Producer Mike Medavoy, who oversaw several of Williams’ movies, explains how the actor developed his performance for his upcoming comedy Absolutely Anything , and how tricky Hollywood can be for people struggling with addiction.
Robin Williams
Chris Pizzello/Invision / AP, File
Simon Pegg in Absolutely Anything
Bill and Ben Productions
One of the final performances audiences will get to see from Robin Williams, who died of suicide on Monday after a long battle with depression, would not have been the same without the actor-comedian dipping into his own pockets.
In Absolutely Anything, Simon Pegg stars as a regular bloke who's endowed with the ability to do anything he wants thanks to aliens voiced by Monty Python alumni John Cleese and Terry Gilliam. (Fellow Python compatriot Terry Jones co-wrote and directed the film.) And one of the first things Pegg's character does, producer Mike Medavoy explained to BuzzFeed, is command his dog — voiced by Williams — to talk.
"The dog says, 'Biscuit!'" the producer explained. "And he says, 'Biscuit? I told you you could talk. That's one word!' The dog says, 'I'm not going to talk until I get my biscuit.'"
Absolutely Anything is still in post-production, and Medavoy said they aren't seeking U.S. distribution until it's completed. (Lionsgate is releasing the film in the U.K.) But the producer also stressed that Williams had finished his work on the film, and will be the voice audiences hear when the dog chooses to speak. But it took some time for Williams to get to a place where he and the filmmakers were happy with his performance.
"What was interesting was he started off doing it one way — tried it, it didn't quite work," said Medavoy. "Then, the [filmmakers] came over from London. He tried it again. And then I was driving I think to one of my kids' basketball games and he called and he said, 'I just had an inspiration. I just figured out how to do it.'"
"It was a great idea," noted Medavoy. In order to make sure it made the film, Medavoy said that Williams shouldered the considerable expense to rent out a studio to record his role one final time. "It's in the movie."
No comments:
Post a Comment