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Why Sandra Bullock takes a break from movies

On one of the coolest streets in Austin, a go-to for the hip and hungry. This is Walton’s Fancy and Staple, a café and flower shop in a century-old brick building owned and restored by actress producer Sandra Bullock. “I like the idea of ​​finding purpose for something that was originally created for a different purpose,” she said.

This place, which was once a horse-and-carriage repair shop, is now a destination for local foodies.

“For me, this is just as fulfilling as making movies,” Bullock told correspondent Tracy Smith.

And if you know their movies, that really says something.

In “The Lost City” (by CBS’s parent company, Paramount), Bullock plays a kidnapped romance novel, which – along with the cover model of her book, Channing Tatum – struggles its way back into civilization through some horrible and strange crucifixion situations. .

Smith said of the play scene: “It’s refreshing that the person taking off their clothes is the guy.”

“Because no one wanted me to do it,” Bullock said. “Do you think I’m kidding? I am net! And Channing was willing to train all the time. I was like, ‘I do not want to’.

It is the last chapter in a career that took her from a fast city bus in 1994 “Speed” to an even more horrible journey in “Gravity” 2013. Of course, she is also known for her brand of physical comedy. It’s something she says she learned at an early age, thanks to her mother.

Sandra Bullock.

CBS News

“My mom had no sense of humor unless you hurt yourself, and then she would laugh her ass off,” Bullock said. “So, I realized that the path to my mother’s heart was through physical comedy.”

“So, would you do pratfalls?”

“I would fall all the time!”

And it’s fair to say that the film world has fallen for her: she’s made four dozen-plus films, earned countless awards, but also shared her share of real-world grief.

Smith asked, “Play with me: on a scale of 1-10, what is life like now?”

Bullock considered. “I would say it’s, you know, it’s my life, so it’s about 9.2.”

“That’s very specific! Why 9.2?”

“Because the other shoe will fall. It’s worth it.”

The other shoe seems to be falling hardest in 2010. It started happily enough, with the surprise adoption of her first child. “He was unexpected, he was unplanned. I got a call one day, ‘Your place is here,’ and that’s after years of introducing them, years.

“Oh my God. Then just out of the blue, boom?

“It was literally out of the blue. And so I got a plastic bag and a baby.

And a few weeks later, with the adoption still a secret, she won an Oscar for “The Blind Side”.

Sandra Bullock holds her Best Actress Oscar for “The Blind Side” at the 82nd Annual Academy Awards at the Kodak Theater on March 7, 2010 in Hollywood.

Jeffrey Mayer / WireImage on Getty

But even during her acceptance speech, she said her mind was on her baby: “All I kept thinking was, ‘He’s home.’ Like, I did not care. I did not care that I was there, I just wanted to go home. And then I sewed on the dress. I was sewn in the dress, and I had to get out of the dress, but I just wanted to go home and feed Lou.

Smith asked, “How can you get out of a dress when you’re hooked?”

“You’re just rubbing it,” she replied. “I grabbed it. And then I asked them to fix it. I go, ‘I do not know what happened! All the guys went down!'”

And days later, the wheels came out of her marriage to reality star Jesse James, leaving her to raise her baby son alone – and leaving the rest of the world as close as she could.

Bullock said: “I think so much has happened. How do you process grief and not hurt your child in the process? It’s a newborn, they take over everything you feel. So, my commitment was to him and did the first year of his Life is not smeared with my grief.

Bullock has since adopted a little girl as well. (She asked us not to use any pictures of her children.)

She says that even in her privileged world there was a real taste of the battles the other mothers fought every day: “You know, my children are black. I have a level of defense that millions of mothers who are not white have. You know, I have an understanding of how creepy it is, and I just get really emotional because I think of hundreds of years of women who could never relax in motherhood. They could never relax. “

“Worried about their kids?”

“Yes, in a way that we as white women should not have to worry about. You worry about other things, but when you really, really, really take a minute and think about hundreds of years of moms who can not be free.” “Enjoying the birth of a child – her son becoming a young man – all these things represent fear and loss.”

Career-wise, Bullock wanted to make the audience laugh with his latest film. But she says “The Lost City,” which will hit theaters this week, will be her last film, at least for now. “I can be creative, I can be part of a community, but now the work in front of the camera has to take a break,” she said.

“For how long?” asked Smith.

“I do not know. I do not know. Until I do not feel how I feel now when I stand in front of a camera.

“That is …?”

“I want to be at home. I do not want anyone to invest in a project when I say: I just want to be at home. Because I was always running, I was always running to the next thing. I just want to be present and responsible for one thing. to be.

“So, did you know that this movie is going to be, this will be the last one for a while?”

“Yeah. And I do not know what ‘a time’ is. I do not know what that is. I would just like to clean the basement.”

“You’re literal?”

“I am literally!” said Bullock. “I have a room where all my S *** goes, for all the years. I want to go through it, and I want to see if I remember anything about it.

Her family comes first, at home, and at Walton’s Fancy and Staple, where her sister Gigi designs some of the pastries. Bullock showed Smith the golden eggs: “They are volatile, but they are my sister’s recipe, a combination of a churro, a donut and a snickerdoodle.”

Sandra Bullock shows correspondent Tracy Smith the tempting pastry at Walton’s Fancy and Staple.

CBS News

Smith asked, “Are you a sweetheart?”

“Yeah, great time. I have a problem. Of course!”

Or, just maybe, Sandra Bullock knows when something is sweet, and has learned to appreciate it.

Smith asked, “What do you see in front of you now?”

“She’s like, ‘I see a crystal ball …'” Bullock laughed. “I do not know! That’s what’s a little creepy, I do not know. Look: in six months I can not stand it anymore, I have to go back to work. But I do not want to do that. If that feeling come on, I do not want to do that. I do not want to rely on work to fill me. But I just do not see much except everyone under my roof. That is it. I know it is not very sexy, but you know what “It’s mine.”


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Story produced by John D’Amelio. Editor: Steven Styler.