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Roberto Aguire Interview on ‘Boulevard’ and Robin Williams

Roberto Aguire Interview on Boulevard and Robin Williams

The character-driven dramatic film Boulevard features outstanding performances from Robin Williams (in his final on-screen role), Roberto Aguire, Kathy Baker, and Bob Odenkirk, and will be opening in limited release beginning July 10, 2015. Boulevard, directed by Dito Montiel (A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints), follows Williams as a married but closeted bank employee who makes a sudden, life-altering decision when he picks up a young hustler (Aguire) off the street.

With the film heading to theaters, I had the opportunity to speak with Aguire about his character, working with Robin Williams, and how he prepared both mentally and physically for taking on his role in Boulevard.

Roberto Aguire Exclusive Interview:

How did you find out about Boulevard?

“The writer, Doug Soesbe, we have a mutual friend in common. The friend said, ‘Hey, you know, you should take a look at this script. It’s got an amazing character.’ He and I were very close from before, and he said I should try to be a part of it. So I read the script, fell in love with Leo, and called Doug and said, ‘I’d love to sit down and talk about your script.’ We sat down and we had an amazing meeting.

Doug’s hyper-intelligent. He’s funny; he’s so humble and grounded. At the end of the meeting it had just gone so well, he said, ‘I’d love for you to play this character. I’d love for you to play this role.’ Then the rest just kind of tumbled into place. It was amazing.”

On that first reading of the script what was it that drew you immediately to Leo? Was there one thing in particular that was your entry point into this character?

“Yeah, it was the fact that he was an observer. He felt to me like a character who was watching the world happen around him, and I couldn’t understand why. I don’t know. As a human being I think there’s an innate curiosity about what happens around you. I couldn’t understand why he was just sitting there and watching the world happen, and just why he was stuck. Immediately there was this curiosity that I had to find out why.

The great thing as an actor is you get to almost write in the story, it’s a self-fulfilling prophecy. You ask why so that you get to say because. That was really cool to write Leo because why is he there? Well, because life just dealt him this shitty hand and the cumulative circumstances that drove him to this endpoint were just wrong places at the wrong time. I think that for me was a huge draw to the character, to find him and just write him to say, ‘Okay, how are you going to get him out of this and unstuck?’ And how is it going to happen with this other character, who’s kind of broken too.”

Roberto Aguire Boulevard Interview
Robert Aguire (Photo by Marc Cartwright)

This had to be extremely emotionally draining for you. How did you get ready each day to do something this intense?

“Physically, the transformation, Dito [Montiel] and I spoke a lot about how we wanted to really give a realistic portrayal of Leo and his life. Leo’s at a place in life where he’s physically abused, he doesn’t sleep, he doesn’t really eat because he can’t afford to eat, or he forgets to eat because of just the world that he inhabits. Physically getting into the character was a question of losing 35 pounds and a lot of diets and a lot of tortuous months.

Once I got to the weight that we wanted me to be at, emotionally everything just followed. I felt weak, I felt tired, I felt hungry. I felt like I just didn’t have energy to do anything, so that was a really nice kind of slide into who Leo was. Then it was just the question of being as true as I could in that situation, because Robin [Williams] came with his character so fully prepared and fully formed that the minute his character met my character, I was just basically hungry and scared and cautious of everyone around him, and it just exploded into this painfully beautiful relationship that he and I developed.”

That relationship is so fascinating to watch on screen. Can you talk about acting opposite Robin Williams? What did the two of you do in between takes?

“It was brilliant to work with him. He’s one of a kind. He was one of a kind, and he always will be. He was a genius in every regard. He made over 100 movies, so in front of the camera he feels so at ease, and then emotionally he’s so vibrant and present, and intellectually he was bar none, you know? You can’t have a mental tennis match with him without feeling like you’re getting overwhelmed, because he has this ability to switch from one subject to the next with such ease and fluidity that it’s astounding to watch.

