Tag Archive | "Robert Downey Jr"

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Robert Downey Jr. makes a cameo

Posted on 23 June 2008 by JoyCeleb

Edward Norton’s The Hulk hopes to revitalize the falling green monster franchise with better cgi — looks the same — a new Bruce Banner, a new Betty Ross and a surprise cameo by Robert Downey Jr. who reprises his role as Iron Man aka Tony Stark. Usually, these types of crossovers are kept secret until people actually go watch the film, but Marvel is attempting a new strategy in acknowledging The Hulk might suck and instead, aiming to build off the popularity of Iron Man.

A better strategy would have been to ask Leslie Bibb from Iron Man to get naked. That would be cool because she’s hot. Oh and they could drip honey over her body and then have her suck on a banana and do other sexy things with fruits. The Hulk? What?

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Eva Mendes Joins ‘Lieutenant’ Ranks

Posted on 17 June 2008 by JoyCeleb

Eva Mendes joins the “Lieutenant’s” ranks. Robert Downey Jr. plays “Cowboys & Aliens.” Plus, Amanda Peet sets her clock ahead to “2012.” It’s all in the latest edition of the Access Hollywood Casting Call!

Eva Mendes is in talks to join Nicolas Cage in a remake of the 1992 drama “Bad Lieutenant,” according to Variety.

The original film starred Harvey Keitel as a corrupt cop investigating the rape of a nun.

“Bad Lieutenant” marks a reunion for Cage and Mendes, who previously teamed up for the 2007 film “Ghost Rider.”

Shooting is slated to begin later this summer.

Mendes recently wrapped production on “The Women,” an ensemble comedy co-starring Meg Ryan, Jada Pinkett Smith and Debra Messing.

She will also soon be seen in the Frank Miller film “The Spirit,” scheduled to hit theaters around Christmas 2008.

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Fresh off his uber-success as “Iron Man,” Robert Downey Jr. is in negotiations to star in “Cowboys & Aliens,” per The Hollywood Reporter.

The film, described as a “pulpy mix of the sci-fi and Western genres,” focuses on an Old West battle between the Apache and Western settlers, which is interrupted when a spaceship comes crashing down into the prairie in old time Arizona.

Downey is in line to play a former Union Army gunslinger named Zeke Jackson.

The Apache and the cowboys must join forces to fend off their extra terrestrial invaders.

Next up for Downey is the comedy “Tropic Thunder,” alongside Jack Black and Ben Stiller. In the fall, Downey takes on the role of a schizophrenic homeless musician in the drama “The Soloist.”

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Amanda Peet will star in the disaster film “2012,” per The Hollywood Reporter.

She joins the previously announced stars John Cusack, Thandie Newton, Danny Glover, Oliver Platt and many more in the Roland Emmerich project.

“2012” centers on the heroic struggle of survivors following a global cataclysm.

Peet will play Cusack’s ex-wife, who has recently re-married a wealthy man.

The duo also shared the screen in the 2007 drama “Martian Child.”

Peet recently finished shooting the crime caper “Real Men Cry,” opposite Ethan Hawke, Mark Ruffalo and New Kid on The Block Donnie Wahlberg.

She also will co-star in the upcoming sci-fi blockbuster, “The X-Files: I Want To Believe.”

“2012” is set to hit theaters in July 2009.

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Now that he’s unleashed “The Incredible Hulk” upon moviegoers, director Louis Leterrier is in talks to develop and direct “Strays,” an environmental action thriller, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

“Strays” follows a group of young business consultants on a business trip to Russia, who mysteriously awake inside an abandoned and radioactive city, where they must fight deadly obstacles to survive.

No potential casting info is available yet.

Leterrier’s other directing credits include “The Transporter 2” and the Jet Li film “Unleashed.”

Copyright 2008 by NBC Universal, Inc. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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‘Hulk’ Has $60M Weekend

Posted on 15 June 2008 by JoyCeleb

It looks like “The Incredible Hulk” has exceeded everyone’s expectations. When the numbers come in this afternoon, look for the Edward Norton-Liv Tyler Marvel comic spectacle to have reeled in around $60 million this weekend.

