Showing posts with label Dan Akroyd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dan Akroyd. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 March 2015

Going Ape with Don McLeod

So, there I was, mooching about the Bronx Zoo, minding my own business, not gettin' under any ones feet, doin' my own thing, not botherin' no one, well I say not botherin'...  I do like to taunt the animals, you know?  In their cages like, wrong I know, but I had nuttin' better to do all day and what the hey... Huh?!

Born and bred Newyorker I am and I love this this city, I love the people, I love the food and I love this god damn zoo... I had retired early, I say retired... I was kinda' removed from my old place of employment, shall we say, force-ably?... And that's why I'm here every day...  But that's not my story here, that's for another day... No, this is my story today... 


So there I was screaming at the lions, laughing raucously at those giraffes and their freakin' necks - Boy, it must take an age for the food to get to their bellies - I'd shout at the sloths for being lazy and mimic the penguins and their stupid walk... Boy they do walk stupid! - But the thing I loved doin' best, my all time favourite thing was to watch those Gorillas... Those dumb bums, sitting there scratching'and pickin' at each other... And boy they hate it when I watch them, especially when I sit there, chomping on a ripe, tasty, yella banana... Oh yes, they hate that! They scream and they yell and they bang on that bullet proof glass, but they ain't gonna' get me, no sir... I am safe as freakin' houses, sittin' there on my bench...  I say my bench because when I sit on it, for some reason no one wants to sit near me... "Do I offend you?" I shout as they pass... But I get no answer, but I don't care, they can go and suck a lemon... This is my zoo and I can sit where I want to... But those Gorillas, they can't sit here, oh no, they can't get me, I am safe, I am happy... Or so I thought... Yes, that was until the day when one came and sat right down beside me... 


Ah crap, I thought... I've been doin' this most days for years...  He must have been pissed? Was this was to be my demise?  Oh lord let him be quick and merciful... 


I screwed up my eyes waiting for the pounding sting of the punch, but nuttin'.... I looked up... He was just sittin' there... doing nuttin'...  I knew these creatures were dumb, but come on... and how the hell did he get out anyway?... I stared at him, curious as to how he did it then suddenly he moved his hands to his head... Now at this point, I am big enough and ugly enough to admit that I was scared, I was petrified... 'Was this to be my end?' I thought. 
But no, instead of viciously mauling me as I had expected, the gorilla just removed his head? I am not jokin' around here... I kid you not... as god is my witness, mama mia! that ape took off his freakin' head and you know what was underneath? Do you? A head, a human head! Yes, that gorilla was a man... In a suit... A gorilla suit! But not just any man either...No! No wonder he was so convincing... This was Don McLeod... Apeman extraordinare, and a  man as famous for being an ape as I was for throwing up in the kids play area... Now that, my friend, that was a fun day... 

And he didn't even seem bothered when I started talking to him... Mind you he also didn't seem too bothered when I started itching my butt...

So I aksed him....


So, what do you need to bring out your inner gorilla?
Usually the pay check is a major motivation.  But on a performance level, I remove thoughts as much as possible and just try to be in a more primal state of mind.  I should add that having studied gorillas at the San Diego Zoo was a big help in understand the rhythms of movement and the gentle stillness of these wonderful creatures.

I heard that you stole the part of a gorilla called Otto… Because you were a better gorilla than a real gorilla?
This was when American Tourister Luggage wanted to remake a series of TV commercials, and were no longer able to use a real gorilla.  I wouldn’t say I was better than a real gorilla ... just more able to take direction and also more willing to execute actions on cue.”

Where do you get the suits? Are they specially tailored for you?
 “There are only a few special effects shops in the world that have made a professional anatomically correct gorilla suit.  My first suit (1980) for American Tourister was made by Oscar winner Rick Baker.  The Godfather of gorilla suits I should add.  And yes, the are “tailor-made” for me.  A body and head cast are taken and then a spandex muscle suit is built.  A fibreglass head piece is made from my head cast and then small motors (called servos) are attached to the inner shell.  These control the gorilla brows, nose and mouth.  Arms (both short & long) are made and feet.  The fur used is very costly and is mostly synthetic fibres with bits of Yak hair added for texture.  Add black contacts ... and bingo!  You have a gorilla suit.  The professional suits cost anywhere from $20,00 to $50,000 ... and even up to $100,000 plus for one of Rick Baker’s movie suits.”