To be opposite that in a scene is exhilarating, because you know something amazing is going to happen because you’re playing with someone who’s functioning at such a high capacity, there’s no way that it can’t be magical in that moment. For me, growing up with his movies and being such a fan of his and idolizing him – because he was one of the reasons I got into acting – to find myself there… I remember the first moment I was opposite him, just saying, ‘Tthis isn’t happening. It can’t be that I’m standing here opposite Robin Williams and in a movie with him.’ It was amazing.”

Was there a little bit of nervousness in your first scene?

“Oh my gosh! Yes! I was a bundle of nerves my first scene. I mean, as much as I could with the fact that I felt so weak, but yeah. I walked up to that set just not knowing what was going to happen. It’s that sink or swim moment where you’re suddenly in the big leagues. You’re about to do a scene with someone like Robin Williams and you have no idea how it’s going to go. But the cool thing about him is, going into what we did between takes, he’s just such a generous man and a kind man. Between takes he was making everyone laugh. He was doing accents, and in the movie we have a kid who was in the restaurant with us and they were doing voices and kind of yelling at each other in a really funny way, and everybody was cracking up.

The environment that he creates outside of the scene, and outside of the movie, and outside of this kind of really difficult subject that we were dealing with, he’s so light and it feels so supportive in every single regard, that those nerves melted in a matter of seconds. The minute I was with him, it was just like you’re being taken care of.”

How did you prepare to play a character in these particular circumstances? What did your research consist of?

“I tried to meet with as many people that were in this situation as I could, because there’s nothing like getting it firsthand and hearing people talk about how they ended up that way, or how they chose to end up that way. A lot of them choose to be in that position because of the money, or because emotionally they have something where they want to be removed from people, or they want to feel desired by people.

There’s so many different stories about how you end up in that place. But there was on specific one that I related very much to Leo’s circumstance, which was this one guy who I interviewed. He was really smart. He was very aware of the world that he was in and he said that one day he just turned around and he said, ‘What am I doing here? How did this happen?’ It was so sad to hear that moment because you could hear him almost crying out that he didn’t want to be there. He wanted to be back in the suburban home that he lived in, that he wanted to go back to the life that he had, but for some reason he took this path and now he was here.

I think the most horrible thing about being in that situation is you don’t know how to get out. Suddenly it’s like you choose a door, you walk through the door, and then you’re in a dark room, and then what do you do? When you turn around and you try to find the door again, it’s not there or it’s locked and you’re just stumbling in the dark and there’s no way to get out of the room. The great thing is that Nolan in Leo’s situation comes in, I wouldn’t say with a flashlight but with a little glow stick, so at least they have a little bit of light and they’re both trying to find where this door is.”

Was it easy to get people to open up to you and tell you their stories?

“Yeah, it was actually. The people that I got to interview and got to talk to were more than willing to share their story. It’s interesting, because there’s no shame for what they do. They’re not embarrassed. I think all the shame and embarrassment is society that throws it onto the profession, onto the people, but for them it’s a job. It’s what they do to survive. They’re good at it, they make a lot of money doing it, and it’s their world.

I think that was the most eye-opening thing to see is these people – and by these people I mean hustlers, people in that circumstance, people who prostitute themselves – a lot of them have to do it to survive, especially the ones who I spoke to and they know that. So with that comes this sense of, ‘Well, you know, I’m doing this and I’m doing it because I have to and that’s it. I’m not going to apologize for it. I’m not going to be shunned in my own world or whether society tries to do it to me. I’m going to embrace it and do what I have to do.’ But the sad is thing is that most of them don’t last, whether it’s because they’re using intimacy as such a commodity, as merchandise, that it’s slowly eating them and changing them, and also because it’s a very dangerous world. A lot of them end up dead.”

That’s heartbreaking.

“Yeah, heartbreaking. Exactly.”

What are you working on next?

