Live Read
Live Read | |
---|---|
Show type | Staged Reading |
Location |
Bing Theater, LACMA Los Angeles |
Creative team | |
Creator and Director | Jason Reitman |
Hosted | Elvis Mitchell |
Official website |
Live Read is a monthly live staged reading of a film script and a part of the Film Independent at LACMA film series at the Bing Theater directed by Jason Reitman and hosted by Elvis Mitchell. Reitman reads the stage directions in the scripts while images from the film are projected behind the cast. The script that is read is only announced days before the event and while some actors are announced beforehand, full cast lists and the role each actor will play are kept secret until the event itself. The actors do not rehearse ahead of time.
The readings are one-night only and are not recorded due to rights issues. Because of this, tickets for the 600 seats, which go on pre-sale to members of Film Independent, LACMA Film Club and NYT Film Club one week ahead of the general public, sell out almost immediately.
Reitman says that the series is to show audiences how actors create characters.[1][2]
Readings
Jason Reitman directs and reads the stage directions unless otherwise noted. Many of the actors play multiple supporting roles. Specific roles are stated only when information is known.
2011
October (The Breakfast Club)
The Breakfast Club by John Hughes[3]
- Cast
- Jennifer Garner as Claire (originally played by Molly Ringwald)
- James Van Der Beek as Andy (originally played by Emilio Estevez)
- Mindy Kaling as Allison (originally played by Ally Sheedy)
- Patton Oswalt as Brian (originally played by Anthony Michael Hall)
- Aaron Paul as Bender (originally played by Judd Nelson)
- Michael Chiklis as Mr. Vernon (originally played by Paul Gleason)
- J.K. Simmons as Carl the janitor (originally played by John Kapelos)
November (The Apartment)
The Apartment by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond[4]
- Cast
- Steve Carell as C.C. Baxter (originally played by Jack Lemmon)
- Natalie Portman as Fran Kubelik (originally played by Shirley MacLaine)
- Pierce Brosnan as Mr. Sheldrake (originally played by Fred MacMurray; J.K. Simmons was originally slated to play this role, couldn't attend the event[5])
- Ken Jeong as Mr. Dobisch (originally played by Ray Walston) and the Rickshaw restaurant waiter
- Jake Johnson as Dr. Dreyfuss (originally played by Jack Kruschen)
- Nick Kroll as Mr. Kirkeby (originally played by David Lewis)
- Collette Wolfe as Sylvia (originally played by Joan Shawlee)
- Mindy Kaling as Miss Olsen (originally played by Edie Adams)
December (The Princess Bride)
The Princess Bride by William Goldman, based on the novel by Goldman[6]
- Cast
- Mindy Kaling as Princess Buttercup (originally played by Robin Wright)
- Paul Rudd as Westley (originally played by Cary Elwes)
- Cary Elwes as Prince Humperdinck (originally played by Chris Sarandon; Elwes played Westley in the original film)
- Nick Kroll as Count Rugen (originally played by Christopher Guest) and the Impressive Clergyman (originally played by Peter Cook)
- Goran Višnjić as Inigo Montoya (originally played by Mandy Patinkin)
- Bill Fagerbakke as Fezzik (originally played by André the Giant)
- Patton Oswalt as Vizzini (originally played by Wallace Shawn)
- Kevin Pollak as Miracle Max (originally played by Billy Crystal) and other male roles
- Collette Wolfe as Valerie (originally played by Carol Kane) and other female roles
- Rob Reiner as the Grandfather (originally played by Peter Falk; Reiner directed the original film)
- Fred Savage as the Grandson (originally played by Fred Savage)
2012
January (Shampoo)
Shampoo by Robert Towne and Warren Beatty[7][8]
- Cast
- Bradley Cooper as George Roundy (originally played by Warren Beatty)
- Olivia Wilde as Jackie (originally played by Julie Christie)
- Kate Hudson as Jill (originally played by Hudson's mother, Goldie Hawn)
- Diane Lane as Felicia Karpf (originally played by Lee Grant)
- J.K. Simmons as Lester Karpf (originally played by Jack Warden)
- Nick Kroll as Johnny Pope (originally played by Tony Bill) and others
- Patton Oswalt as Norman (originally played by Jay Robinson) and others
- Lena Dunham as Lorna Karpf (originally played by Carrie Fisher) and others
February (Reservoir Dogs)
Reservoir Dogs by Quentin Tarantino.[9][10][11][12] Reitman assembled an all-black cast to play roles originally played on screen by white actors.