What’s it like inside?
 “Very hot!  You sweat like crazy in the suit, as hardly any air gets in.  You are encased in a cloak of spandex, thick foam padding and the outer fur suit, along with a rubber arms, feet and a head full of sculpted teeth, tongue and foam latex topped with hand-punched hairs and no cherry on top!  There is a wonderful sense of loosing the human self ... and really becoming something else, as you have no normal reference points like seeing your own human limbs, or clothing.”

 Have you ever fainted?

 It can get up to 120 degrees on a hot day with a lot of running.  I’ve been hospitalised on several occasions due to heat exhaustion.  I nearly died working on a film (Tanya’s Island) in Puerto Rico.  I had lost most of my body fluids due to lack of sleep, extreme humidity, too many drinks in the bar the night before, and being left in the suit for 4 hours without a break.  I awoke in a hospital with tubes coming out of me and my heart rate was racing to the danger point.”


Do you have any special cooling methods?
 “I have used several.  I cool suit, which is basically Ice-packs inserted into a vest worn under the muscle suit or on a few jobs I’ve been hooked up to motorised ice box which forces cold air into a tube-lined vest.  But I rarely use them as it takes so much time to fiddle with the hookups and sometimes it gets too cold and the dramatic change in temperate can lead to serious health issues ... like pneumonia. 
The actor Kevin Peter Hall who starred as Harry in the TV series Harry and the Hendersons died as a result of complications from being in a creature suit for weeks on end with intense shifts in body temperature.”

How many costumes have you had? 
 “I’m on my 5th costume right now ... with frequent upgrades to head, arms, feet as needed.”

And where do you get the suits? Are they specially tailored for you?
 “I have friends who a major Hollywood special effects experts.  They have built the suits for me ... sometimes for a movie role and then I can have the suit once the job is finished.  My friend David Miller (creator of the original Feddie Kruger makeup) made the first version of the suit I now use, and Robert Devine has done all the upgrades and repairs on the current suit.”

Crap, really?! That's bad man.... 


So, what special mechanisms do you have? 
 “Brows, nose and lips are controlled by Remote Controls (the kind used to run a toy car or mini-drone type flying device  I can control the opening and closing of the mouth and the eyes are my own, so naturally I control those ... most of time.  The materials used have changed a lot over the years.  Better fur, lighter foam padding, and more subtle use of the motors used to animate the face.  But these days most gorillas you see in movies are all done through CGI (Computer Generated Imagery) and Motion Capture ... where an actor wears a unitard with sensors and a computer captures his/her movements and then they are generated by a software program that gives the gorilla life.  (Perter Jackson’s King Kong is a prime example).  I did a recent project in Seoul, Korea called Mr. Go ... a film about a baseball playing gorilla.  All done with CGI and Motion Capture.  I trained the actors in gorilla movement, butoh, mime and baseball (I was a college baseball player before I gave it up for the theatre.)”

A baseball playing Gorilla? Sounds crazy... But then again..?

I suppose they couldn't train a real Gorilla to play baseball... Hell in my experience you can't train a gorilla to do anything but sit on his fat butt all day eatin' fruit and scratchin'.... But I wondered why did he think that he worked better than the real thing?
 “Several reasons ... real gorillas are an endangered species and just aren’t available to be used in movement specific projects.  If I’m told to go sit on a rock or jump up and down or open a briefcase ... I can do it.  A real gorilla would just roll over and take a nap or likely move away.”

And when did you decide you liked being an animal better than a human? 
“I’ve always preferred the company of animals to that of most humans.  My first exposure to portraying a gorilla was in theatre school in a mime class.  I was assigned to choose an animal and bring my “animal” to class for a brief improvisation.  Once I got to understand more about gorillas I was hooked.”

