Fairly incredibly the nuclear blonde and for the most part explosive on-screen character Charlize Theron says her dating life is about as distressing as a "Frantic Max" tragic no man's land.
The Oscar victor uncovered she's experienced difficulty securing a date generally, and asked potential suitors to "grow a pair and venture up" in the event that they'd like an opportunity with her.
"I've been single for a long time. It is anything but a long shot. Someone simply needs to grow a pair and venture up," the on-screen character told "Diversion Tonight" at CinemaCon in Las Vegas on Thursday. "I'm amazingly accessible."
"She's out there," her "Long Shot" co-star Seth Rogen included the meeting, to which Theron jested, "I've made it clear."
The "Tully" star is by all accounts reworking a portion of her dating history, given that she was apparently drawn in to Sean Penn as of late as 2014. She even spouted over Penn at a similar Cinema Con occasion in 2015, telling "ET," "I'm in an extraordinary relationship ... I'm extremely cheerful."
The two performing artists split soon thereafter in the midst of gossipy tidbits that Theron "ghosted" Penn, who she once portrayed as the "affection for my life."
"There is a need to sensationalize things," she said of the separation in WSJ magazine. "When you leave a relationship there must be some f**king insane story or some insane dramatization. What's more, the f**king ghosting thing, as truly, despite everything I don't recognize what it is. It's simply its own monster."
Theron, who has two kids, Jackson, 7, and August, 3, was connected to Third Eye Blind frontman Stephan Jenkins right off the bat in her vocation. She dated performing artist Stuart Townsend for almost 10 years in the wake of meeting on the arrangement of their film "Caught" in 2002.
The performing artist recently opened up about how turning into a mother changed her point of view on dating, clarifying that child rearing turned into the greatest need in her life.
"When you have youngsters, that is your identity. There is no chance to get around that. That is my identity," she clarified in 2017. "When I had my children, the initial two years you're in this way, you transform into such a mother. Your body nearly turns off. It resembles I wanted to date or anything."


