Robin
Williams walks in slowly, almost demurely. A publicist
escorts him to his seat; a tall, leather executive
chair. Quietly sipping from a bottle of water, he
looks more GOOD WILL HUNTING than DEATH TO SMOOCHY.
This is the Robin Williams I've been warned about?
He's about to sit when he abruptly stops. His eye
catches something on the table. Picking up the card
in front of his seat marked "TALENT" his
face contorts. Then in a flash, The Robin Williams
Show begins. "Talent? BullSHIT!" he says
and rips the card to pieces. Ahem…what was I
saying?
(So you think I have it easy, don't you? I did see
STAR WARS a week-and-a-half before it's release, I
hang out on the red carpet, I meet fancy celebrities…but
let me tell you it ain't all sittin' pretty sister.
YOU try interviewing Robin Williams. What's more,
YOU try transcribing that interview. I went in assuming
this wouldn't be your stereotypical interview but
had no idea just how off-track we'd veer. Keep that
in mind as you read that interview. Many jokes were
to complicated or visual in nature to reproduce here.
I hope I did the best to represent just how manic
this interview was. Good luck...)
(Looks
at tiny microphone on table.) Nice that you brought
the good shit.
It works…it works. GODFATHER
4 – will it be seen?
(in GODFATHER voice) A lot of people have asked me…
Really?
You know what would be funny? (in fay voice) GODFATHER
ON ICE! (breaking into song) Freeeedo! No, I like
working with Al. Al’s a good man. Very good
guy. I love the blonde hair. You like that?
What’s up with that?
Well he’s playing Roy Cohn. (mocking previous
question in teenage girl voice) What’s up with
that? Hel-lo?! Roy Cohn…he was J. Edgar Hoover’s
right-hand man. (in news announcer voice) Meanwhile,
across town J. Edgar Hoover’s putting on a teddy!
When was the first time you
ever met Al?
Years ago. Two years before but that we’ll talk
about with our lawyers. About being in the women’s
room with a transvestite singing and there’s
Al, (as Pacino) Hey this is great! There is a great
story actually, it was The Night of 100 Stars, the
first one. And there was a party afterwards and there
was Al and Robert De Niro contemplating which one
was going to pick up Elizabeth Taylor. And at that
time they weren’t literally trying to pick her
up. That’d be really rough now. (makes straining
noise, then as Pacino) Bobby! (begins making the beeping
noise of a truck backing up.) But yeah, I remember
him from those days.
Did you enjoy doing this dark
role?
Yeah, very much.
What was the challenge?
Playing a very compulsive…very quiet man who’s
done something so brutal. And then to work against
Al and like you said, we have a great admiration for
him.
Did you watch the original
film?
No. I think I’ll see it in a couple of months.
That way it’s enough time to go “Oh…why
did you do this?”
Did Christopher Nolan tell
you not to?
Oh, no. (Does his quiet, British Christopher Nolan
impersonation) Don’t watch this film, Robin.
Why? (Again as Nolan) Because that man is so much
better than you. And I don’t want you to have
that in your mind. I don’t want you to be worried
about these things and I want you to be open to being
good now. No I didn’t see it.
Were you intimidated to work
with Al?
(in fay voice) Fuck no! He’s a little man. A
little tiny man. He’s just a shrimp, let’s
kick his ass. Some [reporter] over there said “Oh
c’mon, a journalist couldn’t kick a cop’s
ass.” Bullshit! Any of you guys could kick a
cop’s ass! Let’s go outside right now!
[The reporter] bitched about
that the whole time.
He bitched about saying I couldn’t kick his
ass. He’s such a fucking liar. It’s not
like I went one-on-one in a ring with Mike Tyson.
No, I got a running start, I hit him with a thing,
knocked him down and then I wailed on his ass! Bring
it on! You want a piece of me! This guy’s just
going (in French voice) I’m going to find something
hate about this. I’m from Canada. He’s
an angry Canadian. That’s an oxymoron, “angry
Canadian.” That’s like “nerf vibrator.”
They don’t make it out of that for a reason.
It wouldn’t work. (back to making fun of the
Canadian with mock sympathy) Ohhh, somebody didn’t
have a good time? Ohhh. He said Patch Adams couldn’t
kick Don Corleone’s ass. It’s not the
same movie FUCKER.
What happened to DEATH TO
SMOOCHY?
I don’t know man.
It was great.
Yeah, it was funny. People who saw it laughed their
ass off…but the problem was (laughs) not many
people saw it.
And then you’ve got
ONE HOUR PHOTO…
That’s another thing…It’s more disturbing
in a direct way because…people think that when
they bring their photos into a Fotomat that no one
sees them. But if you talk to most people who worked
at a Fotomat, they get back copies and test them for
corrections. And if they see a picture of a guy in
a thong, they’re going to keep it, you know,
for their wall of shame. So this just extrapolates
that idea to a man who lives vicariously through other
peoples’ photographs.
