Archive for the ‘Interview’ Category

An Interview with Matthew Gray Gubler

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

By Rachel Thomas, About.com

Many actors really do lead interesting lives outside of work, and then there are truly unique actors like Matthew Gray Gubler who take creativity to the next level. Like his character on the hit CBS series Criminal Minds, Matthew is a brilliantly creative man who uses his intelligence and extraordinary humor to make the world a better place. I had the fortunate opportunity to chat with Matthew about his life, where his character is headed and his plans for the future.

Q: How old were you when you got into acting?

Matthew: “It was really when the show started that I got into it. I did filmmaking and through a roundabout manner, I got into this. I was 25 when the show started.”

Q: What do you think you’d be doing today if you weren’t acting?

Matthew: “My family and friends sort of chastised me. They’re kind of upset that I’m on the show to be honest because it wasn’t what I had set out to do. I would hopefully be directing movies now or writing them.”

Q: Your grandparents founded the first radio station in Las Vegas (KENO), did you ever work as a DJ on KENO?

Matthew: “No I didn’t, that was way before I was born. My mother was pretty active in it. I think they gave up the station in the mid-60’s.”

Q: Your web site is quite possibly one of the most unusual places I’ve ever visited, where did you get the idea for the design?

Matthew: “Oh, thank you so much for finding it, I’m honored! To be honest, the design was born out of not knowing anything about programming and what would be the simplest way of getting information out. I’m not the biggest fan of technique. I wanted to do a simple, honest, hand-written web page.”

Q: You’ve created several short films, going forward do you hope to do more work behind the camera?

Matthew: “Oh definitely. That’s what I’m better at doing than anything. I’ve been fortunate enough with the show that I’ve been able to work in some time. I did a music video recently. It’s what I’ll do one day when the show slows down or gets cancelled.”

Q: I understand you wear two different socks, what’s the significance?

Matthew: “My grandmother told me at a very early age that it was good luck to not wear matching socks, which I’ve come interpret to as bad luck to wear matching socks because the one time I wore matching socks in ten years was when I was acting in this movie called The Life Aquatic. We were doing a moment where Bill Murray is leading us in exercises and somehow I managed to sprain my ankle on camera. It actually wound up being in the movie. I attribute that entirely to me wearing matching socks.”

Q: Tell us about Dr. Spencer Reid.

Matthew: “He’s an eccentric genius, with hints of schizophrenia and minor autism, Asperger’s Syndrome. Reid is 24, 25 years old with three PH.D.’s and one can’t usually achieve that without some form of autism.”

Q: What’s ahead on Criminal Minds for Spencer?

Matthew: “I’ve heard some pretty exciting stuff! I’ve heard I have an archenemy coming up. He’s a kid I went to school who is one I.Q. point smarter, a little bit taller, better looking. He lives in New Orleans and plays jazz. They’ve hinted at shades of schizophrenia with Reid. I know his mother was schizophrenic and he has a fear of going schizophrenic himself. I’d like to think that one day down the line he will go schizophrenic and maybe turn into the type of person they’ll chase relentlessly.”

Q: How is your personality similar to your character?

Matthew: “He’s not too similar. He’s a genius and I’m technically and functionally retarded [laughs]. In the show, Reid was sort of hand-picked from college. He’s in the FBI, but he didn’t strive to achieve that or have any intention of doing that. Gideon (Mandy Patinkin) recruited him and I feel kind of akin to that because I had no real intention of being an actor or being on a show. I’ve sort of fallen into it. Reid makes the most of it and so do I. It’s fun and quite an honor.”

Q: How are you different?

Matthew: “He’s a PH.D. in physics and mathematics and nobody knows what the third one is and I’m in no way scientifically minded. I think he’s way more analytical than I am.”

Q: What’s ahead for Matthew?

Matthew: “Thanks to the show, I’ve been drawing and painting a lot because we have a lot of down time on the set and it’s the perfect amount of time to make pictures. I’ve had a few art gallery exhibits and I hope that continues. I hope to direct some more. I just shot a movie with John Malkovich and Tom Hanks that is coming out in April.”

Q: Anything you want to say to the fans?

Matthew: “I’m beyond proud and happy – I never imagined I would have one fan, and there seems to be a few. I just couldn’t be happier that people seem to like what I’m doing and seem to respond to it. If they weren’t there, I don’t know what I’d be doing right now.”