- Cast
- Laurence Fishburne as Larry "Mr. White" Dimmick (originally played by Harvey Keitel)
- Cuba Gooding, Jr. as Freddy "Mr. Orange" Newandyke (originally played by Tim Roth)
- Terrence Howard as Vic "Mr. Blonde" Vega (originally played by Michael Madsen)
- Anthony Mackie as Mr. Pink (originally played by Steve Buscemi)
- Anthony Anderson as "Nice Guy Eddie" Cabot (originally played by Chris Penn)
- Chi McBride as Joe Cabot (originally played by Lawrence Tierney)
- Common as Mr. Brown (originally played by Quentin Tarantino) and Officer Marvin Nash (originally played by Kirk Baltz)
- Patton Oswalt as K-Billy DJ (originally played by Steven Wright), Officer Holdaway (originally played by Randy Brooks; as Brooks was the only black actor in the original film, Oswalt was the only white actor at the reading), and others
March (The Big Lebowski)
The Big Lebowski by the Coen brothers.[13][14] Due to the huge turnout, speakers were set up outside to allow those without tickets limited access to the proceedings.[15]
- Cast
- Seth Rogen as The Dude (originally played by Jeff Bridges)
- Rainn Wilson as Walter Sobchak (originally played by John Goodman)
- Hank Azaria as Donny Kerbatsos (originally played by Steve Buscemi, Karl Hungus (originally played by Peter Stormare), Da Fino (originally played by Jon Polito), George Bush,[15] and others
- Jason Alexander as the Big Lebowski (originally played by David Huddleston)
- Christina Hendricks as Maude Lebowski (originally played by Julianne Moore)
- Catherine Reitman as Bunny Lebowski (originally played by Tara Reid) and others
- Fred Savage as Brandt (originally played by Philip Seymour Hoffman), Smokey (originally played by Jimmy Dale Gilmore), a nihilist, and others (Savage was a last-minute replacement for Patton Oswalt[14][15])
- Sam Elliott as The Stranger (originally played by Sam Elliott)
- Nick Kroll as Jackie Treehorn (originally played by Ben Gazzara), Jesus Quintana (originally played by John Turturro), a nihilist, and others
April (The Apartment)
The Apartment by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond at The New York Times Center. This was the first of the Live Read series to take place outside of Los Angeles[16]
- Cast
- Paul Rudd as C.C. Baxter (originally played by Jack Lemmon)
- Emma Stone as Fran Kubelik (originally played by Shirley MacLaine)
- James Woods as Mr. Sheldrake (originally played by Fred MacMurray)
- Tom Cavanagh as Mr. Dobisch (originally played by Ray Walston) and the Rickshaw restaurant waiter
- David Wain as Dr. Dreyfuss (originally played by Jack Kruschen)
- Jason Sudeikis as Mr. Kirkeby (originally played by David Lewis)
- Greta Gerwig as Sylvia (originally played by Joan Shawlee; Lena Dunham was originally slated to play this role, but couldn't attend the event[16])
- Carla Buono as Miss Olsen (originally played by Edie Adams)
September (American Beauty)
American Beauty by Alan Ball at the Toronto International Film Festival.[17][18][19]
- Cast
- Bryan Cranston as Lester Burnham (originally played by Kevin Spacey)
- Christina Hendricks as Carolyn Burnham (originally played by Annette Bening) and others[19]
- Mae Whitman as Jane Burnham (originally played by Thora Birch) and others[19]
- Adam Driver as Ricky Fitts (originally played by Wes Bentley)
- Sarah Gadon as Angela Hayes (originally played by Mena Suvari) and Barbara Fitts (originally played by Allison Janney)[19]
- Nick Kroll as Colonel Frank Fitts (originally played by Chris Cooper) and others[19]
- Paul Scheer as Buddy Kane (originally played by Peter Gallagher) and others[19]
- George Strombolopoulos as Jim Olmeyer (originally played by Scott Bakula) and others[19]
Woody Harrelson was originally slated to play Colonel Fitts while Nick Kroll would play Buddy Kane,[18] but when Harrelson was stuck in Hawaii, Kroll played Fitts and Paul Scheer played Kane.[19]
October (Bull Durham)
- Cast
- J.K. Simmons as "Crash" Davis (originally played by Kevin Costner) and Jimmy (originally played by William O'Leary)
- Susan Sarandon as Annie Savoy (originally played by Susan Sarandon)
- Andy Samberg as "Nuke" LaLoosh (originally played by Tim Robbins)
- Ron Shelton as Skip (originally played by Trey Wilson; Shelton wrote and directed the original film)
- David Koechner as Larry (originally played by Robert Wuhl)
- Johnny Simmons as Bobby (originally played by David Neidorf)
- Mae Whitman as Millie (originally played by Jenny Robertson)
- Jason Mantzoukas as Teddy (originally played by Garland Bunting)
November (Manhattan)
Manhattan by Woody Allen. Unusually for these readings, the script was narrowed down to six speaking roles.[20] The cast included:[21][22]
- Cast
- Stephen Merchant as Isaac Davis (originally played by Woody Allen)
- Olivia Munn as Mary Wilkie (originally played by Diane Keaton)
- Shailene Woodley as Tracy (originally played by Mariel Hemingway)
- Fred Savage as Yale Pollack (originally played by Michael Murphy)
- Mae Whitman as Emily Pollack (originally played by Anne Byrne)
- Erika Christensen as Jill Davis (originally played by Meryl Streep)
- Jason Mantzoukas as Dennis (originally played by Michael O'Donoghue)
December (Ghostbusters)
Ghostbusters by Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis.[23][24] Jason Reitman's father Ivan Reitman directed the original film.