Are you getting a lot of darker
scripts now?
(Deadpans) Yeah, and they’re hard to read. (After
a few seconds crowd realizes joke and cracks up.)
You should do STAR WARS just
to lighten it up.
Oh that was good. They got Jar Jar Binks back. I said
to George Lucas, Man, how did you not realize that
was Steppin Fetchit. (Launches into full-scale Jar
Jar impersonation.) And the villains all sounded Chinese!
(With Asian accent) So Jedi Knight…where’s
Obi Ron Kerobi…
Have you taped your one-man
show for HBO yet?
Not yet, on the 14th (of July).
Can you tell us a little bit
about it?
It’s this show I’ve been doing all over
the country, which has been great. Thirty cities and
a couple in Canada too, just to test it out a little,
you know. See how it works with real people. (Rolls
eyes.) We’re gonna talk about handguns. (in
Canadian accent) What are those?
Have you ever done a Broadway
show?
Never done a Broadway show. I wanted to. (in fay voice)
“I wanted to be in “Godspell.”
So the whole STAR WARS thing…
I gotta go see it today. My wife is there right now.
She’s probably halfway through (long pause)
Natalie Portman. I saw that interview when she said
(in a sad voice) I didn’t know what I was talking
to. Honey, I know, it’s called a green-screen.
Since Chris Nolan is so young,
was he intimidated by you and Al at all on set?
Not at all. And Al wasn’t. I knew how relaxed
Al was, and that’s a great sign. He said, (in
Al voice) This guy’s good. I went, (whistles
through his teeth) Michael said that! So immediately
I knew that this was a great thing, cause if Al senses
someone doesn’t know what they’re doing,
he’ll be on them until they figure it out, until
they really get a clear vision because he’s
about making it the best possible. He’s very
much that way, he doesn’t give up. And neither
do I in a different way. I’ll try different
things. We were basically coming at it two different
ways, we both would know that it was right when we
hit it. Like in that scene on the boat, we’d
both would go that was it, we don’t need to
do it again. Like, you don’t need to go find
something to help. It’s the right note, the
right combination, the right uneasiness, the right
gem. The play back and forth is like jazz. You know,
when you’ve got a great riff and that’s
it. And you know it cause it just meshes.
So do you think it’s
more exciting to do something collaborative or something
like a one-man show?
It’s totally different. You know, one’s
hang-gliding and one is doing this group project in
archeology. For me, the one man show is me. You’re
out there on the road for bout two hours, in some
places, an hour and a half. It’s free-form.
But things like this it’s all about details.
It’s all very minutia of playing back and forth,
and working with great people like Al, Chris Nolan,
and Hilary. People say, what about your stand-up?
and it’s a different being, you know, it’s
a whole other animal.
Did you find you enjoyed doing
it again?
Yeah, I loved it. It’s great to be out working
again in places like New Orleans where they’re
carrying around entire barrels of these drinks. You
can walk around New Orleans with an entire cocktail
whereas in most places tell you to dump out your drink.
In New Orleans they stop you and go (with Cajun accent)
Stop! Stop, right there. You have a cocktail? No?
Take this.
Did you and Al joke around
between takes?
Yeah we used to do this slow-motion fight. But I would
always have to lose. He’d look at me and start
(slowing down his voice considerably) moooving in
sloooow motion. That was probably the running gag.
Do you think you could play
someone with the ferocity of a sociopath?
Yeah, I watched the interviews of guys like Dahmer
and they, except for Charles Manson who was out of
his fucking mind. Walks into a parole board meeting
with a swastika gouged into his forehead going I’m
better! So yeah, it can be done. It’s just finding
the right character to do it with. This one wasn’t
that type of character. And from watching those interviews,
a lot of them have a kind of a terrifying normalcy
about them. And the ferocity of when they really go
at it, yeah, I kind of got that when I got to beat
the shit out of them.
Could you take that kind of
energy you have on-stage and transfer that to a villain?
Yeah, you could do that. Usually you find that type
of energy in the military. Where you find a man who
is allowed total access to that barbarism, then in
the middle of combat that’s released. In FULL
METAL JACKET or BLACK HAWK DOWN, where you find in
the midst of that…I’ve seen it. You see
pictures of guys who’ve just come back.
Have you started working on
something else?
Nothing yet.
Did you know they mentioned
your name as a possibility for the new SPIDER-MAN
villain?
They mentioned me as a villain?! I’d do that
in a red second!**
As Dr. Octopus?…
Really?! That’d be great!
I don’t know Dr. Octopus.
You don’t know Dr. Octopus?! He’s great.
You know Cyclops? He’s another very cool character.
All the guys here are going we know all of that shit!
I just got all the new SPAWN collectibles!
**Note
from RWF: Robin did not play a villain in any
Spider-man movie.
This interview was taken and
published in may 2002, joblo.com
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