Posts Tagged ‘Mike Myers’

Celebs in Cannes for a Cause

May 21st, 2009

Paris and Mike Myers Rule the Razzies

February 21st, 2009 / Author: OK! Staff

Even though most of the entertainment world will be focused on the Oscars on Sunday night, another awards ceremony will be doing the dirty job of calling Hollywood out on all their failures this year.

 

The Razzies gave out their Raspberry Awards this year to all those who made fans groan, close their eyes or just refuse to head to the theaters to see. 

 

Mike Myers and Paris Hilton were the king and queen this year, both "winning" multiple Raspberries. Mike took home Worst Picture, Worst Actor and Worst Screenplay for The Love Guru, while Paris nabbed Worst Actress for The Hottie and the Nottie, Worst Couple (with either Christine Lakin OR Joel David Moore) for The Hottie & The Nottie and Worst Supporting Actress for her role in Repo: The Genetic Opera.

 

Other razzed celebs and movies include Pierce Brosnan for his supporting role in Mamma Mia! and Indiana Jones: Kingdom of the Crystal Skull for Worst Remake.

The complete list of Razzie winners (or losers):

WORST PICTURE
The Love Guru

WORST ACTOR
Mike Myers/The Love Guru

WORST ACTRESS
Paris Hilton/The Hottie & The Nottie

WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Paris Hilton/Repo: The Genetic Opera

WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Pierce Brosnan/Mamma Mia!

WORST SCREEN COUPLE
Paris Hilton & EITHER Christine Lakin OR Joel David Moore/The Hottie & The Nottie

WORST PREQUEL, REMAKE, RIP-OFF or SEQUEL
Indiana Jones: Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

WORST DIRECTOR
Uwe Boll/1968: Tunnel Rats, In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale and Postal.

WORST SCREENPLAY
The Love Guru, Written by Mike Myers & Graham Gordy

WORST CAREER ACHIEVEMENT
Uwe Boll (Germany’s Answer to Ed Wood)

Mike Myers Shows Off

December 12th, 2008

While Mario Batali goes on rumor patrol about the state of Gwyneth Paltrow’s marriage and Julia Stiles tears up about missing Heath Ledger, Mike Myers lightens the mood during the Food Bank’s Lunchbox Auction held Thursday at Milk Studios.  

“I’ve had a food fight,” he tells me. “There’s a Canadian equivalent of the Twinkie called a Wagon Wheel, and I got hit in the eye and I got sent home. I was 12. It was the happiest day of my life. I got to watch Days of Our Lives. It was great.”

Of all his zany characters, which one does he relate to most?

Dr. Evil,” he tells me. “Only because I’ve always wanted to have my own private army.” Um, why does he need his own private army? “To have my own private cafeteria, hello?”

The divorced actor, 45, starred in The Love Guru with Justin Timberlake. Although Mike and Justin hang out together, they don’t do nightlife.

“I don’t club,” he says. “If there was a club, it would be a book club where we would talk about books.”     

Looking ahead, Mike sees a more compact 2009.

“My resolution is to make sandwiches that are in proportion to the size of my lunchbox.”

Verne Troyer Wants To Be A Leading Man

June 30th, 2008

Just before Verne Troyer’s sex tape went public, I caught up with him during The Love Guru junket held at NYC’s Waldorf-Astoria hotel.

The 39-year-old actor gets around by scooter, and parks right beside me. Despite his mini-me stature, he’s wearing a men’s watch, and has a heart tattoo on his right thumb. He’s friendly yet guarded, and personal questions are off limits. Though we chuckled at the time – what personal questions?! – it all becomes clear with the release of the sex tape.

In this interview, Verne covers all the bases.

Any plans for another Austin Powers movie?
I don’t know for sure, but I know Mike’s mentioned something around the ways. He thinks about it. But if that happens, I would love to do it again. I was a stuntman for eight years, and everything just blew up from that first role in Austin Powers when he gave me that chance.

When it is OK to make jokes about small people?

In my opinion, using it in entertainment in a film, in a movie, it’s fine. It’s comedy. It’s there to make people laugh. If some of that stuff would’ve been in the real world, depending on the tone of it, I may get a little offended, but overall, if it offended anybody, just get over it.

How do you feel about being a role model?
If I’m a role model to anybody, wow, that’s something. It makes me speechless. I’m just me doing what I want to do and what I put my mind to. I’ve grown up as a short person, and I’ve had to adapt in the oversize world. It’s just me living my life. If somebody gets inspired by that, thank you , but I’m just trying to fulfill my life.

What’s the most surreal aspect of fame?
Just realizing how many people think they know you. I try to put on a hat and sunglasses, but it doesn’t help. Immediately people think you’re him, or they question you, but most of them are like ‘you’re him.’

Were your parents scared about you going to Hollywood?
I left home when I was 21, and I went down to Texas. From Texas, that’s when I got started doing stuntwork. They didn’t really have a choice.

How do they feel now?
They’re so happy for me and the success I’ve had. They couldn’t be more proud.

Have you reached your goal?
It is very awesome where I’m at, but I can do a lot of other things rather than typecasting me as a leprechaun or an elf for Christmas. I play a hockey coach, and in this case, Mike thought a little bit out of the box and gave me that opportunity.

I’d like a leading man role. I want to stay away from typecasting, and have somebody allow me to show them I can do different things.

How do you spend your free time?
I’m a homebody. I play a lot of video games, watch a lot of sports on TV. When you’re in this business, you travel a lot and don’t get to spend much time at home. When I get that chance, I take advantage of it.

