老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料

Skip to content

Disabled actors shine in basketball comedy 'Champions'

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 The new comedy 鈥淐hampions鈥 stars Woody Harrelson and Kaitlin Olson, but the veteran actors have tough competition for the spotlight with some charismatic newcomers.
20230308100320-6408a88ca84a2d2b13800656jpeg
This image released by Focus Features shows Kaitlin Olson in a scene from the comedy "Champions." (Shauna Townley/Focus Features via AP)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 The new comedy 鈥淐hampions鈥 stars Woody Harrelson and Kaitlin Olson, but the veteran actors have tough competition for the spotlight with some charismatic newcomers.

Harrelson plays a college basketball coach with a bad temper who鈥檚 facing jail time or community service for some bad behavior. To avoid punishment, he finds himself coaching a basketball team of young adults with intellectual disabilitie , who help him rediscover the joy of the game.

Harrelson鈥檚 agent and another producer wanted to remake the original film, called 鈥淐ampeones鈥 鈥 Spain鈥檚 biggest box-office hit in 2018 鈥 and thought the actor and basketball lover would be a great fit. Harrelson loved the story and signed on as star and executive producer, and tapped his longtime friend Bobby Farrelly to direct.

Casting was challenging as the producers wanted the athletes played by disabled actors, who also needed basketball skills. They auditioned hundreds of people before finding the 10 standout personalities who make up the Friends basketball team.

Harrelson says he wasn鈥檛 sure what to expect on the first day of shooting. 鈥淥nce I came in and met everybody and we started at it, I was like, 鈥極h, this is going to be so much fun!鈥 And it really was,鈥 Harrelson told the Associated Press. 鈥淭hey taught me that they can nail the lines, no problem. But also they just taught me, just the great fluidity of being who they are.鈥

The 10 actors have different intellectual challenges but many found their comedy chops on screen.

鈥淓verybody brought something so unique and different to it,鈥 Olson said. 鈥淎nd parts of their actual personalities shone through, which is probably why they 鈥 got the role in the first place. There was a lot鈥 of wonderful acting, but there鈥檚 also a lot of wonderful just being themselves, and it gave us an opportunity to just play off of that.鈥

The film was a chance for Harrelson to collaborate again with Farrelly after making the bowling comedy 鈥淜ingpin鈥 in 1996. The director said he thinks audiences are more open to disabled actors on screen and seeing their stories. He recalled making the 2005 movie 鈥淭he Ringer鈥 with his brother, Pete Farrelly, where Johnny Knoxville infiltrated the Special Olympics. Farrelly said they cast nondisabled actors in disabled roles back then.

鈥淲e would never do that nowadays so the world has changed in that regard,鈥 Farrelly said. 鈥淲e played that a lot broader. It was鈥 much more of a kind of a goofy comedy. This one here, it鈥檚 set in reality. These are all very real people. Before, we didn鈥檛 think anything of it. It was just what people were doing. Dustin Hoffman played 鈥楻ain Man,鈥 you know? But nowadays I think we鈥檝e come to realize that disabled actors have a hard time getting roles ... so the parts that that they do have in the Hollywood world, it should go to them.鈥

Some of the actors playing the Friends team members attended the film鈥檚 New York premiere last week and for many it was their first time on a red carpet. James Day Keith, a Special Olympian for basketball, who plays Benny in the film said he likes setting a positive example for other disabled actors. 鈥淚 do see myself as a role model because seeing what I did will probably make them want to do it themselves because there鈥檚 no limit to success,鈥 Keith said.

Casey Metcalfe, who plays Marlon, said he hopes disabled actors have a place in Hollywood going forward. 鈥淭he more people we have in this industry who are diverse, like myself ... not just racially diverse ... but you鈥檙e neurodiverse. I think that鈥檚 exactly, you know, what the industry needs,鈥 Metcalfe said.

Some of the actors, like Madison Tevlin who plays the only woman on the team, said learning the basketball moves was harder than acting.

鈥淚鈥檓 really natural on camera when it comes to acting, but with basketball, I never played before 鈥 so the team helped me a lot.鈥

Olson, who gave big hugs to all the Friends at the premiere, called working with them 鈥渞eally inspiring.鈥

鈥淭hey showed up every single day, 100%. They鈥檙e ready to work, ready to do the best that they could, ready to take in all the information. And it was really beautiful,鈥 Olson said. 鈥淵ou work with a lot of people sometimes who are just like, 鈥榯his is just a job and they鈥檙e getting it done.鈥 These guys were like, 鈥橶e鈥檙e here. We鈥檙e ready to milk every single ounce out of it.鈥

鈥淐hampions鈥 is in theaters Friday.

___

Associated Press producer John Carucci contributed to this report.

Brooke Lefferts, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks