Everybody Loves Raymond
>>
Articles >>
The sleepy Maine
community has all the
accoutrements of idyllic
small town life: a little
park and gazebo, quaint
architecture, a moose that
wanders through the streets,
and lots of friendly
townsfolk, including the
proprietor of the local
hardware store, Handy
Harrison (Ray Romano) and
his veterinarian girlfriend
Sally (Maura Tierney).
Mooseport also just happens
to be the vacation home for
the leader of the freeworld:
Monroe "Eagle" Cole, the
President of the United
States (Gene Hackman).
Following two successful
terms, the wildly popular
President is ready to retire
to his"Mooseport White
House," publish his memoirs
and embark on a series of
lucrative speaking
engagements. "The Eagle Has
Landed!" proclaim the
Mooseport headlines when
Cole arrives in the Maine
town, along with his devoted
executive secretary Grace
Sutherland (Marcia Gay
Harden) and young PR
director Bullard (Fred
Savage).
But Eagle's retirement is
delayed when the folks of
Mooseport convince the
former President to run for
Mayor. At the same time, he
sparks to Sally - unaware
that she is Handy's
girlfriend. And Sally,
frustrated by Handy's
inattentiveness, doesn't
resist Eagle's flirtations.
When a jealous Handy
announces HIS candidacy for
mayor, Eagle is dumbfounded.
"I'm running for mayor
against the man who's
installing my toilets!" he
rails. And in the heat of
his toughest campaign to
date, Eagle's first date
with Sally receives the kind
of media scrutiny usually
reserved for a summit
meeting. ("Eagle Lays an
Egg" say the pundits when
she rejects his goodnight
kiss. Ouch!) Handy, in turn,
sees himself in a race for
Mayor and boyfriend.
As the campaign kicks into
high gear, things get even
wilder in this once quiet
town. Eagle and Handy's
closely-watched debate seems
to hang on a game of
Rock/Paper/Scissors, the
former president's Secret
Service agents suggest that
he have Handy "eliminated,"
and Eagle's ex-wife
(Christine Baranski) is
campaigning for Handy.
Even Eagle's veteran
campaign manager, Bert
Langdon (Rip Torn), can't
make sense of this "David
and Goliath" battle. But one
thing both the Handy and
Eagle camps can agree on:
Mooseport isn't small enough
for both of them!
America's favorite
television comedy star - Ray
Romano - and one of the most
acclaimed actors in motion
picture history - Gene
Hackman - fight it out for
love and small-town glory in
WELCOME TO MOOSEPORT.
Renowned for his many
dramatic performances in
films such as "The French
Connection" and
"Unforgiven," two-time
Academy Award® winner Gene
Hackman has proven equally
adept in comedies such as
"The Birdcage" and "Get
Shorty." The laughs in
Oscar®-winner Tom Schulman's
screenplay (based on a story
by Doug Richardson) proved
irresistible for the actor.
"Comedy is hard, if not
harder, than dramatic roles
because comedy is not
arbitrary," says Hackman.
"It's either funny or it
isn't. "WELCOME TO MOOSEPORT
is a flat-out comedy and
that appealed to me."
Hackman describes his
character, President Monroe
"Eagle" Cole as "a comedic
view of what we think of as
politicians. He's self-centered,
arrogant and full of
himself. He's a typical
politician, or at least how
we imagine a typical
politician to be. We've seen
so many shots of Presidents
in the news that I think we
have a generalized sense of
how a statesman should act.
However, this character is
not very statesman-like at
times, and that,
of course, is a lot of the
fun in playing him."
Director Donald Petrie, who
helmed the comedies "Miss
Congeniality" and "How to
Lose a Guy in 10 Days," says
Hackman was perfect for the
role. "You totally believe
that Gene is the President
of the United States," says
Petrie. "He has the command
and authority, and he can be
intimidating. On the other
hand, Gene has a sense of
comedy that is unparalleled.
He can take himself so
seriously that it's funny,
and he can stretch that
point of reality but still
always be completely real
and in the moment. There's
never a false
moment, it's never comedy
for comedy's sake. It's the
reality of the moment and
that's what he plays so
wonderfully."
Eagle's opponent isn't a
seasoned political operative
- he's friendly hardware
store owner Harold "Handy"
Harrison. The role was a
natural fit for Ray Romano,
so beloved for his work on
"Everybody Loves Raymond."
"Ray was the standout first
and only choice to play the
role of Handy Harrision,"
states Petrie. "He's very
much a
what-you-see-is-what-you-get
kind of guy, not unlike his
character, and that's what
makes him so perfect for
this role - he's a likable,
easy-going guy and it's very
easy for people to relate to
him."