“I’m doing this project with Olivia Thirlby. I play a small supporting character in it, but it’s this beautiful story about what it’s like ask someone to marry you, and then they get married, and then suddenly to have that moment post-marriage where you don’t really know how to deal with the decision you just made. You’re all nerves and you’re anxious, and you’re dealing with the fact that you just made a lifetime commitment. It’s a really beautiful, realistic view into people and how marriage isn’t always this beautiful, all rainbows and sunshine thing, but it’s also a commitment that’s filled with nerves and angst, and second guesses, and all that. So it’s a really cool project.”




New ‘Star Wars Rebels: The Siege of Lothal’ Clips and Featurettes

Star Wars Rebels The Siege of Lothal Videos
A scene from ‘Star Wars Rebels’

Star Wars Rebels premieres season two on Saturday, June 20, 2015 with the one-hour movie event titled “The Siege of Lothal.” In support of the premiere, Disney XD’s sharing a featurette focusing on Ahsoka, a look ahead at season two, and a clip from “The Siege of Lothal.”

The Plot: The Rebels return to Lothal to save a defecting Imperial officer, only to draw the attention of the Empire’s most dreaded agent – Darth Vader.

Watch the videos:

‘Big Brother’ Introduces the BB Takeover Twist

Big Brother Introduces the BB Takeover Twist

The 2015 season of CBS’ reality competition series Big Brother kicks off on Wednesday, June 24th at 8pm ET/PT and along with the new season comes a new twist on the format. This season will include a visit each week from a surprise guest as part of the BB Takeover. That guest will introduce an unexpected twist to the game that the houseguests will have to deal with.

The network also revealed that the upcoming season’s house is actually the largest ever Big Brother home. The steel beach house will feature a Sky Bridge and a 22-foot-tall Wave Wall, with floor one of the house having a ‘sea’ vibe while the second floor is supposed to evoke a ‘sky’ vibe.

“This is going to be the biggest Big Brother ever! Surprise guests, twists every week all summer long and, of course, Zingbot!” said Executive Producer Rich Meehan. “But the Houseguests better keep their focus because Big Brother is all about relationships. Trust me, with all the twists and turns, those bonds will be more important than ever, because at the end of the week, it’s your housemates that send you packing on eviction night.”

The Plot: Big Brother follows a group of people living together in a house outfitted with 80 HD cameras, four more than last season, and more than 100 microphones, recording their every move 24 hours a day. Each week, the Houseguests will vote someone out of the house. At the end, the last remaining Houseguest will receive the grand prize of $500,000.

‘Flea Market Flip’ Gets a Seventh Season Renewal

HGTV Renews Flea Market Flip for 7th Season

HGTV wants more of Flea Market Flip, renewing the series created and hosted by Lara Spencer for a seventh season. The decision to renew the popular show for a 14-episode seventh season likely wasn’t a difficult one to make as the series is averaging 13.8 million viewers.

Announcing the renewal, HGTV, DIY Network and Great American Country General Manager Allison Page said, “Flea Market Flip is a series that consistently delivers a solid audience for us. A huge part of its success is Lara’s appeal and her impressive knowledge and expertise in this space.”

The Plot: In Flea Market Flip, each team has only one-hour to shop and a $500 budget. They must scour a flea market to find their potential treasures. After searching, haggling and brainstorming on the fly, the teams transform the drab and sometimes weird finds into top-notch designs that they can sell the following day at a different flea market. The competitors must attract customers, negotiate and at times, put on a show, to sell their wares. The team who makes the most profit walks away with bragging rights and the cash prize.

Melissa Rivers is the New ‘Fashion Police’ Co-Host

Melissa Rivers to Co-Host 'Fashion Police'
Ivanka Trump and Melissa Rivers on ‘Celebrity Apprentice’ (Photo by David Giesbrecht / NBC)

Melissa Rivers has committed to a co-hosting gig on E!’s Fashion Police in addition to her off-camera duties as executive producer. Rivers will be handling co-hosting duties along with Giuliana Rancic and Brad Goreski, with two different celebrity guests joining the trio each episode.

According to E!s official announcement, the celebrity guests will include stylists, actors, and comedians.