Now I knew this guy from all the movies he'd been in... Yes I go to the movies, before they kick me out for being noisy and throwing popcorn that is... So how did that all start?
“There was a low-budget movie being filmed in the mountains of Big Bear in Southern California. They needed ape-like early men for the lead roles.  I tried out and got the job.  That was in the Winter of 1979.”

And you played a gorilla for three months in Japan?! Is that true or are you freakin' kidding me?
“There is a theme park in Southern Japan called Mitsui Greenland.  They had a live show that featured me as The Crazy Gorilla.  I was presented as a real gorilla, and rolled out onto the amphitheatre stage in a huge steel cage by a team of Japanese stagehands.  My scantily-clad assistant Sandra ran me thru a number of tricks:  i.e.  “what is 2 plus 3?” And I would pound the cage floor 5 times to great applause.  Then the tricks got more complicated and the crowd (still thinking I was a real ape) went wild when I could answer complicated math problems or point to body parts etc.  The show ended with me being released from the cage and doing a bit of break dancing to a popular Japanese J-pop song.  In the end I took off my head and revealed myself to be just a sweaty Caucasian actor from Hollywood.”

Then these two chicks walked past the bench, I smiled at them, a big toothy grin and politely said hello... I was an utter gentleman, but then for no reason these two looked shocked and ran off... I think it must have been Don... I'm mean a gorilla with human head? That's the thing of nightmares, I tell you... So I aksed...

So, has anybody truly freaked when they saw you? I mean really freaked?
 “Yes ... many times.  I’ve caused a riot in a Tokyo department store, when I accidentally scared a group of school girls on a tour, I’ve caused people to run into glass doors in American shopping malls, and when
working on the TV series Tarzan The Epic Adventures in South Africa I caused some of the local crew members to run screaming into the bush when I first came out of the dressing room.”

This did make me laugh! I had people scared of me, but they usually just give me the look... You know the one, like they've had a bad cannoli... But I only dreamed of screaming! When I had recovered I carried on with my questions.

And how many times have you been mistaken for a real gorilla? Has it ever landed anyone in trouble? 
 “American Tourister took me to the Miami Zoo for a promotion on time.  I was to be filmed outside the gorilla cage with the real gorillas next to me.  Everything went south when it was determined the male & female gorillas were trying to mate and was a major distraction.  I was rushed away by the zoo staff.  On another ill-fated TV news event, I was snuck into the Los Angeles Zoo and came out of the bushes next to the gorilla compound ... with me on the outside with the tourists.  Everyone panicked and ran in all directions.  The trainers thought a real gorilla had escaped and chased me in a golf cart with a tranquilliser gun.  I ran trying to tear off my ape mask and was yelling “don’t shoot ... I’m an actor in a suit” but they couldn’t hear me due to chaos.  I was detained in the zoo jail for several hours ... and abandoned by the TV news crew as they didn’t have permission to even be in the zoo with a news camera.”

You’ve been in so many crazily fantantastic comedies as a gorilla, including two of my personal favourites… 'Trading Places' and 'The man with two brains', but what was Ackroyd/ Murphy/ Martins’ (and all) initial reactions when they saw you in costume?
 “The reaction is always extreme curiosity mixed with laughter and a hesitation to get to close if though they know I’m a man in a suit.  Eddie Murphy put my ape head on and ran around the NY set ... telling everyone he was getting back to his primal roots.”

Did your they treat you differently in costume?
 “Yes ... the minute the gorilla head goes on I’m no longer Don McLeod the actor ... I’m sort of a semi-real animal that people can talk to and I talk back.  But they all end up cracking up and saying” I can’t believe I’m talking to an Ape.”  Once the suit is on ... actors/directors immediately look for my assistant if they want to ask something specific ... as though I can no longer understand them once the gorilla head goes on.”

Was it hard to keep a straight… ape face?
 “I laugh a lot inside the ape suit, but you can’t tell from looking at me, unless I’m physicalising the body movements.”

You acted alongside so many, what were they all like? Do you have any stories for us?
 “Eddie Murphy, Ackroyd, & Jamie Lee where great fun ... as they all are/were true professionals and very talented and funny to be around.  Steve Martin was very different from what I expected ... very stern and humourless when not filming.  
Robin Williams (Hook) was one of my favourite actors to work with.  He was incredibly humble and very interested in what was going on around him.  He was interested in what others were about ... not just himself.”