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STARS ARE BORN: They’re Gonna Live Forever

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

They’d like to thank the Academy.

Not that one. Not yet. One Academy at a time.

“I never thought I’d be making a living off of acting — it’s still kind of a shock for my family and friends to see my face on TV every Wednesday night,” says Matthew Gray Gubler, co-star of CBS’ “Criminal Minds” and Las Vegas Academy graduate, class of 1998.

“My friends and I joked that our major at the academy was Acting Not As An Occupation 101. I knew that at the academy, those were the people I wanted to be around. My junior high experience wasn’t the most creatively charged, so I was very happy to make an exodus to a place where creativity was lauded instead of beaten down.”

The grad’s got cred. When a fan posts a YouTube montage of your scenes set to a Red Hot Chili Peppers soundtrack and titled “The Awesomeness of Matthew Gray Gubler,” that’s major mojo. “That school changed my entire life. Had I not gone there, I don’t know what I’d be doing now, maybe serving shrimp cocktail somewhere.”

The school motto is a model of dignified inspiration, urging aspiring artists to “Share the Vision, Build the Dream.” But riffing on that gloriously goofy “42nd Street” mantra — You’re leaving school a nobody, kid, but you’re coming back to the class reunion a star! — might better predict several career trajectories launched from 315 S. Seventh St.

“The kids come here focused, they come here with a dream,” says Stephen Clark, principal of the Las Vegas Academy of International Studies, Performing and Visual Arts (the full name on the birth certificate after it was born of the former Las Vegas High School in 1993; Las Vegas High was reborn elsewhere). And if, as the “Fame” theme proclaims, they’re gonna live forever, baby, remember these names: R&B singer Ne-Yo, “Dancing with the Stars” hoofer Julianne Hough, stage/screen actress Rutina Wesley, stand-up standout Baron Vaughn, chanteuse/pinup pixie Leah Dizon and series star Gubler.

They’re linked by the academy where, to varying degrees, their talents were revealed, respected and refined.

“They all stood out when they were here,” Clark says of the school’s pro-performer ranks, which also include the R&B belters of the group 702 — Kameelah Williams and the Grinstead sisters, LeMisha, Irish and Orish.

Talent doesn’t come much wider and deeper than Wesley’s. Hers is a one-woman artistic assault of singing, dancing and acting that stormed Broadway and landed on screens big and small. “She could charm the chrome off a trailer hitch,” Clark says, perhaps understating her gracious charisma. “She always seemed a little bit more mature, and even though she had more talent than a lot of the kids, she would work with them, she never lorded it over them.”

Show-biz bookers beware: Cornering her into an easily labeled commodity will prove as pointless as trying to nail Jell-O to a wall.

“Going to that school allowed me to train in being a triple threat, and when I got out, I had all the tools I could use — there’s nothing you can throw my way that I’m not going to be able to do,” says Wesley, who made critics smile (as much as critics’ facial muscles will allow) with her role in the movie “How She Move.” Entertainment Weekly applauded how the Las Vegas Academy grad “glowers with just the right touch of sweetness as a brainy student (and stellar after-school stepper) who needs to learn how to honor her old hood even as she studies hard to move on out.”

Wesley, who moved on to the University of Evansville, the Juilliard School and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, also strode onto the Great White Way, appearing alongside Julianne Moore under Sam Mendes’ direction in David Hare’s “The Vertical Hour.” Now, she’s set to co-star with Anna Paquin in next fall’s new HBO vampire series “True Blood,” from “Six Feet Under” creator Alan Ball.

“All my juices were used every day,” she says of the academy, where, as part of the first full graduating class of 1997, she has reached role-model status. Before America tuned into her talent, Las Vegas audiences caught her in academy productions such as “Fame,” and in the lead of “Sweet Charity,” as well as one of five portrayers of Henry V in a shake-up of Shakespeare.

“I got the famous Kenneth Branagh speech, and I was really excited,” she recalls. “When I was there, they were taking people who had the rawest talent, but they just had something about them, and I loved that. It wasn’t about the most talented person at an audition, it was about the person who just had that spark. Everybody got a shot.”

While Wesley’s career found forward motion at the academy, Ne-Yo (real name: Shaffer Smith) backed into his.

