What about Bill?
Will Bill Murray win the Oscar tonight for best actor in a motion picture?
Itâs a funny question. On âSaturday Night Liveâ in the late 1970s, when he was on âWeekend Update,â Murray used to do his annual Oscar predictions, in which heâd mock the event as a Left Coast dog-and-pony show. The bit involved a magnetic tote board and the names of the nominees, which Murray would blithely toss aside as he eliminated contenders for reasons that had nothing to do with performance (âBest supporting actor and actress? Who really cares
And yet, with âLost in Translation,â here we are: Murray could find himself crowned Grand Pooh-bah of the Hollywood acting community. His competition for best actor includes Ben Kingsley, a guy youâre supposed to call âSirâ when you see him on the street; Johnny Depp, who starred in a movie based on a Disneyland ride; Sean Penn, who will surely be nominated a zillion more times; and Jude Law, a Brit playing a Civil War deserter in a movie, âCold Mountain,â that substituted Romania for the American South.
Of all the nominees, Murray is the one true wild card. The others exude actorly Hollywood rectitude, even the former bad boys Depp and Penn. Put another way, Murray is the only one of the five who hasnât sat down for a discussion of âcraftâ on Bravoâs âInside the Actorâs Studio.â
This is exactly why Murray can be so likable: He is outside the rules. He is not classically handsome, and his face, acne-scarred until it more recently resolved into weathered middle age, is identified more for its malleability than its wattage. Known as reclusive (or, in todayâs media age, someone you canât find on 16 magazine covers when heâs got a movie out), Murray also has a famous antipathy when it comes to the people within the movie business.
In 1999, Murray spoke at the memorial service for his agent, Jay Moloney, who was found hanged in his Mulholland Drive house after years of drug abuse. Murray told the assembled that he was waiving his appearance fee that day âbecause Jay would have wanted it that way.â Then he looked out at an auditorium filled with industry types and said, âThere are so many people here today that I would much rather be eulogizing.â
Murray was in similar form last month, when he won his Golden Globe. He gave a pretty biting speech. Instead of thanking his agents as a parade of winners had been doing all night, Murray said heâd fired his representatives; meanwhile his physical trainer had killed himself. Nor could he thank anyone at Universal or Focus Features for âLost in Translation,â because âso many people are trying to take credit for this thing I wouldnât know where to begin.â
Say this: Murray gave something to the moment. But then he usually does, even if his approach is thickly dolloped with scorn and creative malfeasance. Appearing on âThe Late Show With David Lettermanâ several weeks ago, Murray referred to the Oscars as âthis thing at the end of the month.â Acclaim is forcing him out of hiding and perhaps, as a comedian, he is struggling with which public face to wear. On âLettermanâ -- as at the Golden Globes, and in the current Hollywood issue of Vanity Fair -- he looked as gray and forlorn as his more recent characters, the industrialist Herman Blume in âRushmoreâ and the burned-out Hollywood action star Bob Harris in âLost in Translation.â
The Bill we used to know
For longtime fans of his movies, the glum-faced Murray represents only part of the career. Where was the mischievous smile, the coy Murray?
But no, he kept his miserable face on. Maybe it was jet lag (heâd flown in from Italy, where he was shooting his latest movie, âThe Life Aquaticâ). Between the new movie and promotion of âLost in Translation,â Murray has been away from his home and family since Labor Day, something that is said to weigh on him. The PR people for âLost in Translationâ declared him unavailable for an interview in a way that suggested vast, donât-even-think-about-it unavailability. This even though âTranslation,â which was released quietly as a âsmall movieâ that happened to star Bill Murray, is now being hard-sold as a Bill Murray comedy, even though the movie isnât a comedy (that scene of him losing control on the Life Cycle, while hilarious, is hardly representative of the tone of the film, which is generally deadpan and wistful).
Now that the movie is both out on DVD and in the American multiplex, audiences who havenât seen Murray since, say, âGroundhog Dayâ may be surprised that the tone of the movie is so serious. Certainly itâs a sea change from his best-known work (e.g. âStripes,â âGhostbustersâ or even âKingpinâ). Though considered a comedian, Murray has over the years shown a consistent desire to do dramatic work (as when, according to lore, he agreed to do âGhostbustersâ on the condition Columbia bankroll an adaptation of W. Somerset Maughamâs âThe Razorâs Edge,â in which he starred).
Newly hot thanks to âTranslation,â it remains to be seen how he will play this hand. âHis patent insincerity makes him the perfect emblematic hero for the stoned era,â the late New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael, a consistent admirer, wrote of Murray in her review of âGhostbusters,â which came out in 1984. âHe has a genuine outre gift: he makes you feel that his characters are bums inside -- unconcerned and indifferent -- and he makes that seem like a kind of grace.â
In the course of asking around about Murray you hear that he is âweird,â that getting a project to him can involve leaving a script in a phone booth, that he conducts business, or some business, via an 800 number (needing to get in touch with him, an assistant on a recent Murray movie was told to call the 800 number and leave a number where she, the assistant, would not pick up the phone, thus avoiding any potential for a conversation).