I knew it... I just knew it!




Now you and Beeks had a pretty romantic ending to that infamous scene in 'Trading Places', so you like to think that they did end up make sweet music together
 “I don’t want to think too much about
that possibility ... he was never really my type.  I was actually kind of hoping they’d put Jamie Lee Curtis in the cage with me ... but it wasn’t in the script.  But in Tanya’s Island I did indeed get the girl .... both literally and physically.”




Ha ha! But how fun was it to film that scene?
 “Yes ... famous humping scene.  Beeks (the actor) was not at all thrilled to be forever remember on film as the guy who got humped by a gorilla.  I’m being kind ... he was a pain in the ass (pun intended) during the whole scene.  




And what direction did John Landis give you? 

Landis just kept yelling “Hump him harder ... give it to him good!” 

Ha!

And the laugh! I like to think that’s how all gorillas laugh! Was that your idea?
The “laugh” was mostly done with body language/mime awareness on my part.  Gorillas can be very playful but they don’t laugh as such.  There is a great clip on YouTube of Koko the gorilla being tickled by the late Robin Williams, and she does almost appear to be laughing ... so perhaps I stand corrected.”

Now you haven't just done comedy. or played gorillas... You've also played a werewolf, a shadow and a… Greibbel… ?
“Yes ... I was one of the lead werewolves in the classic film The Howling.  In Hook I played Peter Pan’s Shadow and the Greibbel was a fantasay creature created by my good friend Rob Bottin (Total Recall, Robo Cop, The Thing, Legend).  My friend Mick Garris wrote the script, Joe Dante directed and it was part of Steven Speilbergs’s TV series called Amazing Stories.”




And what was Hayley Mills like to work with?
 “Hayley Mills was a real sweetheart ... as a young boy I had a big crush on her, so it was a joy to work with her after all those years.”






In the howling you played a werewolf! 
“I loved acting in the Howling, as I’d always liked the old werewolf movies and the Howling was (at the time) a ground-breaking special effects wonder with all those transformations by Rob Bottin and his crew.  The makeup did take a few hours each day, but once it was on it really was like wearing a second skin ... you hardly noticed it.  The chango-heads as we called them were puppets operated by cables and condom-bladders which were inflated on cue to give the effect of the actor’s face/neck expanding and transforming into a werewolf.  (All the Eddie Quest changes were done in a single shot, which was a leap ahead from the old stop, paste hair and cut back techniques we saw on actors like Oliver Reed and of course Lon Chaney & others.)”

You also doubled for Jack Nicholson is The witches of Eastwick, why didn’t he perform the character himself? He’s no stranger to prosthetics…
 “Well some of the effects (the devil transformation) were shot after principle filming had been completed.  And there was likely a Laker game on ... so no Jack.  Also a cost factor ... much cheaper to have a day of me in a Rob Bottin chest piece than to have Jack on set for something where you didn’t even need to see his face (just the chest expansion and hands swiping at the 3 witches in the miniature house.)”





I suppose you didn’t technically work with him but...
 “I never met him ... he was long gone when I was brought in by the special effects team (Rob Bottin shop and ILM)”

Do you know what he thought of your version of his character?
“It is very common that a special effect will be done on a “star” without them actually being on the set. I assume he thought I did a brilliant job (lol).”

You were also Quasimodo in Naked Gun 2 ½, that must have been a laugh?! Is Leslie Nielson as funny off camera as on?
 “Leslie Nielson was always cracking jokes, and he even carried a whoppie cushion (rubber fart bladder) around with him, which he would slip under an unsuspecting person when they were about to sit down.”

Bit of a shock about OJ though huh?!
 “OJ was a much better running back than he was an actor ... although he did a pretty good job during his murder trial.”