That means Marvel comics’ Stan Lee, using first Paramount with “Iron Man” and now Universal with “Hulk,” has had the biggest hits of the spring back to back. In a smart move, Lee made sure to include “Iron Man” star Robert Downey Jr. in the “Hulk” promotion and even in a “surprise” scene at the end of the film.

Will the sequels to these movies include cross-overs? No one’s saying anything yet. But on Friday I came upon Paramount chief Brad Grey and Universal head honcho Ron Meyer lunching together in a booth at the Grill on the Alley in Beverly Hills. Odds are the topic came up.

To think that yours truly was reading these comics in the late 60s when the magazines themselves cost — yes— 12 cents. A million years later, the Marvel superstars are bigger than ever. Next up: Captain America. And then, can a 4th Spider Man film be far behind? Tobey Maguire had better be at the gym. PS—he’s Ron Meyer’s son in law. Small super hero world!

‘Hulk’ Lampooned On ‘Kimmel’

Edward Norton skipped doing “live” interviews for his movie “The Incredible Hulk” on shows like Letterman, Leno and “Today.” But in what everyone involved is hoping will turn into a YouTube smash, Norton delivered a video Thursday night on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” sending up the movie and everything that’s happened with it.

Just as “Hulk” stands to be a monster hit this weekend, Norton filmed a segment in which Kimmel character Guillermo, who’s four feet, four inches, turns into his big-screen alter ego — a mini Hulk. Norton lampoons his own character, and concludes by saying “this is not what I signed up for.”

The idea, it’s hoped, it to make this video as big as the ones the Kimmel show did with Matt Damon and Ben Affleck earlier this year. Those videos, which were hysterically funny, became cult hits.

For the “Hulk” movie, the Norton video is a great idea. Norton was put in the position of not wanting to have to answer all kinds of questions about who wrote the movie’s screenplay, or any disagreements he might have had with the film’s direction and editing.

To avoid all that, he limited his appearances to the movie’s red carpet premiere, where he spoke to the “controlled” press, and to the MTV Movie Awards and just a few other outlets. The Kimmel video, if it takes off, could be a new way to market big stars who don’t want to deal with tricky questions. It’s also very funny.

Norton, who’s a serious guy, should take a page from Robert Downey Jr.’s book of superheroes. Downey (see below) is taking full advantage of his “Iron Man” success and enjoying it. Maybe after Norton’s box office numbers come in Friday night, he’ll do the same.

Warren Beatty Feted In Hollywood Left-fest

It was the most star-studded Hollywood lovefest in some time Thursday night as the American Film Institute honored Warren Beatty with a lifetime achievement award at the Kodak Theater.

The guest list combined Beatty’s interest in movies and liberal politics, starting with the continual playing of the Communist Party anthem, “The International,” which was featured in Beatty’s Oscar-winning movie “Reds.”

With that theme used as a processional, Beatty took the podium at the Kodak in front of 600 people including Bill Clinton, retired Sens. George McGovern and Gary Hart, Warren Christopher and former California Gov. Jerry Brown representing Beatty’s lifelong political circles.

From the movie community came the heavy-hitters: Jane Fonda, Al Pacino, Dustin Hoffman, Diane Keaton, Steven Spielberg, Robert Evans, James Caan, Halle Berry, Keith Carradine, Quentin Tarantino, Brett Ratner and Hugh Hefner, as well as Art Garfunkel at the top of the list.

On the dais with Beatty sat his wife, Annette Bening, sister Shirley MacLaine and Hollywood power players Barry Diller, David Geffen, Creative Artists Agency’s Richard Lovett and lawyer Bert Fields (the recent Anthony Pellicano scandal subject) with his art-dealer wife, Barbara Guggenheim.

Late to the four-hour dinner because of the Lakers-Celtics game were Jack Nicholson and Dyan Cannon, but they made it with enough time to deliver toasts.

Plenty of studio execs showed up, too, such as Ron Meyer, Tom Rothman, Jeff Zucker, Jim Gianopulos and Alan Horn. Sony’s Sir Howard Stringer, who sat with Fonda, opened the evening.

Most of the reminiscing was about the movies, but eventually things turned political and left. Said McGovern in a moving toast: “Richard Nixon would have been much better off if we’d been elected” in 1972.

