Meet
Bill Pullman MovieLine, July 1996 By Martha Frankel
He's been around for
years playing every sort of character. But even after he
starred opposite Sandra Bullock in the hit WYWS, people
were still not sure who he was. Will the big blast of ID4
liberate Bill Pullman from the vestiges of anonymity?
After the 5th of 6th person looks at me blankly when I
tell them who I'm going to interview and says,
"Who?" I find myself shouting "Bill
Pullman!!"
How is it possible that most of my movie-maven friends
can't place the name "Bill Pullman," but my 6
and 7 years old godchildren know exactly who he is?
"Casper's dad," they yell in unison when they
see his photo on the coffee table. While that's not
completely correct (he was Christina Ricci's father in
Casper), they also know him from Spaceballs. "May
the Schwartz be with you," they shriek with
laughter, quoting one of the Mel Brooks's zanier lines.
My sister, on the other hand, tells me she loved Pullman
in Sommersby, but even more so in The Butcher's Wife.
She's half-right--Pullman was in Sommersby, but that was
Jeff Daniels in The Butcher's Wife. And when afriend
mentions how terrific he was in Unlawful Entry, I realize
she has him confused with Kurt Russell.
For the record: Bill Pullman started his movie career as
Earl Mott ("perhaps the stupidest person on the face
of the earth") in Ruthless People, with blond hair
and black roots and an attitude matched only by his
naivete. He played William Hurt's publisher in The
Accidental Tourist, Jodie Foster's spurned boyfriend in
Sommersby, the mild-mannered academic duped by his
beautiful wife (Nicole Kidman) in Malice, Meg Ryan's
allergic boyfriend in Sleepless in Seattle, Linda
Fiorentino's ill-fated husband in The Last Seduction and
the absolutely wrong man in Mr. Wrong. He's also done a
million other roles in small films of head-spinningly
varying quality. But here's the part that'll place him
for you, especially if you're a woman. He was the guy who
wooed and won Sandra Bullock in WYWS.
This summer Bill Pullman will be hard to miss: He's the
President of the US in ID4.
I go to meet Pullman in Toronto, where he's filming HBO's
Mistrial. The plan is that I'll arrive at the crack of
dawn, which I do, and meet him on the set, which I don't.
There's been a mix-up and he's not going to be working
till evening. By the time I reach the warehouse where
Mistrial is being filmed, a freak spring snowstorm has
blown in and it's freezingly cold. I've been up for over
36 hours, and it turns out, so has Pullman. There's no
heat in the warehouse, and neither of us is dressed for
the weather. We huddle by a small kerosene heater. The
world of filmmaking sure is glamorous.
"There's a lot of confusion about who you are,"
I begin, turning on the tape.
Pullman nods. "I know. I'm often confused with other
actors. But the people who know my work don't have that
problem."
"That's true. There are legions of kids who loved
you in Spaceballs, and now in Casper."
"I can't go anywhere without little kids saying 'hi'
to me. They love those two films. With Spaceballs, it's
weird because most of those kids don't even get the Star
Wars references. And Casper, that's a film my kids can
watch, even though they don't. I mean, it doesn't hurt my
feelings or anything, but when they look through the
videos at home, I notice that Davy Crockett gets a lot
more play than Casper."
I glance at the papers I've collected on Pullman.
"Wife, three kids," I say. "And
half-a-dozen films in the last 2 years. Are you a
workaholic or what?"
"I know it seems that way. I do take lots of time
off between projects, but when the right thing comes
along, I don't like to turn it down. I've been
doing this for a decade, and I remember what it was like
when I started. You spend maybe 5% of your time actually
doing it, and the rest of the time, you're trying to get
that 5%. I just wasn't built for that, the
waiting-to-work business. And now, suddenly, I am fully
employed. Things are going great. The Last Seduction,
Sleepless in Seattle and WYWS did a lot to get me noticed
for bigger roles. Is this the time for me take a
sabbatical? I think not."
"I agree," I tell him. "Things could all
fall apart after this."
"Thanks for the vote of support," Pullman says
with a tight smile. "You really think it'll never
get better for me?" He has a slightly worried look.
"All I'm saying is that you were a supporting actor
for years, and you were great, and now they see you as a
leading man. But what happens if you don't have that
wonderful chemistry that you had with Sandra Bullock ever
again? What happens if you never get another role that
good?"
"Jesus," he mutters. "Well, I guess I
should enjoy it while it lasts. There are all these
little things that change when you're the quote-unquote
star
of the film. I think people expect you to have more
attitude now."
"Do you?"
"It hardly matters if I have the attitude, it's all
about perception. You get a driver to pick you up and
take you home. And that is a big deal,
especially when you're working weird hours and you're far
from home. And the driver is this guy who's been hired by
the union, he's got a great job, and he loves being
available to you. They call you Mr. Pullman and they jump
out of the car when you walk outside, and I honor that
because this is the guy's job. But then I realize that
the doorman at the hotel picks up on all this, and the
concierge is catching on, and they're all treating Mr.