- Cast
- Seth Rogen as Peter Venkman (originally played by Bill Murray)
- Jack Black as Ray Stantz (originally played by Dan Aykroyd)
- Rainn Wilson as Egon Spengler (originally played by Harold Ramis)
- Phil LaMarr as Winston Zeddmore (originally played by Ernie Hudson)
- Kristen Bell as Dana Barrett (originally played by Sigourney Weaver)
- Kevin Pollak as Walter Peck (originally played by William Atherton), Larry King, and Casey Kasem[24]
- Mae Whitman as Janine Melnitz (originally played by Annie Potts)
- Paul Rust as Louis Tully (originally played by Rick Moranis)
- Paul Scheer as the mayor (originally played by David Marguiles),[24] the male ESP volunteer (originally played by Steven Tash),[23] and others
2013
January (His Girl Friday)
His Girl Friday by Charles Lederer, based on the play The Front Page by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur[25]
Guest director: Fred Savage
- Cast
- Jason Bateman as Walter Burns (originally played by Cary Grant)
- Anne Hathaway as Hildy Johnson (originally played by Rosalind Russell)
- Adam Scott as Bruce Baldwin (originally played by Ralph Bellamy)
- Paul Scheer as Sheriff Hartwell (originally played by Gene Lockhart)
- Nick Kroll as the Mayor (originally played by Clarence Kolb)
- Fred Willard as Earl Williams (originally played by John Qualen)
- Mae Whitman as Mollie Malloy (originally played by Helen Mack)
- Jason Mantzoukas as Eggelhoffer (originally played by Edwin Maxwell)
February (Glengarry Glen Ross)
Glengarry Glen Ross by David Mamet, based on the play by Mamet.[26][27][28] Reitman assembled a cast of women to read the all-male script.
- Cast
- Robin Wright as Ricky Roma (originally played by Al Pacino)
- Catherine O’Hara as Shelley Levene (originally played by Jack Lemmon)
- Maria Bello as Dave Moss (originally played by Ed Harris)
- Melanie Lynskey as George Aaronow (originally played by Alan Arkin)
- Mae Whitman as John Williamson (originally played by Kevin Spacey)
- Carla Gugino as Blake (originally played by Alec Baldwin)
March (The Usual Suspects)
The Usual Suspects by Christopher McQuarrie[29]
- Cast
- Kevin Pollak as Dean Keaton (originally played by Gabriel Byrne; Pollak played Hockney in the original film)
- Michael C. Hall as Verbal Kint (originally played by Kevin Spacey)
- Chi McBride as Special Agent Dave Kujan (originally played by Chazz Palminteri)
- Adam Brody as Michael McManus (originally played by Stephen Baldwin)
- Mark Duplass as Todd Hockney (originally played by Kevin Pollak)
- Nick Kroll as Fred Fenster (originally played by Benicio del Toro)
- Mae Whitman as Kobayashi (originally played by Pete Postlethwaite) and Edie (originally played by Suzy Amis)
- Jason Mantzoukas as Special Agent Jack Baer (originally played by Giancarlo Esposito)
July (Breaking Bad's pilot episode)
The pilot of Breaking Bad by Vince Gilligan.[30] This was the first television episode performed at the readings.
