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Jerry Seinfeld
seems to be a man who has it all. He is
a very successful comic with a loving wife
and three children. His TV show Seinfeld
ran for nine seasons on NBC, getting accolades
and a massive viewing audience, making him
so much money that he truly never has to
work again.
But, the general public hasn’t heard
much of this comic in the last decade. He
was not laying low, just working on projects
that appealed to his artistic general nature
rather than massive network audiences. He
did a giant concert tour where he retired
his old observational act, turning it into
cable TV special.
Then, Jerry made a brave documentary on
building a new act that was more personal.
It was a movie that showed the process of
bombing in trying out new and different
chunks of comedy. Now, he is back in the
limelight and on the Silver Screen with
an animated film. Jerry, with his film making
partners Simon J. Smith and Steve Hickner,
showed the Dallas area press snippets of
one of the most anticipated films of 2007,
Bee Movie.
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In what started as an off hand joke with Steven
Spielberg, Jerry began riffing that he was working
on a ‘Bee’ movie. Not a low budget
film that was the second flick in a double feature
bill, but a movie about bees. Spielberg fell in
love the off the cuff idea and got Dreamworks
Jeffery Katzenberg involved.
But Jerry Seinfeld insists that the movie wasn’t
a planned out idea from the get go. “I didn’t
pitch it,” he said. “Pitching is when
you have this idea and you ask ‘would a
studio like to do this?’ I didn’t
do anything; I was just trying to fill a hole
in a conversation. It was just one of those conversation
lulls. Spielberg got the ball rolling and I got
together with some writers from the show and it
came out really fast. I didn’t see the potential
that Steven saw in it but once I started writing
it and all this stuff with honey and hives and
humans and flowers and pollination—all of
this poured out.”
The story of Bee Movie is of Barry Bee (voiced
by Jerry Seinfeld) a worker drone dreaming of
something more than working in the Honex plant
in New Hive City. He meets Vanessa (Renee Zellweger)
a Manhattan florist and kindred spirit. As they
become friends Barry finds out way more about
human beings than he expected. When Barry discovers
that bee honey is being sold to humans, he sues
mankind. The rest of the story is of the consequences
of that lawsuit.
On why he decided to become involved in an animated
project, Jerry said, “The thing that got
me into this was the look of these movies. If
I could see those kind of images and do my comedy
with it maybe that would be a fresh feeling with
the audience. I knew I wouldn’t do good
work if I wasn’t excited about it. I’m
more excited now than I was at the beginning now
that it has actually come together.”
Since Jerry Seinfeld has been out of the public
eye for so long, many have wondered why he hasn’t
been in any live action films or television shows.
“The TV show used up everything that I had
about wanting to be on camera and acting,”
he said. “It’s not really what I do.
I’m a stand-up comic.” After nine
years of doing Seinfeld, which he called an incredibly
long hobby, “it was time to get back to
work”.
He readily confesses that he is not the best thespian
or comic. Jerry explained, “I think the
only thing people like about what I do is they
like my kind of ideas. There are actors better
than me, a lot of people who are funnier than
me. But I have certain types of ideas that connect
with people. I wasn’t interested in doing
anything that wasn’t my own idea and I didn’t
have any ideas. So, I didn’t do anything,”
he dead paned.
And his Barry Bee animation does look more than
a bit like the stand-up. He knew that he wanted
Barry to be a bee version of himself. “With
me, (I thought that) people would enjoy seeing
a character look like me because I played myself
on the TV show. People know me for who I am and
not one of these actors that disappear in a character.
The expression is my expression.” Added
Simon J. Smith, “The expression and animation
is very much Jerry.”
The more one talks to Jerry Seinfeld, the more
he comes across as a big kid. He found that the
people who work at Dreamworks on animated films
are kindred spirits. “Most people in this
business are creative, slowly matured individuals,”
he said. “You take the word funny and look
at the root it is fun. So we made everything in
the movie fun and not worry about who’s
gonna like it.”
He says that he and the team at Dreamworks never
planned to target a specific young audience but
to make a film for everyone. “The simple
thing is that everything has to be fun,”
Jerry said. “If you make everything fun
then you don’t have to target to an audience.”
While some movies seem to aim at a particular
demographic, Jerry just asked the question “What
would be fun for me?” He used as an example
of ‘being fun’ by constructing the
bee car that Barry drives; he called in a German
racing-car design crew. “Which,” he
said, “was a lot of fun for me.” Jerry
is well known for his collection of racing cars.
Married at 45, Jerry admits that he greatest joy
is with his kids but he also admits he can’t
control them. He asks them to do things and they
say no. “I use threats, fear and intimidation
to control them I have become a small time mob
boss in my house. I figure out what the kids like
and I threaten to hurt those things,” he
says with a laugh.
Jerry did have the highest praises for his team
of Simon J. Smith and Steve Hickner. “We
all got along great and had the same work ethic.
We would do anything to make the movie better.
We would stay up any hours, work with anyone.”
Added Simon, “Wear bee costumes, get dunked
in a tank of water.”
That quip brought up the original trailer that
was shown during the Super Bowl. The little clip
showed the characters live action in insect costumes.
Said Seinfeld; “We thought just what a disaster
it would be to attempt to make one of these movies
live action. Like the scene on the windshield,
imagine if you would try to do that with fire
hoses and a slippery surface. It would be a nightmare.
But it was a funny trailer to tease about what
is coming.”
Jerry claims the record for moral support in ‘the
most recording sessions ever done in an animated
movie’. In Bee Movie, there were over three
hundred recording sessions because Jerry was there
every day. He recorded the movie every day. By
the time it was finally wrapped, there were over
200 different variations of the script.
Jerry recorded every line with every actor. “It
gets funnier when we do it together and I wasn’t
doing anything else. I wasn’t busy. I would
adjust the lines and I wanted it to adlib and
have the characters talk over each other. In the
scenes with Renee we are talking over each other
and you can’t really do that with people
recording a year apart. You can feel them feeling
each other’s energy.”
Said Jerry, “Some people just like to read
the lines of the script, other people are open
to improv. To me, the comedians are better in
the movie. Chris Rock, all his stuff was adlibbed.”
But even the straight actors came in with improvs.
Jerry gave an example, in one scene he told Renee
to just keep asking him to have a cup of coffee
and he would refuse. That little bit turned into
a major comic moment.
One of the biggest casting coups was getting talk
show Oprah Winfrey to be in the film as the court
judge. “She was very nervous the first time
we recorded with her,” said Seinfeld. “She
always wanted to be in an animated movie. I was
on her show promoting the first Seinfeld DVD.
I told her what I was doing and she said ‘I’d
love to be in that’. The judge would be
a perfect part for her. To have the first interspecies
lawsuit, you have to have the world’s most
conciliatory person between these two major groups.
And she was good. She did some of her stuff and
said I want to come back. I can do it better.”
Jerry acknowledged that the hardest sessions were
Patrick Warburton who plays Ken the boyfriend.
“He is the funniest guy in film,”
said Seinfeld. “He would make me cry and
fall off the chair. Most of those laughing scenes
are with Patrick. I would literally fall on my
hands and knees.”
Ray Liotta has a cameo and when asked why Jerry
joked, “because he was the last guy you
would expect to see in a movie about bees.”
Seinfeld said that he was very proud of the movie,
but was amazed at the amount of time it took to
make it—three and half years. “Renee
made two movies in the time Bee Movie was made.”
And finally it was asked--What did you like the
best about Bee Movie? “Making people laugh,”
said Jerry.
Bee Movie opens November 2, 2007
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