Back in Action star Glenn Close is enjoying life in Bozeman, Montana.
In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Close explained that she has adapted to the lifestyle since moving to Montana in 2019.
“Today, my home is in Bozeman, Montana. All my brothers and sisters live here. My modest brick house, built in 1892, has a porch from where I can see the mountains and look toward Say hello to the neighbors," she told the outlet.
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Glenn Close left New York for Montana in 2019. (Getty Images)
After several years in Big Sky Country, Close is looking to expand her real estate portfolio.
“I’m building a bigger house about half an hour outside the city,” she said.
“Today, my home is in Bozeman, Montana. All my brothers and sisters live here. My modest brick house, built in 1892, has a porch from where I can see the mountains and look toward Say hello to the neighbors."
"This will be my Zen farmhouse and our family's sanctuary. In the back will be a stone cabin that reminds me of the best days of my childhood."
In 2021, Close spoke with Mountain Outlaw about leaving New York for Montana a year before the world came to a halt due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
"I shot a movie in Canada over the winter. It was fun and lovely, but I missed home and I I've never been homesick.
Glenn Close is building her family's "sanctuary" in Montana. (Fraser Harrison/Getty Images)
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"Not only is Bozeman my home, but I can't wait to get back here. When I left for work, Jesse and Tina saw me off at the airport. It was awesome. I came to realize how scared I was Get out," Close told the outlet at the time.
Close's sister Jessie lives next door and her sister Tina lives in a nearby property. Close's two brothers, Alexander and Tambu Misaki, also live in Montana.
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"When I was little, I found comfort in nature, and that's never changed," Close said. "I've always tried to create that same potential for my family, especially now to be back here with my brothers and sisters and to have a piece of land outside the city that will belong to my daughter and her kids forever."
"This is my legacy," she added.
At the time, Close explained that her life in Montana was the "best" time of her life.
"You can wake up at four in the morning thinking you've made all the wrong decisions in your life, and then you sleep until dawn, which is an extremely lethal place to be in," the award-winning actress said. "I feel like you've made all the wrong decisions in your life. Very lucky. I do think this will be the best time of my life.”
Close calls the last six years of her life in Montana the "best" years of her life. (Steve Granitz/FilmMagic)
Close's life wasn't always so peaceful. The "Hillbilly Elegy" star is notorious for being a member of the "Moral Rearmament" cult.
Glenn Close says cult upbringing left her traumatized
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Close explained that her "world changed" when she was seven years old and her family joined a cult. It wasn't until 1970, when Close was 22, that she left the cult.
Moral Realignment, also known as MRA, is a religious movement that began in the 1920s when a man named Frank Buchman began evangelizing with success. Some of the beliefs he preached were the importance of surrendering to a higher power and practicing solitary silence. Over the years, he attracted thousands of followers from many countries.
Glenn Close was a member of the "Moral Reconstruction" cult from the age of 7 to 22. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzero, Billiards)
when Second World War Buchman decided to name the organization Moral Rearmament, explaining that he planned to use spirituality to unite the world and bring peace. Critics of the organization derided his simplistic vision, but others were fascinated by it. One of them was Glenn Close's father.
After joining the organization, he went to work in Africa, while Close and her siblings were placed at MRA headquarters in Switzerland. In a 2014 interview with The Hollywood Reporter , the actress detailed the strict rules and manipulation that goes on behind the scenes.
"You're basically not allowed to do anything, or you're forced to feel guilty about any unnatural desires," she explains. “If you talk to anyone in a group, that group basically dictates how you should live, what you should say, and how you should feel, from the time you are seven years old until you grow up” 22, it has a profound effect on you Impact, that's something you have to (consciously overcome) because all your triggers are. "
In 1939, Frank Buckman discussed moral restructuring with legendary actress Mae West. (Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone)
In 2021 interview prince harry And Oprah Winfrey, she elaborated, "It's really bad. We're so broken. It's shocking that something you go through so early in life can still be so devastating. I Think it's childhood trauma.
"Everyone talks about the same things, and there are a lot of rules—a lot of control. Because of the way we are raised, anything you think you would do for yourself is considered selfish," she explains.
In 1970, when Close was 22, she left the band but was still struggling.
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"I would have dreams because I didn't go to any psychiatrists or anything," she told The Hollywood Reporter . "I had these dreams, and they started with betrayal, a feeling of being betrayed, and then they developed into me being able to look at these people and say, 'You're wrong. You're wrong.'" And then the ultimate incarnation of those dreams was that I was able to Calmly stand up and walk away and then I don't have them anymore. "
"Back in Action" stars Glenn Close as Ginny, Jamie Demetriou as Nigel, Cameron Diaz as Emily, and Jamie Foxx as Matt. (John Wilson/Netflix © 2024)
Close to continue action. Her latest project, "Back in Action," stars Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz and Kyle Chandler. The Netflix film premiered on the platform on January 17.
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Fox News Digital's Emily Trainham contributed to this report.