| THE WEDDING PARTY
The
search for the right actor to don Reverend Frank’s
collar didn’t take long. Producer Mike Medavoy notes, “When
I read the script, I just knew that Robin Williams would be ideal
for the role. In addition to being an incredibly funny actor
and comedian, he’s such a passionate and compassionate
person. While Reverend Frank puts Ben and Sadie through some
really trying situations, at the core, likeability was a key
component for building the character.”
Academy
Award-winning actor and comedian Robin Williams says he gravitated
towards the project “for the characters,
mostly, and the idea that Reverend Frank is genuinely trying
to help people. He creates simulated exercises and scenarios
that a young couple might not even think about or have to deal
with until they’re already married, when it’s too
late. But if a couple doesn’t drop out and actually graduates
his class, they’ll be one step closer to living happily
ever after.”
Kwapis
remarks, “Robin Williams was the perfect choice
to create an irreverent Reverend. His ad-lib abilities, of course,
are the stuff of legend. He can riff on anything in his path,
which, more often than not, was me. You wouldn’t believe
the number of ways you can mangle the name Kwapis. There is a
method to Reverend Frank’s madness. No matter how perverse
his tactics, his goal remains noble: keeping couples together.”
The
bride-to-be character in the film, Sadie Jones, has long dreamed
of getting married at St. Augustine’s and will
let nothing get in the way of fulfilling that dream. It’s
where her parents tied the knot, and where she was christened
by Reverend Frank— both very compelling reasons any groom
would be reluctant to challenge.
Kwapis
offers, “For the role of Sadie, I wanted someone
who is adorable but strong. Sadie is the girl that guys would
do anything for, including something as crazy as Reverend Frank’s
patented marriage prep course. Mandy Moore could not be more
winning in this part, and it gave a chance to show off her comedic
skills. Mandy is daffy and real; she is Everywoman, but the funny
version.”
“The thing that really struck me about this script, and
what made me want to be a part of this film so badly, was that
whatever situation these characters found themselves in, it really
felt grounded and relatable,” says Moore. “I have
yet to find myself in these situations for real—like getting
married—but when I do, I’ll certainly be much better
prepared!”
On
the other side of the marriage equation is Sadie’s
fiancé, Ben Murphy. For the role, Kwapis knew exactly
who he wanted. “I helped launch ‘The Office’ and
knew from the moment I first worked with John Krasinski that
he was a rare find, a perfect blend of comic actor and leading
man. He was my very top choice for the role of Ben. John has
an innate ability to be both funny and grounded. He is both understated
and expressive. As fans of ‘The Office’ can attest,
John really knows his way around an awkward pause.”
Krasinski
states, “I really wanted to do
this movie. When I heard that Ken got hired on to direct, it
made me even more excited to do it. I am completely and totally
indebted to him for bringing me on.”
Osborne
attests, “John was always on the top of the list
for Ken, and when we screen-tested Mandy and John, we couldn’t
have agreed more. We saw real chemistry between the two. We could
see them as a couple struggling through the course together...for
better or for worse.”
Being
paired with Moore onscreen for the first time, Krasinski notes, “I was very excited to work with Mandy. She’s
so sweet, and she brought such incredible warmth to the set.”
Moore
offers, “I’ve had a blast with John. We have
a really good rapport. He’s so talented and such a sweetheart;
it’s been such a treat to work with him.”
In
the film, Ben bravely proposes to Sadie in front of the entire
Jones family at her parents’ 30th wedding anniversary.
Sadie accepts, but there’s a hitch to getting hitched as
the jubilant moment quickly spirals towards a pragmatic discussion
about where to have the wedding.
“Ben just wants a simple, casual wedding somewhere exotic,
like the Caribbean, not knowing that marrying Sadie comes with
a stipulation,” says Krasinski.
“Sadie has dreamt of getting married at St. Augustine’s
all her life because she wants to keep the family tradition,
so she’s very determined to make it happen and is sticking
to it,” states Moore.
To
arrange a date at the church, Sadie introduces Ben to Reverend
Frank, who informs them that, as luck would have it, St. Augustine’s
is booked solid for the next two years. However, there has just
been a cancellation, which opens up a slot in three weeks. Sadie
excitedly agrees to the abrupt wedding date, at which point the
Reverend tells them he won’t marry the couple unless they
pass his mandatory prep course.
When
it came to designing and shooting the prep course scenes, “imagine
marriage as a theme park, with thrill rides representing the
various trials and tribulations a couple undergoes. That’s
how I conceived of the marriage prep course in the film. wanted
the audience to experience an emotional roller- coaster ride—thirty
years of marriage crammed into three weeks,” Kwapis says.
“Sadie’s the type that welcomes this kind of a challenge.
To her, it’s just one more thing that will bring her and
Ben closer, and more in love,” says Moore.