- Cast
- Rainn Wilson as Walter White (originally played by Bryan Cranston)
- Mae Whitman as Jesse Pinkman (originally played by Aaron Paul)
- Annie Mumolo as Skyler White (originally played by Anna Gunn)
- Chi McBride as Hank Schrader (originally played by Dean Morris)
- Ellie Kemper as Marie Schrader (originally played by Betsy Brandt)
- Paul Rust as Walter White, Jr. (originally played by RJ Mitte)
September (Boogie Nights)
Boogie Nights by Paul Thomas Anderson at the Toronto International Film Festival[31]
- Cast
- Jesse Eisenberg as Dirk Diggler (originally played by Mark Wahlberg)
- Josh Brolin as Jack Horner (originally played by Burt Reynolds)
- Dakota Fanning as Rollergirl (originally played by Heather Graham)
- Olivia Wilde as Amber Waves (originally played by Julianne Moore)
- Jason Sudeikis as Buck Swope (originally played by Don Cheadle)
- Dane Cook as Reed Rothchild (originally played by John C. Reilly) and Maurice Rodriguez (originally played by Luis Guzmán)
- Marc-Andre Grondin as Scotty J (originally played by Philip Seymour Hoffman)
- Jarod Einsohn as Todd Parker (originally played by Thomas Jane)
- Scott Thompson as The Colonel (originally played by Robert Ridgely)
- Jordan Hayes as Jessie St. Vincent (originally played by Melora Walters)
October (Boogie Nights)
Boogie Nights by Paul Thomas Anderson[32][33][34]
- Cast
- Taylor Lautner as Dirk Diggler (originally played by Mark Wahlberg)
- Don Johnson as Jack Horner (originally played by Burt Reynolds)
- Mae Whitman as Rollergirl (originally played by Heather Graham)
- Judy Greer as Amber Waves (originally played by Julianne Moore) and Dirk's mother (originally played by Joanna Gleason)
- Jim Rash as Buck Swope (originally played by Don Cheadle) and Little Bill Thompson (originally played by William H. Macy)
- Nick Kroll as Reed Rothchild (originally played by John C. Reilly), Maurice Rodriguez (originally played by Luis Guzmán), Floyd Gondolli (originally played by Philip Baker Hall), and Rahad Jackson (originally played by Alfred Molina)
- Nat Faxon as Scotty J (originally played by Philip Seymour Hoffman)
- Jarod Einsohn as Todd Parker (originally played by Thomas Jane)
- Kevin Pollak as The Colonel (originally played by Robert Ridgely)
- Jurnee Smollett as Jessie St. Vincent (originally played by Melora Walters) and Becky Barnett (originally played by Nicole Ari Parker)
November (Tootsie)
Tootsie by Larry Gelbart and Murray Schisgal[35][36]
Guest director: David Wain
- Cast
- Nick Kroll as Michael Dorsey/Dorothy Michaels (originally played by Dustin Hoffman)
- Hannah Simone as Julie (originally played by Jessica Lange)
- Michaela Watkins as Sandy (originally played by Teri Garr)
- Thomas Lennon as Jeff (originally played by Bill Murray)
- Rob Huebel as George (originally played by Sydney Pollack)
- Ken Marino as Ron (originally played by Dabney Coleman)
- Fred Melamed as John Van Horn (originally played by George Gaynes)
- Zandy Hartig as April (originally played by Geena Davis)
December (Raising Arizona)
Raising Arizona by the Coen brothers[37]
Guest director: Patton Oswalt
- Cast
- Timothy Olyphant as H.I. McDunnough (originally played by Nicolas Cage)
- Amy Poehler as Edwina McDunnough (originally played by Holly Hunter)
- Jeff Garlin as Nathan Arizona (originally played by Trey Wilson)
- Keegan-Michael Key as Gale Snoats (originally played by John Goodman)
- Jordan Peele as Evelle Snoats (originally played by William Forsythe)
- Michael McKean as Glen (originally played by Sam McMurray)
- Rachael Harris as Dot (originally played by Frances McDormand)
- Ron Perlman as Lenny Smalls (originally played by Randall "Tex" Cobb)
- Andy Daly as various characters
2014
January (American Pie)
American Pie by Adam Herz. Reitman gender-swapped the cast, with women playing the male roles and men playing the female roles.