Ok then, so who do you consider as the best director that you’ve worked with?
 “I can’t really say there’s a best director as they are all very different.  Some are very sensitive to actors and others are more like military field generals.  But the most famous directors I’ve worked with (Spielberg, Dante, Landis) all had a wonderful sense of excitement and pure joy for the
art of film making which made it exciting to be a small part of a big group project.  Being a suit performer/ movement artist in most of my film and television roles, the directors have pretty much left me to my own devices, which is a real luxury for a performer.  “You’re the expert ... just do your thing.  But do it quick as we’re loosing our light.”  These are common paraphrased statements I’ve heard many times.”


What do yo think about other performers of your ilk? You know like Andy Serkis and the like?
“Andy is wonderful ... almost all his gorilla/ape roles have been created through Motion Capture. 
He is outstanding at primate movement and an excellent actor on all levels.  I like his work very much.  I’m more of an “old school” gorilla, the kind of suit performance that still uses the actor’s own eyes as opposed to mechanised eyes that some of the later suits have used.  I lot of the gorillas I’ve protrayed have been either comedy gorillas (Trading Places,  Man With Two Brains, etc) so the movement is more human and the timing is different than you would get from an actual primate.”

I stared in to the gorilla compound, 2 of them had been watching us for the past 10 minutes, they didn't seem disturbed by us one bit... I wondered...

Have you spent time with gorillas? Or did you just learn by watching them?
 “Many hours in the early days ... standing outside the gorilla compound at the San Diego Zoo and filming/watching the gorillas for hours on end.  I have not had the pleasure of going to Rwanda to actually be with a group of gorillas.  But I’ve worked on many projects with chimps and orang-utans, and I’ve been in long training sessions with a primatologist (for the film Born to be Wild).”


So then, how do you'se describe your job to people?
 “I just tell them I’m a professional gorilla during the day, and a Living Statue or Mime Artist after dark.  A professional shape-shifter of sorts.”


And Do you teach Gorilla... you know, just in case I fancy giving it a go...
"I have taught movement in theatre school and master classes in mime, mask, butoh and commedia all over the world.  I have also trained two younger assistant gorilla performers.  Adam Meir is a member of my Living Statue company and is now my main gorilla performer.  He was a former student of mine at the American Academy of Dramatic Art in Hollywood.  I still do the gorilla work on occasion, but for the most part Adam dons the costume for most of our jobs.”

I had heard he was a practitioner of somthin' called Butoh, So I aksed him more about that?
“Sometimes called the dance of the dark soul.  Butoh means earth dance or

stomp dance in Japanese -- Butoh is a little known Japanese art form that is somewhat like Kabuki or Noh theatre without the rules.  In butoh you let the moment, the environment and one’s inner feelings dictate the movements.  It is done with bent legs and performed very slow in an almost trance-like state.  It is all about transformation ... one can go from rock to man to woman to baby to demon to flora & fauna to wind, rain, insect for abstract image found only in the imagination.  It was very freeing for me as a movement artist.  Freeing from all the self consciousness and rules of classic mime, which I had studied with Marcel Marceau and performed for many years.  More info on Butoh can be found on my web site:  www.zenbutoh.com" 

So with all that under his belt I wondered what he liked best, man, monster or Ape?
“I really like a mix ...monsters are great fun as I get to work with talented special effects people who really create fifty percent of the character through the makeups and suits they bring to the various projects.  Mime is really the key art form for me ... it is the basis for all the creature work, for our Living Statue work, and certainly for the gorilla work.  These days I’m spending a lot of my time on writing.  My autobiographical novel, Gorilla Tales in almost completed and I’m looking forward to getting my stories out to the public.  I hope to do a book tour and signing in the gorilla costume.”




Now I was just about to suggest that he come wid me to put soap suds in the flamingo pool when we heard someone shout behind us... "Hey! Monkey!"

We both turned to see a zoo keeper running down the path towards us, shouting and waving a large net shouting about.

I took my chance - you know just in case something was to happen - and asked one last question...

So, Don do you actually like bananas?
"Yes ... even after having thousands of bananas thrust upon me during photo shoots, commercials or during public appearances."