Pullman like he's the boss. And then it just breeds
itself, like a little virus. I've seen a lot of actors in
a lot of different stages of their careers, and I've seen
it come and go. People get a sense of entitlement from
it. And that's when it starts getting you in trouble.
When it's not there, some people get berserk. The most
self-effacing people. I don't think I'm in danger of
that. I have a pretty good grip on who I am. I see now
that it also keeps some people at a distance, which is OK
in a way, because you suddenly realize that there's a lot
more people who want to talk to you, and sometimes you
don't want to be put in that position. I see both sides
of it. If it all flies away in the morning, I won't
regret anything."
"Bill, I didn't mean to imply..."
He waves me off, and then goes off to shoot a scene.
Which turns into another scene and then another and
another. By the time he returns, I'm
almost asleep.
"Do women find you attractive?" I ask, barely
able to lift my head off the table. Dead silence. When I
look up, Pullman is staring at me.
"Well," he points out, "you're a
woman."
"I'm not a real woman," I say. Now he's
laughing.
"I mean, I'm a journalist."
Pullman shrugs and makes a stab at answering my original
question. "When I was in Japan to promote WYWS, I
went to this screening where they had a thousand Japanese
women who'd won tickets in a radio contest. I've been
around a lot of very successful actors, sex symbols--Brad
Pitt, Richard Gere, Alec Baldwin, some others--and I
always had a quiet little profile through all that. I've
seen women go berserk over some of these guys. But I'll
tell you, I never experienced anything like what happened
in that Japanese theater. I felt like I was Elvis. They
were screaming, the classic thing that you see on
documentaries of the Beatles. And I'm standing there and
my body feels so strange and I'm so embarrassed. And a
girl asks a question and the translator talks to her and
then the translator turns to me and says, 'She thinks
you're a very sexy man.' It's not even a question! And
everyone just starts roaring with laughter. It was not a
comfortable situation, I'll tell you that."
"My theory on you is that you're not the kind of guy
a girl wants to throw up against a wall and fuck, you're
the kind of guy a girl wants her best
friend to marry."
Pullman looks thunderstruck. "Martha...that's a
theory?"
"Well, I watched
all your movies with some of my girlfriends, and that's
what we came up with. You're a very nonthreatening guy.
People root for you. Now, there are actors that you would
not want to sit down and have a chat with, not want to
bring home to your mother. They're dangerous. I think
people look at you and know you'd be nice to them, treat
their mothers kindly. You know what I'm saying?"
"Haven't got a clue," Pullman says, and lays
his head down on the table.
"We wanted you to end up with Sandra Bullock. But
the character played by Peter Gallagher is the kind of
guy who usually does wind up with the girl."
"It's very curious when you're an actor and suddenly
you're in the right role, with the right match,"
Pullman says, perking up. "Truthfully, I almost
avoided WYWS, because I find those romantic comedies kind
of precious, and they're full of lines that leave you
feeling a little bewildered when you say them. It's all
about first looks and little giggles, and part of me is
always thinking, 'Isn't there anything else we could be
doing with our time right now? Something a little more
important?' But when I was doing it, I really enjoyed it.
It was like the air was charged with me and Sandy. From
the minute I met her we just clicked. We were totally in
tune with each other. Lots of the movie was about us just
talking and talking, and I'll tell you the truth, most
actors don't listen very well, they don't give it 100%.
But Sandy and I, we just lived in that rarified air of
the movie, and it worked really, really well."
"So now you want to do all those goofy romantic
comedies, huh?"
"Actually no. I feel like there was something so
Cinderella-ish about being with Sandy that to do another
one would seem like shtick. So I'm doing things that are
totally different."
"Another thing we thought..."
"I can hardly wait to hear this."
"No, this you might like. We watched Sommersby, and
we decided that the reason they gave you the limp and
made you wear shirts and pants that were 2 inches too
short..."
"I looked like Ichabod Crane, for chrissakes."
"I know. And we decided that if they left you alone,
let you act with all your assets, so to speak, you would
have blown Richard Gere off the screen."
Pullman leans over and kisses my forehead, but won't say
a word on the subject.
"Did you see Liebestraum?" he asks.
"I know this is one of your favorite performances,
because your publicist reminded me to watch it. I can
watch anything, but I gotta tell you, Bill, I couldn't
get through the first hour..."
"That's too bad, because I really think it's great.
Mike Figgs directed it--he also did Internal Affairs and
Leaving Las Vegas."
"He did the score for Leaving Las Vegas, too, and
took a separate credit for it. I thought that was the
height of self-importance, for the director to give
himself a pat on the back like that."
"Well, for me, Liebestraum was a great experience, a
great time, and I have such fond memories about
it..."
"I feel the same way about sleep-away camp."
Pullman slaps my hand. "It was wild working with
Figgis, because he's very much in possession of himself.
Some would say a narcissist, but I think there's a power
in that. I have to admit that I was just dazzled by his
absorption with his own instincts and his own ability to
pursue things..."
"Because you're not like that?"
"Well, I think of myself as an actor, and I can get
absorbed in myself and I can get overbearing and
everything like that, but it's not in that totally
toxic way, where if anybody says anything that disparages
your work, it just rolls off your back because you're
thinking 'How dare they...?'"
