‘The Room’: Tommy Wiseau On His Cult Hit, Broadway And Why Fans Are Finally Starting To ‘Get It’

Tommy Wiseau

On a recent humid night, a woman stopped outside the Ziegfeld Theater in Manhattan to ask someone what he and hundreds of others outside the theater were waiting for. “The worst movie of all time is about to play in there,” the boy said, pointing to the Ziegfeld’s closed doors. “And the director is coming.”

Fifteen minutes later a limo appeared. A roar went up. “That is not Tommy Wiseau!” came a voice through a megaphone. It belonged to Adrian Spencer, a former D.C. theater manager who used to screen Wiseau’s “The Room” until he became Wiseau’s right-hand man. “Yes it is!” someone shouted back. The limo turned the corner — for suspense, Spencer later told me — and emerged again. A pale man with long inky hair stepped out. As the crowd chanted his name — Tommy, Tommy, Tommy — he jogged awkwardly down the line, slapping hands and quoting lines on command with the strained obedience of a large dog that might snap.

This was Tommy Wiseau, writer, director, producer and star of “The Room.” In the accidental cult hit, Wiseau plays a virtuous man named Johnny who loses faith in life after his fiancee Lisa sleeps with his best friend. It is a slow and surreally-flawed production, with cancer diagnoses and actors lost halfway through.

On one side stand the movie’s fans, thousands who’ve gathered in Chicago, London et al armed with the necessary tools to mock it – plastic spoons to throw when framed pictures of silverware appear onscreen, tuxedos to reference a vestigial wedding-picture-day scene, footballs to parody an ongoing device in which Johnny and his friends throw a football back and forth about five feet (two characters are inexplicably injured during a “game,” including my personal favorite, the “me underwears” guy). These fans have the twisted affection of a bully for a repeat victim; like Wiseau, who has a mysterious accent and a naturally sinister laugh, the movie’s an easy target. Alone on the other side is Wiseau, a noted fan of Welles and Brando who believes no matter what the crowd says or does, “The Room” is popular because it is fundamentally very, very good.

For a novelty item released eight years ago, it is, if nothing else, weirdly potent. Wiseau says so far more than a million people have “experienced” “The Room” (there are no box office or DVD stats; it’s not a “real” movie as such). This was its second showing in six years at the Ziegfeld, the city’s last single-room theater. The regular movie in rotation at the time was “The Help,” for which ticket sales on a good night hit around 80. “The Room,” by contrast, had pre-sold 500 tickets, with 200 more expected at the box office (the first time around, it sold 1000). One concierge told me though the Ziegfeld isn’t exactly chummy with Wiseau — who’s apparently the only personality besides Oliver Stone to insist on visiting in advance (Stone wanted to check the sound; Wiseau wanted to set up a table to sell posters) — they aren’t about to excise a cash cow.

This fall Wiseau and Spencer are hoping to further milk “The Room,” with dreams of a 2012 run on Broadway and a pitch for a reality show about casting it. The movie’s already live in a modest way, showing as a play later this month at the American FIlm Institute in D.C., where the movie version’s been screened since 2010, and scheduled to run through December in cities like Chicago and Portland (no strangers to ironic live shows). Greg Sestero (“Sestosterone”), the actor who plays Johnny’s treacherous best friend, is signed on.

I spoke to Wiseau after the Ziegfeld screening, hoping to understand how he reconciles the franchise with a creation he thinks is great. I knew not to expect too much. Though critics tend to like him these days, in line with early legitimizers like Tim and Eric (Wiseau directed a 2009 “Awesome Show” episode called “Pig Man”), he’s a notoriously tough nut to crack. Read on for this strange star’s take on his strange success story, and why he says people are finally starting to “get it.”

At these midnight screenings, do you stick around to watch people watching your movie?
Sometimes I’m watching, sometimes I’m not.

What do you think about the crowd’s reaction?
I like everything. Express yourself, don’t hurt yourself. Move on next question.

The movie was clearly a personal venture for you, given that you wrote, directed and starred in it. What inspired the plot?
I inspire myself.

Have you experienced infidelity?
I been in similar relationships. Not hundred percent but we all experience experiences with people.

Do you think people understand what you were trying to do?
Aha! Great question. I give you A- for that question. Minus because you were not sure. You were hesitating. Yes, for the past two years I noticed that the public much more appreciate “The Room” and they really really want to do what I was saying, to have fun with it. Mainstream media they’re much more kind to “The Room,” as well as theater owners, some of the producers, etcetera etcetera. They didn’t grasp at the beginning.

