Hollywood Reporter says Zac Efron is poised for ‘career reinvention’: really?

Zac Efron

Zac Efron covers the latest issue of Hollywood Reporter to promote his role as a shirtless fratboy in Neighbors. The trade paper is calling Zac’s role a “career reinvention” that will make up for the commercial bombs of Zac’s last few years. Zac enjoyed a time of enormous success with the High School Musical franchise. Everyone knows that child stardom rarely translates into adult success, but Zac’s still trying to make it happen. He’s not a bad actor and does have charisma. I think Zac would have a decent shot if he got sober. His recent Skid Row melee looked really sketchy. The explanations that followed only made the situation worse. The tabloids followed up by talking about Zac’s mysterious broken jaw, which was also sketchy and possibly drug related. What a mess.

Zac paints a very wholesome portrait of himself with HR. He often appears “lost in thought” and talks of his work-related anxiety and insomnia. He insists that he’s “living an ultrafit life” and works out daily, eats clean, and only drinks special alkaline-loaded water. He talks about the Skid Row incident in well-rehearsed terms. Zac claims to go to bed at 9pm and swears he’s not partying anymore. Do you believe him?

The trauma of young success: “No matter who you are, you face challenges growing up. You go with your things, you learn, you have to. It’s impossible to lead an honest and fulfilling life as a man and not make mistakes and ‘fess up to them when you need to. But it’s especially humiliating when they happen to be so public and so scrutinized. When you have success young, and you accept the good things, you have to accept all of it. You have to accept the moments of glory but also a great responsibility. And that responsibility, to some degree, involves being a role model. At the same time, I’m a human being, and I’ve made a lot of mistakes. I’ve learned from each one.”

His substance abuse: “I was drinking a lot, way too much,” he says, acknowledging there were drugs, too. “It’s never one specific thing. I mean, you’re in your 20s, single, going through life in Hollywood, you know? Everything is thrown at you. I wouldn’t take anything back; I needed to learn everything I did. But it was an interesting journey, to say the least.”

About that Skid Row fight: “I had a friend come pick me up late at night — we were looking for a place downtown to get a bite and catch up. We were having trouble finding somewhere — a lot of places were closed — and the car ran out of gas off the 110. It was ridiculous. We had to pull over, and I called Uber. A homeless guy, or vagrant, tapped on the driver’s-side window. Before I knew it, he [the friend] was out of the car, and they started fighting. I saw that [the homeless man] was carrying some sort of a knife, or shank, and I got out of the car to disarm him. At some point, he dropped the knife, and I got hit pretty hard in the face — and almost instantly the police were there to break up the fight.” Efron calls it “the most terrifying moment in my life.”

He joined AA: “I just started going. And I think it’s changed my life. I’m much more comfortable in my own skin. Things are so much easier now. It’s a never-ending struggle.”

On shooting Neighbors: “The best part of the shoot by far was hanging out with Seth and the guys. The hardest part? Every single day was more or less a party. You went into this kind of dream state: You show up, it’s dark, and there’s a raging party. Drive home, and the sun’s up, go to sleep and then get back to set. Glow lights, girls in bikinis, electronic dance music blasting in between takes, people jumping around. It was pretty cool, but it was a lot. It was a lot. It sort of became real.”

His High School Musical success: “I’m grateful for every bit of that early success. It was hands down the most honest, carefree, passionate experience of my life. There were no expectations. [But later] I definitely felt that pressure. I’m not comfortable with it at all times. The people that I saw and the people that I started to meet, the majority were young. These were kids, and I looked into their eyes and I saw myself as a fan, and it was shocking to be on the other end of that. You just want to please every single one.”

He pulled out of the Footloose remake: “I was aching to do it. It just sounded like so much fun. But I knew if I did that, it would ultimately be limiting. And at that point, I was really searching for something else. It was never about money for me, [but] the hardest part was saying no to Kenny [Ortega] because I adore him so much.”

His future career: “I’m constantly searching for characters that are about betterment of self and betterment of others. And I’m searching for those parts because those are the ones that make me happy. They’re the ones that fulfill me personally.”

Why he turned to drugs & alcohol: “There was something lacking, some sort of hole that I couldn’t really fill up.” Work, he says, “started to become the reason to go anywhere, the reason to talk to anybody. The phone calls I received were regarding [work], the ones I wanted to make were regarding scripts or to producers. Slowly but surely, I was no longer living in my house. It was just hotel to hotel. So my hobbies went out the window. I was just so deep into my work, it was really the only thing I had,” he says. “I clung to it in a way that became a little bit destructive.”

He’s all better now: “Without those moments where you feel like your lowest, it’s impossible to appreciate the high ones. But I sit here in front of you today much happier and healthier than I’ve probably ever been.”

[From Hollywood Reporter]

I want to believe that Zac is on the straight and narrow, but the Skid Row situation makes it hard to believe he’s not still drugging. He previously claimed to be healthy and happy after rehab, but recent accounts say he never really went to rehab (only individual therapy sessions). If he’s really in AA now, that’s one thing, but a real rehab progam would have helped even more.

