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1

Wolfman in Disguise
Who, exactly, is the man behind all the prosthetics and fake fur of The Wolfman? Oscar winner Benicio del Toro gives us a glimpse.
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2

15 Innovators
In every arena imaginable, young Latinos are shaping our world. While they are most conspicuous in the entertainment industry, these icons age 30 and under have a huge impact and wide breadth of talent.
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3

Higher Education
Keeping in mind everything from graduation rates to financial aid, we scoured the statistics to come up with our annual list of the top 25 colleges for Hispanics.
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The Transformation

Benicio del Toro’s choice of roles up to this point have never been the hero in the white hat. Instead, he has built a storied career on portraying deliciously complicated protagonists with issues. So to watch his evolution into the lead role in The Wolfman—fur, fangs and all—feels somehow, well, natural.


By Anna Marie de la Fuente

Benicio del Toro’s choice of roles up to this point have never been the hero in the white hat. Instead, he has built a storied career on portraying deliciously complicated protagonists with issues. So to watch his evolution into the lead role in The Wolfman—fur, fangs and all—feels somehow, well, natural.
Even del Toro knows it is a role that fits. “I’ve always been a fan of black and white horror classics,” says the Puerto Rican actor and Academy Award winner. He stands over 6 feet tall and has the thick dark eyebrows and brooding looks that make him ideal to play the mythical shape-shifting wolf. Even his friend, actor Sean Penn sees him in a similar manner. “He’s like an acting animal, this guy who comes out of the forest to make movies better,” he has said.
But, meeting him one weekend in Los Angeles, del Toro could not look less like that animal. Decked out in an expensive black suit and a white shirt, he sat in a small but elegant room in the Four Seasons Hotel. He was the picture of composure. He might be an animal on the set, but he’s often reticent for the press.
He was most eager to discuss his latest beastly character. It was del Toro and his manager, Rick Yorn, who convinced Universal Studios to remake the 1941 classic, The Wolf Man, as a sort of an homage to the classic horror genre, remaining true to the original style and story. The film, to be released February 12, marks a milestone in del Toro’s career. With a budget allegedly north of $100 million, it is the most expensive film in which he plays the lead.
Del Toro plays Lawrence Talbot, who returns from America to the family estate in England after hearing from his brother’s fiancee (who is played by Emily Blunt) that his brother has vanished. He admits that the iconic performance of Lon Chaney, Jr., who played the werewolf in the original film, inspired his own interpretation of the role.
In the movie, del Toro’s character reunites with his estranged father, played by Sir Anthony Hopkins, only to discover horrific forces at play. To explain del Toro’s Latino looks—he certainly does not resemble Hopkins—Talbot’s mother in the movie is Latina. When asked how plausible it would be for Latinas to have married into English aristocracy during Victorian times, del Toro points out, “There were mixed marriages between the Argentinians and the English during those times.”
In his past roles, del Toro, 43, did not need an excess of makeup to morph into his characters. And that quality has become his calling card. Other than the wildly different characters that he has personified onscreen, it is difficult to know del Toro. Many details are known about his past. He was born in Puerto Rico to a mother and father who were both lawyers, he was sent to school in the U.S. when he was 13, and was in college when he discovered acting. But not much is known about his personality or what makes him tick.
And getting that information can prove tricky. When journalists have veered to close to del Toro’s personal life, he has done anything to shy away from the questions, including storming out of an interview.
As private as he is about himself, he certainly leaves a big impression on friends and cohorts who are willing to shed light on his nature.
“Is he a method actor?” muses director/writer Christopher McQuarrie, who won a best original screenplay Oscar for The Usual Suspects and directed del Toro in The Way of the Gun. “The definition is very broad, so I don’t know. I can say he is a story-teller.”
Screenwriter David Hayter (The X-Men, Watchmen) who has written and is set to direct a werewolf-themed film later this year, recalls how he first met del Toro on the set of The Usual Suspects when he had gone to support his friend, the film’s director Bryan Singer.