If it’s actually a serious movie, then why do you think it’s been interpreted the way it has?
The true story is we..I don’t know why I did certain things, but some things happen and that way you open the bad door and the good door at the same time. Like we had some conflict with crew. That’s why we had to replace Peter as Steven. People ask like, why did you replace Peter. But he is a different character. He does not take the place of Peter. So you may argue that it worked out. It is what it is. I suggest you see it few times because you do have subliminal messages. I got complimentary statements about “The Room” when I went to Harvard University last October.

Why were you at Harvard?
It was a question and answer session. They showed it and then people asked me questions about it and they really gave very good answers that show they’re starting to get it.

Can you give an example of one of the questions they asked?
Oh you know, they asked about the character’s life. Who they are? Are they real people actually living in the planet Earth? I have a Q&A in L.A. as well and people ask some really challenging questions. Somebody ask for example what happened to Peter. He went to the hospital because he couldn’t catch the football. People do not understand layers of the subliminal messages but also words behind the words. Is it OK to be with two person, three person if you go into relationship? You think we are very far away from Egyptians. I would say no. Relationships it was the same thousands years ago. It was about jealousy. Compare Cleopatra and Lisa for example.

You think they’re similar?
Yes. Okay, move on next question.

When you were young, what did you dream you’d be?
When I was little kid I used to want to be a rock star. I actually have 800 pages book that will eventually be published.

What’s the book about?
I don’t want to talk about that now!

Are you happy with where you’re at now, in your life?
I am very happy. Like I say. I’m going to do more movies and travel. I want to actually show the people that actually we can put “The Room” on Broadway.

Do you have investors lined up?
Why? Do you have money? Let me know! (laughs) Let’s put it this way, we’re happy where we are.

WATCH the official trailer for ‘The Room,’ featuring the ex post facto “black comedy” tagline:

‘Gossip Girl’ Fifth Season Extended Promo Released; Stars Go To LA

Elizabeth Hurley

For probably the first time ever, “Gossip Girl” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm” are following a similar theme: coast-hopping.

The New York-based “Gossip Girl” is heading to LA for their fifth season and, from the looks of the newly released promo, La La land has had quite the affect on the Upper East Siders.

Blair Waldorf (Leighton Meester) seems to be – in the wise-cracking style of Woody Allen – true to her New York roots.

“Los Angeles is a plastic surgery layover, not somewhere you live,” the character said. “Everyone has dinner there at six.”

Though, the group does get to explore a whole lot of character arcs including the sultry Elizabeth Hurley, who gets hot and heavy with Nate Archibald (Chance Crawford).

The new season of Gossip Girl premieres September 26, on The CW.

 

Kate Winslet Talks ‘Carnage’ Projectile Vomiting

Kate Winslet

VENICE, Italy — The most memorable scene in Roman Polanski’s new film “Carnage” belongs to Oscar-winner Kate Winslet.

Just ask her kids. Winslet says they haven’t forgotten about the day she had to projectile vomit on set.

“My kids came to work for the vomit day, and I am so thrilled that they were there because they literally have not stopped talking about it since. It was hysterical,” Winslet told a news conference Thursday ahead of the world premiere of Polanski’s latest film in competition at the Venice Film Festival.

Based on the play by Yasmina Reza, “The God of Carnage,” the film is a sort of “Lord of the Flies” for the adult set – where civilized intentions go horribly awry as each character reveals their baser sides.

The satire packed with comic moments stars Winslet and Christoph Waltz as husband and wife Nancy and Alan, appearing opposite Jodie Foster and John C. Reilly as Penelope and Michael – two sets of parents who meet to sort out the details of a playground fight that left one of the boys with swollen lips and broken teeth.

The parents manage to maintain the appearance decorum as they niggle over whether Nancy and Alan’s son was armed with a stick, or just holding one. But rigid Penelope’s assertion that the parents of the alleged bully lack interest in their son’s behavior was more than Winslet’s Nancy could stomach, literally.

Fittingly, Nancy projectile vomits the cobbler they have been eating – all over Penelope’s cherished and rare art books.

Though the stunt required Winslet to operate a complex apparatus, Reilly disputes that Winslet had the toughest job.

“While Kate was the one who threw up, Jody and I had to clean up the vomit, so we had the more disgusting involvement with the vomit,” Reilly said.

The all-star cast said they got on famously, and were united in praise of Polanski, who skipped the premiere.

