Wes Anderson on Gene Hackman Being Furious While Shooting THE ROYAL TENANBAUMS: “He Left Without Saying Goodbye”

Wes Anderson is known for his meticulously crafted worlds, but the behind-the-scenes reality of The Royal Tenenbaums wasn’t nearly as whimsical as what ended up on screen, especially when it came to working with the late Gene Hackman.

In a new interview with The Sunday Times, Anderson reflected on the tension with Hackman during the making of the 2001 film. The director explained:

“Gene was very annoyed about the money. He was furious. Also, he didn’t want to do the film anyway. I talked him into it — I just didn’t go away. And everybody else said yes to the salary, so Gene just went with it — and that just became our way.”

Hackman played the deeply flawed but oddly endearing Royal Tenenbaum, a role that would become one of his most memorable late-career performances. But despite how awesom he was in the role, Hackman never quite connected with the process or the people around it.

Anderson, who was only 32 at the time and directing his third feature, admitted things never really improved between them, even after the cameras stopped rolling. When asked if they stayed in touch after the film’s release, Anderson said:

“Not a word. In fact he left without saying goodbye. He was grumpy — we had friction. He didn’t enjoy it. I was probably too young and it was annoying to him.”

The last conversation Anderson had with Hackman was just as the movie was opening. The filmmaker said:

“And he liked it, but he told me he didn’t understand it when we were shooting. I wish I’d shown him 10 minutes, early on. Then, maybe, he would have said, ‘OK, I get it.’”

Hackman, who passed away in April, was famously selective with his roles late in his career. Bill Murray, who was also part of Tenenbaums, shared his own perspective after Hackman’s passing, saying:

“I sympathize with Gene because to him, Wes Anderson was just a punk kid and Gene’s made some of the greatest American movies. So he was a little irritable. But he had to work with children, dogs, Kumar [Pallana, who played valet Pagoda], who was like an absolute mystery to all of us anyway.

“They put him in very challenging positions to work, and so he just felt a lot of responsibility and kept thinking, ‘What am I doing here with these people?’ But the performance he gives is brilliant. And I watched him, and I suffered with him because I saw what he was going through.”

Despite the clash, there’s no denying that Hackman’s work on The Royal Tenenbaums was a masterclass in acting. His performance remains a cornerstone of the film’s legacy, even if the experience behind the scenes was far less harmonious.

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