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Richard Gere Has a Theory About Why Mainstream Hollywood Dumped Him

Not that he’s sweating it: “I’m not interested in playing the wizened Jedi in your tentpole.”
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By Matthias Nareyek/Getty Images.

For two decades—between 1982’s An Officer and a Gentleman and 2002’s ChicagoRichard Gere was a hot box-office commodity, able to summon such crackling chemistry with Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman that Paramount re-united the duo nearly a decade later for the pseudo-sequel Runaway Bride. But then something happened: Gere gradually stopped starring in mainstream studio movies. Although this plight is routine for actresses, Gere maintains that mainstream Hollywood’s motive to dump him had nothing to do with age—and everything to do with another factor entirely.

That factor: China, the country that finances much of Hollywood these days. Not so coincidentally, it’s also the country that Gere—a practicing Tibetan Buddhist and longtime friend of the religion’s exiled leader, the Dalai Lama—infamously disparaged during the 1993 Oscars when he went off-script while presenting the art-direction category.

“There are definitely movies that I can’t be in because the Chinese will say, ‘Not with him,’” Gere tells The Hollywood Reporter in a new interview. “I recently had an episode where someone said they could not finance a film with me because it would upset the Chinese.”

In the years since drawing Oscar audience attention to China’s “horrendous, horrendous human rights situation,” Gere has remained dogged in his cause—calling a boycott of the 2008 Olympics, pressuring China to make Tibet independent, and speaking out against the country in myriad interviews.

While the actor has managed to maintain a tidy career acting in independent films—proof arriving this April and May with Norman and The Dinner—Gere reveals that even smaller-budget productions have balked at bringing him on board.

“There was something I was going do with a Chinese director, and two weeks before we were going to shoot, he called saying, ‘Sorry, I can’t do it,’” explains Gere. “We had a secret phone call on a protected line. If I had worked with this director, he, his family would never have been allowed to leave the country ever again, and he would never work.”

But don’t get it twisted—Gere isn’t regretting the fact that he isn’t scoring parts in franchise films and blow-’em-up blockbusters. For starters: ever since the career tidal shift, Gere hasn’t had to “put on a tuxedo again” for any contractually obligated red-carpet appearance, which the actor is just “fine” with. Secondly, Gere says, in a delicious Hollywood burn: “I’m not interested in playing the wizened Jedi in your tentpole.”

Finally and most important, though, Gere has something that Hollywood doesn’t these days: money and, in conjunction, freedom.

“I was successful enough in the last three decades that I can afford to do these [smaller films] now,” the Pretty Woman actor says, essentially telling China and its financed Hollywood pictures, “The feeling is mutual.”