“Shiloh, we feel, has Montenegro style,” the actress tells Vanity Fair. “It’s how people dress there. She likes tracksuits, she likes (regular) suits. She likes to dress like a boy. She wants to be a boy. So we had to cut her hair. She likes to wear boys’ everything. She thinks she’s one of the brothers.”
Angie, who stars in Salt, out July 23, also reveals that she isn’t pregnant but is “not opposed to it. “We want to make sure we don’t build a family so big that we don’t have absolutely enough time to raise them each really well.”
As for marriage? She’s not against it, either, but “it’s just like we already are. Children are clearly a commitment, a bigger commitment (than marriage). It’s for life.”
A few more highlights from Angelina’s interview:
On what Brad has been up to in Venice: “He sculpts and designs. He makes furniture, sculpts things related to houses. Traditional male.”
On Brad with the kids: “I keep telling Brad he owes me. He’s had a few months off in one of the most beautiful cities in the world with the children. And he’s such an artist and goes to the stone yards and the art exhibits, and loves being in such a cultural place.”
On a potential Mr. & Mrs. Smith sequel: “People have tried. And it’s strange: do we have kids in the movie? We’ve thought about that, but it becomes personal now that we actually have kids. And if we work on it, we pull from our own life, which is funny to us, but you feel strange sharing too much. We did ask somebody to look into Mr. & Mrs. to see if they could crack a sequel, but there wasn’t anything original. It was just, Well, they’re going to get married, or they’ve got kids, or they get separated. Never great.”
On co-starring again with Brad: “I’d love to. We’ve talked about it. We’d have to figure out who’s going to watch the kids, but it’s really about finding the right thing, because we’ve looked. When you’re a couple, there are certain things people don’t want to see you do. It becomes too indulgent, too personal. I don’t think people want to see people who are really together intimate on-screen. Maybe we have to play bad guys that try to kill each other, so it’s just fun and aggressive, not dealing with some man-woman deal.”
The August issue of Vanity Fair hits newsstands nationwide July 6.
Danica Patrick
Jaime King
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