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Subject: "Great tribute from Scorsese (Swipe)" Previous topic | Next topic
Mynoriti
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63. "Great tribute from Scorsese (Swipe)"
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https://www.theguardian.com/film/2022/jun/06/martin-scorsese-ray-liotta-goodfellas-gangster-dangerous-disarming-innocent?fbclid=IwAR1Su1yzHIdlStw1_UF7Jrnoo8ZqfSebo_0kpc2CBlA9BdHH8Y_z7UITrCc


We had some problems trying to get Goodfellas made. It came at a low moment in my career and the studios were not exactly eager to work with me. And it was a big production, with locations all over New York and many speaking parts. We also needed to find just the right actor to play the lead, Henry Hill. The part required a rare combination of qualities. He needed to be dangerous. He needed to be disarming. He needed to be vulnerable. Within the context of the world we were dealing with, he had to be something close to an innocent, the guy who was always there, witnessing everything, along for the ride. And, it goes without saying, he needed to look and act like he might have come out of that world.

Eventually, it came down to a handful of names. One of them was Ray Liotta.

Like everyone else in and out of the movie business, I was stunned by his performance in my friend Jonathan Demme’s Something Wild. Halfway through the picture, he walked in and more or less took it over. You couldn’t take your eyes off of him. But Ray’s role in Something Wild was finite, and I wondered if he could carry a whole picture.

I found him distraught in his trailer. His mother was dying. He kept saying: 'Why does she have this terrible cancer?'
Two very interesting things happened. My producer, Irwin Winkler, did not see Ray in the role. He didn’t think he had enough charm to counterbalance all the violence and the excess. One night, while Irwin was having dinner in a Santa Monica restaurant with his wife Margo and his friend Richard Zanuck, Ray politely approached him and asked for a couple of minutes of his time. They walked into a quiet corner, they talked, and right then and there Ray persuaded Irwin.

When The Last Temptation of Christ had its world premiere at the Venice film festival, I was crossing the lobby of the Excelsior hotel on my way to an interview. Ray and I saw each other from across the lobby, and he headed toward me to say hello and check in with me. He came near and then he hit a wall of security. Instead of throwing a fit and demanding that he be allowed through, he reacted quietly and calmly, observed the rules and patiently defused the situation. He looked at me, I looked at him, and we signalled that we would talk, and he walked away. I watched it all very closely, and I saw him handle the situation with quiet authority and a real elegance. Actually, that was just what the role needed. When I look back on it, I believe that was the moment when I knew I wanted Ray to play Henry Hill.

The word “fearless” is used quite often to describe actors, and with good reason: actors need to be fearless. They have to jump in and just go, and they have to stumble and fail and risk appearing ridiculous as they’re finding their way into a role. That’s just part of the work. On Goodfellas, we were working improvisationally in most scenes, and many members of the team had known each other and worked together for years, including my mother and my father. Into that walked the new guy, Ray Liotta, and he never missed a beat. It felt like we’d worked together for years.

I will never forget the day we shot the scene where Henry, Tommy (Joe Pesci) and Jimmy (Robert De Niro) bring their tribute money from the Air France heist to Paulie, played by Paul Sorvino. When they were setting up, I got word that Ray had just gotten a call with bad news. I went right to his trailer and found him completely distraught. His mother was dying. I remember that he kept saying: “She adopted me and raised me, she’s the sweetest woman there is – why does she have this terrible cancer? Why?”

I told him that he had to go to be with her, but he was adamant: he wanted to do the scene before he left. We walked to the set together, everyone was told what was happening, and something extraordinary happened when we rolled. The scene was all about the euphoria of the characters after making their first big score, and everyone came together in an emotional bond around Ray: as everyone was laughing and celebrating, they were mourning with him at the same time. Laughter and tears, tears and laughter … they were one and the same. Ray did the scene so beautifully, and then he left to be with his beloved mother. It was a rare experience.

We had many plans to work together again but the timing was always off, or the project wasn’t quite right. I regret that now. When I watched Ray as the divorce lawyer in Marriage Story – he’s genuinely scary in the role, which is precisely why he’s so funny – I remember feeling that I wanted to work with him again at this point in his life, to explore the gravity in his presence, so different from the young, sprightly actor he was when I met him.

I wish I’d had the chance to see him just once more, too – to tell him just how much the work we did together meant to me. But maybe he knew that. I hope so.

