I just watched the clip and looked up Crispin Glover on wiki. Here’s what wiki had to say about it.
From that, it sounds less like a meltdown than a publicity stunt that went badly due to the timing of the release of the show. The wiki makes it sound like Letterman didn’t know about the prank.
I saw it. Clive’s shtick is making funny little digs at people. In the right context this can be amusing - I much preferred him to Drew Carey as WLIIA host - but when you’re the host of a talk show mocking your guests is a dick move, and he was basically being a dick to the Bee Gees. It wasn’t a huge offense but they had no reason to stay there and put up with it.
Funny thing was, he didn’t seem to mean any harm. He was just clueless about how annoying he was being. You can tell because after they walk out he has a, oh shit, what have I done, look on his face.
Come on, Clive has made a career of riding the line of obnoxiousness and insult. He knew what he was saying; he just was used to people taking it from him.
Well, being an American, I only really saw him on Whose Line, so I’ll take your word for it. But even him knowing he’s annoying the look on his face was still one of shock, embarrassment, and sadness as he was begging Maurice to stay.
Even knowing it’s an act, I wouldn’t want someone kicking that close to my face, and would want to get out.
Plus, it’s not as if Glover has come off as sane in other contexts. The thing about the meltdown story is that it’s believable based on his current reclusivity. I personally think he must have had some sort of breakdown, even if this was not actually it.
Then again, I also think Cruise’s jumping on the couch was a stunt, too. It was intended to make him seem “crazy in love” with Homes, and fight off the gay rumors.
The weird thing, and the thing which must have seemed particularly confusing to Clive, is that the particular line that sent Barry over the edge was rather innocuous. The song “Don’t Forget to Remember” is mentioned and Clive jokes “I’ve forgotten that one.” Just a play on the title, rather than a dig at the band, as such… Still, I suppose it was the last straw; Barry seems to have been brooding throughout about the “tossers” thing from the beginning.
I remember watching the Clive Anderson Bee Gees interview when it was first broadcast and I knew that Barry was getting pretty upset at Clive’s comments. It’s actually all about his body language. Watch that leg twitch away. It was still a surprise when he decided to walk but I found the whole interview had an uneasy vibe about it.
Another very awkward interview from UK TV was Frank Skinner and interviewing Matthew Kelly. I am not sure if either of those will known outside of the UK though. Matthew Kelly had been charged with paedophilia types charges that he was cleared of but decided to bring up the fact that Frank Skinner had made a joke about these charges during a stand-up act while he was being interviewed by Skinner.
They’re the fucking Bee Gees. When you are the poster band for a musical movement that has become a joke, you either stop taking yourselves so seriously and learn to laugh at yourselves or you end up like that. Maurice didn’t get all pissy over a few throw away lines in an otherwise positive interview (he talked about their early music, the breakup, and more than just their gold flame jacket period), probably because he’s not taking himself too seriously. Maybe it was just a bad day, but Barry needs to learn to laugh at himself.
I was on Andersen’s side. Barry Gibb took himself far too seriously. I would imagine he just had not come across someone who did not fawn all over him recently when he did that interview. He seemed to have no idea that some might not take the Bee Gees seriously.
He just wanted the same money as Fox and they didn’t want to pay him. The film makers got another actor and gave him a fake nose and chin to make him look like Crispin. Crispin sued because he thought that he should have been paid since they used his likeness. He won and in doing so made new law so now other actors can’t be ripped off that way.
And if he had been “written out” that would have been one thing. What the studio decided to do instead was to get someone to impersonate him. In other words, have him in the movie without paying him.
I’ve been beat to it, I see. Serves me right for not refreshing.
Sort of off topic but is the Andersen/Bee Gees incident the inspiration for the SNL skit “The Barry Gibb Talk Show”? I never understood where the heck they came up with that idea.
Thanks for the Glover clarification. “Written out” is obviously not what I should’ve said. “Recast” was the right word. BTW, it was “ego” that made him think he was as important as Fox to the movie.