Hollywood stories of Murray include the disagreement with producer Laura Ziskin on the set of âWhat About Bob?â in which Murray tossed Ziskin into a lake -- âplayfully,â Ziskin said. âBill also threatened to throw me across the parking lot and then broke my sunglasses and threw them across the parking lot,â she told The Times last year.
Jessica Tuchinsky, one of the CAA agents Murray recently fired, declined to be interviewed. Tuchinsky, who had been Moloneyâs assistant, referred questions to Wendy Smith, an agency spokeswoman, who said it was the companyâs policy not to comment on former clients.
Several sources, requesting anonymity, suggested Murray was unhappy that his representatives had not been able to get him a bigger payday for âThe Life Aquatic,â a big-budget Disney film directed by âRushmoreâsâ Wes Anderson, in which Murray plays an oceanographer not unlike the late Jacques Cousteau.
Murrayâs fee was reportedly $10 million for âGroundhog Day,â but that was more than a decade ago, when he was represented by then-CAA superagent Michael Ovitz (Ovitz did not return several phone calls). At 53, Murray is too old to be Adam Sandler, who rakes in the millions as the box-office king of slapstick.
But Murray never wanted to be that guy, or at least he was ambivalent about it. True, there have been a few naked commercial grabs (âCharlieâs Angelsâ), but he has aged in to quirky dramatic roles apparently not done for the money (âEd Wood,â âCradle Will Rockâ).
In âLost in Translation,â Murray plays a fading star who canât earn in Hollywood anymore and has to take a whiskey commercial in Japan to keep the seven-figure paydays coming. Is it art imitating life? Murray turned down the role of Bosley in âCharlieâs Angels IIâ -- work he probably saw as roughly the equivalent of staring into a camera and saying âMake it Suntory time.â
Instead he did âTranslation,â a movie whose total budget was around $4 million. Lo and behold he fires his representatives, gets an Oscar nomination and becomes even harder to contact.
This is all part of his mystique or his perversity, depending on your point of view. As a movie star, Murray is no Julia Roberts: He shuns most press but appears at odd moments. At the International Conference on Sturgeon Biodiversity and Conservation in New York, according to a 1994 New York Times item, he âcrumpled up a check and threw it at Kathryn Birstein, the wife of Dr. Vadim Birstein, a geneticist and champion of sturgeons in Russia. It was a signed blank check.â
All of this is great so long as you can keep Hollywood needing you more than you need them. Murray has had a few misses (i.e. âThe Man Who Knew Too Littleâ), but he has managed to hold onto his essence in ways that other big-name comedians have not. There is a through line, a humanity, to his work that isnât as palpable with other comedic stars, including Steve Martin, who went from the wild-and-crazy guy of âThe Jerkâ to his more recent series of neutered roles as dads, or Robin Williams and Jim Carrey, who are all over the place, playing pet detectives and serial killers and menschy therapists, depending on the year.
Letterman tried to point this out to Murray, though as he ticked off the now-classic films (âCaddyshack,â âGhostbustersâ) Murray sat there, looking chagrined. Then he choked up talking about all the months away from his family (Murray, choking up?). He has six children, all males, between the ages of 2 and 21, and he lives with his second wife, Jennifer Butler, somewhere up the Hudson River in New York.
This is the private Murray, the Kurtz-on-the-Hudson whom people in Hollywood must seek out.
âHe keeps getting better, and most artists go the other way,â said Jason Schwartzman, the 23-year-old actor who co-starred with Murray in âRushmoreâ (1998). âThatâs whatâs exciting about him.â
In that film, a dark comedy, Murray played a misfit father figure to Schwartzmanâs misfit teenager. It was the latterâs first major role. âI donât know how he makes choices about movies, or how Hollywood perceives him,â Schwartzman said. âAll I know is Bill Murray, the guy that I worked with. And that guy is about 75% of the reason why Iâm here [and] kind of the way I am.â
After some more thought Schwartzman added: âBill Murray is to me what calculators are to math. I never knew math before calculators, and I never knew life before Bill Murray. Being a child of the â80s, his movies were always around me, and I canât remember a time when there wasnât Bill Murray.â
Nudging toward âTranslationâ
âI saw a sneak preview of âMeatballs,â OK?â Quentin Tarantino said a few weeks ago, at the DVD release party for âLost in Translation.â Tarantino was standing near the bar in one of the inner-sanctum, VIP rooms at Koi, a fashionable Japanese restaurant on La Cienega Boulevard.
âIâm 40, and heâs truly a god-like, iconic hero to me,â Tarantino said of Murray. He suggested that, for a generation, Murray is to comedy what John Lennon was to pop music. He said that other stars had cut their teeth copying him. Tom Hanks was doing Bill Murray in âBachelor Party,â Tarantino said, and John Cusack was doing Murray in âThe Sure Thing.â
Tarantino is a former video store clerk, and video store nerds, particularly males, revere Murray. To that end, it is probably worth noting that Murray movies typically warrant their own shelf. Tarantinoâs top five of all time: âLost in Translation,â âGroundhog Day,â âStripes,â âKingpinâ and a tie between âCaddyshackâ and âScrooged.â
âHeâs like W.C. Fields in âScrooged!â Tarantino proclaimed.
