By Chisa Osaka
TOKYO — Standing in the shower before the
Tokyo premiere of his movie "The Bucket List," Jack Nicholson
contemplated his own "bucket list" of last great goals, the
three-time Oscar winner said on Wednesday.
Easing tensions between the West and Islam
would be a political goal, the actor said, but it was having
"one last big love" that topped his list.
"Many of my friends, my own contemporaries,
have said in their life that they would like one last big
romance to occur, so that would be on my list also," the
71-year-old performer said.
"I thought in the shower today (that) it’d
been many political things I’d like, but of course I’m not in
control of that."
Nicholson, who stars in the movie along
with Morgan Freeman, another septuagenarian Oscar-winner, said
he did not have a formal list of things to do before he dies,
or ‘kicks the bucket’, as the cliche has it, but offered the
ideas as examples.
In the film Nicholson and Freeman play
cancer patients who share the same cramped hospital room and
same incurable disease.
Nicholson plays the millionaire owner of a
hospital chain whose two patients to every room motto sees him
assigned to a room with Freeman, the black owner of a garage
who had to drop out of college early to support his family.
Freeman’s character has the idea of making
a "bucket list" of all the things he’d like to do before
dying, and Nicholson finances the trip for both of them as
their friendship blossoms.
During the trip, the pair go sky-diving, visit the Pyramids
and the Serengeti in Africa and dine in fine restaurants. –
Reuters