I mince them when I know that everybody’s wait­ing for them. You know what I mean? It’s, like…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Well, really, we’re just wait­ing for your truth. We just want you to be who­ever you want us to know you to be, because I under­stand that being in front of the cam­era, a per­son can’t know your whole life, but I don’t think anybody’s wait­ing for any­thing other than for you just to sort of be your­self. So feel really at home.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Just feel really at home. Feel com­fort­able with that.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): But we can tell that you really care so much for the char­ac­ter. You really care so much for who Bella is.

KRISTEN STEWART: I feel like I prob­a­bly bring more of myself to Bella than I have to any other char­ac­ter, but that’s all I can do. I mean, you really project your­self onto her because it’s a very vic­ar­i­ous read. I mean, you are her. And I can also com­pletely relate to the fact that she’s totally awk­ward, but that she owns that and that she’s not going to say any­thing that she doesn’t mean.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): And I think what’s so great about it, and the rea­son why every­body is so relat­ing to her, is because we’ve all had that awk­ward­ness, we’ve all had those feel­ings, we all can relate. It’s more dif­fi­cult to relate to your char­ac­ter, however.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): More dif­fi­cult for that. And isn’t it true that when Robert opens his mouth, you expect him to sound like Edward? You do, and then this British accent comes out. So I’m curi­ous about this. How do they teach you to speak Amer­i­can? What is that? Do you have to, like, flat­ten out your tongue or some­thing? I don’t know. How do you get rid of the accent?

ROBERT PATTINSON: Kris­ten thinks I do the most ter­ri­ble Amer­i­can accent in the world. (laugh)

KRISTEN STEWART: (laugh) No, I don’t. Occa­sion­ally some word will come out, and I’ll be like, “We don’t say that.”

ROBERT PATTINSON: I don’t know. I just always–I grew up watch­ing Amer­i­can movies and stuff, and I don’t know. And also, I used to–I think what the main thing was, I used to want to be a rapper…

ROBERT PATTINSON: …when I was, like, 14.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): No, you didn’t.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I swear to god. I have a lot of record­ings of it.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Oh, I wish I had know that.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I know.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You’d be play­ing them right now if I’d have known that.

ROBERT PATTINSON: And so, yeah, the cadence and every­thing. I used to do an Amer­i­can accent and trans­pose my voice down, and there’s a few key words, and then I think if you–like, “water.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Woh-tah.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah. As soon as you can say “water” in an Amer­i­can accent, then that’s–you’re, like, halfway there.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So they tell you to say “wadder.”

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah. That’s Chicago, right?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): That was a lit­tle Chicago mixed with Ten­nessee, but okay, yeah.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah. There’s, like, a few key words, and once you start get­ting that you’ve got it.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So water is one. What would be another?

KRISTEN STEWART: Pasta.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Pasta?

KRISTEN STEWART: That one’s really tough, actually.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Pasta.

ROBERT PATTINSON: All right. Nachos.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I can’t think of the other ones.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Okay. Well, two weeks ago, Robert was named–I don’t know if you all know this or not. He was named one of “Time” magazine’s “Most Influ­en­tial Peo­ple In The World.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): And one of the world’s most beau­ti­ful by “Peo­ple” mag­a­zine. One of the most beau­ti­ful and one of the most influ­en­tial, which one meant the most to you?

ROBERT PATTINSON: Def­i­nitely beautiful.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I have no rea­son to influ­ence peo­ple. I just want to have it all for myself. I just want some­one to pat me on the back. (laugh) It’s crazy. I mean, it’s the same thing as what’s Taylor’s say­ing. It seems just com­pletely ridicu­lous. I don’t know why. I mean, three years ago, I wouldn’t be able to influ­ence my dog to walk.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): And now you’re one of world’s–listed as one of the world’s most influ­en­tial peo­ple. It was 100 most influ­en­tial in the world.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I was above Obama. I was like, I have to agree with that. I totally agree. (laugh) But it’s com­pletely insane.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): We’ll be right back with the cast of “Eclipse.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Com­ing up, what would you do if Robert Pat­tin­son knocked on your front door?

GROUP (GIRLS): (scream)

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): And later, Tay­lor Laut­ner sur­prises some unsus­pect­ing soror­ity sisters.

GROUP (SORORITY SISTERS): (scream)

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): It’s the moment Twi­hards have been count­ing down for months.

