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"The funniest man in Italy" it says in yellow on the cover and in the contents page, under the heading
FRIENDS
Roberto Benigni by Tom Waits
A great clown meets an old pal with a gravelly voice
(funny business)
Roberto Benigni, the new Clouseau waits for Tom Waits to pour the coffee and ask the questions.
(photo of Benigni seated, doubled over, head laughing aside at us, thick black specs dangling from left hand by his shin, caption "Clown by law")
"I ham a good egg," Roberto Benigni claimed in Jim Jarmusch's "Down By Law" - and, as if there were any doubt, the Tuscan Toto went on to prove it as the sheep-loving taxi driver in Jarmusch's "Night On Earth". In between, he acted in Fellini's "The Voice Of The Moon" and directed and starred in "The Little Devil" and last fall's "Johnny Stecchino", the most successful Italian film of all time; this spring, he appears as Inspector Clouseau's bungling offspring in "Son Of The Pink Panther", a casting director's dream.
When this good egg was recently in Hollywood, we put him next to a sizzling piece of bacon, Tom Waits, who had shared a cell with Benigni (and John Lurie) in "Down By Law". Waits follows last year's "Bone Machine" album with "The Black Rider" (Island) in April and his role in "Bram Stoker's Dracula with one in Robert Altman's upcoming "Short Cuts". Samuel Beckett didn't write the dialogue of his conversation with Benigni, but 'Godot' was definitely in the details.
TOM WAITS: The one thing that makes you such a gifted comedian and actor is that you have a sense of music about everything you do. That's what I love, when you hit your boot and knee and your chest...
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Yes, yes.
TOM WAITS: When you're directing, how do you keep the humor and keep the life? How do you keep the wings on all the birds?
ROBERTO BENIGNI: That is a very good question. So you think to direct is to fly? To move legs from the ground?
TOM WAITS: To leave the ground and to soar. I don't know how you do it, because in films you deal with a machine. My theory about songs is that most of them don't like to be recorded, they like to be wild. And I think very human moments in film sometimes don't like to be captured by the camera. The camera is like a butterfly net. You have to capture the butterfly without hurting it.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Yes. I think this is a very good sensation you have about the movies. I feel exactly the same. Because when I am shooting it, the romantic thing about a movie is it's the opposite of theater: (sic) you can't control it. You never know when it's good or not. Because the movie is choosing what is beautiful. When you are acting, if the crew is laughing very much, this doesn't mean that you are doing it right. For a movie, a laughing crew is very dangerous.
TOM WAITS: So, ideally, the camera is laughing and the crew is silent?
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Right! A lot of the time on "Johnny Stecchino" I remember the crew didn't laugh. But then the audience rioted. I was really flabbergasted. Very discombobulated. And always the movie is choosing you. You can't say, "I am a good actor for a movie." Only the screen can say "This is good actor - I like him." I never go with my director of photography to watch rushes, because a movie must be undisturbed until the end. Like a watermelon. You open it - "Oh, it's red. Hah! It's red. It's red!" Heh-hah!
TOM WAITS: They say that if you tap on a watermelon and it has a certain sound, it's a red watermelon.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Hah! I tap the camera. This sounds very good, yes.
TOM WAITS:Yeah, it's red. But not always. Sometimes it's rotten. With insects living inside of it.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Revolting.
TOM WAITS: I think that's a good metaphor, the watermelon.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: There it is - it's fresh, it's sweet, it's very red and good. But it's true, about a movie choosing you. It happens a lot of times that very bad actors become big. They not good actors. They are just in a good movie, a good watermelon.
TOM WAITS: Just light flicking through a machine.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: And your metaphor with the music is good, because the music is like a free jail. It you read the script of Bach, you see music is like mathematic, but when you hear it, it seems like something completely free, improvisation. Like in your songs. My favourite musicians, Bach and Waits.
TOM WAITS: My thing is the best songs come out of the ground, just like a potato. You plan and plan, and then you wait for the potato - and watermelon, same.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Your potato is for music, watermelon is for film. So when you are doing a soundtrack, you are doing a potato for a watermelon.
TOM WAITS: And the tape machine is like the camera. There are things that go into the machine that are improved, and there are other things that go into the machine that are lost. It's not like a science. It's like a mystery. More coffee?
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Yes. I like coffee. Black coffee. I have a wonderful jet lag, yes.
TOM WAITS: You like jet lag?
RB I love it. Jet lag is one of my favourite things in the world. Yes. I woke up this morning, and it was 4:30, and I felt so good, but I didn't know what time it was. I thought it was the sun that was very dark. I couldn't understand what happened.
TOM WAITS: It's good to be lost.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Yes. Lost with yourself.
TOM WAITS: Because film and music are expeditions and sometimes you have no map. You just go drifting, and you go many days without water or food. When I am making music, I don't change my clothes for two full months.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: You know who did this, too?Michelangelo. He painted the Sistine Chapel. He never washed himself, he never changed clothes, especially shoes and socks.
TOM WAITS: Yeah?
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Michelangelo tried to take the socks off and skin came off with the socks. He never changed his clothes until he was finished, and was completely revolting.
TOM WAITS: Sometimes when you finish, you take the clothes and you put them in a pile, and you burn them. You make a fire of all your clothes. Sometimes to be a leader you must be a child, you must be a stinking idiot.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Absolutely. You must be a stinking idiot.
TOM WAITS: You know what I mean? The courage of a child to say, "I smell nothing," and to go into it with eyes open. But more important than liking movies, it's important for the movies to like you.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Right! I like watermelons. But it's more important that the watermelons like me. We started with this theory - the movies choose you. Movies decide if you are a great actor.
TOM WAITS: Yeah. We've come full circle.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: This is it. This is like Bach's music.
TOM WAITS: Exactly.
ROBERTO BENIGNI: Correct. Very good. Without meaning to, we finish where we started.
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