“I was there for visual design for the first three years of high school, then I went to Rancho High,” says the singer, whose albums “In My Own Words” and “Because of You” went platinum. As a songwriter he has struck lightning with some high-voltage collaborators, penning Rihanna’s hit “Unfaithful,” Beyoncé’s “Irreplaceable,” and tunes for Whitney Houston, Celine Dion and Enrique Iglesias.

“I’ve been doing music since before I could talk, but I never thought I was good enough to be out in public with it,” he says. “I wanted to go out for the choir, but I heard it was difficult to get in so I chickened out at the last minute and went with art. I hung out with a lot of the choir majors, but I was afraid to sing until the annual talent show. That was the first time my friends knew I could do it, and they were impressed. So I was like, ‘OK, maybe I’m a little better than I thought I was.’ From then on, I knew exactly what I wanted to do with my life.”

By then, approaching his final year at the academy, a budding singer remaining a visual design major was like leaving a singer without a song — and triggered some strange, alienating urges.

“They’d put up an orange, an apple and a banana, and say, ‘Paint the still life,’ so I’d have the orange fighting the banana, the apple with a machine gun shooting the orange, and I’d get an F.”

Shortly after the apple whacked the orange, Ne-Yo transferred to Rancho High, though the art chops the academy encouraged still might color his career — he’s negotiating with the Cartoon Network to create a show for which he will do all the drawing. (No word on whether it features any fully armed fruit.)

“I loved the whole environment at the academy,” he says. “It was very free-expressive, not like a regular high school where they try to make you be something. In this school, it was like, ‘Well, what do you want to be? And if this is what you want, this is how you can be that,’ and that’s a beautiful thing. Those people helped me come out of my shell.”

As Ne-Yo discovered he could rock the world with rhythm and blues, Baron Vaughn found he could make a joke sing:

“Every white woman I’ve ever dated, I’m the first black guy they’ve ever dated, which sounds cool, but I know a lot of them are like, ‘I don’t want a full-on, ghetto Negro. How about this Steve Urkel-Alfonso Ribeiro guy over here, because I’d like to go black, but I’d still like to go back.’ “

Vaughn’s quick-wit shtick first found a voice at the academy. “I remember they did a one-act play festival at the academy, and I became the stage manager of the whole thing and directed one of the plays,” recalls Vaughn, a class of ‘99 graduate. “Before the show, I came out and did a six-minute set to warm up the audience. None of it was my own material. That was the first time I did stand-up, even though the stand-up wasn’t mine.”

Vaughn has waded into acting, playing “Partygoer” in the recent film “Cloverfield,” (”I survived and got across before the monster got the bridge.”) as well as small roles in “Law & Order,” “Law & Order: Criminal Intent” and the indie film “Black Dynamite,” plus commercial voice-over work for AOL, Radio Shack and McDonald’s. But he’s mostly packin’ punch lines, perhaps on his way to becoming a next-gen Chris Rock. Vaughn has manned the mike on Comedy Central and at HBO’s Comedy Arts Festival, and is among the smart-aleck Greek chorus that rains sarcasm on misbehaving celebs on cable’s put-down/countdown shows — you know, “The 100 Most Embarrassing Celebrity (Fill in the Blank).”

“At the academy, I was always on the fringes in shows, I called myself ‘The King of Small Parts,’ ” Vaughn says. “But my crowning achievement was ‘Oliver,’ where I played Fagin. I had songs all to myself, it’s the first show my little sisters came to, they loved it, and that made me very happy. I had a great time there, made a lot of friends who I keep in touch with. … Actually, I need to call them. Maybe I will after this interview.”

He’d need the international operator to reach Leah Dizon. Born in Las Vegas to parents who were both croupiers, the 21-year-old of Chinese, Filipino and French descent is now a car model and pop princess in Japan, and much-ogled eye candy on hot-babe Web sites. Editors of DSport magazine practically panted during an interview: “While (Dizon) would be too young for the majority of our staff, everyone on staff was claiming that this was their future wife. … Fortunately, anti-stalking laws kept (Dizon) safe.”

Post-Las Vegas Academy, Dizon posed on the covers of import car magazines, earning an overseas fan base, and once her sexy image slinked onto the Web, she’d gotten male motors revving to the beat of 2 million hits on search engines. In 2006, after sending demo tapes to a Japanese talent agency, she relocated to Tokyo, and since has released several albums, as well as photo books. (A couple of seminude photos sparked a miniscandal in Japan, and several look-alike porn performers cropped up in the wake of her success.)