Mike Myers Is A True ‘Love Guru’

June 19th, 2008

Mike Myers meets me at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel to chat about his comedy, The Love Guru. Sipping a Coke, he unleashes a surprise burp. “Ah, the joys of Coca-Cola,” he yuks. “I’ve had a lot of Coca-Cola today. One has to laugh at oneself. I’ve done that twice today. I’m not going to lie — it’s a little embarrassing.”
 
The divorced actor, 45, likes to crack a good joke or pull a well-performed prank.

“I did a comedy routine last night with Heidi Klum where I put on her eight inch heels, and my calves are killing me. To all the gals, I just want to say ‘how do you do it?’ She had these things on, and she said ‘ow, my feet hurt,’ and I said ‘oh they can’t hurt that much.’ They hurt that much. She was kind enough to overlook the fact that I was stretching her shoes a little bit, but it was funny. It got a nice laugh. I was happy.”

He certainly has reason to be happy. His comedy, which also stars Justin Timberlake and Jessica Alba, is set to become box-office gold. But when asked about the comedy disrespecting Hinduism, he calls criticism unfair.

“I have presented a mythical, nondenominational fictional teaching system called DRAMA that has nothing to do with anything but DRAMA,” he says. “You Distract yourself from emotional pain so that you can get to a place of rationality to Regress – look at your childhood, your family of origin, and your family has given you a belief about yourself – usually a defective belief in what’s known as the shame core – that’s the “R” – the Adjustment is it’s up to you to rewrite what’s written in that shame core, correct it – the Maturity part is that you’re responsible for your own health and happiness, and the Action is the discipline to put all those concepts into action so that you may more frequently – with a longer duration and more intensity – start to live yourself not as a victim – which is a vicious and incidious congnition that impedes maturity TM. I took years developing this. This is designed to be relevant to no one except myself.”

He says Star Wars did the same thing with The Force.

“Nobody believes that The Force is a roman a clef, a reference, an illusion to anything other than a belief into your own intuitive process.”

Mike continues, “This is about taking responsibility for your own actions so that you don’t have vicious and insidious cognitions that impede maturity TM.  That you’re not a victim. People may say bad things about you, but you won’t say bad things about yourself. You are responsible for your own health and happiness. It was meticulously worked out to be its own thing.”

The self-proclaimed culture vulture takes philosophy seriously. Verne Troyer, who plays a hockey coach, says Mike studied up on Deepak Chopra to help with personal issues.

“I nibble on things in comedy, but I never bite with my teeth and I never break the skin,” Mike says. “I only travel with respect for all cultures. I love it. I love how things are done.”

What’s Mike’s favorite mantra?

“I would say ‘the only way out is in,’ he says. “Most of everyone’s problems is not owning their part in something, taking responsibility for it. I asked Gary Zukoff the definition of happiness, and he said ‘to live more in truth than in lies, to hold yourself and others in high and warm regard, to place a boundary around people’s dark side but accept them for it, and to celebrate their light side.’ I think that’s it.”

He laughs at his publicist, who  is wearing a towel like a shawl, when he confuses Jessica Simpson with Jessica Alba. (Jessica Simpson has a cameo; Jessica Alba plays a lead role.) Too many Jessicas!

 “Thank you so much,” Mike says. “Have a great day. Bye-bye now. Sorry about the burp. Gosh, I wish I could control those things. Coca-cola. Have a great day.”

The Love Guru hits theaters Friday.

Mike Myers Credits Oprah for Love Guru

June 18th, 2008

Behind every great man is a great woman, so who is behind Mike MyersLove Guru, Maurice Pitka?

 

None other than Oprah Winfrey herself. 

 

"In 1991, my father passed away — it was around that time that I saw Deepak Chopra on Oprah [laughs] and I became very interested in philosophy; I read his book and loved it," Mike tells AOL.

 

So moved by the doctor he was that the two eventually met and struck up a close friendship. Then, one day, "this voice of the Love Guru emerged and I started to say things like ‘The only way out is in’ and ‘Intimacy is In-to-Me-I-See,’" Mike says. 

 

Dr. Chopra wasn’t the only who influenced the creation of Guru Maurice. Best-selling author and Vietnam War vet Gary Zukav also served as inspiration — and yes, Mike caught him on Oprah as well.

"I love Oprah," he says. "Oprah, I admire greatly. This experience she’s having on Earth is a great one. It’s an expansive one, and it’s an empowering one — she’s helping a lot of people."

Though the talk show queen has played a key role in getting The Love Guru off the ground, don’t expect to see her face among the cameos in the film.

Known for peppering his movies with star-studded appearances, the actor is keeping the A-listers coming in the comedy, opening friday. In addition to stars Jessica Alba and Justin Timberlake, the film will also feature appearances by Sir Ben Kingsley, Stephen Colbert, Verne Troyer and Kanye West.

"I’ve been very lucky that a lot of people have been [in] cameos in my movies over the years — what people kind of know is that it’s a party, a filmed party," Mike says. "What I want to do is create a great, fun atmosphere and then put that on film."

Mike and Verne a.k.a. Mini-Me weren’t the only ones with a past connection on The Love Guru. The comedian and Kanye share some history too. During a benefit concert for Hurriance Katrina, where the two presented together, the rapper went into attack mode, declaring that "George Bush doesn’t care about black people." The comment offended a lot of people, but Mike wasn’t one of them.

"I went to the Katrina telethon because I was very moved by the plight of the people in New Orleans and I wanted to make a difference," he says. "I think that the frustration that Kanye expressed was valid … I just think you gotta tell a feller you’re gonna say it. [Laughs] Just tell a feller, would ya?"

While he admires Kanye’s audacity, Mike definitely won’t be making any political comments of his own.

"I don’t feel that being political is my forte — doing characters and sort of speaking what’s on my mind has been something I’m more comfortable with. I admire political comedy, it’s just not anything that I’ve ever been good at. "

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