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Jesse Eisenberg:High resistance

"The history of Jewish people is just so endlessly fascinating," the Hollywood star tells the JC. "If you don’t end up exploring it, it would be a surprise."

June 18, 2020 09:25
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6 min read

When the Covid-19 pandemic struck, actor-playwright Jesse Eisenberg was in Los Angeles for work. Rather than usher his family — wife, Anna Strout, and their 3½ year-old son Banner — towards the nearest airport, they rented an RV and drove to Indiana. “We live half the year in southern Indiana,” Eisenberg explains, when he calls me from a peaceful-sounding park in Bloomington in late May. 

For the 36 -year-old, famed for his Oscar-nominated role as the Machiavellian Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Network, the motorhome was the ideal mode of transport to help isolate himself and his family. But ever since he arrived in Indiana, he hasn’t been hunkering down in his house to avoid the virus. Instead, he’s been spending four hours a day working at a domestic violence shelter, where his mother-in-law was an executive.

A shelter for women and children fleeing violence at home, an issue that’s become even more prevalent in lockdown, Middle Way House was losing volunteers during the pandemic and Eisenberg wanted to help. It’s typical of his socially conscious side, putting something back at a time when the coronavirus hasn’t drastically affected his work. “For me, oftentimes, I will find myself with months off at a time —it’s just the nature of my job.”