Zac’s been fudging the truth about his career too. On the Neighbors red carpet, he fronted like he could have a Star Wars role. Yesterday’s official annoucement put Zac nowhere near the movie. He’s probably playing fast and loose with the truth because desperately wants this “career reinvention” to succeed. Why wouldn’t he want that? If he’s not clean, then the success can only last so long. I wish him only the best, but it’s hard to be optimistic when so many other actors have lied about sobriety.

Zac Efron

Photos courtesy of Hollywood Reporter

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31 Responses to “Hollywood Reporter says Zac Efron is poised for ‘career reinvention’: really?”

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  1. Sarah says:

    Wish him the best hope he is on the straight and narrow!

    • springingforward says:

      I don’t know, Bedhead. This guy doesn’t strike me as a liar. I haven’t read what he said exactly, regarding a role in Star Wars, but unlike every other celeb/actor, I give Zac my confidence and a pass. He is very open…..
      I wish him the best in his future and I hope to see more of his work…..LOVED him in that movie with Leslie Mann and Matt Perry…17 Again or something. He is a gifted actor with comedic timing and that takes talent to pull off.
      Go Zac!

      • Mia4S says:

        Really? He strikes me as the saddest kind of liar. He is widely reported to have/had a drug problem and he’s still pulling the “it was drinking only” card? That’s guarding the image over getting well. The “openness” is talking points that make little sense (Skid Row). He’s in a lot of trouble and it’s just sad.

      • TG says:

        I agree with MIA4 – this interview and the accompanying photo of him on the couch shows a man in deep trouble with himself. I hope he finds the resolve to get better. Fame isn’t worth your life. In light of all this Brian Singer stuff I wonder if Zach was caught up in any of that. Makes me sick that executives can get away with sexual abuse. Also, I don’t know if he is gay, but if he is I wonder if having to live a lie, or feeling that you have to pretend to be someone you are not doesn’t contribute to his problems that would make him resort to drugs.

  2. Erinn says:

    I like Zac. God, I made so much fun of him during the HSM timeframe. I find him to be a pretty likable guy, and I hope he IS on the straight and narrow. Or that at least he’s striving for that. I’m not going to judge him on how long it takes him to get himself in a healthy place, only on whether or not he wants that. And he at least SEEMS like he wants that.

    • anna says:

      plus, he seems to be well liked by people he worked with and to show up on time and deliver. i mean the whole lohan-thing is so ridiculous because she is a drunk and has a bad work ethic. if she would be drunk and deliver, it would be fine. she doesn´t. but with him, who cares if he has a drink as long as he works it during filming.

  3. Dani2 says:

    I want him to get the help he needs and surround himself with good, supportive people. I feel like he shouldn’t have mentioned the Skid Row incident at all though, sometimes it’s best to just not mention something at all.

    • Lark says:

      I like him too, and I agree…He would be better off being quiet, or just fessing up. I remember the ridiculous first excuse, and maybe it was because he panicked because he worried the truth would negatively affect the movie…but after that he should have just shut up.

    • Liv says:

      I mean who believes him? He’s got obviously a drug problem and not a small one. He should go to rehab and then focus on independent films. He’s going nowhere with these films in which he plays himself.

  4. Lark says:

    Drug abuse is always sad. He’s supposedly really good in Neighbors according to the film journalists/blogs. Zac isn’t a bad actor and he has charisma, but he clearly has a serious drug problem. I’m from L.A., and the way the city is laid out…there is no way in hell he “stumbled” upon Skid Row. Yes, it is close to some trendy areas but you don’t drive through it unless you are taking surface streets to East L.A. for some reason (and no, I don’t see Zac Efron driving to Boyle Heights at 1 a.m. in the morning). It’s rather ironic, in that supposedly some of his drug abuse came from him not being able to cope with his career stalling but now that his career is on an uptick his drug abuse may prevent him from getting future roles.

    • Dani2 says:

      Those were my exact thoughts, who “looks for a bite to eat” near Skid Row? It’s like he didn’t even try to be convincing about the lie, I don’t know why he mentioned it. His publicist is doing a sh-t job right now.

    • Beth says:

      The thing is, that it was not skid row. TMZ shouted it from the rooftops and now everyone including the hollywood reporter keeps repeating it. TMZ removed it from their initial story but it’s too late. I’m not from LA but the LA Times crime reporter said this: “Zac Efron wasn’t near skid row when car got stranded. Downtown LA at Temple just off 110” Not saying his story is true but it puts a slightly different light on it.

  5. Aurie says:

    He probably was in discussions for a minor role but got passed over. It happens….I don’t think he was necessarily lying. Wasn’t Lupita up for a role as well but nothing happened?

    • AM says:

      Basically all of young Hollywood auditioned at one point or another. I believe he auditioned, but the timing of his red carpet remarks and the official announcement shows he didn’t have a lot of real knowledge about the film’s casting process/production schedule.

