GENERAL DISCUSSIONS

Steve the Pirate!!

POSTED BY: QUICKSAND
UPDATED: Monday, June 21, 2004 07:39
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VIEWED: 3633
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Sunday, June 20, 2004 8:41 PM

QUICKSAND



If you didn't know it before, you know it now.... Steve the Pirate RULES!!!

He was freakin' hysterical in "Dodgeball," and as a female patron informed me, damn sexy out of that pirate outfit, too.

HELLO WORLD, meet Alan Tudyk!


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Monday, June 21, 2004 2:38 AM

LIZ


I just want to add, i liked Dodgeball, and i don't usually like Ben Stiller movies. (The humor is usually too dumb, and i hate watching movies where people make stupid decisions -- i sit there the entire time going "no, no, please... oh why did you do that?!?!") Anyway -- i never really notice how hot Alan Tudyk was.. but that long red hair and the scene with him shirtless... i admit it, i ogled.
anyway, i reccommend the movie. it made me laugh much more than i thought it would, and Alan has some great character moments too.

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Monday, June 21, 2004 3:12 AM

MILORADELL


Verrry funny movie! All weekend my husband I were repeating the "gar!" bit !

Select to view spoiler:


edit - Did anyone else get a shiver at the end when "Steve" showed up in the red shirt with his hair cut? Hello Wash!



****
F*** Chuck Norris!

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Monday, June 21, 2004 3:17 AM

LIZ


In reference to the above:

Select to view spoiler:


oh my goodness yes!!!! i started to reconsider my choice in ElwoodMom's poll!!! Did wash always have red hair?
(wiping drool...)


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Monday, June 21, 2004 4:11 AM

CYBERSNARK


I especially liked the other guy not even registering the "pirate" thing.

There'd damn well better be some kinda pirate (or even I, Robot) reference in Serenity. Have Wash wear a bandana, or say Arrr, or something.

-----
We applied the cortical electrodes but were unable to get a neural reaction from either patient.

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Monday, June 21, 2004 5:08 AM

CLICHEMOMMA


Quote:

Originally posted by Cybersnark:
I especially liked the other guy not even registering the "pirate" thing.

There'd damn well better be some kinda pirate (or even I, Robot) reference in Serenity. Have Wash wear a bandana, or say Arrr, or something.

-----
We applied the cortical electrodes but were unable to get a neural reaction from either patient.



I, too, loved Alan Tudyk in "Dodgeball" - funny, funny! I loved his first scene when he arrived at the gym. Wish they'd had more with his 'pirate lingo'. Did anyone else catch the "I, Robot" reference in "Dodgeball"? When they were practicing dodging traffic, the nerdy guy (that didn't know there was a pirate on the team) had a t-shirt on that said, "I love (heart) robots", but they shot the scene first with only I Robot showing. Pretty clever!

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Monday, June 21, 2004 6:59 AM

MILORADELL


Quote:

the nerdy guy (that didn't know there was a pirate on the team) had a t-shirt on that said, "I love (heart) robots", but they shot the scene first with only I Robot showing


Yes!!! I did see that, and I was going to point it out to hubby, but was distracted by laughing!

****
F*** Chuck Norris!

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Monday, June 21, 2004 7:39 AM

LIZ


i caught that too.
also found this today:
Quote:

Among the hapless team members victimized by Patches' coaching is one Steve the Pirate, a self-styled buccaneer whose answer to life's challenges is a growled "Aaargggh!" "I thought it would be funny to have a character who walks, talks and thinks of himself as a pirate, and nobody even blinks at it," says Thurber. The director was surprised when the character became a comedy "litmus test" for people reading the script. "I discovered that if you 'got' Steve the Pirate, then I knew you really 'got' the whole movie," he says.

Steve the Pirate, like most of the DODGEBALL: A TRUE UNDERDOG STORY characters, is outrageous, but in casting the role, the filmmakers were looking for anything but an over-the-top reading. "A lot of people we auditioned did a kind of Long John Silver-on-amphetamines," says Thurber. "But Steve the Pirate was never about somebody pretending to be a pirate. It's not Halloween, and he's not doing schtick." To that end, the filmmakers cast Juilliard-trained actor Alan Tudyk as Steve. "The character has little dialogue, maybe 10 lines, but Alan makes him memorable," says Thurber. "He's always doing something, always keeping the character of Steve the Pirate alive in every scene, even if he has nothing to say. That's no small task."


it's here (sorry it's from the evil corp's site):
http://www.foxsports.com/content/view?contentId=2411388
and it has a brief bio for Alan later in the article.
EDIT: i figured i should probably just put in the bio:
Quote:

ALAN TUDYK (Steve the Pirate) has had leading stage roles in off-beat productions as well as scene-stealing supporting turns in film. In 2002, he starred as Wash in Fox's "Firefly," a science fiction-western fantasy set in space. He reprises the role in a new feature film, "Serenity," based on the series.

On the big screen, Tudyk starred as the soft-spoken and kind voice of Sonny in "I, Robot" in addition to providing several of the voices in the animated feature film "Ice Age." He recently completed the independent feature film "Ralph's Club." Tudyk's other film roles include Sir William's squire, Wat, in "A Knight's Tale" opposite Heath Ledger; the cocaine-addicted German stripper Gerhardt in "28 Days," opposite Sandra Bullock; and Monte Man in "Hearts in Atlantis," opposite Anthony Hopkins. His additional feature credits include "Wonder Boys" with Michael Douglas, "Patch Adams" starring Robin Williams, and "35 Miles to Normal."

After attending the Juilliard School, Tudyk appeared in several regional and off-Broadway productions before making his Broadway debut in Jerry Zak's play "Epic Proportions" with Kristin Chenoweth. Other stage work includes "The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told," "Oedipus Rex," "Misalliance," "Much Ado About Nothing," "A Midsummer Night's Dream" and "Bunny Bunny," for which he received both the Clarence Derwent and Drama League Awards for Best New York Debut of 1997.



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