The significantly smarter others
A growing number of celebrities are hooking up with more intelligent partners, and they’re calling it ‘the Clooney effect’ A US study by Match. com revealed that 87 per cent of men would date a woman who was their intellectual, academic and economic super
Ever since the world’s most celestially beautiful duo uncoupled 18 months ago, amid allegations of his drug-taking and her disregard for their children’s privacy, there has been speculation as to who might supplant the ambrosial Angelina Jolie in Brad Pitt’s affections.
Before the ink had dried on the divorce petition, gossip rags were falling over themselves to link the 54-year-old heart-throb to actresses such as Marion Cotillard, Kate Hudson and 21-year-old British starlet Ella Purnell, currently in BBC drama Ordeal by Innocence .Soitis only to be expected that Pitt’s latest rumoured paramour, despite being virtually unknown, could comfortably give the former Mrs Jolie-Pitt a run for her money with her chiselled cheekbones and tumbling tresses.
Not that Neri Oxman, the raven-haired beauty in question, is likely to waste much head space on such frivolous considerations. For rather than a wideeyed ingenue, Oxman is a 42-year-old professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the world’s top-ranked university. She also happens to be an award-winning artist whose work has been displayed in New York’s Museum of Modern Art.
Despite rarely having ventured outside the pristine waters of the Hollywood dating pool — before Jolie, he was married to Jennifer Aniston and he counts Gwyneth Paltrow and Juliette Lewis among his exes — Pitt is reportedly “smitten” with the Israeli-born professor, whom he is said to have met after seeking her expertise on an architectural project. The pairing is all the more extraordinary given that the actor has cultivated an image as something of a himbo, playing a series of delectable but dim characters in films such as Burn After Reading.
It seems, however, that Pitt is just the latest silver screen hunk to have swapped actresses for academics, in what has been called “the Clooney effect”.
For it was the actor’s close pal who started the trend five years ago, when he swept Oxford-educated barrister Amal Alamuddin off her (blue) stockinged feet. The romance signalled a shift among Tinseltown’s leading men, a group never previously known for valuing a woman’s IQ points over her vital statistics.
As well as the Clooneys, now parents to nine-month-old twins, there is Eddie Redmayne, who is married to
Hannah Bagshawe — formerly the global head of PR at a financial media firm. Not to mention Benedict Cumberbatch, once named Empire’s sexiest movie star, who has two sons with his Oxford-educated theatre director wife Sophie, and Inception actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who is to married Silicon Valley robotics expert Tasha McCauley. Meanwhile, reformed philanderer Jude Law this year celebrates his third anniversary with Phillipa Coan, a business psychologist with a PhD.
While Pitt et al have, unsurprisingly, found partners who are as physically striking as they are cerebral, an increasing number of men are claiming that brains are the only body part they are interested in. According to reports, more people than ever are identifying as “sapiosexual”: harbouring an attraction based on intellect, as opposed to appearance.
On dating site Plenty of Fish, more than 89,000 men identify as “sapiophiles”, while Match.com and OKCupid have added “sapiosexual” as a category of orientation.
Beyond Hollywood, it looks like the rest of the world’s male population is catching up. A US study by Match. com revealed that 87 per cent of men would date a woman who was their intellectual, academic and economic superior — a statistic that flies in the face of generations of preconceived wisdom that men fear intelligent women. —