  6. Jayna says:

    Nobody believes his elaborate story of how he ended up in a rough part of town and the events after. An addict believes the story sounds reasonable and you should accept it. I wanted to believe his broken jaw story, but I’m sure it was related to being high.

    • katy says:

      I don’t know when this interview was but didn’t he have a 6 month chip necklace/bracelet a while ago? Now he “just started going?” Hm.

  7. lucy2 says:

    I’m still not buying his Skid Row story (he doesn’t have a smartphone to look up 24 hour restaurants?), but I really want him to get proper help and overcome his addictions. He seems like a nice guy, and if he gets back on the right path, he probably has a shot at a good acting career.

  8. TheOriginalKitten says:

    I love him so much but I don’t believe him.
    I really do wish him well though.

  9. Sarah says:

    I really WANT him to be clean and on the right path. I admit to a “Mom crush” on him from the HSM days and he is still so nice to look at. He has always seemed like a genuinely good guy to me. Don’t know what he said about Star Wars, but heck – a lot of names were dropping (and being dropped) on that one, including your beloved Cumberbitch.

  10. original kay says:

    I really hope the best for him.

    I scoffed at HSM until my daughter made me watch “the making of”, that was on one of the discs.
    Those kids worked it, hard. He is an incredible dancer, not a bad singer, and an ok actor.

    I hope he figures it out and does the career he wants. He should have done Footlose though.

  11. Alexis says:

    He comes off as a really nice guy, so naturally people are rooting for him. You never hear anything about him acting bratty or entitled. I believe he has the talent to be a “bigger” star. The only thing that can get in the way is himself — if he’s not being truthful about his substance abuse issues.

    I wish him the best.

  12. Leslie says:

    I always thought he tried way to hard to present the clean-cut-boy image to all his High School Musical fans, and all the while he’s been leading a secret life, using drugs, drinking, kinky sex. I remember an interview he did during the 17 Again promotion and when asked about his relationship with his then girlfriend, he said something along the lines of, “A relationship should be between two people, and everyone should keep their noses out.” I realize now that it was a line he’d memorized to promote his image, but that comment stuck in my head, making him a rare nice guy in Hollywood. Then when he was filming some movie in Texas, he hooked up with some girls for a threesome. One of the girls sold her story to some tabloid rag.

    He needs to be honest with himself, and not try to live up to some unattainable image. Going to therapy will help him do that. If he sticks with it.

    • Mom2two says:

      Leslie, I have to agree with you. I wish, for his sake, that he would get clean. But honestly, this Hollywood Reporter article reads as a PR puff piece basically saying, I am not the male Lindsay Lohan.
      What he does have going for him, as far as I know, is that he is professional on sets and does not act like a jerk. He truly gets clean, hr will have that reinvention.

  13. Beth says:

    Do people really expect him to reveal any dirty little detail? He would have to be really stupid to do that. He hasn’t retired so of course he’s not giving out information which could further limit his career at this point. That’s just a necessity not being delusional. A career which btw is by far not as bad as you make it out to be. He had 2 movies which did pretty well and a few indies with really interesting directors and costars.

    It’s also pretty clear that most people including writers have little knowledge about addiction and recovery. Relapse is part of recovery for many. The important thing is that you get back on the wagon right away and eventually it will stick. That doesn’t mean he’s delusional or “back to his old ways.” It means he’s an addict and that sobriety is hard. And the road to permanent sobriety has often a few setbacks. It just really bugs me that this post acts like he went to coachella and art basel in miami claiming to be sober and still hangs at nightclubs every day. Which he doesn’t.

  14. snowflake says:

    he seems like a nice guy, I hope he gets through his problems. He’s so good-looking, he could be a big star, imo.

  15. Happy21 says:

    I had never seen him in anything until I watched the movie New Years Eve and I absolutely loved him in it and have adored him ever since. I hope that he finds the path he needs to take and that he has a successful career. He just seems so sweet.

  16. Lucy says:

    I’m definitely rooting for him as well.

  17. ramona says:

    I like Zac because he never tries to distance himself from HSM. A lot of actors would try to downplay their early success in a Disney movie franchise aimed at kids, but he wears it pretty proudly. Good for him.

    Also, his light sabre/comic book-themed fight with Tom Lennon in 17 Again is the best thing in the world, ever.

  18. Emily C. says:

    This “friend” is a new addition to the story. This is such a transparent lie, but I guess if a cute white man tells lies, people are all too eager to swallow them.

    Btw, a lot of people who are into the so-called “clean” eating craze, supposedly special water, and other pseudoscientific nonsense, abuse drugs and alcohol.

  19. kristin says:

    I hope he has a long, happy life and a successful career…maybe and probably he is lying about the skid row incident, i don’t think it makes him “delusional” as the tag suggests, he just doesn’t need to provide details to the press. I’m a fan. I even liked that movie where he got peed on by Nicole Kidman. Pure gold.