Jen commented on Farrell and some others, and that frat boy humor is not for her. That said, this movie does not look like something I’d see anyway. I think he was always deficient in kindness but it became exponentially exaggerated with his success. I have heard stories about Myers for years (a friend and cousin in the industry) and he sounds incorrigible. But that doesn’t mean that all actors treat others like crap. For many of them that is like their ‘fix’. And I think most actors share the desperate need for continuous validation and attention even from strangers. a lot of anger.somehow it makes for good comics though. Mike Myers is shown at the premiere of The Love Guru on 6/11/08, thanks to PRPhotos.Īgree with Anon69 in that many comics do have a dark side i.e. Let’s see if those rooting for the movie to flop get their wish. I wasn’t surprised to find out that guys like Mel Gibson and Isaiah Washington were arrogant asswipes, but Linda Richman from Coffee Talk? Say it ain’t so!Īnyway, Myers’ new comedy, The Love Guru, opens this weekend. This is a bombshell- if not to Hollywood insiders, than definitely for the movie-going public. ”It’s not healthy for personal relations.” ”I think Mike’s a visionary, but his way of getting what he wants is to emote and threaten and express anger,” says the film’s producer, Rob Fried. From the outset, Myers clashed with director Thomas Schlamme, at times holing up in his trailer and refusing to work. If Wayne’s World was a difficult experience, Myers’ next film, 1993’s So I Married an Axe Murderer, was a torturous one. ”You should have heard him bitching when I was trying to do that ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ scene: ‘I can’t move my neck like that! Why do we have to do this so many times? No one is going to laugh at that!”’ To manage Myers’ moods, Spheeris put her daughter in charge of making sure he had whatever snack he needed at any given moment: ”To this day, I have this image of her sitting on this little cooler, looking at me, like, ‘Mom, I f-ing hate you.”’ (Myers’ rep denies he is hypoglycemic.) ”He was emotionally needy and got more difficult as the shoot went along,” Spheeris says. One day, infuriated that there was no margarine for his bagel, only butter, Myers - who, according to several sources, said he suffered from hypoglycemia - stormed off the set. Spheeris found herself struggling to prop up Myers’ often dark moods. Carvey, via his publicist, calls this notion ”ridiculous.” Michaels, who produced the film, says it’s ”overstated,” but adds, ”That isn’t to say they’re not both comedians and that occasionally there’s not some disagreement over who should be speaking what.” ”Mike didn’t want Dana in the movie because he felt insecure that someone who had his own creative ideas would get in the way,” says one source involved in the production. As for director Spheeris, who only directed the first film of that series, she tells a story of a demanding diva who pitched a fit when he didn’t get the snacks he wanted.Īccording to several accounts, including a Vanity Fair article in 2000, Myers felt threatened by his more famous SNL costar, Dana Carvey, who played Wayne’s nerdy sidekick, Garth. At the time, Dana’s career was bigger than Myers’ thanks to his ubiquitous “Church Lady” character, and the two clashed on set due to Mike’s insecurities. The article goes on to say that during the making of the two hit “Wayne’s World” films, Mike was threatened by co-star and friend Dana Carvey. ”Maybe he could open, like, a children’s hospital to clean up his rep,” she jokes darkly. Penelope Spheeris, who directed Myers in his first film, the 1992 smash Wayne’s World, says she has shared war stories with others who’ve worked with the actor. Says one executive who has had a rocky relationship with Myers: ”I honestly root against him.” That description could, of course, fit many actors and filmmakers, but the degree of enmity directed toward Myers by some who’ve worked with him - even years after the fact - is rare. Since early in his career the actor has been tagged with a reputation for being difficult to work with: moody, controlling, and arrogant. Still, the fact is, within Hollywood, not everyone is cheering for Myers to succeed. EW interviewed some of Myers’ former co-workers who paint a much darker picture of the actor, saying he is difficult, moody and demanding. When you see comic Mike Myers hamming it up on screen as Wayne Campbell or Austin Powers, he seems like a fun, goofy guy, doesn’t he? Like, someone really down to earth whom you could hang with? Well, if you believe Entertainment Weekly’s latest story, he couldn’t be anything further. Thanks for linking this story u/SnowHesher.
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