Ben,
on the other hand, can’t help but
feel a little uneasy, especially when Reverend Frank introduces
two very important rules they must follow: Rule Number One,
they must each write their own wedding vows, which are only
to be revealed at the wedding ceremony; Rule Number Two, effective
immediately, they are to have no sex until the honeymoon.
“Rule Number Two is, without a doubt, one of the hardest
rules to follow for a modern couple, and that’s the beauty
of the prep course,” states Williams. “I especially
like the idea of putting a young couple’s relationship
to the test that way. Let’s just take that tool out of
your toolbox and see what you have left.”
“In the beginning of a typical relationship, the sex is
everywhere, but after about 15 or 20 years, it’s another
story,” Williams jokes, continuing, “Reverend Frank
owes the high success rate of his class to his commitment to
helping couples discover what it is in their relationship that
will give it the staying power it needs to last through the years.”
Before
Ben even realizes he’s being tested, Reverend Frank
not-so-subtly grills him with piercing personal questions. Krasinski
notes, “One of the tests Ben goes through with Reverend
Frank is playing catch. What Ben thinks is a casual conversation
turns into 20 questions of a very personal nature: how long Sadie
and Ben have been dating, whether they sleep together, and things
like that. I think Reverend Frank does identify Ben as somebody
who is worthy of Sadie, but just wants Ben to prove it, not only
to Sadie but also to Ben himself. He wants Ben to really understand
why he wants to get married and to look at the relationship past
the starry-eyed perspective.”
Another
exercise from Reverend Frank’s class involves
the care and feeding of eerily lifelike, but decidedly creepy-looking,
animatronic babies. Drawing inspiration from real-life experiences,
Kim Barker recalls a high school assignment designed to teach
students the responsibilities of being a parent. “I remember,
in one of my classes, we had to carry around eggs for a week,
24 hours a day, as if they were real babies. We had to take care
of them; you couldn’t just leave them in your locker. From
that idea, we created a stress test in which Ben and Sadie would
be responsible for something 24/7. Initially, the idea was to
use simple devices like baby pagers and, eventually, the idea
evolved into the twin robotic babies."
Designed by makeup and special effects company Drac Studios,
the animatronic babies were controlled remotely via radio transmitters.
Eye movements, hand movements, mouth movements, and even bowel
movements were controlled independently. Each function was precisely
coordinated and rehearsed for each shot.
Moore
recalls, “Handling the babies was
pretty difficult. I would hope that they are actually more
temperamental than real babies because they required a whole
lot of maintenance...and battery changes. They were also really
heavy and smelled funny. was surprised at how much effort it
took to make them work behind the scenes. There were four different
people controlling one baby. Poor John...he had to do more
scenes with the babies than I did.”
Krasinski
agrees, “There’s a scene where Sadie and
Ben are in a department store creating their wedding registry,
and while Sadie’s picking out dinnerware I’m stuck
with the two babies, who suddenly decide to have a complete breakdown.”
Unbeknownst
to Ben, the tot-sized terrors are being controlled remotely
by Reverend Frank’s right-hand man, a precocious
minister-in-training, referred to in the script as Choir Boy.
Played by Josh Flitter, Choir Boy adjusts the “Robo Mood” of
the animatronic babies by flipping the switches on the remote
control from “Calm,” skipping the intermediate stages
of “Cranky” and “Berserk,” and going
directly to “Meltdown.”
“The toughest role to cast was Choir Boy,” Kwapis
notes. “He’s like a miniature thug, a little henchman
who does all Reverend Frank’s heavy lifting. Most of the
candidates read the part as if they were little cherubs. When
Josh Flitter walked into the casting session, it was as if he
was channeling every Hollywood tough guy from Edward G. Robinson
to James Gandolfini. The idea of Josh as a marriage enforcer
was too irresistible to pass up.” Flitter says, “Choir
Boy is enrolled in Reverend Frank’s ‘Ministers of
Tomorrow’ program, and his life goal is to become the greatest
reverend ever when he grows up. He wholeheartedly believes in
the prep course that Reverend Frank created and is the one who
gets things done behind the scenes.”
Choir
Boy has covertly bugged Ben and Sadie’s bedroom
with a mini-microphone that gives Reverend Frank around-the-clock
surveillance of the couple’s conversations. In one instance,
the bug serves to prevent a violation of Reverend Frank’s
much- dreaded Rule Number Two.
Rule
Number Two notwithstanding, perhaps one of the more stress-inducing
tests in the Reverend’s course is the word association
exercise with in-laws. Under the guise of a wine and cheese tasting,
the test is designed to open the lines of communication between
Ben and his future relatives, including Sadie’s older,
jaded, and recently divorced sister, Lindsey, played by Christine
Taylor.
Taylor
offers, “Having just gone through a nasty divorce,
my character is very sarcastic and bitter. She has no faith in
marriage, or men for that matter, and is very wary about Sadie
getting married so suddenly. She’s definitely feeling like
the black sheep in the family being surrounded by her parents’ and
grandparents’ successful marriages—and now Sadie
and Ben’s engagement. She can’t help but act a little
standoffish towards Ben, and it becomes really apparent during
the in-laws exercise.”
