Bennett Miller & Steve Carell: ‘The make-up… | Little White Lies

Interviews

Ben­nett Miller & Steve Carell: The make-up became part of the character’

12 Jan 2015

Words by Adam Woodward

Two men with pensive expressions, one wearing a yellow top and the other a black top, on a green background.
Two men with pensive expressions, one wearing a yellow top and the other a black top, on a green background.
The writer/​director and star of Fox­catch­er chat com­e­dy inspi­ra­tion and facial prosthetics.

Fol­low­ing in the foot­steps of Peter Sell­ers, Robin Williams and Jim Car­rey, Steve Carell chal­lenges his benign screen per­sona to dis­qui­et­ing effect in Ben­nett Miller’s true crime dra­ma, Fox­catch­er. Carell plays John du Pont, the wealthy wrestling enthu­si­ast whose unhealthy rela­tion­ship with Olympic wrestling cham­pi­ons Mark and Dave Schultz end­ed in tragedy in 1996. Miller and Carell spoke to LWLies about the chal­lenge of devel­op­ing this com­plex character.

Ben­nett Miller: The first time I met Steve I saw a seri­ous­ness and an insight­ful­ness about him. This is a trag­ic sto­ry and Steve’s reflec­tions on the script bore no resem­blance to any­thing you might have seen on The Office. That, cou­pled with Steve’s com­ic styling, I just think was a real­ly kinky cock­tail. My feel­ing about good com­ic actors – not nec­es­sar­i­ly come­di­ans, but com­ic actors – is that they can do any­thing. Maybe it’s an unfair bias in their favour, but if you can do com­e­dy well then the oth­er stuff, giv­en the right cir­cum­stances, is absolute­ly with­in reach.

Steve Carell: One of the things that I found exhil­a­rat­ing was get­ting to explore a dif­fer­ent side of myself. Chan­ning [Tatum], Mark [Ruf­fa­lo] and I kept to our­selves. We grav­i­tat­ed to dif­fer­ent places, phys­i­cal­ly and emo­tion­al­ly. I think we all felt it was bet­ter to not make those per­son­al con­nec­tions. I’m so wary of pre­ten­tious actor talk, of method act­ing” or what­ev­er, but I think it inad­ver­tent­ly became that. I nev­er con­scious­ly set out to sub­vert people’s expec­ta­tions of me as an actor, though.

BM: That’s right, but from the per­spec­tive of you being a com­ic actor we dis­cussed stuff like Scrooge with Alas­tair Sim, who was pre­dom­i­nant­ly known as a comedic actor at the time, and like­wise Peter Sell­ers in things like Being There and also Antho­ny Hop­kins in The Remains of the Day.

SC: Anoth­er thing about Du Pont was that he had such a spe­cif­ic look and I think that con­tributed in great part to how peo­ple treat­ed him and respond­ed to him. He was repel­lent in many ways, phys­i­cal­ly. The make up inad­ver­tent­ly informed me of that when I was on set – I could feel that sense of oth­ers not want­i­ng to be in my com­pa­ny. It’s noth­ing that I had planned on; it wasn’t a pre­con­ceived notion, more an inter­est­ing effect.

Down­load the Fox­catch­er issue of LWLies Weekly

BM: I’m just remem­ber­ing now though some­thing that you did on our cam­era test day, before we began shoot­ing that pos­si­bly could have con­tributed to that feel­ing… The first time Steve appeared on set, it was the first time the crew and the rest of the cast had seen him in full make up. I remem­ber every­one was get­ting into posi­tion, mov­ing lights around and mak­ing last-minute adjust­ments and all of a sud­den Steve’s voice pierced above the din of the set in a very loud, humour­less, sting­ing reg­is­ter, announc­ing, Carell is spelled with one r’ and two l’s!” The room was absolute­ly silenced, and that chair dis­ap­peared in a snap. Real­ly, in a near-impos­si­ble feat of prop man­age­ment, his chair came back in what seemed like no time at all with his name spelled cor­rect­ly. That real­ly set the tone mov­ing for­ward. Do you remem­ber that?

SC: I do. It seemed like they went and did it imme­di­ate­ly. I just want­ed to try out the char­ac­ter and see how peo­ple reacted.

BM: Du Pont was this dopey, benign fel­low who could sur­prise you with a hard slap across the face. So the make-up served two func­tions real­ly. But at its most effec­tive it became part of the char­ac­ter and helped peo­ple under­stand the alien­ation he felt because of the way he looked.

SC: Peo­ple treat­ed me dif­fer­ent­ly. Very rarely was I seen out of make-up, because I’d be in it for three hours and I’d be in two hours before every­one got to set, and I’d gen­er­al­ly be one of the last to leave. I always got the sense when peo­ple saw my face that they’d almost for­got­ten I was there.

BM: That absolute­ly hap­pened. It took me a bit of time to accli­mate back to the real Steve Carell, because I nev­er saw him with­out make-up on. It was a 55-day shoot, that’s a long time to spend in someone’s com­pa­ny when they’re almost unrecog­nis­able from the per­son you know.

You might like

Accessibility Settings

Text

Applies the Open Dyslexic font, designed to improve readability for individuals with dyslexia.

Applies a more readable font throughout the website, improving readability.

Underlines links throughout the website, making them easier to distinguish.

Adjusts the font size for improved readability.

Visuals

Reduces animations and disables autoplaying videos across the website, reducing distractions and improving focus.

Reduces the colour saturation throughout the website to create a more soothing visual experience.

Increases the contrast of elements on the website, making text and interface elements easier to distinguish.