Do you think comedy is a lot different now than it was in the eighties when you were kind the face guy of movie comedy? Comedy is the same. It always will be the same. People laugh at the truth. What about breaking into show business? You do the best job you can with the equipment you are given. So if you look like Brad Pitt, you are going to have a different trajectory than if you look like Paul Giamatti or if you look like me. But he could play that in theater very easily.
Train, read, become as smart as you can and work as hard as you can every day to get people to see you as an artist and in theater you can absolutely make a living for the rest of your life.
You got to train and also lady luck has a lot to do with it. Oh yeah. We went to the theater all the time. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here. I had so many questions for Steve Guttenberg. How are you doing? You doing a lot of press for this one? So people want to hear about it.
Did you consciously take a step back from acting in the nineties? Then are you getting a lot of offers these days? Did you ever get in trouble for having this unauthorized the office there? Do you still live in Manhattan now? No, my wife and I moved to a town called Pacific Palisades in California.
I was there almost 20 years and we moved to California two years ago. Hide Show Producer 5 credits. Hide Show Director 2 credits. Hide Show Soundtrack 3 credits. Hide Show Writer 1 credit. Hide Show Music department 1 credit. Hide Show Additional Crew 1 credit. Hide Show Thanks 6 credits. Video documentary short special thanks. Hide Show Self 75 credits. Self - Judge. TV Series Self - Parents Self - Guest.
Self - Audience Member. TV Series Self - Episode 6. Carey Mahoney. Self credit only. Hide Show Archive footage 10 credits. History Michael Kellam uncredited. Michael Kellam in '3 Men and a Baby' uncredited. Jack Bonner in 'Cocoon' uncredited. Related Videos. See more ». Official Sites: Cameo Facebook See more ». Alternate Names: S. Guttenberg Steven Guttenberg. Four decades is a long time to do anything. In a profession as cutthroat and fickle as show business, having any sort of career for 40 years is even more admirable.
Sure, Guttenberg might not be booking choice roles in big-budget blockbusters, but he still works. He seems to have a pretty drama-free, peaceful life. Rather than rail against the '80s properties that made him famous, he embraces them fully. He has nothing but glowing things to say about his co-stars then and now , and has fun with his public image. It makes sense that a man who was at his busiest three decades ago would slow down to kill a few lava spiders and indulge in interviews talking about his heyday.
What works for him is that there's never an air of bitterness, and he never seems like he's trying to distance himself. He appears to be proud of and happy about his career, and who can argue with that? As he approaches his 60th birthday, Guttenberg still has plenty of years left to entertain the masses.
With the near constant drumbeat of sequels and reboots coming out of Hollywood and the nostalgia that the '80s tends to generate , is it so far-fetched to anticipate the Three Men and a Baby threequel, Three Men and a Bride, that Guttenberg's former co-star Tom Selleck mentioned on The Talk in ?
Brooklyn Nine-Nine has steadily charmed audiences weekly for years. With its menagerie of quirky misfit cops, is it so out of pocket to hope for a resurgence of Police Academy with an updated sensibility and a passel of new, young recruits that the old gang has to whip into shape?
Black Mirror recreated the Boston Dynamics robots as relentless killing machines — someone could turn them into adorable pals for a new Short Circuit. In a reimagined Cocoon , Guttenberg could play Walter, the Brian Dennehy character with a twinkle of charm and an amiable smile.
Get on it, Hollywood — you just haven't been the same since Steve Guttenberg was a regular presence at the cineplex. Getty Images. Playing it safe.
Hanks for the memories Getty Images. More homebody than Hollywood Getty Images. Although Guttenberg is most commonly associated with actors such as Selleck, Danson and Michael Winslow, the man who makes the funny noises in Police Academy, one of his first major roles when he was 20 was in The Boys from Brazil, with Gregory Peck playing Josef Mengele, and Laurence Olivier as a Nazi hunter.
What did Guttenberg learn from Peck and Olivier? My mom, dad and sisters took me to the airport because it was my first international flight, and I was flying over to Lisbon with Greg Peck. The table went silent. The point will come across.
And punctuality — they were always on time and they never complained. Who was he closest to on that movie? Have a free bagel and a schmear!
But sometimes people say mean things: they tell him he sucks, or that his career tanked. Does that upset him? I wanted to be a movie star, and I achieved my little plan. This business has been better than terrific to me.
0コメント