Mistaken Identity: Confusing Actors With Their Characters
#1
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 4:34 PM
I could not stand Fonzie on "Happy Days" to save my life. He was cocky, ubiquitous, sexist, etc. But Henry Winkler seems like a nice, down-to-earth man, IMO. I liked his appearances on "Good Day Live" as Steve's replacement. He just fit in perfectly.
Speaking of "Happy Days," I always considered Marion Cunningham to be such a "motherly" type, but I cannot get the image of Marion Ross (the actress) smacking gum like a cow in the archive footage.
Moving on to a different show, in "A Different World," Whitley is also an extremely annoying and ubiquitous character, but Jasmine Guy (from seeing her "Intimate Portait") seems relaxed, nonchalant, and even was worried that Whitley would grate on people's nerves.
Cree Summer (also on "ADW"): love her as Freddie, since she seemed to be full of life and energy. The real Cree, who is also this hippie type, is way, way, way too passive. I saw her in an interview and she looked and seemed stoned as hell. Disappointing. I was also turned off by seeing a picture of her with Lisa Bonet, where she (Cree) was smoking a cigarette. I know people smoke (unfortunately), but it was one of those pictures where she was in the middle of taking a puff, and her cheeks were sucked in and her eyes were in the back of her head. Ew.
#2
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 4:42 PM
I could not stand Fonzie on "Happy Days" to save my life. He was cocky, ubiquitous, sexist, etc. But Henry Winkler seems like a nice, down-to-earth man, IMO. I liked his appearances on "Good Day Live" as Steve's replacement. He just fit in perfectly.
That's hilarious. You and I have completely different experiences with the Fonz. As a teen, I thought he was the coolest guy around. Then he came to my high school to present a program for deaf children and I met him afterwards with my one of my friends. She told him she wanted to be an actress and he kissed her cheek. Then I asked him for a cheek kiss too (ok I was 14) and he literally rolled his eyes.
Hated the asshole ever since.
#3
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 4:49 PM
I'm just embarrassed that he was my favorite in the first place. (embarrassed glance)
#4
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 5:08 PM
#5
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 5:34 PM
#6
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 5:40 PM
#7
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 6:22 PM
Ever watch a show and see a character you can't stand...just to find out that they are the nicest person IRL?
Carroll O'Connor. (Archie Bunker) In real life, he was the polar opposite of that character.
#8
Posted Mar 2, 2005 @ 6:25 PM
But dammit, I still wanna nail Dharma Finkelstein.
#9
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 12:02 AM
Definitely gotta throw in Dawson Leery (portrayed by James Van der Beek, of course). No matter what he does or where he goes, I'm going to always refer to him as that nose-flaring, patronizing, moronic asscurl that is our friend Dawson in some way or another.
I hear that he has a new sitcom in the works and I might try to check it out. It's going to be extremely difficult not to say, "Shut up, Dawson" whenever his new character pisses me off.
And RealChic? You can't throw in that former favorite character of yours and not dish the details! Dish! ;)
#10
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 12:41 AM
On another note, my opinion of Felicity Huffman has been severely damaged by her annoying turn in Desperate Housewives. Her character, Lynette, pisses me off more every time I see her on screen, to the point where I wish somebody would kill *her* with with a blender, and while I'm sure that FH is a very nice person in real life I hate the person she plays so much that I've begun to hate her by extension. Just...shut up and die, Lynette!
#11
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 1:32 AM
Jason Alexander, OTOH. Polar opposite. Smug, smarmy, strong superiority complex, thinks he's the funniest person in the world. Can't stand him (yeah) in interviews or in Celebrity Poker Showdown.
#12
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 3:01 AM
I watched one of these 'After they were famous' specials on them and it was amazing, not only how nice they were coming across in the interviews, but also how clearly friendly they were with each other. Who'd have thunk it, Bobby and JR, actually good buddies!
It gave me a new respect for the actors abilities on screen.
#13
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 9:53 AM
#14
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 10:11 AM
This may not be exactly the same thing, but I remember watching Scott Wolf on the Rosie O'Donnel Show one time. This was right after his character on Party of Five cheated on his girlfriend. Apparently, a couple of his sister's coworkers went up to her at work the next day and said "We hate your brother for what he did to Sarah, and we hate you too." I just want to smack people who are that immature and stupid.