At Koi, âLost in Translation,â an increasingly trendy product that will likely make more money as a DVD than as a theatrical release, played on flat screens around the restaurant, and the waiters were wearing the camouflage T-shirt that, in the film, symbolizes Bob Harrisâ midlife crisis.
Beck was there, and Marisa Tomei and Francis Ford Coppola. So were Murrayâs director and his costar, Sofia Coppola and Scarlett Johansson, respectively. But not Murray, who was in Italy for âThe Life Aquatic.â
It is the third film Murray has done for writer-director Wes Anderson, after âRushmoreâ and âThe Royal Tenenbaums.â Anderson is 34, Coppola is 32. They are young filmmakers in whose quirky cinematic worlds Murrayâs comic skills have been repositioned as engines of romance, comedy and, yes, sincerity.
In âRushmore,â it was Murray as the depressed, alcoholic father and industrialist Herman Blume who strikes up an odd but poignant alliance with Max Fischer (Schwartzman), a precocious kid failing out of prep school. In âLost in Translation,â the conceit is repeated, this time with Murray as a movie star out of sorts in a Tokyo hotel who strikes up an odd but poignant alliance with Charlotte, the ignored, 21-year-old wife of a climbing fashion photographer.
âRushmoreâ was Andersonâs second film, after âBottle Rocketâ; âTranslationâ was Coppolaâs second feature, after âThe Virgin Suicides.â Both filmmakers had to beg, cajole and wheedle to get Murray to commit.
Coppola turned to screenwriter Mitch Glazer, who co-wrote âScroogedâ and has known Murray since his âSNLâ days. Glazer said he sent Murray the âTranslationâ script and called him âevery few weeks, saying, âYou need to read this.â â He bugged Murray while Coppola bugged Glazer and Murray. Eventually, Glazer brokered a dinner, in New York.
âI just wanted to see him sitting in the kimono on the bed,â Coppola said recently. â... I left him a lot of messages. He probably got sick of it. I sent him pages, and then I would leave him messages about what I was thinking about it.â
âLost in Translationâ posits Murray as a romantic leading man. This is not exactly new (he always got the girls in his comedies -- once with the use of an ice cream scoop in âStripesâ). But the romance in âTranslationâ is meant to be seen, finally, as bittersweet and tragic. Bob Harris and Charlotte never have sex, but they do have a series of intimate conversations in bed, clothed and on top of the covers, lying there.
âIâm stuck, does it get easier?â Charlotte, the Yale-educated, existentially challenged protagonist, asks of life.
âNo,â Harris tells her. Beat. âYes, it does,â he says.
On the DVD of âLost in Translation,â there is a conversation between Coppola and Murray, shot on a balcony somewhere in Rome last year. The conversation is pretty boring, but the body language between the two is not. At one point they stand awkwardly next to each other, at another theyâre back to back. She gazes up at him and he down at her.
The feeling is very much like the tone of Murrayâs quasi-romantic scenes with Johansson and perhaps explains why their on-screen relationship, while unlikely, is the most convincing aspect of the film.
âI think heâs really attractive,â Coppola said on the phone. âBill Murray is hot. Different women have said that to me ...â She realized what she had just said and added: âI donât want to say anything inappropriate.â
Coppola vaguely remembers watching âSaturday Night Liveâ as a kid. âI remember Lisa Loopner and Todd,â she said, referring to the high school nerds Murray and Gilda Radner played in a recurring sketch. And so, whereas Murray has been a particular kind of anti-hero to guys, âLost in Translationâ presents Murray from the point of view of a woman: a paternal figure who is charming and funny and sweet -- and thus sexy.
âI think that I saw him as a leading man, and I really respected him as an actor,â Coppola said. âI could see that heâs a brilliant comic, but you could also see that he has this really sensitive side. In âGroundhog Day,â he was really romantic.â
Material for comics
On âLetterman,â Murray hinted that if he wins the Oscar he plans to thank some of the people he started out with in Second City, the famed sketch comedy troupe in Chicago.
He mentioned John Candy, who co-starred with Murray in âStripes.â Candy died 10 years ago this week while shooting a comedy in Mexico called âWagons East.â By then he was grossly overweight and showing up in any number of comedies that were vastly beneath his best work.
But this is how it so often goes for even the good comics; they canât find the material, and so they recycle whatever moves theyâve got to keep working. That Murray has been able to avoid this fate is a sign that his work transcends the tastes of different generations.
âMurray seems enormously likable now,â the New Yorkerâs Kael wrote in her 1981 review of âStripes,â âthe more so, maybe, because he has been wearing his suave put-on expressions so long that he has no way to be straight without appearing even phonier.â
In âLost in Translation,â anyway, he figured out a way.