TAYLOR LAUTNER (AS JACOB BLACK): I’m here to warn you.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): “Eclipse,” the third movie in the “Twi­light” saga phe­nom­e­non, is on the hori­zon. The epic story con­tin­ues with Bella Swan torn between her vam­pire boyfriend Edward…

ROBERT PATTINSON (AS EDWARD CULLEN): Isabella Swan, I promise to love you every moment forever.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): …and Jacob, her best friend, who’s also a werewolf.

TAYLOR LAUTNER (AS JACOB BLACK): You wouldn’t have to change for me, Bella. I’m in love with you. I want you to pick me instead of him.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): While their love tri­an­gle heats up…

ROBERT PATTINSON (AS EDWARD CULLEN): Doesn’t he own a shirt?

TAYLOR LAUTNER (AS JACOB BLACK): Hey, beautiful.

KRISTEN STEWART (AS BELLA SWAN): Hi.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): …long­time ene­mies, vam­pires and were­wolves must join forces to pro­tect Bella from an army of blood­thirsty killers.

PETER FACINELLI (AS CARLISLE CULLEN): This means an ugly fight with lives lost.

TAYLOR LAUTNER (AS JACOB BLACK): We’re in as long as we get to kill some vampires.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): But Bella can’t escape the most impor­tant deci­sion of her life.

KRISTEN STEWART (AS BELLA SWAN): Why are you so against me com­ing like you?

ROBERT PATTINSON (AS EDWARD CULLEN): I know the con­se­quences of the choice you’re making.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): The con­se­quences. Okay. The third movie in the “Twi­light Saga,” “Eclipse.” I don’t even have to tell you, but I will–it opens in the­aters on June 30. I know you all will be camped out. Robert Pat­tin­son, Kris­ten Stew­art, and Tay­lor Laut­ner are all here. I love that shot where you’re by the car for the first time as we see you with the shirt off.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): And just when I saw that edit, I thought, in that moment, did they say, All right. Flex?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): “All right. Go for it. Go for it. Go for it.” So you really buffed your­self up. You did the work.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah. It was def­i­nitely a lot of work, and, yeah, when I was film­ing “Twi­light,” I knew where my char­ac­ter went physically…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yes.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: …and I def­i­nitely wasn’t there, so, yeah, it was about a year’s worth of work.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Look at that shot right there.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Oh, boy.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Put that shot back, guys. Look at that shot right there. Tay­lor, whoo.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): That is a six pack plus. Yes.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: So, yeah, it required, obvi­ously, a lot of time in the gym, but, you know, mainly eat­ing changes.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): There’s the moment. There’s the moment. That’s what that was.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Don’t get embar­rassed now. Long time in the gym? What did you do? What did you eat or not eat to get that way?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: I basi­cally ate a lot, as much as I could. If I was busy, if I was on set or if I was in L.A. and I had meet­ings, I’d have to carry around this lit­tle minia­ture cooler, and I would carry around, like, beef pat­ties and almonds.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Seriously?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah, seri­ously, just beef pat­ties, and it’s so weird. I’ll be, like, talk­ing to some­body. All of a sud­den, I’ll just be like, “Yeah, yeah. Can you hold on one sec? I got to eat a beef patty.” So.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So you were work­ing out how many hours a day?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: At one point, I was in the gym, like, almost three hours, and that’s when I real­ized that I was actu­ally over­work­ing myself, and I had to cut back. So it ended up being about an hour and 15, hour and a half a day, about five days a week.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Wow.

KRISTEN STEWART: He was los­ing weight, he was work­ing so hard.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Right.

KRISTEN STEWART: It was like he would start to sweat, and we’d be like, “You bet­ter be care­ful because you’re going to burn, like, five calo­ries just sit­ting there.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah. It is true that women when you see them when you’re out in pub­lic peo­ple ask you to howl?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: At one point, and I for­get where I said that I don’t enjoy howl­ing, but they’ve stopped, so I do appre­ci­ate it, everyone.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yes. You say to peo­ple, “It’s a char­ac­ter, peo­ple. It’s a character.”

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah. On the red car­pet, it hap­pened once. It was, like, I was on the red car­pet, and they were like, “Can you howl for us?” I was like, “No.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): “No. I’m not howl­ing.” Robert, is it true that you wanted to quit? I heard that, but you can’t believe any­thing you read, so I have to ask you. Is it true that you thought about quit­ting act­ing before you did this audition?