“As an executive producer since the beginning, Melissa helped shape Fashion Police into an iconic TV series that couples fashion with comedy,” stated Jeff Olde, Executive Vice President, Programming and Development for E!. “We are pleased to now also feature Melissa in front of the Fashion Police cameras, as she joins returning panelists Giuliana and Brad. And with the added flavor of rotating panelists, the show will deliver fresh, different and unpredictable fashion reviews with each new episode.”

“I’m very excited to be given the opportunity to continue to work with my E! and Fashion Police family,” said Rivers.

The show’s host Giuliana Rancic drew the ire of her co-hosts Kelly Osbourne and Kathy Griffin after making a controversial comment about Zendaya’s hair at the Oscars. The comment created a firestorm on social media and ultimately Griffin and Osbourne both left the series.


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Colin Cunningham ‘Falling Skies’ Season Five Interview

Colin Cunningham Falling Skies Season 5 Interview
Colin Cunningham, Doug Jones, Sarah Carter, and Drew Roy from ‘Falling Skies’ (Photo © Richard Chavez)

Falling Skies star and fan favorite Colin Cunningham (‘John Pope’) says viewers are in store for a wild ride with the final season of the popular TNT sci-fi series. At the 2015 WonderCon in Anaheim, Cunningham discussed what it was like to actually shoot season five and how it felt on the set on his last day of filming. Cunningham also talked about what he’ll miss about the series and how he has a few permanent scars that will always remind him of working on Falling Skies.

Falling Skies season five debuts on June 28, 2015 at 10pm ET/PT.

Looking back, what was it that drew you to Falling Skies in the first place?

Colin Cunningham: “I didn’t know what it was. I didn’t ask what it was. I never ask what it is because if it’s a little thing, I don’t want to get lazy and if it’s a big, gigantic thing, I don’t want to get freaked out because that will ruin you too. The guy I work with who sends me out on these things, he knows don’t tell me what it is. That way I hit everything 100%.

But I remember the day he says, ‘Yeah, you’re shortlisted for Falling Skies.’ I’m like, ‘Falling Skies? What was that? That was the alien thing?’ He says, ‘Yeah, the alien thing.’ He’s like, ‘It’s DreamWorks.’ ‘DreamWorks – Spielberg DreamWorks?’ He said yeah and I said, ‘You’re kidding?’ He said, ‘No, that’s what you did,’ and I’m like, ‘Thanks for not telling me because I would have screwed it up.’

So, it was just gratitude. If anything, Pope was only supposed to hang out for an episode or two and here I am five years later talking to you guys out here in Anaheim. So, I mean, come on, it’s awesome!”

Can you talk about where Pope is in this last season?

Colin Cunningham: “I felt Pope was better when he wasn’t so much part of the group. Fortunately, the writers felt the same way and so there’s definitely a break-away. Pope…I don’t know what I can say and what I can’t. I think I can say there’s enough conflict, the stakes are higher now between him and Mason than they’ve ever been. It’s not about an airplane anymore, it’s not about a bar anymore, it’s not about a black market I can get this and you can’t kind of thing. The stakes are incredibly high. Finally, Pope’s out for blood and that’s a neat thing.”

What are you going to miss the most about playing Pope after so many years?

Colin Cunningham: “What a great part. I mean, really, what a great part. I’d show up and put on the tattoos and put my wig on, put on the leather jacket and the boots and just become somebody else. The writing was so great for Pope. I just loved being a part of that show. It was just a great part, and that’s when you’re lucky. I remember Jack Palance, one of my favorite quotes he says, ‘There are no great actors, there’s just great parts.’

I got lucky. I got really, really lucky because I could be playing an accountant in the next cop show that comes around and I’ll look like this. And it’s cool – I’ve never been a fan of just me. I look in the mirror and I’m bored out of my mind so I’ll grow this or do that, bleach it or shave it or wig it or whatever. And it’s just fun. I don’t like looking like me.”

What was it like shooting the very last scene?