  

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Is Ray Liotta A "Great" Actor? [View all] , Buddy_Gilapagos, Tue Jan-17-12 10:16 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
He's outstanding in Narc.
Jan 17th 2012
1
^^^^^^^^^^
Jan 17th 2012
4
^^^^Non-fiction
Jan 17th 2012
13
Ray Liotta was in Citizen Kane?
Jan 17th 2012
2
I hedged.
Jan 17th 2012
3
      RE: I hedged.
Jan 17th 2012
5
      i think the coen brothers could get some of the old heads back
Jan 21st 2012
49
Nope
Jan 17th 2012
6
If consistency was the standard, you couldn't consider a lot of folk
Jan 17th 2012
8
      All of those guys were pretty consistent in their primes
Jan 17th 2012
9
      "Consistent in their primes" is the whole point!
Jan 18th 2012
17
           point is they had primes
Jan 18th 2012
20
                This
Jan 18th 2012
23
                Ray's been consistent throughout his career
Jan 18th 2012
25
      Brando ain't Italian & those guys had decade-plus long runs
Jan 17th 2012
15
Absolutely. Even in shit movies, he still does amazing work
Jan 17th 2012
7
Is this a situation of putting up numbers on a shitty team though?
Jan 17th 2012
10
      I think part of this....
Jan 17th 2012
11
      GAWD DAMN @ the Katy Perry Bikini Photos
Jan 17th 2012
12
      are we talking ACTING or THE MOVIES HE'S IN?
Jan 18th 2012
18
Watch Something Wild, if you haven't seen it yet. His 2nd best perf.
Jan 17th 2012
14
The Wordman explains why Ray Liotta is a GREAT actor
Jan 18th 2012
16
You've articulated what I was thinking. Thanks.
Jan 18th 2012
22
POAST END POAST RIGHT HERE
Jan 18th 2012
24
Well, allow me to offer a counterpoint.
Jan 19th 2012
29
      Andre Dawson isn't less of a player just 'cause he's on the Cubs
Jan 19th 2012
30
           Forgetting the basics? Dude, I coach acting for a living, lol.
Jan 19th 2012
32
                ^^ Agreed. That's what I was trying to get at above...n/m
Jan 19th 2012
33
                RE: Forgetting the basics? Dude, I coach acting for a living, lol.
Jan 19th 2012
36
                     In general, that's how I feel about evaluating actors & actresses
Jan 19th 2012
37
                          But here's my question then:
Jan 19th 2012
38
                               Wordman's "off the top" criteria:
Jan 19th 2012
39
                               I think everyone in movies should have most of these:
Jan 19th 2012
41
                                    RE: I think everyone in movies should have most of these:
Jan 20th 2012
43
                                         This conversation is fascinating.
Jan 21st 2012
50
                                              Interesting epilogue
Jan 22nd 2012
51
                               RE: But here's my question then:
Jan 19th 2012
40
                                    Fair enough.
Jan 19th 2012
42
                                         I got to side with Wordup, Franky Baby
Jan 20th 2012
45
Great? No. Underrated? Most definitely.
Jan 18th 2012
19
I didn't even like him in Goodfellas
Jan 18th 2012
21
^^^lives across the street from Karen
Jan 18th 2012
26
      HA!
Jan 18th 2012
27
      LMAO
Jan 19th 2012
28
      Lol. My, My, My, what a wonderful witty reply
Jan 19th 2012
31
      ha!
Jan 19th 2012
34
      Hilarious
Jan 19th 2012
35
      ladies and gentleman, we have a winner.
Jan 20th 2012
44
      well played
Jan 21st 2012
46
      well played
Jan 21st 2012
47
      THAT... was some high quality snarkage.
Jan 21st 2012
48
      *dead*
May 26th 2022
55
RE: No, No, No
Jan 27th 2012
52
You'll read a lot of think pieces, but Wordman
May 26th 2022
53
Wordman deserves to make the RIP post for Ray Liotta
May 26th 2022
54
lol and I clearly hadn't yet seen Something Wild
May 26th 2022
56
      I almost mentioned you by name to see if you had changed your vote.
May 31st 2022
59
           I mean, I don't *disagree* with what I said up there, technically...
May 31st 2022
61
I had to check the dates on the earlier posts
May 27th 2022
57
Goodfellas isn’t even the top mob movie of all time,
May 27th 2022
58
lol
May 31st 2022
60
      Joker really did come in here to mention Gone with the Wind as a better
Jun 07th 2022
64
I wouldn't put him above John Cusack, and Steve Martin's Hill>>>>>>>
May 31st 2022
62
He took a lotta shit roles later on for the $$$.
Jun 10th 2022
65

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