ROBERT PATTINSON: I mean, I think I was always, like, going to, because I kind of fell into it, and then if you say you’re an actor and you’re going to audi­tions and stuff and not get­ting parts, then you’re not an actor. (laugh) And so I guess that was what my predica­ment was, but, yeah, there was one. When I came out to L.A. to do the “Twi­light” audi­tion, I was, like, flat broke. Every­thing was kind of rub­bish in Lon­don, and…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Rub­bish. You all say “rub­bish” a lot. That’s good.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah, and I came up for a dif­fer­ent audi­tion and then flew out. I’d done a tape in Lon­don for it and thought it was going to be great and then turned up, and it was absolutely awful. And then I called my par­ents, and I was like, “Oh, that’s it,” and then I was going to fly home the next day, and my par­ents are like, “Yeah, yeah. Sure. Okay. That’s fine,” which is com­pletely the wrong thing to say. So I’m like, “No, I really want to do it now.” And then so I went to another audi­tion, and the next audi­tion was “Twi­light.” I had met Kris­ten and Cather­ine Hard­wick, and it just seemed like a really–I don’t know. It just went down really, really well, and, yeah, it was kind of the only job I wanted to do for years.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So thou­sands audi­tioned for the role of the roman­tic vam­pire Edward Cullen and, Kris­ten, I hear you instantly knew that he was the one. Tell us how.

KRISTEN STEWART: Well.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: His six pack.

KRISTEN STEWART: Audi­tion­ing is such a weird thing to begin with. I mean, I don’t know. There’s just so many expec­ta­tions, and you’re never your­self because you’re ner­vous, and I knew that this was the only thing that mat­tered in the movie. I mean, there were things that could fall short, and the movie would still stand, I think. Like, what I loved about the movie would be okay if this was okay. I guess it was just a gut thing. I mean, it was good.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): What’d you all do for the audition?

KRISTEN STEWART: We read some scenes.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Mm-hmm. Did you have to kiss?

KRISTEN STEWART: Yeah.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): For the audition?

ROBERT PATTINSON: And they didn’t pre­pare us for that. Yeah. Cather­ine hadn’t told me, any­way. I know she prob­a­bly told you. Yeah. She’d done it with a whole bunch of guys before. (laugh)

KRISTEN STEWART: I’d done it with a bunch of guys. He was the last one that came in. (laugh) No. He really was actu­ally a lit­tle scared.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Get the sloppy seconds.

KRISTEN STEWART: Ew, that’s so gross.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Well, you know there are all these rumors about the two of you. I’m not going to ask her because she’s so shy, she’s not going to tell me, but there are all these rumors about the two of you dat­ing. Is it true?

ROBERT PATTINSON: Kris­ten is pregnant.

KRISTEN STEWART: He likes to–he really loves to, like, shock peo­ple because he thinks it’s funny. No, no, no. We’ve actu­ally had this conv–he’s hav­ing the baby, because I can’t. I’m too–I mean, imag­ine a baby com­ing out of this thing. I mean, like, that’s just not going to happen.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So you’re going to have the baby.

KRISTEN STEWART: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah. We know that the new­borns are harder to deal with.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Well, last night after we landed in Chicago, Robert did some­thing I thought–I was really couldn’t believe you actu­ally agreed to do it, but he did because our pro­duc­ers will ask you to do any­thing, and he agreed to go knock on strangers’ doors.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: That’s amazing.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah. Isn’t it amaz­ing? So he did this for some of “Twilight’s” biggest fans, and watch what hap­pened when Robert Pat­tin­son comes knock­ing on strangers’ doors.

ROBERT PATTINSON: We have heard that there are a lot of “Twi­light” fans in the vicin­ity, and we’re going to sur­prise a num­ber of them and invite them to the show. Well, this is prob­a­bly going to be very embar­rass­ing. Is there any kind of pro­to­col for these things? (door­bell) This is ter­ri­fy­ing. Hello? Should we just break into the house?

GROUP (GIRLS): (scream)

ROBERT PATTINSON: Whew.

GIRL ONE: Oh, my god. Oh, my god.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I was ring­ing the door­bell for, like, 10 min­utes. No one came down.

GIRL TWO: I’m sorry. We were in the basement.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Oh, right. Oh.

GIRL THREE: We don’t know what to say. You always think about what you’re going to say to them once you meet them, but when you meet them, you don’t really know what to say.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Yeah. I have no idea what to say, either. I was goning break into your house a few min­utes ago.