Between playing Dr. Kimberly Shaw on Melrose Place and Bree on Desparate Housewives, I actually find it a relief to know that Marcia Cross is a very down-to-earth person (who I worship).
Edited by 18matt, Mar 3, 2005 @ 10:12 AM.
#15
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 10:23 AM
When I see JA in anything else he is always the
guy from Pretty Woman.Smug, smarmy, strong superiority complex
#16
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 10:53 AM
When I see him in interviews, etc., he is the opposite. At the Oscars, he looked genuinely thrilled that Morgan Freeman won. Hawkeye would have been pissing and moaning.
#17
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 11:00 AM
Doogie Howser. If he had been Kenny Howser or any other normal name, he could have left that role in obscurity. But despite seeing him on stage in NYC in at least five productions, I always think of him as Doogie.
Heh, last summer I saw Neal Patrick Harris in Assassins on Broadway, and couldn't get over how Doogie-liscious he was.
This sounds silly, but I always get slightly weirded out when I see Courtney Cox or Matthew Perry with their significant others on tv/magazines- I think, "you're supposed to be with Chandler/Monica!" Those two had such great chemistry on Friends, as if they could pull it off in "real life" as well.
#18
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 11:16 AM
Also, Alison Arngrim's Nellie Oleson. Nellie was the biggest prairie bitch there was, but Alison was/is the snarkiest, funniest person.
ETA Nellie or Nelly, make up your mind!
Edited by PrincessLuceval, Mar 3, 2005 @ 11:17 AM.
#19
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 11:32 AM
I think Alyson Hannigan suffers from this a lot too, that she's become so identifiable as "Willow Rosenberg" that it's affected her entire career.
When I saw her on Veronica Mars I kept thinking that every little vocal tick she has was exactly like Michelle, her character in American Pie.
Sarah Jessica Parker. Will she ever get a role where she isn't playing a whiny, indecisive little fashion victim after six years as Carrie Bradshaw?
This is a really bad one, but whenever I see something with Stephen Collins in it I cringe, expecting him to do something stalker-ish like the horrible Reverend Cameron.
#20
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 12:24 PM
-Same with Fred Savage. He'll always be Kevin Arnold, no matter how much he's beating the living shit out of DJ (from Full house) on some crappy TV movie.
#21
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 12:44 PM
The actresses who play bimbos on TV usually seem normal in real life.
L&O: SVU is great for former sitcom/child stars exploring the dark side. Henry Winkler, Michael Gross (the dad from Family Ties), Fred Savage and Mark-Paul Gosselar have guest-starred off the top of my head.Same with Fred Savage. He'll always be Kevin Arnold, no matter how much he's beating the living shit out of DJ (from Full house) on some crappy TV movie.
#22
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 2:40 PM
-Devon(something?) as "Brian" from: My So-Called Life. I think he played a rapist on Felicity years back, and I was truley scarred for a good 3 months. WTF! Krakow as a rapist? No. Just No.
You would have loved his role as Lisa on the L-Word. Brian Krakow as a lesbian-identified man! Whoah.
#23
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 3:24 PM
Ceindreadh, there was an interview where Larry Hagman was at an airport and a woman came up and slapped him in the face. She was furious at the way he treated Sue Ellen, and when he tried to tell this person that he was only an actor, she slapped him again. Pretty funny to think about.The cast of Dallas, especially Larry Hagman.
I watched one of these 'After they were famous' specials on them and it was amazing, not only how nice they were coming across in the interviews, but also how clearly friendly they were with each other.
#24
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 3:42 PM
I saw Patrick Stewart on a talk show and I was amazed at how different from he is from Picard. He was very charming and relaxed and he told several hilarious anecdotes and he had a great sense of humour overall. Now I liked Picard but the character was reserved and slightly uptight while Stewart seems like great fun altogether. And Stewart is far sexier then Picard if that makes any sense...
Edited by Astral Weeks, Mar 4, 2005 @ 4:20 AM.