- Cast
- Ari Graynor as Jim (originally played by Jason Biggs)
- Sarah Burns as Oz (originally played by Chris Klein)
- Olivia Wilde as Kevin (originally played by Thomas Ian Nicholas)
- Krysten Ritter as Finch (originally played by Eddie Kaye Thomas)
- Mike White as Michelle (originally played by Alyson Hannigan)
- Topher Grace as Vicky (originally played by Tara Reid)
- Anna Kendrick as Stifler (originally played by Seann William Scott)
- John Cho as Heather (originally played by Mena Suvari; Cho played John, MILF Guy #2 in the original film)
- Michael Sheen as Nadia (originally played by Shannon Elizabeth) and Stifler's mom (originally played by Jennifer Coolidge)
- Sharon Stone as Jim's dad (originally played by Eugene Levy)
February (Pulp Fiction)
Pulp Fiction by Quentin Tarantino[38][39]
Guest director: Evan Goldberg
- Cast
- Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Vincent Vega (originally played by John Travolta)
- Jordan Peele as Jules Winnfield (originally played by Samuel L. Jackson)
- Lizzy Caplan as Mia Wallace (originally played by Uma Thurman) and Honey Bunny (originally played by Amanda Plummer)
- Jonah Hill as Butch Coolidge (originally played by Bruce Willis) and Pumpkin (originally played by Tim Roth)
- Michael Chiklis as The Wolf (originally played by Harvey Keitel), Captain Koons (originally played by Christopher Walken), and Brett (originally played by Frank Whaley)
- Rebecca Romijn as Fabienne (originally played by Maria de Medeiros) and Esmarelda Villalobos (originally played by Angela Jones)
- Wendell Pierce as Marsellus Wallace (originally played by Ving Rhames)
- Seth Rogen as Lance (originally played by Eric Stoltz), Maynard (originally played by Duane Whitaker), and Jimmy Dimmick (originally played by Quentin Tarantino)
- Nick Kroll as English Dave (originally played by Paul Calderon), Zed (originally played by Peter Greene), the diner manager (originally played by Robert Ruth), the boxing trainer (originally played by Don Blakely), Marvin (originally played by Phil LaMarr), and the gimp (originally played by Stephen Hibbert)[38]
March (Groundhog Day)
Groundhog Day by Danny Rubin and Harold Ramis. Reitman chose this reading as a tribute to Harold Ramis, who died the previous month. He also chose an earlier draft of the screenplay rather than the final shooting script.[40]
- Cast
- Jason Bateman as Phil Connors (originally played by Bill Murray)
- Elizabeth Reaser as Rita (originally played by Andie MacDowell)
- Jeff Ross as Larry (originally played by Chris Elliott) and others
- Stephen Tobolowsky as Ned Ryerson (originally played by Stephen Tobolowsky)
- Mae Whitman as Nancy (originally played by Marita Geraghty) and others
April
The Graduate
April 17: The Graduate by Calder Willingham and Buck Henry. Based on the novel by Charles Webb.[41]
- Cast
- Sharon Stone as Mrs. Robinson (originally played by Anne Bancroft)
- Jay Baruchel as Benjamin Braddock (originally played by Dustin Hoffman)
- Mae Whitman as Elaine Robinson (originally played by Katharine Ross)
- Paul Scheer as Mr. Braddock (originally played by William Daniels)
- Kevin Pollak as Mr. Robinson (originally played by Murray Hamilton) and others
- Tig Notaro as Mrs. Braddock (originally played by Elizabeth Wilson)
The Hateful Eight
April 19, special event: The Hateful Eight by Quentin Tarantino at the United Artists Theater at the Ace Hotel Los Angeles. Unusually for the series, this script had not been filmed prior to the reading. After a script leak in January, Tarantino considered dropping the film, but decided to hold a reading of the first draft of this script.[42][43][44]
Guest director: Quentin Tarantino
- Cast
- Samuel L. Jackson as Major Marquis Warren
- Kurt Russell as John "The Hangman" Ruth
- Amber Tamblyn as Daisy Domergue
- Walton Goggins as Chris Maddox
- Bruce Dern as Confederate General Smithers
- Michael Madsen as John Gage
- Tim Roth as Oswaldo Mobray
- James Parks as O.B.
- Denis Menochet as Bob
- James Remar as Jody
- Dana Gourrier as Minnie
- Zoe Bell as Six Horse Judy
October (American Beauty)
American Beauty by Alan Ball. All cast members starred in Jason Reitman's 2014 film Men, Women & Children.[45]
- Cast
- Adam Sandler as Lester Burnham (originally played by Kevin Spacey)
- Rosemarie DeWitt as Carolyn Burnham (originally played by Annette Bening) and Barbara Fitts (originally played by Allison Janney)
- Kaitlyn Dever as Jane Burnham (originally played by Thora Birch)
- Travis Trope as Ricky Fitts (originally played by Wes Bentley)
- Olivia Crocicchia as Angela Hayes (originally played by Mena Suvari)
- Dean Norris as Colonel Frank Fitts (originally played by Chris Cooper) and others
- Phil LaMarr as Buddy Kane (originally played by Peter Gallagher) and Jim Olmeyer (originally played by Scott Bakula) and others
November (Diner)
Diner by Barry Levinson. All cast members have appeared in a lead or recurring role in the FX show The League.