GROUP (GIRLS): Oh. (laugh)

ROBERT PATTINSON: So you guys know what’s going to hap­pen tomor­row. You all have tick­ets to “The Oprah Show.”

GROUP (GIRLS): (scream)

GIRL ONE: Thank you.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I’ll see you tomor­row. See you. Bye.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Next stop–the house of an unsus­pect­ing birth­day girl.

ROBERT PATTINSON: Okay. Oh, god, they got a dog.

ROBERT PATTINSON: They’re going to open the door. Hey. Ruff. (laugh) Hey, how are you?

GIRL ONE: Good. Oh, my god.

GIRL’S MOTHER: Oh, my god. He is so hot.

GIRL ONE: Oh, my god, he’s so hot. Oh, god. Oh, my god.

ROBERT PATTINSON: For your birth­day, we didn’t have the tick­ets on us, so I wrote one.

GIRL ONE: Oh, my god, what does it say? Oh, my god. We’re going to see “The Oprah Show.”

GIRL’S MOTHER: Thank you so much.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Rob’s last knock of the night–an entire fam­ily of fans.

FATHER: Oh, my god.

FAMILY: (scream)

ROBERT PATTINSON: How you guys doing? It’s what?

MOTHER: You’re beautiful.

GIRL ONE: You’re so tall. I never thought you’d be that tall.

ROBERT PATTINSON: You all have tick­ets to the show tomorrow.

FAMILY: Oh, my god. Oprah.

MOTHER: Tomor­row we’ll look totally different.

ROBERT PATTINSON: They were really nice. That was nice. I kind of wanted to stay there and have dinner.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): That’s nice. No. I think the only way we could con­vince you because you’re so jet­lagged, right? You’d just got­ten off the plane.

ROBERT PATTINSON: I just got in the car, and there’s already a cam­era crew, and they’re like, “Okay, so we’re going to go to these houses.” I was like, “Okay.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Thank you. We’ll be right back. That’s fun. We’ll be right back. Crazy.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Com­ing up, “Twi­light” is tak­ing over col­lege campuses.

GROUP (SORORITY SISTERS): (scream)

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): See what hap­pens when Tay­lor drops in on a soror­ity house.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): “Twi­light” is a far-reaching phe­nom­e­non that tran­scends gen­er­a­tions. As you saw in the shot, you know, people’s moth­ers are scream­ing as loud as they are. Grown women are devour­ing the “Twi­light” series and liv­ing vic­ar­i­ously through this love story. Last week, our own Ali Went­worth, mother of two, went on spe­cial assign­ment to inves­ti­gate the fantasy.

ALI WENTWORTH: I’m here in south­ern Illi­nois to talk to four moms about this obses­sion with the “Twi­light” movies. I don’t get it, but I’m going to go in there and find out what all this crazi­ness is about. Oh, my god.

WOMAN ONE: Nice to meet you. Wel­come to my house.

ALI WENTWORTH: The twimoms.

WOMAN ONE: The twimoms. Wel­come to our…

WOMAN TWO: Hi.

WOMAN ONE: We have a lit­tle invi­ta­tion for you, if you want to join us.

ALI WENTWORTH: This is my “Eclipse.”

WOMAN ONE: It is.

ALI WENTWORTH: Wow.

WOMAN ONE: Because we’re gonna get you hooked. We have our lit­tle Twi-mom party set up for you.

ALI WENTWORTH: Look at that. How often do we have these lit­tle soirees?

WOMAN TWO: Usu­ally before a movie comes out, but when­ever we feel like it, really.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Right. So, and the straw­ber­ries? Oh, Edward?

WOMAN TWO: The white ones are Edward and the dark ones are Jacob.

ALI WENTWORTH: Okay. All right. That’s not weird at all.

ALI WENTWORTH: So this is what I need to under­stand a lit­tle bit more. What is it about the Twi-moms?

WOMAN THREE: I think you miss the pas­sion of the first love. The first love, it’s just so pas­sion­ate. You’re mar­ried, you have kids. We’re run­ning to school, we’re mak­ing dinner.

WOMAN TWO: It’s a 24/7 job and it’s not always appreciated.

ALI WENTWORTH: And it’s an escape, it’s a way to relive your pas­sion, and you’re not cheating.

WOMAN ONE: We’re not.

WOMAN TWO: No.