“If Roman Polanski invites you to join in any project, you really don’t say no,” Winslet said. “I had seen the play in New York so I was already very much a fan on the piece. I just felt extremely fortunate to be included.”

Polanski’s movements are restricted by an Interpol warrant in effect for 188 countries for extradition to the United States to face sentencing for having sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977. He moves freely between Switzerland, which refused to extradite him, and France, which has a blanket policy of not extraditing its citizens.

“Carnage” is set in Brooklyn, but shot on a soundstage near Paris over six weeks. Most of the action takes place inside an apartment, which was constructed to allow the actors to move seamlessly through the space. Brief exterior shots show the boys fighting at a riverside park – and later give the film a bittersweet postscript.

“The use of space was actually a very precise and confined and minimal and detailed affair,” Waltz said. “But that is exactly Roman’s forte. The precision, the detail, the exactitude. The microscopic way of working.”

Polanski had the actors rehearse the script like a play, memorizing the entire screenplay and then doing run through after run through. While the screenplay was similar to the script, Winslet said the tone and rhythm were different – creating a unique piece.

“The whole thing was actually shot in story order from start to finish, which I don’t think any of us have ever experienced in film before,” Winslet said.

Kathy Griffin Hints Marcus Bachmann Is Gay On The Late Late Show

Kathy Griffin & Marcus Bachmann

Having already called out Michele Bachmann on a late night show for the Congresswoman and presidential candidate’s anti-gay bigotry, Kathy Griffin is moving on to include the Minnesota Republican’s controversial husband in her line of fire.

After discussing a number of pressing issues with “Late Late Show” host Craig Ferguson, including her breasts and how to meet a man while hiking, Griffin turned to politics and Bachmann’s husband, who runs a controversial clinic in Minnesota that allegedly works to use prayer to reverse its patients homosexuality.

“The Bravo special was supposed to be called ‘Pray the Gay Back.’ You get the Marcus Bachmann joke? Marcus Bachmann is one of my new favorite targets, he’s Michele Bachmann’s husband,” Griffin laughed. “Okay, he’s very anti-gay and LGBT rights, and it’s odd, because if you look at him on YouTube, it’s almost as if he himself… or, it’s as if…”

At this point, Ferguson jokingly warned Griffin, who boasts a large gay fan base and earlier in the show even called herself a gay man, to take care with her wording.

“I would say that Marcus Bachmann reminds me of a lot of the type of men who come sees my live shows,” she continued. “And he wants people to pray the gay away, and so I was going to call the special ‘Pray the Gay Back.”

Bravo, however, decided to go with the much more traditional title of “Kathy Griffin: Pants Off.” TV execs, always going the conservative route.

Don’t Expect To See Chaz Bono In Outrageous ‘Dancing With The Stars’ Costumes

Chaz Bono

Chaz Bono is confirmed to take part in “Dancing With The Stars” this season but if you are hoping to see Cher’s son wiggle his hips in the outrageous costumes that have become associated with the show, think again.

“I will wear a tasteful tux,” Bono told me just before the big announcement when I asked him what he would wear on the Emmy’s red carpet — making it clear that the outrageous fashion his mom loves to wear isn’t his style or his fiancée Jenny’s.

“I doubt Jenny will be in Bob Mackie [one of his mother favorite designers]. Jenny is too classy, not that Bob isn’t,” Bono quickly added realizing exactly what he had just said about his mother. “I’m on bad feet here. I don’t see her doing Bob Mackie. I know she likes DVF. She wore her on Oprah.”

Currently getting into shape for the competition by hitting the gym, Bono is also busy making a follow-up special to his Emmy nominated documentary, “Becoming Chaz,” for Oprah’s OWN network. Bono also Hopes at some point to write a book and a film for transgender teens — he’s also still working on that beard.

“I’m not going to shave,” for the Emmys Bono tells me. “I will trim and it will look ordered. I’m not going to shave for a while.”

Expect to see a hairy but tastefully dressed Chaz Bono Waltzing onto your TV for ABC’s “Dancing with the Stars” season premiere on September 19.

Jennifer Lopez’s Ex-Husband Ojani Noa Calls Her Mother A ‘Gold Digger’

Jennifer Lopez & Ojani Noa

Jennifer Lopez’s first ex-husband Ojani Noa has won the fight to release intimate footage from their short-lived marriage. But he isn’t happy with the way Lopez, her family and her legal team have been treating him and has gone as far as calling the singer’s mother a gold digger.