#25
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 5:21 PM
OK, RealChic1999, my interest is piqued. Who is this former favourite character of yours? I promise not to pass it on. =)
Hey all. I didn't want to mention him again because I used to talk about him ad nauseum on these threads (and you can even search Google and find some of my quotes on said person, sadly). It's Joher Coleman, formerly known as Jory Husain, who played Jawaharlal on "Head of the Class." I thought that the character was such a nice, underused character, and I thought he was underused because he was a minority. Come to find out that Joher isn't really 100% Indian (unless you count the one-drop rule), he's a mix of all sorts---but that's not the reason why I despise him now. I got in contact with him, and he is this smug, condescending, sanctimonious (I think he found "God" and every quote out of his mouth is "Peace and Buddha be with you" or something like that) person who thinks that he is the greatest actor in the world and is indignant about his treatment on HOTC. Come to find out (from former classmates, relatives, and whatnot) that Joher's attitude was the reason why he got written off HOTC, not because he's a minority. I used to have a fan site for him (in conjunction with my HOTC one), and he wanted me to make an "identical" one...which was a ruse for him to make me make him a whole separate page. He found so many things wrong with it, it was ridiculous. I've cut contact with him...and got over his ass in due time.
I look back and laugh at what an idiot I was about the whole thing. From that point on I've decided to put time and energy into being a fan of actors with real talent and whose careers are going somewhere.
Edited by RealChic1999, Mar 3, 2005 @ 5:22 PM.
#26
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 6:42 PM
#27
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 6:55 PM
Devon(something?)
I believe his name was Devon Gummersall.
This phenomenon is a major hassle for people who appear in crime re-enactments for "America's Most Wanted" et al. People see them playing a killer on TV, then see them in public and think "Hey, it's that murderer from that show!"
I guess the same could go for someone who has done a herpes or hemorrhoid commmercial. Once a person has done one, everyone will think that that person has one of those "issues." ("Hey, it's the hemorrhoid girl!"---from Just Shoot Me)
Edited by RealChic1999, Mar 3, 2005 @ 6:58 PM.
#28
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 7:10 PM
I might have read too much into your sentence, but it sounded like you two might have dated. I guess the lesson is: Never date a Hollywood actor. I remember Jawaharlal. When I first saw Fez, the foreigner of That 70's Show, it reminded me of that Jawaharlal character of HOTC. I liked Jawaharlal. I would never have guessed that Jory Husain would turn out to be a Buddha freak.I've cut contact with him and...got over his ass in due time.
Anyway, I saw this show about one hit wonders on VH1. One of the singers who was featured was the actor Jaime Walters. His one hit wonder was "How do you talk to an angel". It was the theme song for a short-lived series, The Heights, that he starred in.
Later on, he was on Berverly Hills 90210. He played Ray, a character that was very abusive to his girlfriend Donna (the Tori Spelling character). While he was acting on the show, he also was trying to get his singing career going.
On that VH1 show, JW said that alot of his potential fans confused the abusive character that he played with himself. During his concerts, girls would hold up signs that read "Stop Abusing Donna" and would come up to him and say the same thing. JW attributed his lack of success of his singing career with that misperception. JW says that he is really is a nice guy unlike Ray. However, his potential fans weren't able to distinguish the actor from the character.
On a personal note, I actually bumped into JW once. A few years ago, while I was riding on a public transit light rail train, I saw him there. I was sitting near the door and in came JW. I had to do a double take. But it was him, an actual celebrity taking public transit. (Then again he's probably, at best, a third rate celebrity.) He bumped into my knee and said excuse me. He didn't sit; he just stood. He got off a station or two later. Even though it was a short encounter, he seemed like a decent guy.
#29
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 7:16 PM
Be still, my heart . . .I saw Patrick Stewart on a talk show and I was amazed at how different from he is from Picard. He was a very charming and relaxed and he told several hilarious anecdotes and he had a great sense of humour overall. Now I liked Picard but the character was reserved and slightly uptight while Stewart seems like great fun altogether. And Stewart is far sexier then Picard if that makes any sense...
#30
Posted Mar 3, 2005 @ 7:18 PM
I might have read too much into your sentence, but it sounded like you two might have dated.
Whoa...you did. I just had a huge crush on him (we only communicated through e-mail and the phone) and he took advantage of that. Never saw me romantically. Called me "kiddo" (hence the condescension). I'm almost 24, he's almost 37...so there's also an age difference there...but not enough for the "kiddo" crap.