ALI WENTWORTH: So we’re going down to a base­ment? That’s not scary.

WOMAN ONE: This is where we have our pre­miere parties.

ALI WENTWORTH: Wow.

WOMAN ONE: So we walk the red carpet.

ALI WENTWORTH: Oh.

WOMAN ONE: We take pic­tures with our Edward.

ALI WENTWORTH: All right, I’m gonna sit here. Let me see some of your favorite scenes.

WOMAN TWO: All right, this is one of our favorites.

WOMEN: Ohh.

WOMAN TWO: My inside is tingling.

ALI WENTWORTH: Really? What’s happening?

WOMAN TWO: I just–I just have a phys­i­cal– (all talking at once)

ALI WENTWORTH: These “Twi­light” sagas have really made an impact on your life in other ways, too, right?

WOMAN THREE: I never used to read. I was too busy. I’m a reader now, thanks to “Twilight.”

WOMAN FOUR: Now we’ve bonded over some­thing com­pletely different.

WOMAN ONE: All right, so the kids are home from lunch.

ALI WENTWORTH: Oh, your kids are home now?

WOMAN ONE: We have to make them lunch.

ALI WENTWORTH: Okay. Hey, kids. Come here. Kneel down like I’m your grand­mother. So your moms are obsessed with these “Twi­light” movies. You know that, right?

GIRL: Yes. It takes hours. She watches only the Edward scenes.

GIRL TWO: My dad gets so mad. He’s, like, “You love Edward more than me.”

ALI WENTWORTH: Oh, no, he didn’t. So, any­way, thank you for let­ting me be here. When are you guys see­ing “Eclipse” June 30?

WOMAN ONE: June 30.

ALI WENTWORTH: Wait. I have a much bet­ter idea. Why don’t you come to the show Wednesday?

WOMEN: (scream)

ALI WENTWORTH: It’s gonna be so–oh, my god, because Edward, Jacob, and Bella will be there.

WOMEN: (scream)

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): My good­ness, my good­ness. My good­ness, my good­ness. There’s Lisa, Liz, Eden, and Renee are all here. So Ali, are you tapped into the appeal now? What do you–it’s really a phenomenon.

ALI WENTWORTH: Lis­ten. Really nice to meet you. I’ve heard a lot about you. But it wasn’t on my radar, so when I was gonna go hang out with the Twi-moms, I watched the movies, and I under­stand it. I do. I under­stand it. It brings up the first love so, you know, they are obsessed with Edward and Jacob. I mean, I had a thing for Henry Kissinger when I was lit­tle, so I get it. But also, it’s a safe love. It’s safe, espe­cially if you’re obsessed with the char­ac­ter, and it’s this kind of unre­quited, for­bid­den love, but also, I found vic­ar­i­ously through them it con­jured up feel­ings of when I was that age. So you do feel the feel­ings that you had when you were first in love. And also, just for a middle-aged woman that, you know, could use a lit­tle work in her face, the idea of being frozen in time I get. I really get, Kris­ten. I would, you know, I would’ve taken the bite right away.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): That’s great. That’s great. Well, now we under­stand it a lit­tle bit more. I think it’s fan­tas­tic. This is what I want to know. If I were to look in on your–if I were to look through the win­dow of your house on a Sat­ur­day night, what would I see?

ROBERT PATTINSON: I was say­ing to some­one ear­lier, prob­a­bly des­per­ately call­ing up every­one in my phone book, like, see­ing if any­one at all was doing some­thing. Any­one who I’ve ever met was doing some­thing, because no one would’ve called me. So…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Why? Why?

ROBERT PATTINSON: I ask myself that every time it happens.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So we peek in on a Sat­ur­day night. What are we going to see?

KRISTEN STEWART: I’m such a lame per­son. I’ll prob­a­bly be–I’m obsessed with my cat, and I don’t spend a whole lot of time at home, and so I’d prob­a­bly be with–I have a Edward and–I have a very Edward and Bella rela­tion­ship. It’s like, very co-dependent with my cat, so I’d prob­a­bly be with him.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Okay. We’re look­ing through the win­dow. First of all, are you home?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: I wish it was a Tues­day or Wednes­day, because I’d be watch­ing “Amer­i­can Idol.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Okay.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Sun­day I’d be watch­ing “Celebrity Apprentice.”