- Cast
- Mark Duplass as Boogie (originally played by Mickey Rourke)
- Nadine Velazquez as Barbara (originally played by Kathryn Dowling)
- Stephen Rannazzisi as Eddie (originally played by Steve Guttenberg)
- Katie Aselton as Beth (originally played by Ellen Barkin)
- Rob Huebel as Billy (originally played by Tim Daly)
- Jason Mantzoukas as Modell (originally played by Paul Reiser)
- Paul Scheer as Shrevie (originally played by Daniel Stern)
- Nick Kroll as Fenwick (originally played by Kevin Bacon)
December (The Empire Strikes Back)
The Empire Strikes Back by Leigh Brackett and Lawrence Kasdan, story by George Lucas.[46]
- Cast
- Aaron Paul as Luke Skywalker (originally played by Mark Hamill)
- Ellen Page as Han Solo (originally played by Harrison Ford)
- Jessica Alba as Princess Leia Organa (originally played by Carrie Fisher)
- Dennis Haysbert as Lando Calrissian (originally played by Billy Dee Williams)
- Stephen Merchant as C-3PO (originally played by Anthony Daniels)
- Jason Reitman as R2-D2 (originally played by Kenny Baker), in addition to his usual reading of stage directions
- J.K. Simmons as Darth Vader (originally played by David Prowse and voiced by James Earl Jones)
- Kevin Pollak as Yoda (originally played by Frank Oz) and others
- Rainn Wilson as Chewbacca (originally played by Peter Mayhew)
- Mark Hamill as Obi-Wan Kenobi (originally played by Alec Guinness) and the Emperor (originally played by Clive Revill) (Hamill played Luke in the original film)
2015
January (Goodfellas)
Goodfellas by Nicholas Pileggi and Martin Scorsese. Based on Wiseguy by Pileggi.
- Cast
- Fred Savage as Henry (originally played by Ray Liotta)
- Eric Andre as Tommy (originally played by Joe Pesci)
- Laurence Fishburne as Jimmy (originally played by Robert De Niro)
- Michaela Watkins as Karen (originally played by Lorraine Bracco)
- Joe Manganiello as Paul (originally played by Paul Sorvino)
- Mae Whitman as Sandy (originally played by Debi Mazar)
- Dane Cook as Morris (originally played by Chuck Low)
February (Sideways)
Sideways by Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor. Based on the novel by Rex Pickett.[47]
- Cast
- Josh Gad as Miles Raymond (originally played by Paul Giamatti)
- Keegan-Michael Key as Jack Cole (originally played by Thomas Haden Church)
- Michaela Watkins as Maya Randall (originally played by Virginia Madsen)
- Lake Bell as Stephanie (originally played by Sandra Oh)
- Catherine Reitman as Victoria (originally played by Jessica Hecht)
March (Dazed and Confused)
Dazed and Confused by Richard Linklater. Most actors except Travis Tope also played various freshmen.[48][49]
- Cast
- James Van Der Beek as Randall “Pink” Floyd (originally played by Jason London)
- Travis Tope as Mitch Kramer (originally played by Wiley Wiggins)
- Nick Kroll as Ron Slater (originally played by Rory Cochrane), Tony Olson (originally played by Anthony Rapp), and Fred O’Bannion (originally played by Ben Affleck)
- Mae Whitman as David Wooderson (originally played by Matthew McConaughey) and Sabrina Davis (originally played by Christin Hinojosa)
- Eric André as Don Dawson (originally played by Sasha Jenson)
- Michaela Watkins as Jodi Kramer (originally played by Michelle Burke) and Cynthia Dunn (originally played by Marissa Ribisi)
- Catherine Reitman as Kaye Faulkner (originally played by Christine Harnos)
- Jason Mantzoukas as Mike Newhouse (originally played by Adam Goldberg)
- Whitney Cummings as Julie Simms (originally played by Catherine Avril Morris) and Darla Marks (originally played by Parker Posey)
- Paul Scheer as Kevin Pickford (originally played by Shawn Andrews) and Clint Bruno (originally played by Nicky Katt)
- Jonathan Tucker as Benny O'Donnell (originally portrayed by Cole Hauser)
April (Major League)
Guest director: Joe Manganiello. In a departure from Live Read tradition, Manganiello did not read the stage directions, but instead played a character. He cast sportscaster Rich Eisen as the narrator.[50]
- Cast
- Joe Manganiello as Jake Taylor (originally played by Tom Berenger)
- Brian Wilson as Ricky Vaughn (originally played by Charlie Sheen)
- Rob Huebel as Roger Dorn (originally played by Corbin Bernsen)
- Sharon Osbourne as Rachel Phelps (originally played by Margaret Whitton) and Suzanne Dorn (originally played by Stacy Carroll)
- Billy Gardell as Lou Brown (originally played by James Gammon)
- Ming-Na Wen as Lynn Wells (originally played by Rene Russo)
- Robbie jones as Willie Mays Hayes (originally played by Wesley Snipes)
- Eric Stonestreet as Charlie Donovan (originally played by Charles Cyphers) and Eddie Harris (originally played by Chelcie Ross)
- Sofia Vergara as Pedro Cerrano (originally played by Dennis Haysbert)
- Thomas Lennon as Harry Doyle (originally played by Bob Uecker)
Other events