Colin Cunningham: “It was surprising in that not so much the scene… The scene was again it was a matter of trying not to be nervous. Don’t make it a big deal. Don’t make it a thing. That’s not how you showed up on your first day and it shouldn’t be any different on your last. There’s the lines, there’s your piece of tape, stand on that and then say your lines and that was it. But I was surprised that when I was wrapped I couldn’t speak. I really couldn’t. I wanted to say thank you to everybody and I couldn’t get it out. It was a trip. I got a frog in my throat because it was like, ‘This is it. Five years, man.'”

Pope has always been about survival but he doesn’t cross the line of making any deals with the aliens? Why do you think that is?

Colin Cunningham: “Well, I think from the beginning – and it was nice to see it touch base throughout the seasons – the quote was, ‘There’s only one thing I hate more than you, Mason, and that’s the skitters.’ So I think he’s the ultimate – how can I put this? I’d say he really hates illegal aliens. Those undocumented aliens coming in from outer space, man, we’ve got to stop that sh*t. Not cool!”

You’ve had the chance to do some amazing stunt work. What stands out?

Colin Cunningham: [Indicating two fingers] “These two scars stand out from the seasons. This one I sliced open really, really nice all in the middle of a take. I think that was sliced on a knife. That one right there is Sarah Carter’s M-16 or P-4 or M-4 or whatever, and that was a bad one. It was a trip because you’re in the scene and you’re holding your finger and you can feel an inch of it dangling.

You’ve got to lift it back and hold it and then get through the scene. And then I thought I could do another one but that wasn’t doing it so I had to go to the med thing and wrap it up. It’s one of those where you have to keep your hand up because you can feel your own heartbeat pulsing through it. You’ve got to lift it up. And then the bandage became red and we couldn’t get it to stop bleeding.”

Also of Interest: Interview with Drew Roy and Sarah Carter / Cast Photo Gallery





‘Hotel Transylvania 2’ New Trailer Introduces Vlad

Hotel Transylvania 2 Trailer #2 with Vlad
Dennis (Asher Blinkoff) and Dracula (Adam Sandler) with Wayne (Steve Buscemi) and Frank (Kevin James) looking on in ‘Hotel Transylvania 2’ (Photo© 2015 Sony Pictures Animation, Inc.)

Sony Pictures Animation’s new trailer for Hotel Transylvania 2 finds Dracula attempting to teach his grandson, Dennis, how to be a vampire so that his daughter won’t move to California. The new trailer also finds Dracula (Adam Sandler) turning to his dad, Vlad (voiced by Mel Brooks), for help in how to make Dennis into a scary monster.

Directed by Genndy Tartakovsky, the voice cast includes Sandler, Brooks, Andy Samberg, Selena Gomez, Kevin James, Fran Drescher, Steve Buscemi, Molly Shannon, David Spade, and Keegan-Michael Key.

And for those wondering about the songs featured in the trailer, “I’m in Love with a Monster” is sung by Fifth Harmony. Lady Gaga’s “Born This Way” also helps set the mood.

Hotel Transylvania 2 will open in theaters on September 25, 2015.

The Plot: Everything seems to be changing for the better at Hotel Transylvania… Dracula’s rigid monster-only hotel policy has finally relaxed, opening up its doors to human guests. But behind closed coffins, Drac is worried that his adorable half-human, half-vampire grandson, Dennis, isn’t showing signs of being a vampire. So while Mavis is busy visiting her human in-laws with Johnny – and in for a major cultural shock of her own – “Vampa” Drac enlists his friends Frank, Murray, Wayne and Griffin to put Dennis through a “monster-in-training” boot camp.

But little do they know that Drac’s grumpy and very old, old, old-school dad Vlad is about to pay a family visit to the hotel. And when Vlad finds out that his great-grandson is not a pure blood – and humans are now welcome at Hotel Transylvania – things are going to get batty!