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Sat­ur­days is a lit­tle dif­fi­cult for me. I don’t know. I’m bored on Saturdays.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Would you be home Sat­ur­day night?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah, most likely.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): What you doing?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: I’m see­ing if any­body wants to hang out with me, too. I mean, it’s…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You all should call each other.

ROBERT PATTINSON: (laugh) I know right.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: That’s a fan­tas­tic idea.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Talk about another good sport. Let’s take a look at what hap­pened when we sent Tay­lor out for a sur­prise drop-in. Look at this.

SORORITY GIRL ONE: Theta girls are pas­sion­ate about “Twi­light.” Theta girls are obsessed.

SORORITY GIRL TWO: Oh, my god. I am obsessed with “Twi­light.” This is our “Twi­light” room. We got the “New Moon” posters. We got every­thing. Like, all the Thetas love it. So we all get together and, like, “Twi­light” dec­o­rate. I know, I can’t believe I’m say­ing that out loud, but we do.

SORORITY GIRL THREE: We prob­a­bly watch the movie, like, at least every weekend.

SORORITY GIRL FOUR: Oh, I’m def­i­nitely team Jacob. It has a lot to do with the abs. I’m not going to lie.

SORORITY GIRL THREE: That’s just a bonus. I lay like this and then he’s, like, right there so he looks like my boyfriend.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): This soror­ity is prac­ti­cally major­ing in “Twilight.”

SORORITY GIRL FIVE: I’m think­ing we might have to, like, have, like, a study group.

SORORITY GIRL SIX: In the Twi-hard center.

SORORITY GIRL FIVE: Yeah.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So when “New Moon” held its world pre­mier just blocks from cam­pus, well, classes would just have to wait.

SORORITY GIRL ONE: Every­one was camped out for, like, seri­ously, like three days before the premiere.

SORORITY GIRL THREE: I waited for about 24 hours and I was behind, like, 40 peo­ple, and unfor­tu­nately a lit­tle too short to see, like, over their heads, because I really wanted to see Tay­lor Laut­ner, basi­cally. Obviously.

I was hop­ing that Tay­lor Laut­ner would fall in love with me and that we would live hap­pily ever after, and that was what I was thinking.

GROUP (SORORITY GIRLS): Yes.

SORORITY GIRL THREE: No, because look at those muscles.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): While the unsus­pect­ing soror­ity sis­ters gush over Taylor…

SORORITY GIRL ONE: I don’t know how he got him­self so muscle-y for this movie, but it was amazing.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You-know-who is just out­side the door.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: All right. We’re here at the theta house right now. They don’t know I’m here, but I’m going to hop in there and we’ll see what hap­pens. Here we go.

SORORITY GIRL ONE: Did Tay­lor do all of his own, like, stunt scenes in this? Like, he did all of his own, like…

GROUP (SORORITY GIRLS): (scream)

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Hello. Hi.

SORORITY GIRL THREE: Hi.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): They haven’t even heard the best part.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: So I heard a rumor that some of you might’ve camped out last year at the premiere.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: A cou­ple? Yeah? Well, every­body that is in this room right now, I can guar­an­tee you that you will be attending…

GROUP (SORORITY GIRLS): (scream)

TAYLOR LAUTNER: …the world pre­miere of “The Twi­light Saga: Eclipse.” All right. That was fun.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): I was a lit­tle scared for you going in that room. That was fun. Was that fun?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Hon­estly, it was a lot of fun. They were all–they were great.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): They were great. I was a lit­tle scared for you going in that room.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Thought they might rip your shirt off. We’ll be right back. Back in a moment. That’s great.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Com­ing up, from America’s sweet­heart to an evil vam­pire. Dakota Fan­ning joins the cast party. Next.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Dakota Fan­ning plays an evil Vol­turi vam­pire in the new movie “Eclipse,” which opens June 30. She says it was the role that she’d been dying to play.

VOLTURI VAMPIRE: Oth­ers may begin to ques­tion the Volturi’s effectiveness.

DAKOTA FANNING (AS JANE): Let them.

VOLTURI VAMPIRE: Maybe we should con­sult with Aro.

DAKOTA FANNING (AS JANE): Aro’s deci­sions are being watched. Either we let them do what they were cre­ated for or we end them.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Wel­come, Dakota Fan­ning. There is lit­tle Dakota, all grown up.

DAKOTA FANNING: Yeah.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So I under­stand this was a side of you we hadn’t seen. You’re evil.

DAKOTA FANNING: Definitely.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Is it fun to be evil?