Dizon couldn’t be reached for an interview in Japan, but in 2006, she told DSport that, “I didn’t enjoy public school very much, I have memories of being pushed around and being lonely. But I went to the Performing Arts Academy for the first two years of high school, and I loved it because I was able to do every day what I loved, which is perform.”

Back on the domestic front, dance floor dynamo Julianne Hough dazzled America with twin wins on ABC’s “Dancing with the Stars,” which catapulted her to the top of the tabloids and gossip blogs buzzing about her romantic entanglements. Her academy stay was only a year, but it registered impressively on Clark.

“She came to us after spending years at a dance academy in London and just stunned everybody with her dancing,” Clark says of America’s latest sweetheart, whose fame comes with the standard accoutrements, including publicist/gatekeepers who declined to make her available for an interview. Recalling her co-leading role in “Beauty and the Beast” on the academy stage, Clark says Hough’s talent had a surprising side. “Julianne was a strange dichotomy, because not only is she very pretty and striking onstage, but she also had excellent comedic timing — she stole the scenes.”

But the most consistently visible academy alum is Gubler, who recently returned to the “Criminal Minds” soundstage following the resolution of the Hollywood writers strike.

“I have to shoot the show in L.A., but if I had my way, I’d move the show to Las Vegas,” says the actor who portrays FBI profiler Dr. Spencer Reid on the hit CBS series starring Joe Mantegna, and recently voiced Simon in the big-screen adventures of Alvin and the Chipmunks.

Mainly focused on filmmaking early on, the wryly amusing Gubler — who has made several self-deprecating mock-u-mentaries skewering Tinseltown narcissism, viewable on YouTube — initially studied acting at the academy as a fallback skill.

“I thought it would help me become a lawyer or something, help me speak in public. That’s how I looked at that school.” But while interning for director Wes Anderson, Gubler was cast as “Intern No. 1″ in the Bill Murray film “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou,” opening up audition opportunities that eventually landed him “Criminal Minds.”

“There’s nothing like the academy, and a lot of people there like myself probably couldn’t function as well in a public school where people beat you up, you know? There weren’t any bullies at the academy, and that made it a sanctuary for us,” says Gubler, who later graduated from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and directed and co-produced The Killers video “Don’t Shoot Me Santa.”

“I was in ‘Picnic’ at the academy, and ‘The Importance of Being Earnest,’ and I also got to play The Cat in the Hat and The Mad Hatter, two of my favorite fictional psychopaths. Those were fun shows. I miss those. I wish I could go back.”

Right now he’s striding forward. Someday soon he might even thank the academy.

Not this one. That other one.

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Of The Minute. Close Up: Matthew Gray Gubler

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

Matthew Gray Gubler, former top 50 model (Tommy Hilfiger, Sisley, Marc Jacobs, Louis Vuitton) and current rising star in film and television sits down with MDC to chat about his projects which include tomorrow’s premier of Alvin and the Chipmunks. Check out MDC’s video interview below with the extremely personable and talented actor/director/producer/artist.

Download Interview
[38 MB Flash Video]

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Matthew Gray Gubler Talks About Dr. Spencer Reid on Criminal Minds

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007

By Jacki Garfinkel

New Reid or Old Reid? That is the question.

“I like the fact that in just two years, from the pilot to Ashes to Dust, it’s not the same guy,” Matthew Gray Gubler commented on his character’s transition.

When Criminal Minds began, Dr. Spencer Reid, played by Matthew Gray Gubler, was a cute, quirky, somewhat oblivious genius. Ever since “the Super BowlJack Myers Topics episodes,” The Big Game and Revelations, when Reid was held hostage, tortured, and injected with drugs, Reid’s temperament has changed. He’s become feisty, more reserved, and perhaps addicted to drugs. “In the first episode I’m like Macaulay CulkinJack Myers Topics. I’m so young. Now I look really old and decrepit,” Gubler joked. (Actually, the one thing that’s remained the same is he’s still cute.)

