WHO

‘WE’RE NOT PERFECT’ Elsa Pataky on Hemsworth family life

The Spanish actress and wellness author dishes on her ‘normal’ life with ‘Avengers’ star Chris Hemsworth

- By Stephen ■ Downie

Beautiful couple. Adorable children. A mega-mansion on the crushed-diamond NSW coastline in the not overly bohemian town of Byron Bay. Everything seems perfect for Spanish actress Elsa Pataky and her Hollywood hunk of a husband, Chris Hemsworth. It is. And it’s not. At the risk of shattering the illusion with a Thor-like thrust of a mighty hammer, Chris and Elsa are (gulp) normal. “We’re the same as everybody else,” Pataky, 43, tells WHO. “We don’t have a special secret. We have our ups and downs.”

Avengers star Hemsworth and Pataky will soon celebrate nine years of marriage. That’s probably an eternity in Hollywood years. They share three children – daughter, India Rose, 7, and twin sons, Tristan and Sasha, 5. And just like parents all over the planet (and maybe some on Asgard), Hemsworth and Pataky argue (and presumably make up while looking impossibly sexy). “Nothing is as easy and perfect as it looks,” a candid Pataky says. “We have those moments where we shout at the kids and then we feel like horrible parents and we have to work at being a couple like everyone else.

“There are those moments where you fight, and I think you have to put a lot of effort into [your marriage]. As much effort

as you put into your work, you have to put into your marriage and into being a dad and a mum. And it’s constant work.”

Some might say Pataky and Hemsworth were destined to be together. When she was a 15-year-old back in Madrid she had a Thor symbol inked on her right shoulder because she was fascinated by the symbol and, she told Vogue Australia in 2018, she found the legend of the Norse god to be “so beautiful”. Now she’s married to Thor.

Pataky is on the publicity trail for her latest health and wellbeing book, Strong. It’s rippling with exercise routines and recipes and reasons for getting off the couch and hitting the gym, the pavement or the beach. We all need them. Even Pataky. The Fast and the Furious star admits there are times when she wasn’t the super-fit wonder woman she is.

“I was in LA, I was lonely, with nothing to do and nothing was going right, not auditions,” she remembers. “Of course, instead of exercise, I just wanted to watch a movie on the sofa. I had a friend who started kickboxing. I said, ‘I’m going with you because I don’t have the strength to go to a gym to work out. I started

getting stronger in my mind and the endorphins gave me more confidence and suddenly things started to be different.”

Pataky eventually moved away from LA to Byron Bay with Hemsworth. But even now, she has moments when she struggles to find the motivation to exercise.

“We all have excuses,” she concedes. “There are times now when I would love to sit on the sofa and watch a movie. But at night-time, if I haven’t had the time to train, I feel anxious. It’s 10pm and I’m training in the gym because it makes me feel better. I feel like I need it. I don’t recommend this is the best thing to do, but it works for me because I go to bed feeling better.”

One of Pataky’s pointers for a better life is to get off your phones and screens two hours before going to bed. Really? “It’s very easy to say it, but really hard to do it,” she says. “I have days I do it and days I don’t. It’s something to start with. Everything starts with a little tiny thought.” Phones in general appear to be a sore point for Pataky. When one of their children asked Hemsworth why he didn’t spend time on his phone when they were at school, rather than when they were at home, it left the couple feeling “so guilty”. “It’s so crazy how even your kids have to come and say that,” she says. Now,

“I’m so scared of the drones in my life”

they’re looking to buy phones which can only be used for calls and messages. No internet. Good luck.

When it comes to mealtimes, Pataky says she tends to cook the kids’ meals, while Hemsworth handles the dinners for the adults. “Some days it’s amazing,” she says of his cooking, “and some days it’s not that edible. But I want to eat it because I’m so hungry. I think great chefs try things and that’s what he does, and he enjoys it so much.”

Pataky and Hemsworth seem fairly relatable (with their phone troubles, especially). But as celebritie­s, they’re constantly in the public gaze, even in Byron

Bay. How does she deal with being under the microscope? “Not very well,” she says. One thing she’s concerned about is people flying drones with cameras over her home. She and Hemsworth have built a mansion estimated to be worth $20 million.

“I’m so scared of all these drones in my life,” she says. “They just come in and take photos of my house. I don’t know what’s going to happen with my kids in the pool, and that’s my private space and we’re naked and we’re free to do that, and there’s going to be drones up the top taking photos. I’m really angry about that.”

Fortunatel­y, Pataky still has plenty to laugh about. Like her husband’s jokes, for

one. On a recent Instagram post about her book, Hemsworth pretended to be Pataky. “He took the phone and he’s such a good comedian,” she says. “The way he tells things with a sense of humour, I just love.” Along with his cooking. Mostly.

 ??  ?? Pataky and Hemsworth recently gave close friends a six-week challenge to get fit and eat healthy food.
Pataky and Hemsworth recently gave close friends a six-week challenge to get fit and eat healthy food.
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 ??  ?? The couple and their kids are passionate about the environmen­t.
The couple and their kids are passionate about the environmen­t.
 ??  ?? “You have to change your philosophy on life and all your bad habits” if you want to get fit and healthy, Pataky says.
“You have to change your philosophy on life and all your bad habits” if you want to get fit and healthy, Pataky says.
 ??  ?? “I hope people can see we’re as normal and as relatable as anyone else,” she says.
“I hope people can see we’re as normal and as relatable as anyone else,” she says.
 ??  ?? “People don’t believe that I might eat three doughnuts one after another,” Pataky says. The next day, she’ll train extra hard.
“People don’t believe that I might eat three doughnuts one after another,” Pataky says. The next day, she’ll train extra hard.
 ??  ?? Strong by Elsa Pataky (Plum, RRP $34.99, Photograph­y: Georges Antoni) is out now.
Strong by Elsa Pataky (Plum, RRP $34.99, Photograph­y: Georges Antoni) is out now.

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