And with that I jumped off the bench, thanked him profusely for his time and started running, with the keeper hot on my heals shouting "Bobo, you schmuck... How did you get out again?!... Get your ass back in your cage! Now"

I stopped and turned, sticking my tongue out at him, I thought for a moment about throwing more at him than just a banana at him, if you catch my drift?! But there was no time... What a predicament! To stay and talk more, or to run and hope I lose him? But however much I had enjoyed our time together my freedom was calling and if I had to spend one more day with the rest of those dumb apes I would lose my freakin' mind, so I ran and jumped and swang away! A talking monkey is a great attraction for the zoo, but I'd put money on it that they're regretting the day they saved me from that laboratory! 

But as I said, that's a story for another day....

For more info on Don go to his Website and his IMDB page 

Saturday, 25 October 2014

She ain't no fluke - An Interview with Jennifer Runyon

I scanned the university noticeboard... Rooms for let, cycling tours around Norway, a summer in Africa.. No, that was not  for me, not after that summer in    Mexico - beautiful countryand amazing food...  But did my stomach like it? No it did not! 

Anyway what I was searching for was way different  to the usual stuff you would normally find on this   board, Oh yes, I was looking for something more… Something more… Something more paranormal...

Then I spotted it, it was scuffed and tattered, my god it looked like it had been there since the mid 80s! The advert called for volunteers for ESP experiments and was offering payment… Perfect, interesting and the extra cash would come in handy, mind you… only 5 bucks? That wouldn’t even get you a coffee and a muffin these days… But money is money and I wasn’t in it for the cash anyway. I ripped off one of the slips at the bottom of the advert with the contact details on them… 

Dr Venkman… Why did that name seem so familiar?

I was deep in thought when I bumped into someone, literally bumped into them! Books, note pads and pens went flying, I apologised and helped the poor woman pick up her things, she noticed my scrap of paper, picked it up and laughed, it was then when I realised who I had bumped into... None other than Jennifer Runyon!

Jennifer Victoria Runyon was born in Chicago in 1960 and has appeared in a myriad of TV programmes    and films, from Another world to Charles in Charge and was even a Brady in 'A very Brady Christmas'! She starred in the comedy '18 again!' with George Burns, but what I will most fondly remember her for is as the object of Bill Murray's affections in the start of 'Ghostbusters'.

I offered her a coffee by the way of an apology and we got chatting.

So, what was it like appearing in Ghostbusters? How does it  feel to be in such a iconic film?
 “Such a great experience, of course I had no idea while filming would become such a huge Box-Office success...
…I was just excited to work with Bill Murray.

Who wouldn't be? I thought...

And I bet people quote lines to you all the time!?  “I get that a lot from Ghostbusters especially... strangers have approached me saying "you're no fluke Jennifer" I'm always so flattered by that.”

So what were the guys [Bill Murrey, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis] like to work with... and for? “It was probably one of the most enjoyable days I ever had on a set....you never stopped laughing which really relaxed me... Bill was so easy to work with...”


Dear old Harold Ramis, all the people I've talked who knew him and they all say he was a lovely guy, wso what did you think? 
“Harold Ramis was such a lovely and kind man...”

So nice...

And did you socialise with any them off set?  “I went to dinner with Bill Murray once..he sang opera to the whole restaurant...then we ended up at Union Station in downtown LA...
He somehow convinced the engineer of an Amtrack train to let us drive it...only Bill Murray could get away with that...”

I nearly spat out my coffee, I had heard so many crazy stories about Bill, about him turning up at peoples parties, pouring tequila or going up to people and just eating their food telling them "No one will believe you" and then just leaving.... I wondered if Jennifer believed them... So I thought I'd ask...

So do you believe the stories? “Yes I've heard the stories...and after driving an Amtrack Train and singing Opera with him...it doen't surprise me in the least....”

And I know Bill Murray is famous for his ad-libbing, did he do much during your scene? “Yes he did ad-lib a bit...I think that's what made the scene so great.” 

And did your character have a name?  “No my character didn't have a name in the script...I was "female student" but he called me Jennifer while filming the scene”

A perfect example of Bills Ad-Libbing, I thought.

