Fans of Robin Williams sure have their evaluations about what his best film was. Honestly, there is not any shortage of amazing Robin Williams films that you can track down on numerous streaming services. While Hook may not have been the critics' favorite movie, it positive moved a whole era of moviegoers. So many outstanding other folks, including Travis Scott, credit Robin Williams as an inspiration, however his efficiency in Hook really moved children. He was Peter Pan, in any case.
According to a fascinating expose by UPROXX about the actors who played the Lost Boys in Steven Spielberg's Hook, Robin did extra than just inspire the audiences. Here's how his young co-stars skilled the beloved actor.
In the disclose through UPROXX, Dante Basco (Rufio), Thomas Tulak (Too Small), Raushan Hammond (Thud Butt), James Madio (Don't Ask), and Brett Willis (Later) were all interviewed about their studies working with Robin Williams. While in addition they worked with legends like Dustin Hoffman and Julia Roberts, the then-kids spent most of their time on set with Robin, who was already extremely well-known at the time.
"Robin will always have a place in my heart because he was never like Mr. Professional Actor," Thomas Tulak defined to UPROXX. "He was just a big kid. Of all the kids on the set, he was the one kid that I got along with the most even though he was a middle-aged man."
By the sounds of it, Robin Williams was exactly what you would be expecting him to be.
"He took us all under his wing and he had this amazing ability to keep us all entertained and just at the end of this rope waiting for any little thing he could do so he could laugh. It kept us all together," James Madio defined.
Of path, Robin Williams had a natural means of relating to children. He may stay on the subject of any individual entertained. The adults loved his edgy, wild, and completely sure sense of humor and the children for sure gravitated towards the latter. But a couple of of the stars could relate to him on a extra grownup degree, particularly the eldest, Dante Basco, who played Rufio.
"Of course I grew up with Mork and Mindy, I grew up with so many of his films, but to this day one of my favorite films is Dead Poet’s Society," Dante mentioned of Robin's work. "So we got to talk about poetry in our off time and he would talk about poets and poems he loved, I would talk about poems I loved and I started writing poetry during that time. It was really fascinating."
The youth cherished playing with Robin in the treehouse set. Robin would even in finding tactics of serving to them conquer their fears and insecurities. Of path, he did this in the maximum charming manner imaginable.
"They had me put on a harness, and they had a giant aircraft cable going up my pants so, just in case I fell off, I would dangle by the cable. And Robin Williams looked at me, because I was terrified, and he said, 'Hey, buddy, don’t worry. If you fall, you’ll just be dangling by your underwear,'" Raushan Hammond said.
"[Robin] would come in and knock on my trailer after a day of shooting and my mom would answer, and he’d stand there with his hands behind his back, 'Can Tommy come out to play?'" Thomas Tulak mentioned. "Then we’d go and I’d have more fun playing with him than anyone else on the set. There was no air of, oh this is Robin Williams, star-struck. He was just a big kid who was a best friend."
Robin additionally acted like a dad to a couple of the teenagers, particularly Raushan Hammond who discovered himself being roughed up by means of some of his co-stars.
"Robin Williams would see this going on in-between shots and he would come over, like he was my dad, and he would turn the other kids straight," Raushan mentioned. "It was really surprising because we always saw Robin Williams always joking, always laughing, always doing the craziest things. And when he would do that all the kids would stop because they were so shocked that the 10-year-old child in him would stop for a minute or two."
Like every unmarried one of Robin's fans, the actors who performed The Lost Boys in Hook took his loss of life arduous. Perhaps they took it even more difficult as they built a private dating with him. But like us, they most commonly saw a man complete of happiness, now not the one plagued via the illness that ultimately inspired him to take his existence.
"I took Robin’s death very, very hard," Thomas admitted. "I think I locked myself away and shut off my internet for days. I did nothing but watch his movies and cry for days."
"I was shocked and definitely saddened, " James Madio mentioned to UPROXX. "It was hard for me to understand. I only remember him as this man full of life and happiness and he was giving to others and would lighten up a room and he’s incredibly infectious with people and just so warm and engaging with you. I know these are all words a lot of people use about him and they were true. I’m not one to speak otherwise, and it was tough for me to understand that someone with so much and how real that was and how real that disease can be."
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