McGovern got a big laugh, but in all seriousness, the 86-year-old former presidential candidate had an important point to make: back in 1972, Beatty invented the celebrity political fundraiser when he staged a superstar concert at Madison Square Garden for him. He brought together Barbra Streisand, James Taylor, Simon and Garfunkel, who’d parted ways two years earlier at their height, and he also reunited the comedy team of Mike Nichols and Elaine May. All of these people at that moment could not have been bigger.

McGovern was not alone among politicians who gave thanks to Beatty. On a serious note, Gary Hart saluted him and thanked the film star, enigmatically, for “an act of personal generosity to me.” He added, on a lighter note, that “people always thought Warren wanted to be me. But in fact, I always wanted to be Warren Beatty.”

As many people noted Beatty’s long history of romantic conquests before meeting and marrying the love of his life, Bening, in 1991, Hart’s words may have been all too true considering what happened to him.

And it wasn’t just liberals — although at one point, the evening really took on the look of a Hollywood backyard Democratic fundraiser.

Among the many video tributes that were interspersed (rather skillfully, I might add) with the live speeches was one from Sen. John McCain. He and Beatty are actually quite good friends as it turns out, even though their politics — as each has pointed out — are very different.

I think the audience was a little taken aback when they saw McCain’s face pop up among those of Goldie Hawn, Julie Christie, Arthur Penn, Streisand, Paul Sorvino, Charles Grodin, Estelle Parsons, Robert Towne and Pacino (who later surprised the room by also coming to give Beatty the AFI honor). Here’s a case where politicians shouldn’t make jokes. McCain’s was something to the effect that he, the Senator, had been bombed — as in literally — in Vietnam, but Warren had once “bombed” with Miss Vietnam. Ouch!

But, as Beatty himself said when he took the stage, the AFI event was “like psychoanalysis.” Indeed, I cannot recall a tribute like this when so many famous people showed up and spoke, without Teleprompters or notes, from the heart.

All of the speeches were superb, and some were sublime. Faye Dunaway nearly stole the evening by recalling “Bonnie and Clyde” in rhyme a la her Bonnie Parker character from that landmark movie. Hoffman, whom everyone would like to speak at their lifetime achievement ceremonies, came with a sheaf of papers and held the room in thrall as he touted Beatty and tweaked Nicholson for choosing the losing Lakers over his best friend until the very end of the night.

And then there were the women. A stunning looking Fonda — noting that she and Beatty had done their first screen test together — told the audience what she’d told this column a few months ago. When they met, she thought he was gay. “He was so good-looking and all his male friends were gay. What were the odds he wasn’t?”

Perhaps the biggest serious jolt of the night came from Diane Keaton, who never speaks about her personal life. Dramatically taking the stage at the end of the night, after Clinton, Dustin, et al she presented right before her two former lovers, Pacino and Beatty himself, and just after Nicholson.

Keaton also spoke without notes. She kind of joked that she didn’t remember much about her outstanding film career except that “’The Godfather’ was important, ‘Sleeper’ was very funny and ‘The Little Drummer Girl was a bomb.’”

However: in recalling the landmark film she made with Beatty, “Reds,” for which she received an Oscar nomination, Keaton talked about the famous reunion-at-the-train-station scene near the film’s end.

“It’s my favorite few minutes of anything I’ve done on film,” Keaton said, which is saying a lot. She said of Beatty, who directed her, “I didn’t make it easy for him.” She said that she wore a Walkman (you remember — the tape kind) “blasting Bob Dylan to block out all your direction. It was take after take till I finally got it.”

Keaton continued: “It’s the memory of the kind of love I never imagined possible in the movies.” On that train station in Spain, where the scene was filmed, Keaton said, “it was the sweet anguish of love when I saw your face.”

Keaton’s moment should be quite memorable when the AFI tribute is edited for broadcast on USA Network on June 25 (it’s not to be missed).

Robert Downey Jr. and Elaine May were also in the category of sublime performances. May’s was, well, a kind of pure ditzy comedy as she explained how Beatty pitched “Heaven’s Gate” to her originally as a project for Muhammad Ali, and then explained “Reds.”

And Downey: how to describe the star of “Iron Man” totally rehabilitated from Hollywood’s very bad boy to gigantic star of the moment? Downey was such a drug addict that he was found sleeping in strangers’ beds and went to jail.

He is now hailed as a conquering hero. He is also brilliantly gifted with verbiage, and so his fictional monologue about being a 9-year-old producer advising Beatty and late director Hal Ashby about the movie “Shampoo” will wind up being one of those viral videos on YouTube. It’s a classic.

Woody: Should He?; Quentin’s Terms Of Endearment

Now that the AFI has honored Warren Beatty, I am told that there’s a move afoot for next year to get Woody Allen. It’s a great idea. Woody’s “Vicky Christina Barcelona” will be a big hit for the Weinstein Company this fall, with many Oscar nominations likely. And imagine the cast of that tribute — Diane Keaton, Alan Alda, Dianne Wiest, Louise Lasser, Tony Roberts, Mira Sorvino, Michael Caine and so on.

“VCB” is just one of four big expected Oscar pictures touted hits this fall for the Weinstein Company, now in its second full year of operation. Look for “The Road” and “The Reader” as well as “Shanghai” to lead the unsinkable Harvey Weinstein back to the Kodak Theater stage. His investors should be smiling.

Meantime, Weinstein has a lot to look forward to on Sunday night at the Tony Awards with all his nominations. The play he backed, “August: Osage County,” is set to win Best Play. …

Also Thursday night, from the AFI tribute: how about Quentin Tarantino chewing the ear off of Shirley MacLaine? He couldn’t get enough of her! Tarantino was sitting at a hot table hosted by producer Steve Bing, who also brought James Caan, Mitch Glazer and Kelly Lynch and R&B legend Solomon Burke .

My own table hosts were the fantastic Larry and Michelle Herbert. Larry has been on the AFI board for over 20 years. He invented the famous Pantone numbered color system used in every art store in the world, and by corporations who need punch for their logos (you can buy his fascinating memoir on amazon.com). Michelle Herbert looked like such a movie star Thursday night on the red carpet that the paparazzi and the fans at the Kodak kept stopping her to take her picture. Bravo!

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An incredible treat for ‘Hulk’ fans

Posted on 13 June 2008 by JoyCeleb

As you may have heard, everything about “The Incredible Hulk” is different. Cast, director, the look of the big green guy, the overall storytelling approach all have been changed for the sequel to Ang Lee’s over-thought and poorly CG’d 2003 “Hulk.”

Does the new approach work better? Generally, yes. “Incredible” has a few annoying flaws, but it’s gratifying in many of the ways a Marvel Comics movie should be.

Set five years after the original story, this one finds scientist Bruce Banner hiding out in a Brazilian favela, working in a soda bottling plant and studying martial arts in hopes of controlling his Hulk-heralding rage. Edward Norton underplays Banner, atypically, to a fault. The guy’s so passive he’s often just a wisp on the screen, but that may have something to do with the cutting of character scenes the actor has reportedly been upset over.

Though it might have damaged the main performance, emphasizing action quickly proves to be a fair trade-off. Louis Leterrier, the French director of the “Transporter” series, stages a fantastic raid/pursuit/horror movie style Hulk appearance on the Rio hillsides when an elite force of U.S. commandos tries to capture Banner.

Commanded by Hulk’s old nemesis, Gen. “Thunderbolt” Ross (a good, borderline sociopath William Hurt), and led by aging supersoldier Emil Blonsky (Tim Roth in the movie’s best performance), the Americans don’t achieve their objective. But they do drive Banner back to the States on a more urgent search for a cure to his condition. And the chase, sometimes breathless, is on.

Liv Tyler is perfectly adequate as Betty Ross, the general’s estranged daughter and Bruce’s true love. Tim Blake Nelson provides the bulk of the movie’s welcome comedy relief as a university researcher who may have found the antidote to Hulking out. And then there’s The Abomination, a bigger, stronger, smarter and much uglier creature that provides this movie with something crucially missing from previous film and TV versions: a formidable foe for our unstoppable antihero.

The digital Hulk itself is more fearsome and expressive than the video-game cartoon we saw five years ago. There’s more of a Frankenstein quality to him, especially whenever Betty’s able to reach the tender man inside the raging giant. That, Blonsky’s warrior fascination with what gamma radiation can do, the constant blurring of the line between good guys and bad … they all scream Marvel.