So let's go back to the beginning... How did you get the part? What was the audition like? “I got the call to audition for a Bill Murray movie… I remember a lot of girls being there...I didn't hear anything for the longest time...I figured I didn't get it...I was working on another show when the call came...I was so excited..”

I'm not surprised I thought!
So have you been to the Fire station in NY? “I sadly have never visited the fire station...definitely something I need to do.”

Now we all understand Ghostbusters now, but it seemed a crazy idea back in 1984... How was it described to you? “They were very secretive while auditioning... we were not told the story line
...I am trying to remember when I eventually
was given the script????” 

I suddenly realised that I was going on and on about Ghostbusters when she had done so much more! I also noticed that I was nealy down to just the froth on my Cappuccino.

I know I keep talking about Ghostbusters, sorry... “No worries, I love talking Ghostbusters”

You played regular characters in both Another world & Charles in charge? “When I got the part I was so excited...I was nervous because 
I had always had a little crush on Scott Baio..."

What washe like, did he live up to your expectations? "He was great.. he ended up becoming like a brother to me...I learned a lot from working with Scott and Willie Aames...Willie by the way is one of my best friends...we do a radio show together with Susan Olsen called F.L.U.I.D. Amazing after 30 years Willie and I are working together again...”

Now you played two different characters in Murder she wrote, only a couple of years apart.. Did you ever question that? Did you ever wonder that people would realise? Is this a common thing to happen? “Murder She Wrote did this quite often...I wasn't the first to do multiple episodes...I remember someone telling me Angela liked bringing people back...
she was wonderful by the way...”

You were in 18 again with the incomparable George Burns, what was he like? “Eighteen Again was another one I had such a positive experience filming...I loved the cast and crew..George Burns was so dear...always telling amazing stories and singing little tunes... "

And was that cigar always burning?
 "...yes he had a chair that followed him around with an ashtray attached and a cigar always lit...I adored him.”

As a very attractive girl in Hollywood, you must have had some attention from actors?! Do you   have any good stories? “You are very kind, but I really was very shy. I never felt comfortable with the whole "Hollywood"   scene. I was pretty much a homebody when I wasn't working...oh dear...that sounds so boring and  sad..LOL...”

No, it sounded rather sensible I thought! 

Your dad James R Runyon was a DJ, did you have an interesting childhood? Were you surrounded by music royalty? Did he ever want you to go into the music biz?  “I never got to meet any music royalty..but my Mom and Dad certainly did... they met the Beatles back in the day...but I was too young to appreciate how cool that was...the cool part about my parents being DJ's was listening to them on the radio every morning while getting ready for school...”

And you have some pretty big named in-laws? It must be excellent at weddings & Christmas?! Have you worked with your husband or in-laws? “Yes Roger Corman asked me to do a movie for him called Carnasaur, I was 4 months pregnant with my son at the time..I didn't tell him..I wanted so badly to do the movie. I also did a movie for my father-in-law Gene Corman called A Man Called Sarge, we shot the movie in Israel and had such a great time...the cast was wonderful...”

So you must get loads, but what is your best piece of fan mail to date? “I'm not sure I have a favorite, I'm always so touched someone took the time to write to me...”   

And what would your dream role be?  “My dream role..hmmmm...I always wanted to be in a western...I love westerns...”

I tipped the last bit of foam into my mouth and checked my watch... I was going to be late for my lecture... One... or maybe two questions and I had to go!

So, going back to Ghostbusters just for a second, do you think Peter Venkman and the student did meet up at 8 o'clock?  “I like to think they did...but I believe he got tied up in the library investigating ...”

And lastly, are you afraid of ghosts?  “No...I've had a few experiences...I'm fascinated...”

thanked Jennifer, grabbed my briefcase and dashed out of the cafeteria, that was fantastic, what a coup... Jennifer Runyon... Wow! I was going to be late I knew it, I was going to get in trouble and miss some of the lecture... But hey, call it fate, call it Karma, I believe things happen for a reason... And anyway my students could wait another 10 minutes...

For more information on Jennifer go to:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer_Runyon
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001690/
http://ghostbusters.wikia.com/wiki/Jennifer_Runyon