Also
invited to the wine and cheese tasting is Sadie’s
attractive, sophisticated, wealthy—and male—best
friend, Carlisle, played by Eric Christian Olsen. “Carlisle
is Sadie’s B.F.F. They grew up together, took baths together,
and know everything about each other. He’s definitely part
of Sadie’s family. This presents an interesting dynamic
for Ben, who should be made to feel very territorial by Carlisle’s
mere presence. I mean, you can’t really blame Ben for feeling
a bit insecure when Carlisle’s around because, besides
having a good relationship with Sadie’s family, he’s
also very charming, very talented, and has great teeth and cheekbones,” smiles
Olsen.
While
Sadie confides in Carlisle for advice on just about everything,
Ben seeks out his best friend, Joel, who provides Ben with
a slightly different point of view. Played by actor-comedian
DeRay Davis, Joel has been married for some time—complete with
two children and a lawnmower—and can perhaps be best summed
up as a man’s man, or as Davis puts it, “the everyman
who thinks that men should be kings again. Joel knows that, for
him, the days of being the master of his domain have long passed
since he got married. So, living vicariously, he secretly wants
Ben to reign as a free man just a little bit longer.”
As Ben and Sadie get caught in the crossfire of conflicting
influences and endure the demands of the prep course, their true
personalities materialize, putting their compatibility to the
ultimate test.
Krasinski
states, “Ben and Sadie had never fought prior
to enrolling in Reverend Frank’s class, but as soon as
the course begins and they’re feeling the pressure, Sadie’s
type-A personality really begins to emerge. She’s someone
who is very organized, gets things done, and needs to have them
done a certain way, whereas Ben is happy to wake up with a smile
and just sort of get through the day. Then, when Sadie starts
showing favoritism towards Carlisle’s opinions, and Sadie’s
sister starts in on Ben’s passive nature, he can’t
help but feel like everyone is teaming up against him.”
Sometimes
the truth hurts, but other times the truth can be really funny.
Taylor notes, “When Reverend Frank asks Lindsey
to word associate with Ben, she, in her sarcastic, cutting way,
calls him ‘assertive,’ which is the complete opposite
of how she really feels about him. She actually thinks Ben is
a big pushover, and not necessarily the right guy for Sadie.
When Ben is asked to word associate with Lindsey, he calls her ‘blonde,’ which
she takes as a cue to attack him right back. It was a really
fun scene to shoot. We kept blowing takes because everybody around
the table was making everyone else laugh so much.”
With
a comedic dynamo like Robin Williams on the set, Kwapis encouraged
everyone to expect the unexpected. “With Robin,
who has an inexhaustible desire to invent, you have to make sure
there’s plenty of film in the camera and you have a group
of actors who can hold their own when the ad-libs start flying.”
“My favorite thing about working with Ken is the fact
that he just hands you the ball, and gives you the leeway and
the freedom to get into the moment,” says Moore. “He
doesn’t call ‘Action’ to begin a scene. Instead,
he simply says, ‘Go ahead.’ It’s so relaxed
and conversational. Even though Ken was very supportive and gave
us a lot of freedom on the set to improvise, I was still terrified
to try things in front of Robin because he’s such a comic
legend. But I was really impressed with him because he was so
considerate of all the other actors and so collaborative.”
The
chance to work with Robin Williams was also an incredible highlight
for Krasinski, who reveals that when he was much younger he
had written Williams a fan letter asking for, and receiving,
an autographed photo. “I was a big fan of Robin’s,
and had seen all of his movies. Even before I wanted to be an
actor, I just loved, loved to watch his work. So to act in a
film with him now is nothing short of surreal. And, he’s
even funnier and more enthusiastic in person than he is on film.”
Too
funny, perhaps; as Kwapis says, “The great hazard
of putting together such a group of nimble comic talents is that
it was often impossible for them to get through a take without
laughing. Keeping a straight face became a Herculean task for
John in particular, faced with Robin’s onslaught of quips.”
Additionally,
both Kwapis and Krasinski enjoyed an “office” party
of their own while shooting scenes featuring co-workers from “The
Office,” including Brian Baumgartner as Jim, Ben and Sadie’s
potato skin-loving prep course classmate; Mindy Kaling as Joel’s
demanding wife, Shelly; and Angela Kinsey as Judith, a jewelry
store clerk.
NEXT
NO
PALM TREES IN CHICAGO
Though the story is set in Chicago, the film was primarily
shot on location in and around Los Angeles. Location manager
Tom Hillman notes, “Ken’s
initial vision for the setting of this film was Anytown, USA. He wasn’t
originally going for Chicago, but he liked the architecture and feel of the city
and its suburbs.”
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