
James Franco spoke to THR about his adaptation of William Faulkner’s novel about an impoverished Mississippi family. "Its essence is something that was relevant 80 years ago and is relevant today and was relevant 2,000 years ago," he said. The film premiered in the Un Certain Regard section.
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Ahead of his upcoming Broadway debut in Of Mice and Men — opposite Chris O’Dowd, Leighton Meester and Jim Parrack, and directed by Anna D. Shapiro, who won the Tony for the stage production of August: Osage County — James Franco stopped by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on Friday. He was a bit loopy.
STORY: James Franco, Chris O’Dowd Pair Up on Stage in ‘Of Mice and Men’
“I feel kind of out of it right now; I just came from rehearsal,” Franco told Jimmy Fallon, rubbing his eyes. “I’ve been shooting a short film at nights, rehearsing during the day, and now I’m here.”
Franco plays George, the uneducated but quick-witted friend and protector of simple-minded Lennie (O’Dowd), a gentle soul unaware of his own strength, in John Steinbeck‘s tragic story of two itinerant workers seeking new opportunities in Depression-era California. Previews begin March 19 at the Longacre Theatre, with the official opening scheduled for April 16.
Fallon suggested that the hyper-productive multihyphenate Franco wouldn’t be up for a stage production, since it entails repeating the same lines each night as the same character for weeks at a time. But Franco clarified: “There’s something really refreshing about that where you feel a deeper connection to the character. I’ve heard other actors say it, too – you realize how deep you can go into a character.”
STORY: James Franco on Shia LaBeouf’s Behavior: ‘Clever or Pathological?’
He continued, “In movies, we hardly rehearse. It’s like, you’re ready to go when you’re there, you only ostensibly have to get it right only once, and then you move on. Here, you’re etching it, and there’s something kind of zen about that.”
Franco spoke on his upcoming poetry book Directing Herbert White, and gave more details on that short film he’s been working on. “It’s Harmony Korine, who directed Spring Breakers — when he was 18, he wrote Kids, and this is a short that he wrote around that time that he gave to [director] Larry Clark to get the job to write Kids. It was never made, so I’m making it now.”
Email: Ashley.Lee@THR.com
Twitter: @cashleelee
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