Role Model: Gene Wilder
Brief Synopsis
Gene Wilder sits down with Alec Baldwin for an intimate conversation about Wilder's extensive career.
Film Details
Genre
Documentary
Interview
Release Date
2008
Technical Specs
Duration
58m
Synopsis
Gene Wilder sits down with Alec Baldwin for an intimate conversation about Wilder's extensive career.
Film Details
Genre
Documentary
Interview
Release Date
2008
Technical Specs
Duration
58m
Articles
Role Model: Gene Wilder
"For four decades, movie funnyman Gene Wilder has been keeping audiences in stitches with his combination of over-the-top neurosis and sweet vulnerability," said Tom Brown, then-vice president of original productions for TCM. "We are proud to be able to celebrate this outstanding actor, writer and director and are especially honored to have Alec Baldwin sit down with Wilder, his movie idol, for this intimate conversation."
"I'm so grateful that Turner Classic Movies asked me to be a part of this project," Baldwin said during the opening of Role Model: Gene Wilder. "I'm a big fan of the network, so I jumped at the chance when I was asked, 'What movie star would you like to have a conversation with?'"
In Role Model: Gene Wilder, Wilder and Baldwin engage in a wide-ranging conversation at Waveny House in New Canaan, located in Wilder's home state of Connecticut. Their talk touches on several important events in Wilder's life, including the night he met Mel Brooks, who was then dating (and would later marry) Anne Bancroft, Wilder's co-star in the stage production of Mother Courage; being kissed fully on the lips by renowned actor Zero Mostel just before auditioning for The Producers; getting to act opposite Lee J. Cobb in a television production of Death of a Salesman, a performance Wilder saw Cobb give when Wilder was 16; and working on his first screenplay, Young Frankenstein, which earned an Oscar® nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.
Wilder also speaks about his love life, including his too-brief marriage to comedienne Gilda Radner (who died of ovarian cancer in 1989 and whose struggle Wilder chronicled in the book Gilda's Disease); and his then-16-year marriage to Karen Boyer. Both Wilder and Baldwin also talk about acting on stage versus acting in film. Wilder prefered the latter. "The thing I love about making movies is the peace of mind that I know I don't have to be perfect the first time," Wilder said. "I can be perfect the second time or the third time." Baldwin, on the other hand, prefers the stage, with the immediacy and intimacy that develops with a live audience.
Role Model: Gene Wilder
Role Model: Gene Wilder was a 2008 TCM special in which the movie
funnyman sat down with Alec Baldwin for an
intimate conversation about Wilder's extensive
career. The special came to
TCM from executive producer Robert Trachtenberg
(The Dick Cavett Show with Special Guest
Mel Brooks; Cary Grant: A Class Apart) and originally premiered on the network on Tuesday, April 15, 2008.
"For four decades, movie funnyman Gene Wilder
has been keeping audiences in stitches with his
combination of over-the-top neurosis and sweet
vulnerability," said Tom Brown, then-vice president of
original productions for TCM. "We are proud to be
able to celebrate this outstanding actor, writer and
director and are especially honored to have Alec
Baldwin sit down with Wilder, his movie idol, for this
intimate conversation."
"I'm so grateful that Turner Classic Movies asked
me to be a part of this project," Baldwin said during
the opening of Role Model: Gene Wilder. "I'm a big fan of the network, so I
jumped at the chance when I was asked, 'What
movie star would you like to have a conversation
with?'"
In Role Model: Gene Wilder, Wilder
and Baldwin engage in a wide-ranging conversation
at Waveny House in New Canaan, located in
Wilder's home state of Connecticut. Their talk
touches on several important events in Wilder's life,
including the night he met Mel Brooks, who was
then dating (and would later marry) Anne Bancroft,
Wilder's co-star in the stage production of
Mother Courage; being kissed fully on the
lips by renowned actor Zero Mostel just before
auditioning for The Producers; getting to act
opposite Lee J. Cobb in a television production of
Death of a Salesman, a performance Wilder
saw Cobb give when Wilder was 16; and working on
his first screenplay, Young Frankenstein,
which earned an Oscar® nomination for Best
Adapted Screenplay.
Wilder also speaks about his love life, including his
too-brief marriage to comedienne Gilda Radner (who
died of ovarian cancer in 1989 and whose struggle
Wilder chronicled in the book Gilda's
Disease); and his then-16-year marriage to
Karen Boyer.
Both Wilder and Baldwin also talk about acting on
stage versus acting in film. Wilder prefered the latter.
"The thing I love about making movies is the peace
of mind that I know I don't have to be perfect the first
time," Wilder said. "I can be perfect the second
time or the third time." Baldwin, on the other hand,
prefers the stage, with the immediacy and intimacy
that develops with a live audience.