“I’m not that horrible guy to her or anybody,” Noa tells me. “I just wanted to get my life and story out there and for whatever reason people have judged me and misinterpreted my life. I’m a regular guy trying to make a living and trying to work. I never in my life or 12 years since I’ve been divorced from her ever said anything bad about her or her family.”

Noa claims that he was originally supporting Lopez when they met. He was earning good money in Miami, modeling and acting. But once her career took off he put his career on hold and worked as her bodyguard and trainer — none of which he regrets but does resent what Lopez’s mother has said about him

“Her mom went on [the] radio calling me a gold digger. I never was a gold digger. If anything that would be her [Lopez’s mother] calling herself a gold digger because she was the one crying, asking Jennifer for money.”

Noa believes that his ex-wife and her very impressive team of lawyers have manipulated the media when it comes to his reputation. But says it wouldn’t be the first time Lopez and her lawyers have got the better of him.

“When we got divorced she hired her lawyers. She paid for [them] and everything. I didn’t know what was happening. I didn’t speak the language. Everything was done in English,” Noa, whose first language is not English, tells me. “I have tried in the past to tell her and her people what I was doing … They have managed to sue me and I haven’t done anything. All this stuff that [the video] is pornographic is coming from her part. Not my part. It’s not pornographic.”

Noa maintains that he has no idea why Lopez is so scared of him and the tapes.

“Besides the story is about me not about her,” he tells me. “If you see those videos it’s a beautiful thing. We were young, we went to Cuba. If anything people will like her more.”

Anne Hathaway In Talks To Join ‘Les Miserables’; Hugh Jackman Suggests Hathaway For Role In ‘Les Mis’

Anne Hathaway

After receiving tremendous scrutiny over her Yorkshire accent, Anne Hathaway may be trying on a different dialect for size.

Director Tom Hooper is adapting the Broadway classic “Les Miserables” and with casting just around the bend, Hathaway is already on the top of the list.

The film boasts Australian demi-god Hugh Jackman as lead man Jean Valjean and the actor, apparently, has been making casting suggestions.

Anyone who’s watched 2009’s Oscars, or 2011’s, knows that when it comes to a singing companion, Jackman only has eyes for Anne.

In “Les Mis” Anne would be playing the small, but crucial, role of Fantime, the distraught mother of heroine Cosette (with one hell of a musical number).

Whille Hathaway has proved she can sing, (and even gave us a “Les Mis” parody) will she really be able to out do her rap?

George Clooney Pulls Out Of ‘The Man From UNCLE’: Exits Steven Soderbergh Film

George Clooney

George Clooney is human, after all.

The Oscar-winner was attached to star in friend Steven Soderbergh’s film adaptation of the 60s spy drama TV series, “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,” but has pulled out of the flick, Deadline reports. According to E! Online, the exit comes thanks to the stunt-intensive script that the actor feared would put too much strain on his body, which is still healing from injuries suffered during the filming of the Middle East-set thriller.

“He said he just can’t do the action and stunt scenes,” a source from the film told E!. “In fact, I think he’s planning on having another operation during the time he would have been filming.”

Clooney has a busy fall, as it is; he will premiere “The Ides of March,” the political thriller he wrote, directed and starred in (along with Ryan Gosling) at the Venice Film Festival, and will also take lead in Alexander Payne’s film, “The Descendants.”

Soderbergh, Clooney’s “Oceans 11” franchise director, is said to be continuing with the film; currently, he is working on stripper drama “Magic Mike.” He plans to make “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” one of his last three films before retiring.

Debby Ryan Interview: ‘Suite Life’ Star Talks New Show, Indie Movies & Growing Up Disney

Debby Ryan

Now that Hilary Duff is pregnant, MIley Cyrus has ditched the blonde wig for a few tattoos, Demi Lovato has taken a trip to rehab and Selena Gomez has Bieber fever, Disney is on the hunt for its next superstar–and they might have found one in Debby Ryan. But Debby Ryan isn’t your average Disney starlet.

Her new Disney show “Jessie” centers on a character much like herself–an 18-year-old fish out of water from Texas who becomes an au pair in New York City. Gone is the trivial high school drama. Instead, “Jessie” is a much more mature venture for the House of Mouse. But the role seems tailor-made for Ryan, who comes off as much more mature than her 18 years.

It’s not uncommon to find Ryan knitting during her downtime or acting motherly toward her younger co-stars–a pastime that she truly enjoys.