DAKOTA FANNING: It is. It’s very fun. It’s very obvi­ously a dif­fer­ent role than I’ve ever played and I loved that I got to be one of the bad vam­pires with the red eyes and the cool cos­tume and I loved get­ting to play, like, a real character.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Is it true you read all four of these books in one week?

DAKOTA FANNING: I did. Yes.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): What a lux­ury. What a lux­ury. Did you just read them one right after the other?

DAKOTA FANNING: Yeah, I just read them one right after the other. I was doing press for another film at the time, and so I was on, like, a lot of air­planes, and I read really fast any­way, so I just read it and I was hooked.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): What do you love about this story?

DAKOTA FANNING: I love about the story that–I mean, like you’ve seen on the show, peo­ple of so many ages appre­ci­ate it and love it. I mean, I know from expe­ri­ence with myself, but also my sis­ter is 12 and her and her best friend are obsessed with every­thing and they have the cut-outs of Rob and Tay­lor. And, you know, they’re actually–they’re mak­ing a robot at school and they named it “Rob-bot Pattinson.”

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Wow. That and the most beau­ti­ful peo­ple. I don’t know what else.

DAKOTA FANNING: Oh, no. Yeah.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): So you and Kris­ten worked together on another movie that’s really, “The Run­aways,” right? And you’ve become good friends.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): How would you describe her? How would you describe her?

DAKOTA FANNING: Well, I mean, I’ve got­ten to know her very well. And, I mean, espe­cially doing “The Run­aways.” I mean, the rela­tion­ship that we have in the movie is so impor­tant, and you can’t help but become close to that per­son in your life, and, I mean, she’s become one of my best friends and I love her.

KRISTEN STEWART: She would never tell you what I’m really like.

KRISTEN STEWART: She’s my friend.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Well, we obvi­ously know she’s shy. Yeah. But I under­stand you look up to her, too. You look up to her?

KRISTEN STEWART: Yes, def­i­nitely. I’m 20, Dakota’s 16. And it, like, I’ve always had friends that are older than me, and I lit­er­ally don’t even feel–I call her for advice when I’m, like, either freak­ing out or not sure of some­thing. I mean, it’s like, “What do I do?” Yeah.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Well, Dakota–do you feel, Dakota–I’ve heard other actors say this of you. Not only are you, you know, one ter­rific actress but that there’s some­thing about you that car­ries the aura of actu­ally being much older. I remem­ber, you know, hear­ing other actors say that about you.

DAKOTA FANNING: Right.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah. So do you feel like you grew up faster than you nor­mally would have had you not been an actress?

DAKOTA FANNING: I mean, I think I def­i­nitely grew up dif­fer­ently. I mean, I’ve been work­ing since I was six and, I mean, I have a very dif­fer­ent life than other, you know, peo­ple my age when I’m work­ing. But when I come home, it’s so nor­mal. I mean, like you were all say­ing, I just go home and have, you know, a com­pletely nor­mal fam­ily that’s not involved in the busi­ness in any way, I mean, besides my sis­ter. And so I think it’s nice to main­tain that and that helps. And so, no, I don’t think I’ve grown up faster. I think I’ve been so lucky to have had the child­hood that I’ve had. I’ve seen so many things and met so many peo­ple, and I think my life has only, you know, been bet­ter because of it.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah, but you seem wise beyond your years. I remem­ber Tom Cruise told me once that you were 12 when he was work­ing with you, but you were 12 going on 35.

DAKOTA FANNING: Wow.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yeah.

DAKOTA FANNING: I mean, I don’t know–some peo­ple say that about me. I feel the age that I am, you know? I don’t know.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): We’ll be right back. Be right back. Be right back.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Com­ing up, Tay­lor talks rela­tion­ships. If you were choos­ing the ideal woman for your­self, who would that be?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): I wanted to ask you, do you have–we always read about this squeaky clean image of yours, that you’ve never smoked a cig­a­rette, never had a drink. Never, never, never. Is that true?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Um…

ROBERT PATTINSON: No.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah. I mean, I guess so. It’s kind of just…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): You guess so?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Like, not even behind–no, really, like, not even behind the barn or some­thing? You never had or tried a cig­a­rette when you were, you know, with your friends?