Weighing in on the New Reid/Old Reid debate, Gubler said, “I kinda like the old school Reid a little more. Naïve Reid. I was doing the math in my head during the drug addiction script. In like 30 episodes, he’s been held hostage three times, has killed two people, a kid he identified with slashed his wrists in front him, he was shot full of heroine…”

Many viewers noticed in the last episode, Ashes to Dust, that Reid and Gideon had some sort of moment regarding the drugs, but it was unclear as to what it meant. “In all honesty, that was an absolute spur of the moment improv from the writer. He said, ‘Hey you want to try something? Why don’t you say you can’t get over it without help and then you look at Gideon.’”

So which Reid will remain as the show progresses? “It’s not the end of the drug addiction,” Gubler asserted. I asked the writer who wrote the drug addiction script [Chris Mundy], and he said no…Now it’s just whether or not they pick it up again.”

Although Gubler likes “old school Reid” as a person more, he said, “The drug thing was out of nowhere. I was so freakin excited. I was like ‘This is so good. It won’t make it into the final script. Someone will have a problem with Reid stealing heroine.’”

Yet the drugs did make it into the final script, and have greatly been a part of Reid’s storyline since. Gubler said, “I know fans hate sarcastic Reid. The Reid that yells at Emily Prentiss. I don’t think he’ll ever get back to the new Reid… It’s more real if you spend your life hunting bad guys. I’m sure you can’t remain wide eyed.” Not only is it more real and believable, but it has given Gubler a chance to expand his acting range.

“This is my first real job,” Gubler divulged. “I sort of accidently got it.” Gubler went to NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, where he studied film. Part of the requirements was to get an internship, and he got one with famed director Wes AndersonJack Myers Topics. Gubler said Anderson asked him, “Do you want to audition to be in this film I’m making, playing an intern?” Gubler accepted, and got the role as an intern in The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou. From there, Gubler’s directing agent asked if he wanted to act. “This [Criminal Minds] was the second audition I ever went on, with the first being the Wes Anderson movie,” Gubler admitted.

“I’ve never really seen crime shows, other than Murder She Wrote… I liked that Reid was a little bit crazy, and it’s kind of become a cliché now, but at the time I didn’t think there was anything like him on TV,” Gubler said of his reaction when he first read the Criminal Minds script.

It’s a good thing Gubler loves his role, because he said, “The hours are just about the worst hours in the entertainment industry.” He quipped, “A one hour crime show is the worst. Some jerk ten or fifteen years ago proved to the networks they could make an hour of watchable TV in 8 days, and that has just f— us up ever since. If we had nine days… I just found out I have a little brother. I didn’t know this. I have a brother, a dad, and a mom!”

One thing’s for sure: Gubler is definitely more of a jokester than Reid. Knowing I had an interview with Shemar MooreJack Myers Topics coming up later in the day, he said, “My six pack is better than Shemar’s. Tell Shemar I said my six pack is a littler better than his. It’s a seven pack.” (To which Moore later laughed, “He probably drew it on.”)

Also, when I told Gubler how paranoid I was after watching the episode The Fisher King Part 1, he asked me where I lived. I said New York City, and he responded that he heard on the news the Fisher King was last seen there. Luckily Gubler made me laugh and didn’t have me hiding under the bed out of fright!

Gubler’s comedy doesn’t end there. He said, “In real life I like things to be perfect. I’ve been ruining our fake documentaries by my obsessive perfectionism.”

Fake documentaries? Oh, you got that right. Gubler said, “We started making fake documentaries on the set, which are the most fun things ever. I’m this kind of crazy and out of my mind guy and I’ve hired this film school kid to document my life for my quote unquote friends.”

Go on www.YouTube.com and search for “Matthew Gray Gubler: The Unauthorized Documentary.” You will see some of the most hilarious scenes of Gubler making fun of himself, as well as other members of the cast and crew mocking him. It is truly great comedy.

During the interview, Gubler told me, “So far we have four of them. I’m editing one of them from the James Van Der BeekJack Myers Topics episode. We supposedly have a history on Dawson’s CreekJack Myers Topics, and he doesn’t like me that much.” Gubler also said, “I won’t release this Van Der Beek one until it’s perfect.” Well, lucky for fans, episode five was released on Monday, and is truly the best yet.

For example, at one point, in reference to sharing the screen with Van Der Beek, Gubler says, “It’s bold casting on CBS’s part to put two mega stars in the same frame. It’s rare that you see that.” That’s all I’ll reveal, because I really can’t do the humor justice – these videos need to be watched!