Following his feature film
debut as the voice of Manny
in the animated box office
smash "Ice Age," Romano was
searching for a live-action
follow-up. He didn't want a
carbon copy of his
television alter ego, "Ray
Barone," but he also didn't
want to stray too far from
what he does best: comedy.
"I didn't want to play Ray,"
he says, "and I didn't want
to play a psycho killer
either. I was looking for a
project where I could do
something a little
different, but at the same
time, wouldn't shock the
audience - at least, not
yet. The
role of Handy Harrison was a
comfortable fit."
The differences between the
film and television media
made an impression on
Romano. "When you do a
television show you're
getting an immediate
response from an audience,
which you're used to when
you're doing stand-up. When
you're doing a film, that
immediate response isn't
there; you've got to find it
in different ways. Whenever
our director, Donald Petrie,
liked something, he rubbed
his hands together. So after
a take I looked to see if he
was rubbing his hands. And
with Gene he's always
rubbing his hands.
Me, once in a while he'd rub
his hands. Donald's a tough
audience."
Joining Hackman and Romano
in the starring cast are
Marcia Gay Harden, Maura
Tierney, Christine Baranski,
Fred Savage and Rip Torn.
Harden, who won an Oscar for
her performance as Lee
Krasner in "Pollock,"
portrays Grace Sutherland,
the President's beleaguered
personal secretary.
Says Donald Petrie, "For
Grace, we needed an actress
who could handle the
comedy and be somewhat
chameleon-like, because the
President doesn't always
notice her. She's supremely
efficient and always has the
President's best interests
in heart and mind - because
she's in love with him -
although he's clueless.
"Marcia Gay Harden really
fit that bill. She can pull
herself in and fade into the
background when the role
calls for it, yet come out
into the light just
wonderfully." "Grace
basically runs the
President's life," says
Harden. "She schedules
everything. Any kind of
picayune thing that one has
to do in a day, he doesn't
have to address this at all¡
she does it for him so his
mind can ostensibly be free
to run the world.
She takes care of everything
quietly and efficiently and
the President just takes it
for granted. But what she
really wants is for the
President to fall in love
with her."
Grace's "rival" for the
President's affection is
Sally Mannis, Handy's
frustrated
girlfriend. The filmmakers
turned to "E.R." star Maura
Tierney to play the role.
"We needed someone who was
beautiful and sexy - and
tough as nails, and who
would be believable as a
roll-up-your-sleeves, small
town vet," says Petrie. For
Tierney, the role of Sally
presented a chance to
portray a character
completely different from
her "E.R." role,
nurse/medical student Abby
Lockhart. Says Tierney, "I
play a really serious
character on ¡®E.R.' so it
was nice to lighten it up a
little bit. Sally is a very
down-to earth, confident
woman who is frustrated in
her relationship with her
boyfriend,
Handy. They've been dating
for six years and she's
ready to make the
relationship a little more
permanent, but he likes the
status quo. So when the
President asks her out, her
saying ¡®yes' is more about
making her boyfriend jealous
than about getting into any
kind of relationship with
the President."
Another woman in the
President's life is ex-wife
Charlotte, whom he calls
"The
Wicked Witch of the West
Wing." "Charlotte's a great
deal of fun to play," says
Baranski. "She's a witty and
sophisticated woman with a
twinkle in her eye and a
great sense of humor - she's
had to develop a great sense
of humor being married to
that man."
Another acting veteran, Rip
Torn, takes on the key role
of Bert Langdon - the
President's long-time
campaign manager, Washington
insider and self-described
"total political animal."
Working on WELCOME TO
MOOSEPORT gave Torn the
chance to reunite with old
friends. "Gene Hackman and I
worked together about 20
years ago, in a film called
¡®Misunderstood,'" recalls
Torn. "And I had the great
honor of casting him in his
first professional role when
I was the producer of an
Off-Broadway show and he
came
in and did a scene. I always
remember him mowing the
grass, and there was no
grass, but he was so real I
turned around and said to my
co-producer, ¡®We gotta get
that guy.'"
Another member of the
President's team is Bullard,
an ambitious press attach¨¦,
played by Fred Savage, best
known for his starring role
in the television series
"The Wonder Years." The role
of Bullard, originally
conceived as an older, jaded
and slick operative, was
rewritten following Savage's
audition. "Fred's got a kind
of naďve eagerness that
really works for his
character and provides a
wonderful counterpoint to
Gene Hackman," says Petrie.
l l l