The Star Early Edition

REBELLIOUS SEAN PENN WANTS TO SEE IT FOR HIMSELF

Actor used his Hollywood power to find the world’s most hunted drug cartel kingpin, but he’s used to the rush, having rubbed shoulders with presidents, writes Jessica Contrera

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H E HAS jumped into riots, protested wars, drunk with dictators and aided natural disaster relief. Now Sean Penn has taken his boldest step yet in what appears to be a never-ending quest to ensure he is remembered as more than an actor.

He found the world’s most hunted criminal and asked him some questions for Rolling Stone magazine.

Why, you might have asked, would Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán sit down with the guy from Fast Times at Ridgemont

High?

Because while you know Penn as a box office regular, the cartel kingpin knows him as a rebellious activist. Penn has been using his Hollywood power to jump into high-profile conversati­ons for most of his career, from humanitari­an moments in New Orleans and Haiti to political kerfuffles as controvers­ial as this encounter with Guzmán.

“I take no pride in keeping secrets that may be perceived as protecting criminals,” Penn wrote in his Rolling Stone piece, published on Saturday.

But as he was gearing up to meet the people who would eventually lead him to Guzmán, Penn said, he was in his “rhythm” – this was the kind of story he has been working towards for years, and not just because it might lead to a movie eventually. The escaped fugitive was “interested in seeing the story of his life told on film”, if the project involved Mexican actress Kate del Castillo.

Presumably, he did not foresee that contacting two extremely famous actors would lead authoritie­s to his capture last week.

A Mexican law-enforcemen­t official denied media reports that the Mexican government has requested to interrogat­e Penn. But the official added that “lines of investigat­ion” could include Penn, without specifying how.

The actor’s drive to be at the heart of the action seems to come from basic curiosity. A 2006 profile in the New Yorker describes how Penn drove into the thick of the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles in 1992 because he wanted to see it for himself. The adventure ended with a shopping cart crashing into his windshield.

“He’s not taking a second-hand opinion. He really wants to know what’s going down,” actor-director Dennis Hopper said.

As his success continued on screen, Penn’s growing reputation allowed for his curiosity to take him to more dangerous and exclusive places. In 2002, he travelled to Iraq. In 2003, after the invasion of US troops, he went back, this time to write about the experience for the San Francisco Chronicle. Penn enjoyed the experience of playing reporter enough to try it again in 2005, this time in Iran. Reporting, he told the New Yorker, was just like acting.

“You wake up in the morning with an interest in listening and expressing,” he said. “It all feels the same to me. Acting is everyman-ness, and loving everyman. You’re reaching out to people’s pain.”

Penn, who declined through a spokespers­on to be interviewe­d for this story, wasn’t approachin­g turmoil in the Middle East as an unbiased journalist­ic observer. He had previously taken out an advertisem­ent in The Washington Post condemning President George W Bush on Iraq, and later called for his impeachmen­t. “The needless blood on your hands, and therefore, on our own, is drowning the freedom, the security and the dream that America might have been, once healed of and awakened by, the tragedy of September 11, 2001,” Penn wrote to Bush in 2010.

Though he allegedly tried to interview Bush, Penn never made it to the White House. Instead he veered towards a different brand of world leader, developing relationsh­ips with Cuban President Raúl Castro and Venezuela’s late Hugo Chávez.

Penn visited Cuba for Christmas in 2005, “under the auspices of religious tourism”, with his then-wife Robin Wright and their two children. The family was introduced to Castro in a private midnight meeting, where they discussed the actor’s trips to the Middle East, Latin American history and gay rights. Penn wrote about the encounter in a 17 000-word story for The Nation, in which he also describes meeting and befriendin­g Chávez. When Chávez died in 2013, Penn called him one of the “most important forces we’ve had on this planet”.

This is apparently what piqued Guzmán’s interest in Penn.

“He asks about my relationsh­ip with the late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez with what seems to be a probing of my willingnes­s to be vilified through associatio­ns,” Penn wrote in Rolling Stone.”I speak to our friendship in a way that seems to pass an intuitive litmus test measuring the independen­ce of my perspectiv­e.”

When he flew to the post-disaster scenes of Hurricane Katrina and the Haiti earthquake, Penn was accused of show-boating. He responded by saying he hoped those critics would “die screaming of rectal cancer”, then founded “J/P Haitian Relief Organisati­on”. The non-profit body held a benefit gathering the same evening as the Rolling Stone interview with Guzmán was released.

“I’m just another a****** trying to feel good about himself,” he told Esquire last year. And why shouldn’t I? That’s what everybody should try to do.

“I’d seen plenty of video and graphic photograph­y of those beheaded, exploded, dismembere­d or bullet-riddled innocents, activists, courageous journalist­s and car- tel enemies alike,” he wrote. “I was highly aware of committed DEA (Drug-Enforcemen­t Administra­tion) and other law-enforcemen­t officers and soldiers, both Mexican and American, who had lost their lives executing the policies of the War on Drugs. The families decimated, and institutio­ns corrupted.”

It’s just the kind of thing that would make a captivatin­g movie, perhaps one day, starring Sean Penn. – The Washington Post

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 ?? PICTURE: ANDRES MARTINEZ CASARES/REUTERS ?? ANOTHER PERSPECTIV­E: US actor Sean Penn thrives on taking on the role of reporter and being a standard-bearer for the ordinary person.
PICTURE: ANDRES MARTINEZ CASARES/REUTERS ANOTHER PERSPECTIV­E: US actor Sean Penn thrives on taking on the role of reporter and being a standard-bearer for the ordinary person.

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