“Now that I’m a bit older than the new Disney generation, I feel motherly toward these kids,” Ryan tells The Huffington Post. “If we go to New York for a press trip, I’ll take the young, new kids out and teach them about the business. It’s like, ‘Yes, people are handing you stuff for free, but don’t find your value in these things.’ In the same way, I’ve learned from a lot of people that have come before me in Disney.”

Ryan took center stage on the hit show “The Suite Life on Deck,” as country girl Bailey Pickett, and has brought the show, which starred twins Dylan and Cole Sprouse, to the top of the Disney Channel–beating both Cyrus’ “Hannah Montana” and Gomez’s “Wizards of Waverly Place” in the 2008 and 2009 relevant ratings. And because of her show’s huge success, she’s often compared to former Disney darlings like Cyrus, Lovato and Gomez.

But Ryan doesn’t like to think about herself as Disney’s next big star–in fact, she doesn’t think about it at all.

“I don’t think about it,” admits Ryan. “I believe that people start to get into trouble when they start to believe their own hype. The easiest way to not believe your own hype is to not know what people are saying about you. It’s definitely an honor because those are some very hard-working girls, and they’ve definitely blazed some trails.”

Instead, Ryan wants to her own trail-blazer. And she thinks her new show “Jessie” is the perfect way to break out of the stereotypical Disney mold.

“Very rarely has there ever been a Disney show about a kid out of high school and trying to find her place in the world and figuring out a way to support herself,” says Ryan. “She kind of takes this nanny gig as job and then realizes that she really loves these kids and they’re her family and she’s their lifeline. There’s a lot of responsibility involved, and that’s what makes this show different. On ‘Suite Life,’ it’s really cool to think about sailing around the world, but ‘Jessie’ is entering a new part of her life where she needs to take responsibility for her actions–much like myself.”

But don’t be too quick to write Ryan off as just a Disney star. She’s a dedicated songwriter, who is currently “producing a song over video chat” with her old brother. However, you won’t see Ryan releasing an album anytime soon. “It’s a fun, creative outlet–I don’t do it to be a singer. You can’t force music; It just has to come to you.”

Ryan also has her sights set on the big screen. Last year, the teen starred in her first independent movie, “What If,” which starred Kristy Swanson and Kevin Sorbo.

“Before the whole Disney realm had undergone this huge revamping, as a kid, I always saw myself doing these dramatic indie parts,” says Ryan. “And then I fell in love with doing comedy and doing kid shows and really working for kids. But I can definitely see myself branching out and doing more dramatic roles and indies. ‘What If’ was an amazing experience.”

While it hasn’t always been easy for a post-Disney starlet to make the transition from mouse ears to bona fide Hollywood star, Ryan’s not so concerned with the statistics. Inspired by fellow funny gals Tina Fey and Emma Stone, she’s just going to keep living her dream, whether it’s helping out her younger co-stars adjust to new-found fame, taking on more dramatic indie roles, “owning” her spot on top of the Disney crop–or even dawning a cape and some spandex.

“I would love to play an action hero. That’s something that I’ve always had a heart for. I have an older brother, so you know, who ever got to the remote fast enough or could wrestle it out of my hands, got to choose what was on the television, so a majority of my childhood was spent watching ‘Indiana Jones,’ ‘Star Wars,’ ‘Lord of the Rings’ and ‘James Bond.’ So I always wanted to play a Jane Bond. I thought if these guys can do it, why can’t I?”

Pregnant Hilary Duff Makes $100k For Being Let Go From ‘Bonnie And Clyde’ Flick

HILARY DUFF

Talk about the perks of a well-designed contract. After announcing her pregnancy, Hilary Duff was dropped from her once forthcoming flick, “Bonnie and Clyde” — but not without a pretty penny to send her packing.

According to TMZ, Duff had a play-or-pay contract so that if, for any reason, she was let go from the film, she would still be payed $100,000. Not a bad payout for a gig that you never even started.

Duff’s disassociation from the project comes on the heels of the exciting announcement that she’ll now be eating for two. Duff and her husband of one year, Mike Comrie, took to the Disney born and bred actress’ website to share the big news — “We also want to share the exciting news that.. BABY MAKES THREE!!!” she wrote before continuing that the couple is “extremely happy and ready to start this new chapter of our lives.”

Since the announcement, there hasn’t been a photog in L.A. who isn’t on Duff bump duty, hoping to snag the first shots of “Lizzie McGuire” all grown up and pregnant.

But now that Duff’s out of the “Bonnie and Clyde” picture, who will step in to fill her shoes?