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Robin Williams once was as ubiquitous
as that Oscar whipping boy Jude Law, wallowing in
a stream of sentimental mush like Patch Adams and
Bicentennial Man.
Then
he lowered his profile and cleansed his artistic soul
by playing creeps (One Hour Photo) and killers (Insomnia).
"I
get different fan mail now," he says via phone
while nursing a cold at home in San Francisco.
This
year, the madcap comic's new goal seems to be breaking
the attendance record at awards shows.
First,
he accepted a lifetime achievement honor at the not-exactly
elderly age of 53 at the Golden Globes. Then he cracked
Sideways jokes at the Independent Spirit Awards. He
topped that by stealing host Chris Rock's thunder
of controversy at the Oscars, protesting the censorship
of a SpongeBob-inspired tune with duct tape over his
mouth.
"We
were thinking of a shock collar, but I couldn't get
one in time," says Williams, who was to gospel-wail
such lyrics as "Olive Oyl is really anorexic,
and Casper is in the Ku Klux Klan." Instead,
he rattled off a few safe zingers because "when
you have a network worrying about a half-million-dollar
fine, you know ... 'I saw a breast!' I saw a doorknocker."
Where
you won't see Williams is in his latest film, Robots,
opening Friday. Instead, you'll get a cheerful earful
of his trademark Tourettesian riffing — from
a Castilian party crasher to a gender-bending Britney
Spears — as he brings Fender to vocal life.
"He's
a skid robot," Williams says of his walking junkyard
of discarded parts who shows the big-city ropes to
naive hero Rodney (Ewan McGregor). They band together
with other misfits to fight a corporate plot to make
their kind obsolete. "It's the haves and the
have-bots."
The
computer-animated comedy from the makers of Ice Age
marks the actor's first cartoon feature since 1992,
when he rubbed the box office the right way as the
shape-shifting Genie in Disney's Aladdin.
For
director Chris Wedge, the ad-lib-erated Williams was
a perfect fit. "You bring a script to him, put
it on a podium and then gingerly step out of the room
to see what he does."
Why
has it taken 13 years for the actor to return to the
genre? "No one asked. They were worried I might
be uppity," Williams says, referring to his feud
with Disney after the studio broke a promise not to
use his voice to promote Aladdin tie-ins. With Robots,
"when it comes to products, they have to use
other characters. Upfront, we say, 'This is the drill.'
"
Williams
has another voice job lined up, as a trio of penguins
and a sea lion in Happy Feet, out in 2006. He wouldn't
mind speaking for others full time. "I could
be Mel Blanc. I could be up here and ride bikes and
occasionally show up at Pixar."
This article was first published
on March 06, 2005 by USA Today. Susan Wloszczyna.
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