(2011, on getting cast in Miller's Crossing) Now, Miller's Crossing, of course, the story's out ther...
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(2011, on getting cast in Miller's Crossing) Now, Miller's Crossing, of course, the story's out there and people know that the Coens had seen me in Death Of A Salesman years before and I was 150 pounds playing Howard. And this was four years later, 'cause I did that at 35 and now I was 39, and I received the script for Miller's Crossing and read the script cover-to-cover. It was one of those you-can't-put-down scripts. And it was brilliant. The first piece was amazing. And, of course, I was flipped and I wanted to play Johnny Caspar. So I assumed that's what they were calling me for. I said to my agent, "Yes, I'm definitely going in on this audition. Tell 'em I want to see them for Johnny Caspar." And then the word came back they don't want to see me for Johnny Caspar. They wanted to see me for the character of The Dane. And I said, "No, no, no, I gotta play Johnny Caspar." And they said, basically, no. They were not interested. They wanted a much older man. A 55-year-old man. And I was 39. They did not know that I gained all the weight and all that. Anyway, I said I won't read for anything but Johnny Caspar. "And tell them that they're gonna have to come back to me cause I'm gonna play Johnny." I was very obnoxious. But anyway, the word came down that they weren't gonna read me. So I went off and I went to Miami. I did Miami Vice. And then I was cast in the play Other People's Money, the original production of that at the Hartford Stage, which became a movie with Danny DeVito, which is another story. But anyway, I was up in Hartford when I got the word that the Coens were on the last legs of casting and they were finally going to see me for Johnny Caspar. And so I went down from Hartford, Connecticut, went to New York, and I read the opening speech. And I remember I was rather annoyed because the casting woman, whom I love, Donna Isaacson, but she has one of those little lapdog things and she kept it in the room. And I'm doing that opening speech and I start it and then the lapdog's barkin' and stuff and I finally went out and I was furious and she said, "Don't leave, don't leave." And I said, "I'll go back in if you get rid of the damn dog!" So she kept the dogs outside and the Coens called and asked me to go back in the room. And they had me read cold the entire role. Scene-by-scene. I read every scene in that movie. Because I think they didn't really know me well and they certainly wanted to see if I could deliver it. And whatever I did in the room meant I got cast. Even though I know there was another actor that was actually in the negotiations to get that part. So I was really very, very lucky-and the Coens, I've spoken to them recently, I've talked to them about how important they've been in my life-that that accident happened. That I didn't read for the other role, which is actually quite like how I got Death Of A Salesman. Sometimes you just gotta stand up for what you want to read for. And in that case, I was able to get Johnny Caspar. And really, I believe that one six-month period shooting in New Orleans, that one role, has led to my workload ever since.
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