“Benicio carried an air of mystery about him, which is part of what makes him such a powerful actor,” he says. “That, and his mind, which is constantly addressing the issues of the story, and coming up with creative, original ways to solve those problems.”
Hayter relates how del Toro came up with up with the strange gibberish for his character of Fred Fenster in The Usual Suspects. “He figured out that if it didn’t matter what he was saying then the audience didn’t need to understand him.
“On his first day on set, Benicio started into his ‘Fenster-speak,’ and Bryan walked up to him after the shot, and said, ‘Um, so... Is that how you’re going to say all your lines?’ Benicio said yes. Bryan thought about it for a beat, and then said, ‘Okay.’ A brilliant choice, for a director who was smart enough to recognize and accept it,” Hayter concludes.
For Sin City, Robert Rodriguez remembers his co-director Frank Miller saying, “I kind of let you direct Benicio, I could tell you guys had the whole Latin thing going on.”
“It was true, we connected immediately on that level and had an enormous amount of fun on that film,” Rodriguez says. “But Benicio’s also extremely creative, full of ideas, and makes a character live and breathe—which makes the whole experience run smoothly.”
McQuarrie credits del Toro for helping him figure out the ending of his directorial debut, The Way of the Gun. “I consider it to be ‘our’ film, not mine,” McQuarrie says.
“Much of the action in the film evolved from conversations with Benicio. We were midway through the movie, and I had still not worked out all the action for the film’s climactic shoot-out centering around the delivery of the ransom money,” he says about the film. “Benicio came to me and asked: “How much does the money weigh?’ I was very busy and said: ‘Who cares?’ Benicio said: ‘I care. I have to carry it.’
“So I had the prop guy work out how much a bag holding $15 million dollars in 10s, 20s and 50s (as described in the script) would weigh,” he relates. “As it turns out, it would fill 35 printer paper boxes and weigh 2,300 pounds. By making it all 100s, we brought the weight down to 375 pounds, divided evenly into three very large duffle bags.
“And suddenly I saw the entire ending of the movie. I had a great complication: two men, each with one gun and three bags, each weighing as much as a small adult,” he recalls. “Suddenly a bullet in the arm cost $5 million. The sheer weight and mass of the money became what the gunfight was all about. It had never occurred to me until Benicio asked.”
Not that working with del Toro is always easy. “His attention to detail can be exasperating to directors,” says actor/writer Brandon Boyce (Milk) who also met del Toro while visiting the set of The Usual Suspects. “He’s more concerned about the authenticity of his performance than whether the audience will get it.”
But, this uncompromising stance is most likely what landed him his Best Supporting Actor Oscar in Steven Soderbergh’s Traffic where he insisted that his Mexican cop character be righteous and less ambiguous, giving the film a vital moral core.
Even in his less successful films, del Toro’s performance shines through. While noting that there have been few other screen portrayals of Che Guevara, the Argentine-born Marxist guerrilla leader charged with helping craft the Cuban Revolution, Jon Lee Anderson, author of the biography Che Guevara, A Revolutionary Life, observes that del Toro “put a lot of integrity into his performance” in Soderbergh’s otherwise flawed two-part film.
“I thought he lived and breathed Che during the making of the film,” Anderson says. “This degree of extended identification and merging, almost, by an actor with his role, is unusual, and with del Toro and Che it was nothing if not exceptional.”
Del Toro acknowledges the role of Che was a challenge. Not only in its portrayal of a controversial figure, but also because of a surprising linguistic challenge. “I found out that acting in Spanish was not as easy as I expected it to be,” del Toro observes.
Del Toro was a co-producer in Che, as he was in The Wolfman. He was also an executive producer in Puerto Rican dramedy Maldeamores (Lovesickness). But now he’s ready to make the leap into directing. “I’ve been in this business for more than 20 years,” he says. “It’s time I took the chance.”
While he has no specific project in the near future, he is attached to two high-profile projects currently in a state of flux: The Three Stooges and Martin Scorcese’s Silence. In the Stooges film, he’s rumored to play Moe, the bowl-haircut-sporting alpha dog. It’s a far cry from anything del Toro has played before, and it’s hard to imagine such an iconoclast playing slapstick comedy. But then again, if his repertoire has revealed anything, it’s to expect the unexpected.