Watch the trailer:





Watch the New ‘Ray Donovan’ Season Three Trailer

Showtime’s Ray Donovan kicks off season three on July 12, 2015 at 9pm ET/PT with Katie Holmes and Ian McShane joining the cast in guest starring roles, and the new trailer actually includes scenes with both Holmes and McShane along with series regulars Liev Schreiber and Jon Voight. The cast of season three also includes Paula Malcomson, Elliott Gould, Eddie Marsan, Dash Mihok, Steven Bauer, Katherine Moennig, Pooch Hall, Kerris Dorsey, and Devon Bagby.

Season 3’s Plot:

Ray Donovan stars two-time Golden Globe and Emmy nominee Liev Schreiber as LA’s best professional fixer, the man called in to make the city’s celebrities, superstar athletes, and business moguls’ most complicated and combustible situations go away. Season 3 finds Ray adrift from his family and those closest to him, while he focuses on his business and desires to be his own boss.

Meanwhile, his father, Mickey (Voight), who had narrowly escaped last season’s heist debacle, finds himself charting a similar course to build his own empire.

Woody Harrelson to Star in ‘LBJ’ for Director Rob Reiner

Woody Harrelson and Rob Reiner Team Up on LBJ
Woody Harrelson (Photo by Richard Chavez / Showbiz Junkies)

Oscar nominee Woody Harrelson (The People vs Larry Flynt, The Messenger) will be teaming up with Oscar nominated director Rob Reiner (A Few Good Men) on LBJ, with Harrelson set to play Lyndon Baines Johnson. The political drama is set up with Acacia Entertainment, Savvy Media Holdings, Castle Rock Entertainment, and Star Thrower Entertainment and was written by 2014 Black List winner Joey Hartstone. Reiner, Matthew George, Liz Glotzer, Michael R. Williams, Tim White, and Trevor White (the Whites developed the project) are producing.

“During the sixties, I was a hippy and Lyndon Johnson was my president,” said Reiner. “At the time LBJ was the target of most of my generation’s anti-Vietnam-War anger. But as time has passed and my understanding of political realities has grown; I’ve come to see LBJ in a very different light. He was a complex man; a combination of brilliant political instinct, raw strength, ambition, and deep insecurities. The strength and power of persuasion that he showed to his colleagues existed alongside of a soft, almost childlike quality that perhaps only Lady Bird got to see. His life’s path was nothing short of Shakespearean. From the poor hill country of West Texas to the corridors of power in Washington, he used his brilliant political acumen to pass the most groundbreaking civil rights legislation of the twentieth century. And had it not been for the Vietnam War, I believe he would have gone down as one of America’s greatest presidents.”

Filming will take place in New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Dallas, and Washington DC beginning in September 2015.

The Plot:

The script centers around the political upheaval that Vice President Johnson faced when he was thrust into the presidency at the hands of an assassin’s bullet in November 1963. With political battles on both sides of the aisle, Johnson struggles to heal a nation and secure his presidency by passing Kennedy’s historic Civil Rights Act.


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‘Breaking Bad’s Aaron Paul to Star in ‘The Way’

Aaron Paul to Star in The Way
Aaron Paul (Photo by Richard Chavez / Showbiz Junkies)

Aaron Paul has committed to a starring role in Hulu’s original series The Way created by writer/executive producer Jessica Goldberg. Jason Katims and Michelle Lee are also on board as executive producers on the project, and Paul will serve as a producer with his Lucid Road Productions.

The Way marks Paul’s return to TV following his Emmy-winning turn as Jesse Pinkman in the critically acclaimed series Breaking Bad. Paul joins Michelle Monaghan who was previously announced as starring in the dramatic series.

The Plot:

The Way examines a family at the center of a controversial movement struggling with relationships, marriage and power, with each episode taking an in-depth look at what it means to choose between the life we live and the life we want. The series is slated to premiere this winter.

Paul will play Eddie Cleary, a convert to a controversial movement with a wayward past. He’s a husband (to “Sarah Cleary” played by Michelle Monaghan) and father who suffers a crisis of faith when all that he’s come to accept as truth in his life is fundamentally challenged.


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