On March 23, 2014, Jensen Karp assembled a cast to read Space Jam by Leo Benvenuti, Steve Rudnick, Timothy Harris and Herschel Weingrod at the UCB Theatre in Los Angeles.[51] The event was in many ways a parody of Reitman's series. While the scripts Reitman chooses are from well-received and occasionally Academy Award-winning films, Space Jam is a children's film that received, at best, mixed reviews. In addition, LACMA's Bing Theater is a large auditorium, while the UCB Theatre is a small comedy club. The cast included:
- Blake Griffin as Michael Jordan
- Seth Green as Bugs Bunny (originally voiced by Billy West)
- Nick Kroll as Daffy Duck (originally voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) and Bill Murray
- Danielle Fishel as Lola Bunny (originally voiced by Kath Soucie), Juanita Jordan (originally played by Theresa Randle), Nick Van Exel and others
- Ralph Garman as Porky Pig (originally voiced by Bob Bergen), Yosemite Sam (originally voiced by Bill Farmer), Sylvester (originally voiced by Bill Farmer), Foghorn Leghorn (originally voiced by Bill Farmer), Marvin the Martian (originally voiced by Bob Bergen) and others
- Paul Scheer as Stan Podolak (originally played by Wayne Knight)
- DeAndre Jordan as Charles Barkley and Mr. Swackhammer (originally voiced by Danny Devito)
- Jerrod Carmichael as Muggsy Bogues, Marcus Jordan (originally played by Eric Gordon), James Jordan Sr. (originally played by Thom Barry) and others
- Ben Schwartz as Zilch
References
- ↑ Zeitchik, Steven. "'Breakfast Club' reading: Jason Reitman heads to detention". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Creeden, Molly. "Live From New York: Jason Reitman On His Table Reading Series". Vogue. Vogue. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Murphy, Shaunna. "Jason Reitman gathers Jennifer Garner, Aaron Paul and more for star-studded reading of 'The Breakfast Club'". Entertainment Weekly. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Labrecque, Jeff. "Jason Reitman's table-read of 'The Apartment': And his Baxter is... -- EXCLUSIVE". Entertainment Weekly. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Yamato, Jen. "Notes from the Jason Reitman-Directed Live Script Read of The Apartment". Movieline. Movieline. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Pearon, Ben. "Review: Jason Reitman's Live Read of THE PRINCESS BRIDE". Geek Tyrant. Geek Tyrant. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Appelo, Tim. "Patton Oswalt, J.K. Simmons and Lena Dunham Steal the Show at Jason Reitman's 'Shampoo' Reading". The Hollywood Reporter. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "On The Scene: Jason Reitman’s Live Read of Shampoo". Film.com. Film.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Pearson, Ben. "Review: Jason Reitman's Live Read of RESERVOIR DOGS". Geek Tyrant. Geek Tyrant. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Tyrell, Jason Chase. "A Screenplay Reading with Bark and Bite: Jason Reitman & Co. Take on 'Reservoir Dogs'". Filmslate. Filmslate. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Breznican, Anthony. "Laurence Fishburne as Mr. White! Inside the all-black (almost) 'Reservoir Dogs' reading". Entertainment Weekly. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Horgan, Richard. "Jason Reitman’s Reservoir Dogs Rocks the LACMA House". Fishbowl LA. Fishbowl NY. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Pearson, Ben. "Review: Jason Reitman's Live Read of THE BIG LEBOWSKI". Geek Tyrant. Geek Tyrant. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Breznican, Anthony. "A cloud of weed descends on Jason Reitman's live-read of 'The Big Lebowski'". Entertainment Weekly. Entertainment Weekly.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 Reverte, Michele. "The Dude Abides at LACMA: Jason Reitman Directs All-Star Live Read of 'The Big Lebowski'". LAist. LAist. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 Everett, Cory. "Jason Reitman Debuts His 'Live Read' Series In NYC With 'The Apartment' Starring Paul Rudd & Emma Stone". IndieWire. IndieWire. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Barnes, Henry. "American Beauty shines in Toronto live reading". The Guardian. The Guardian. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 Breznican, Anthony. "Look closer: Jason Reitman reveals leads in Toronto live-read of 'American Beauty' -- EXCLUSIVE". Entertainment Weekly. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 19.4 19.5 19.6 19.7 Love, Noah. "Review: Jason Reitman’s American Beauty live reading". The National Post. The National Post. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Jason Reitman to re-create Woody Allen's Manhattan in live-read event" by Anthony Breznican, Entertainment Weekly, November 9, 2012. Retrieved March 1, 2014.
