Miami Living Magazine

Danica Patrick

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Jeremy's latest movie premiered last month. He is the voice of King Runeard in Disney's Frozen II, in theaters now. "There's an element of the film that is searching through the past, trying to discover where they came from, so I'm the girls' grandfather, King Arendelle." His daughter Charlie was a huge fan of the first movie —it was on a loop at his house— so he was excited to join the cast. "I loved the movie. "Let It Go," I thought was such a great release of that moment in a lot of teenagers' lives when they're trying to break free from the constraints and expectations of their parents and this idea: I'm going to be everything you were afraid I was going to turn into." Jeremy is impressed and surprised by how deep the animated film went. "These directors and filmmakers really wanted to push themselves, so they took some chances," he says proudly. Though Frozen is a musical, you won't hear Jeremy singing in the film. "I think I did audition for Frozen, but I came with my guitar and sang Van Morrison's "Crazy Love," and it's not really a song you would find in a musical…. Um, I didn't get it." He flashes a smile. He would like to take on the challenge of a musical one day. "I'd be very nervous about it. I've never done it." He did release an alt rock album about seven years ago under the pseudonym, Escape Tailor. "It's good, but it's not a musical type. There's no part of the song where I'm belting out vibrato," he laughs. "That I would've had to figure out for this. I don't know how to sing technique-wise. I wasn't trained, probably would last a week and then would sound froggy for the rest of the run." But let's not forget when Elton serenaded Cher "Turn away…" in Clueless. Jeremy has done theater and performed in the play Festen on Broadway in 2006, but was put-off by how the reviews affect the show's success. "As soon as the review comes out, that is in the air, and the one on Broadway [Festen] wasn't a great review, so as soon as it opened, had the bad reviews there and the audience stepped back a little bit. Just seemed a strange dichotomy something that is, as an actor, at least for me, you're going to play to be creatively satisfied, 'cause it's not like it's paying you a ton of money, so then to have it be so judged, more critically than something that y'know you're doing for a wider audience, it seems misbalanced." These days, Jeremy devotes most of his energy to his kids, Charlie, 10 and Sebastian, 7. He confesses that he's pretty "neurotic" about the way he is raising his children. "I didn't have the most traditional upbringing, so I often feel like I'm faking it. But I bet a lot of parents feel like that. And it's an interesting time to have kids that are 10 and 7, because it's right before they're about to have their own independence and I don't know what that looks like. I don't know what my life becomes then," he muses. "Might be a good thing, because creatively, I've been a little bit less productive over the last couple of years, and I think it's possibly tied to the fact that they take a lot of energy." Do you think they'll follow in your footsteps? Do they watch your work? "My daughter and her friends were dressed up as Clueless characters for Halloween." He pulls out his cell phone and shows me the photo. He points out that she's the one in red. "Yeah, they, I dunno. My daughter is definitely not as interested in it. I can sorta see my son — it's hard to tell. There's a side of me that really hopes they don't because it does seem that a lot of actors or actresses are searching for something," he laughs, "that they probably won't find. Trying to compensate for something that was lacking in their childhood perhaps. So if I do my job properly, then it will seem kinda weird to them. Why do you want to get up in front of everyone and do this thing where... — 'cause it is a weird job." Though this is an industry he knows very well and would be able to help them navigate, he hopes they go a different direction and choose a career path that is "not so up for criticism, so dependent on public affirmation." Jeremy didn't seek out acting. As a child, his mother took his sister and him along with her to auditions, so they began auditioning too. "We went to a pretty rough school, so we wanted an excuse to get out of there as soon as possible, so we would do these plays and they were really fun experiences —not necessarily for the acting, just because the community was really cool." It all seemed "kinda magical" — a welcome escape, especially since his parents were going through a divorce. Jeremy made his film debut in Grand Canyon in 1991 at 16 and has been in entertainment ever since. "It kinda just followed that straight line. I'm still waiting for my jagged line —jet off and become an astronaut," he says with a smile. But we don't want that, we like watching Jeremy every week on FBI. "There are a lot of people that are watching the show. Right now, we have 12 million viewers or something." And there are times when he notices that people recognize him. "I've done a lot of TV shows, so it's a pretty weird reality where sometimes you're walking

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