"I'll tell ya, Internal Affairs has some of the
sickest things in it. When Richard Gere comes into the
elevator and butts head with Andy Garcia while
he's holding Andy Garcia's wife's underpants in his
hands..."
We both get hysterical. "I know," says Pullman,
"There's a scene in Liebestraum that's
quintessential Figgis. Kevin Anderson has come into town,
and I know he's attracted to my wife and she's attracted
to him. I'm telling him about my relationship to my wife,
and I say, 'Yeah, we've had some tough times. She found a
pair of black lace panties in the back of my pickup truck
and then she shaved her head.' Those are the kind of
things that happen in a Figgis movie! In that same scene,
Kevin Anderson and I are drinking, and I put my arm
around him, and I go, 'I'm gonna give you the keys to
this building.' And I sort of put his head in a headlock,
and I say, 'You can come and go as you want, but just
don't come in my wife.'"
Pullman and I both turn red. "I think I'm
speechless," I say. "Not likely," Pullman
retorts.
"How come we never read about you in the tabloids?
Don't you know in order to be really successful in
Hollywood you have to know how to make an asshole of
yourself in public?"
Pullman smacks his head. "Now you tell me! No, I
live a fairly normal life, and I guess it's not that
interesting to the tabloids, I'll tell you, I read
things about myself, and usually I can take it. But one
time, somebody printed this story, and they wrote about
my wife and kids, and they printed
my kids' names in the piece. My kids deserve their own
privacy. But the other part of it was that the way they
said it, that I was a married guy
with kids, it just felt like I was boring, that I was
like white bread. That was the tone of the whole piece,
to show how flat a personality I had."
"We want our movie stars to be more than we are, and
maybe being married with children makes them realize that
you're just like them."
"I'm not sure I'm really a guy for the '90's. Not
that I know what a '90's guy is..."
"I read that Roseanne said there isn't any New Man.
The New Man is the Old Man only he whines more."
"Oooohh, she's harsh. And who knows what a '90's
woman is? Sometimes it just feels like the whole world's
holding its breath, waiting for the millennium. But there
are things that are so out of style now. I'm not sure you
should get points just for doing what's right. And that's
not to say that I can't be disrespectful and ungracious.
But I think you have to know in your soul what you're
doing."
"Look at it this way; when good manners come back
in, which they will, you'll be well ahead of the
curve."
Pullman rolls his eyes at me and goes off to shoot
another scene. When he comes back, he looks almost as
beat as I feel. It's near midnight now, and we both have
our heads cradled in our hands.
"ID4..." I finally mutter.
"Big movie," he says. "Lots of fun for me.
I play the President of the US, and the world is being
attacked by aliens on the 4th of July. I used to be a
fighter pilot..."
"You were?" I ask, sitting up in amazement.
"No, silly, in the movie."
"So it's basically your boy-meets-aliens,
boy-saves-the-world kinda movie?"
Pullman starts to laugh. "Exactly. When I was a kid
and I'd go to a matinee on Saturdays with my friends,
we'd come out and run all the way home pretending to be
shooting each other. You'd hide behind a telephone pole
or a tree, and pretend that your arm was a gun. Well,
that's what ID4 felt like. In order to save the world, I
have to get back in a fighter plane. I mean, this is any
boy's dream come true. I'm galvanizing the troops before
dawn, making a speech, saying, 'The 4th of July is no
longer an American holiday, it's the day the world
declared in one voice: "We will not go quietly into
the night, we will not vanish without a fight."' I
mean, c'mon, this was the speech I was saying in my head
when I was 12. I saw recently that they've made a doll of
my character, which is hysterical. The doll's forearms
are 3 times the size of my actual wrist."
"And the Lynch film?" Pullman just finished
starring in the first movie David Lynch has directed in
eons, Lost Highway.
"I was brought up in a very small town in upstate
New York. We lived on Main Street, and my dad was a
doctor. And this adyllic setting held some very dark
corners. Working with David Lynch, getting to know his
psyche, and getting inside the character in Lost Highway
felt so connected up to my past. Benign on the exterior,
seething on the interior. My dad was also the town
coroner, so we saw all these dead bodies..."
"When you were a kid?"
"A teenager. My father would bring us along. I
remember that when my mother had colon cancer, my father
took us down to the basement of the hospital and pulled
out a tumor in a jar to show us. And he's holding it up,
he's kinda laughing, like a scientist. He said, 'See,
it's kinda like congealed hamburger.' I mean, that's like
David Lynch, that combination of strange, funny, macabre,
all in one. So working with Lynch felt very much like
going home." I see.
They call Pullman back to shoot a scene, and this time, I
DO fall asleep. I wake to Pullman shaking my shoulder.
"Come with me," he says. I'm not capable of
arguing. He leads me downstairs, to a cream-colored
Cadillac, and when the driver jumps out, he says,
"Please take my friend back to her hotel."
When the driver drops me off, he turns and says,
"He's quite a guy, that Mr. Pullman. He's the nicest
guy I ever drove around."
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