And that’s no surprise; the movie was written by “X-Men” expert Zak Penn (with an uncredited assist from Norton) and is the second production from Marvel Studios, the comic-book company’s new moviemaking arm.

Some major loose ends are left dangling by the time “Incredible Hulk” smashes to its finish. However, it is - like the studio’s first release, “Iron Man” - competent, fan-pleasing fun (nerds will be delighted by the presence of S.H.I.E.L.D. and a wry Tony Stark cameo). This one doesn’t have the extra-special ingredient of Robert Downey Jr. riffing all over the place, but it does have better and much more destructive action. And isn’t that what we really want from the Hulk?

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Robert Downey Jr.‘s Burger King Breakthrough

Posted on 11 June 2008 by JoyCeleb

Fast Food may be the secret to Robert Downey Jr.’s success at overcoming drug addiction, as the actor’s Burger King break played a big part in helping him beat drugs.

The story goes that the “Iron Man” star was driving along Pacific Coast Highway in 2003, when he pulled over at the chain restaurant for a fateful fast food fix.

As he dug into his burger, Robert came to an epiphany: it was time to clean up his habits. He then threw all of his drugs into the ocean.

The actor’s rep told Access Hollywood, the savory story was “not as simplified as described, but true enough.”

On a related note, Burger King played a key role in Robert’s “Iron Man,” a movie that made the actor a box office superstar.

After being imprisoned overseas, his character, whose life, like Robert’s has been saved, requests “an American cheeseburger.” And he fulfills his wish at Burger King.

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Iron Man’s Repulsors Set on The Mandarin for Sequel

Posted on 08 June 2008 by JoyCeleb

With the Incredible Hulk tracking surprisingly well and threatening to smash Iron Man’s box office records next weekend, director Jon Favreau is keeping Tony Stark and company in the news by hinting at the plot of the Iron Man sequel.

When the original film made mention of the terrorist organization The 10 Rings, it was a clear reference to Marvel history and the alien artifacts The Mandarin discovered before beginning his career of oppression and supervillainy. It seemed like a pretty obvious clue from Favreau and his writers that Iron Man’s arch-nemesis would appear in a sequel.

Now, with the director saying he needs “heavy duty, heavyweight bad guys” to confront Iron Man in the next film, Mandarin seems all but a lock. There’s no mention of casting yet for the Far Eastern troublemaker, but that will have to break soon, as Robert Downey Jr. will be ready to begin filming in the golden titanium suit again when he finishes the Hugh Hefner biography he’s working on now.

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Robert Downey Jr. to Play Hugh Hefner in ‘Playboy’ Movie

Posted on 26 May 2008 by JoyCeleb

A Hugh Hefner biopic, titled ‘Playboy’ is in the works and it is rumored that Hef would like to be played by Robert Downey JR.

Hugh-Hefner-Playmates

The movie is about Hugh Hefner’s past and his life as a sexual revolution icon and the founder of Playboy. The film is being directed by Brett Ratner and produced by Ron Howard. Image Entertainment and Universal Pictures have teamed up to obtain the rights to 48 years of Playboy material for the movie.

Hugh-Hefner-Playmates

Other rumored men to play the role of Hugh Hefner are Hefner himself, Tom Cruise, and Leo Dicaprio. Who do you think would make the best Hefner?

Hugh-Hefner-Movie Robert-Downey-Jr

Tom-Cruise Leo-Dicaprio

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John Cusack goes the distance for John’s ‘War, Inc.’ satire

Posted on 19 May 2008 by JoyCeleb

Joan Cusack admits that it was tough shuttling back and forth between her Chicago home and Bulgaria location for her brother, John’s, “War, Inc.” big screen political satire that opens in limited release May 23 – but she was glad to do it.

“At this point I appreciate how hard it is to get something made that you love, that you really feel has content that’s worth talking about, that’s stimulating cultural conversations.  It’s a great luxury,” says Joan, who plays an executive of the corporation running the world’s first fully-outsourced war – complete with tanks bearing sponsor logos.  “To me, whenever John is working on something that he feels passionate about and I have an opportunity to work with my family and be able to support him, of course I’m going to do it.”