- ↑ Jason Reitman to Live Read Manhattan in L.A", The Woody Allen Pages, November 10, 2012. Retrieved August 31, 2013.
- ↑ "Stephen Merchant and Olivia Munn Starred in Jason Reitman's Manhattan Live Read", The Woody Allen Pages, November 18, 2012. Retrieved March 1, 2014.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 Breznican, Anthony. "'Ghostbusters' live-read grabs Seth Rogen, Jack Black, and Rainn Wilson -- EXCLUSIVE". Entertainment Weekly. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 24.2 Mays, Robert. "Jason Reitman Stages a Reading of Ghostbusters With Seth Rogen, Jack Black, and Kristen Bell". Hollywood Prospectus. Grantland. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "LACMA’s Live Reading Of His Girl Friday (pics)". Retrieved 4 March 2014.
- ↑ Lussier, Germain. "Jason Reitman’s All-Female Live Read of ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’ Transcends Gender With Brilliant Performances". /Film. /Film. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Fennessey, Sean. "We Went There: The Brass Balls of an All-Female Live Read of Glengarry Glen Ross". Hollywood Prospectus. Grantland. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Raden, Bill. "Jason Reitman Directed an All-Female Glengarry Glen Ross Reading at LACMA Last Night". LA Weekly. LA Weekly. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Lussier, Germain. "Jason Reitman’s ‘The Usual Suspects’ Live Read Highlights the Power of McQuarrie’s Script and Singer’s Direction". /Film. /Film. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Lussier, Germain. "Jason Reitman’s ‘Breaking Bad’ Live Read Featured Sharp Writing and Deleted Scenes From The Pilot Episode". /Film. /Film. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Foundas, Scott. "Toronto: Jason Reitman Does ‘Boogie Nights’ Live Read". Variety. Variety. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Bahr, Lindsey. "'Boogie Nights' live read: Taylor Lautner, Don Johnson, and cast giggle through the racy script". Entertainment Weekly. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Teran, Jasmine. "BIG, BRIGHT, SHINING STARS AT BOOGIE NIGHTS LIVE READ". Film Independent. Film Independent. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Fennessey, Sean. "We Went There: Feeling the Heat of a Boogie Nights Live Read". Hollywood Prospectus. Grantland. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "7 Highlights From the 'Tootsie' Remake". Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Buendia, Diana. "LIVE READ RECAP: NICK KROLL HITS THE HIGH OCTAVES AS TOOTSIE". Film Independent. Film Independent. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Appelo, Tim. "Amy Poehler, Timothy Olyphant, Patton Oswalt Impress in LACMA Live Read's 'Raising Arizona'". The Hollywood Reporter. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ 38.0 38.1 "Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen Unite for ‘Pulp Fiction’ Live Read". Variety. Variety. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Royale with Cheese: 'Pulp Fiction' Gets a Live Reading at LACMA". Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Walton, Brian. "Jason Reitman’s LIVE READ Returns With Groundhog Day". Nerdist. Nerdist. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
- ↑ Wolfe, Clarke. "THE GRADUATE LIVE READ CLOSES SEASON AT LACMA". The Nerdist. The Nerdist. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
- ↑ Thompson, Anne. "Once in a Lifetime 'The Hateful Eight' Live Read with "Tarantino superstars!"". Thompson on Hollywood. Indiewire. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
- ↑ Sharkey, Betsy. "Much to love in live reading of Quentin Tarantino's 'Hateful Eight'". LA Times. LA Times. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
- ↑ "THE HATEFUL EIGHT – The Live Read". Miramax.com. Miramax. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
- ↑ Lussier, Germain. "Jason Reitman Uses His Own Cast For ‘American Beauty’ Live Read With Gorgeous Results". Slashfilm. Slashfilm. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
- ↑ Lussier, Germain. "The Force Was With Jason Reitman’s ‘Empire Strikes Back’ Live Read; Full Recap and Photos". Slashfilm. Slashfilm. Retrieved 19 December 2014.
- ↑ Bogulski, JB. "Sideways Gets the Live Read Treatment". Film Independent. Film Independent. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
- ↑ Lombardi, Chris. "Dazed and Confused and Hilarious--Another Great Live Read Night". Film Independent. Film Independent. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
- ↑ Lussier, Germain. "‘Dazed and Confused’ Live Read: Nostalgia and Novelty Provide a New Look at Classic Characters". Slashfilm. Slashfilm. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
- ↑ Sveen, Tom. "Top Five Plays from Last Night's Major LeagueLive Read". Film Independent. Film Independent. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
- ↑ Anthony, David. "Watch Nick Kroll, Seth Green, Paul Scheer, and more do a live reading of Space Jam". The AV Club. The AV Club. Retrieved 5 October 2014.