KRISTEN STEWART: That’s a good spot for it.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah, hon­estly, no. I mean, I guess it’s just the way I was raised by my par­ents and my family.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Good fam­ily. Good, good.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Definitely.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Very nice. Now, so many peo­ple who watch the movies want you to either pick one or the other. If you were choos­ing the ideal woman for your­self, who would that be?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Specifically?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yes.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: I have to choose a lady right now?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): No, specif­i­cally, what would those qual­i­ties be?

ROBERT PATTINSON: From the audience.

KRISTEN STEWART: From the audi­ence. That’s what I was…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): No, what are the qual­i­ties you are look­ing for, for a relationship?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Obvi­ously, loyalty.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Mm-hmm.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Um…

ROBERT PATTINSON: Must like beef patties?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: That was num­ber two.

KRISTEN STEWART: Must make deli­cious beef patties.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Loy­alty, hon­esty, somebody–but, you know, really impor­tant to me is some­body who can totally let loose and pretty much be them­selves and have fun.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Is funny a part–do they need to be funny?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Yeah, definitely.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Or would you be–are you the funny one in the relationship?

TAYLOR LAUTNER: I don’t find myself very funny, so I–they’d definitely…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Well, you’d know if you were funny or not.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: Then I guess I’m not funny.

TAYLOR LAUTNER: So they bet­ter be pretty funny.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Okay. Back in a moment. That’s great.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Com­ing up, she flew 2500 miles just to get a glimpse of Kristen.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): A few weeks ago, I got an email from 15-year-old Atiya Nel­son, who says that Bella’s will­ing­ness to be her­self inspired her to come out of her own shell. Atiya came here today from the Caribbean just to see Kris­ten. So, Atiya, what does she mean to you? Where are you, Atiya? Hi, Atiya.

ATIYA NELSON: Hi.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Hi. Hi, Atiya. So, what does the char­ac­ter Bella mean to you? What does that char­ac­ter Bella mean to you?

ATIYA NELSON: Well, she means every­thing to me. I think she likes to be her own per­son and not try to change her­self to try to fit in with other kids. And she’s really in love with Edward, and I like that.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): And so were you a dif­fer­ent kind of girl before you started read­ing and watch­ing these movies? Read­ing the books and watch­ing the movies?

ATIYA NELSON: Well, I never really used to talk to much peo­ple. And now, since “Twi­light,” I can dis­cuss it with my friends, and it’s really cool.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Ter­rific. You can come get a pic­ture with Kris­ten. You can come do that.

ATIYA NELSON: Really?

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Yes. Yes. So you brought a lit­tle some­thing? You brought something?

KRISTEN STEWART: Yeah, yeah. Totally. Okay. I have a–I wear a ring in the movie.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Uh-huh.

KRISTEN STEWART: And this is the first one that I wore. And…

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): That’s just great.

KRISTEN STEWART: Yeah. It’s cut, because my hand grew from the second–from the first to the sec­ond one, and we have more.

ATIYA NELSON: Thank you. Can I hug you?

KRISTEN STEWART: Yeah, come on. Of course.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): That’s so sweet. We’ll be right back. We’ll be right back.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): Teen super­star Justin Bieber just got his driver’s license.

JUSTIN BIEBER (SINGER): Let’s do it.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): He is not going to text and drive. That makes me so proud. Now, that’s really some­thing to go crazy over.

KRISTEN STEWART (AS BELLA SWAN): Edward…

ROBERT PATTINSON (AS EDWARD CULLEN): If you ever touch her against her will again…

KRISTEN STEWART (AS BELLA SWAN): Edward, don’t do this to him.

TAYLOR LAUTNER (AS JACOB BLACK): She’s not sure what she wants.

ROBERT PATTINSON (AS EDWARD CULLEN): Well, let me give you a clue. Wait for her to say the words.

TAYLOR LAUTNER (AS JACOB BLACK): Fine. And she will.

KRISTEN STEWART (AS BELLA SWAN): Jacob, just go, okay?

BILLY BURKE (AS CHARLIE SWAN): Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey. Easy, guys. Easy. Let’s take it down a notch. All right? What’s going on?

TAYLOR LAUTNER (AS JACOB BLACK): I kissed Bella.

OPRAH WINFREY (HOST): I kissed Bella. She broke her hand. I want to say thank you to Robert Pat­tin­son, to Kris­ten Stew­art, to Tay­lor Laut­ner, and Dakota Fan­ning. “Eclipse” opens June 30. Bye, every­body. Bye, everybody.

Credit => Gos­sip Cop / Source => Thinking of Rob

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