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Caught In The Act
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| Sometimes screen sex is for real. Only the actors know for sure, and
Angelina Jolie isn't telling. Ali Catterall looks back over the history
of cinematic sex including all those rumours about who actually did the
deed on camera. |
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Jolie had met Thornton on the set of 1999's air traffic control drama Pushing Tin, marrying him a year later. According to reports, Jolie told friends Billy Bob was "the biggest in Hollywood", vital for an actress who claimed she needed sex "more than anyone I know". Three years later, the marriage was in tatters.
As sexpert Emily Dubberley, founder of Cliterati.co.uk, says, "If actors are playing at being in love, they can all too easily convince themselves they actually are. Some people may feel that 'tour rules' apply - if your partner's out of sight, they're out of mind, and what happens on set, stays on set. There is also a lot of pressure on set to get things done on time, because time is money, and research has shown that people get more aroused in times of stress as the adrenaline runs through them." Real-life porn performer Mark Sloane, star of Customs And Sexcise among others, agrees: "If you're working together in a tense situation, it can overpower everybody - but you can't blame it all on filming."
Finally, proving that real love can blossom through cinema, Jack Nicholson told Adam Sandler on the set of Anger Management - a film about a man who can't commit - that he'd lost his lifelong love Anjelica Huston because he wouldn't settle down. Heeding his words, Sandler took his girlfriend of three years, Jackie Titone, down the aisle during a private ceremony in the summer of 2003. Who said romance was dead?
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