She notes, “The easy part was that I have a great husband and John was obviously flexible about when I could go and come back, so it worked with my family.”

Her other upcoming film this summer couldn’t be much more different – the July 2 release “Kit Kittredge: An American Girl’s Story,” inspired by the popular line of dolls, and its young heroine wannabe reporter of the Great Depression era.  That film stars the superb Abigail Breslin, with whom Joan is currently working in the big screen adaptation of Jody Picoult’s “My Sister’s Keeper.” “I’d worked with her before in ‘Raising Helen,’” reminds Joan, “and she’s a great kid with a great family.” She also notes, “I have two boys, so this girls’ world wasn’t a world I knew very much about.  I was impressed with the content of the story and the way they dealt with the subject matter.  It’s very psychologically empowering.  It made me want an American Boys store.”

Next up for Cusack, “Toy Story 3.”  “They’re just in the beginning stages,” reports the actress known to Pixar lovers as the voice of cowgirl Jesse.  “That’s easy.  I can do it from my home.”

ON THE PERSONAL SIDE: Cheetah Girl Sabrina Bryan admits that time with her beau, “Dancing With the Stars” pro Mark Ballas, has been pretty hard to come by lately between their respective professional activities.  “We’re just both really busy,” says Bryan, who competed in the upcoming Disney Channel Games last week.  “My partner has his card taken right now with Kristi Yamaguchi, which I’m so happy for.  We did go on tour together, which was awesome – to meet so many of the ‘Dancing With the Stars’ fans face to face and hear their applause.”

Bryan finished the much-anticipated summer Disney Channel movie “Cheetah Girls 3: One World” in India with group mates Adrienne Bailon and Kiely Williams last month.  “I got back on a Saturday and Adrienne and I went to that Monday’s ‘Dancing With the Stars’ show.  I couldn’t wait to get back and see him dance with Kristi, so I support Team Yamaguchi.  They’ll definitely make the finals, I think.”

As for Bryan and Ballas?  “We’ll see. We’re seeing how were going.”

THE BIG SCREEN SCENE: As fans eagerly await J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek” , which just wrapped production, Faran Tahir, who plays the Federation Captain, says he’s confident it will bring forth a new legion of Trekkies – and not the kind that still sleep in their parent’s basement.  “J.J. is one of those people who has the ability to re-introduce water to you in a new way.  He’s such a creative man,” claims Tahir.  “I love what he’s done with it because he hasn’t said farewell to the tradition or the story of ‘Star Trek,’ but he has such a fresh approach to it that I think he will re-introduce it to this generation in a way they can relate.  It will create this bridge between the people who grew up with it and this younger generation who didn’t know about it.”

Tahir is certainly no stranger to fantasy flicks as he is also starring in “Iron Man” as Robert Downey Jr.’s nemesis Raza.  The actor believes people will really take to Downey Jr.’s approach to playing a superhero.  “The thing about Robert is that no matter what he attempts, he brings so many layers to the character.  Yes, this is an action movie and you could just do the action part of it and it would be fine, but he brings a certain amount of levity, which not many actors can do,” he notes.  The movie certainly holds a special place for Tahir, whose son got a part in it as well.  “For other movies I might have said no, but for a nine-year-old to be in superhero movie, what is cooler than that?  I couldn’t deny him that, and he did an amazing job.”

IN HIS SITES: Gerald McRaney’s off to Namibia to hunt game for his “World of Beretta” Outdoor Life Network series.  It’s the kind of unscripted show multi-series veteran McRaney can get into.  As for other non-scripted fare, “I agree with my brother’s notion about reality television.  He said, ‘Survivor my a–!  The craft services table is 20 feet away.’”  McRaney’s wife, Delta Burke, is staying home.  He says that while she understands hunting intellectually, “She’s not going to go there herself.”  He’ll be bringing Horton Foote’s “Dividing the Estate” onto Broadway this fall.  On the scripted TV front, “I’ve seen a couple of things this year that look promising, but any more, something is going to have to be really interesting to get me involved in it.  I’m getting a little long in the tooth to putting up with something less just to have another payday.”

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