Aside from releasing fake documentaries, Gubler has many other passions including directing, drawing, and magic, to name a few. This summer, though, on his Criminal Minds hiatus, he’ll be working on something new – a children’s book, which he is writing and illustrating. Of course though, Gubler said, “I’ll be making more of these fake documentaries, which I’m so incredibly proud of. We’ve got a lot of footage stockpiled.” Then again, he added, “I have no problem sleeping for two months.”

Whatever he chooses to do, people will be interested, as Matthew Gray Gubler has a ton of fans. “Fortunately, I seem to have really interesting fans. Predominately they’re eccentric, younger girls who have pretty good artistic taste.” Of course, all those girls probably want to know about Gubler’s love life.

And Gubler’s willing to talk.

“As long as I’m cashing checks that say ‘Actor,’ I think it goes with the territory.” He laughed, “I’ve got seven girlfriends: Mandy, Shemar, Paget…”

Truly though, Gubler said, “Sadly, because of the show, and my ineptitude at talking to females… I had one [a girlfriend] before the show started, and she vanished. I live in NY normally, and I had to come out here for the show. The schedule doesn’t allow for anything. I’m really awkward with the ladies.”

Yet he added, “I know a girl in LA that I see once a month who’s all right by me.”

Besides the idea that Gubler could actually have trouble with women, there are two other things he says people will be surprised to know about him. First, “I’m an Eagle Scout.”

Secondly, “People who kind of know me at work are always beyond flabbergasted to learn I’m not a drug addict in real life. Everyone thinks I’m some stoner druggie drunk… All my life people think that I’m kinda weird… you know like I’m from the place in Pinocchio where the bad kids go.”

He continued, “Just yesterday Paget [Brewster] was looking at me, and Shemar [Moore] was there, and she was zoning out and she said, ‘Wouldn’t it be terrible if we learned Matthew was lying to us and he really was a junkie in real life?’”

Yet Gubler promises, “I’ve never smoked a cigarette in my life. I’ve never touched a drug, and I don’t like to drink.”

That, of course, is a testament to Gubler’s superior acting ability, considering he plays, so believably, someone struggling with drug addiction on Criminal Minds. Even without a lengthy list of previous acting experience, Gubler does not disappoint. I think this sums it up best: Matthew Gray Gubler can act, he’s smart, he’s funny, he’s creative, he can make fun of himself, and oh yeah, he happens to be easy on the eyes as well.

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Wes Anderson’s hapless intern gives gophering another go in the director’s highly anticipated new film

Wednesday, December 1st, 2004

by Sarah Cristobal

“I had to get a perm,” explains actor Matthew Gray Gubler of his surreptitious jump from being an intern in director Wes Anderson’s New York City production office to playing one in the dowdy filmmaker’s new movie, The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou. “I went from getting mango chutney for these guys to all of a sudden having production assistants and cars,” says the 24-year-old Las Vegas native–a New York University film school grad, model, and self-proclaimed children’s magician–of his transition to onscreen gopher. “I was just sitting around, relaxing with this perm. It was the ugliest perm in the history of cinema. They said it would be a cool perm, and I was like, ‘Are you mad? Perms aren’t cool.’”

Yet, Gubler’s hair-raising antics in Anderson’s office are rumored to be what earned him the spot in The Life Aquatic alongside a roster of bigwigs like Bill Murray, Cate Blanchett, Willem Dafoe, Anjelica Huston,
Jeff Goldblum, and Owen Wilson. “I was maybe the worst intern in history,” admits Gubler, recounting sordid tales of attempting to deliver a rather large painting–a gift from Murray to Anderson–after stopping off for a drink, or unsuccessfully shopping for couscous when “I don’t even know what couscous is.”

To Gubler’s credit, whatever he’s not doing seems to be working. Since completing The Life Aquatic, he has wrapped production on his own film, a “fairy tale-macabre western-horror movie” called The Cactus That Looked Just Like a Man, and acquired an acting agent. “The toughest acting I’ve ever done was on those terrible runway catwalks,” says Gubler, who was once bestowed the coveted title of No. 46 on the all-time best-male-model list. “These days I can’t even walk into cafeterias without feeling self-conscious.”

COPYRIGHT 2004 Brant Publications, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning

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