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On the Red Carpet With the ‘Scrooge & Marley’ Cast

Red Carpet Interviews with HollywoodChicago.com

By Patrick McDonald

CHICAGO – Bring up the immortal classic “A Christmas Carol,” by author Charles Dickens, then bring up how many film and TV versions have been done using its basic story. After a half hour of listing every conceivable production, a gay version won’t be found. “Scrooge & Marley” is the new film that takes care of that category. The premiere was last week in Chicago at the Music Box Theatre.


The Cast and Production Crew of ‘Scrooge & Marley’ at The Music Box Theater, Chicago
Photo credit: Patrick McDonald for HollywoodChicago.com

Featuring an essential array of talent – including David Pevsner (Scrooge), Tim Kazurinsky (Marley), Bruce Vilanch (Fezziwig), Megan Cavanagh (Ghost of Christmas Present) and Richard Ganoung (Charity Solicitor) – “Scrooge & Marley” updates the story to present day, places its characters in the gay community and contains flashbacks to the disco era and the go-go 1980s. With a combination of camp and the main premise of ‘A Christmas Carol,’ the film puts a new spin on the old tale.

HollywoodChicago.com was at the red carpet premiere last week on November 29th, and got to interview many of the acting and production talent in “Scrooge & Marley.”

StarDavid Pevsner, Portrays Scrooge in “Scrooge and Marley”

David Pevsner
David Pevsner as Ben Scrooge in ‘Scrooge & Marley’
Photo credit: Sam I Am Films

HollywoodChicago.com: Since this is a different take on a revered character, what did you want to take from the original story to make sure was in your interpretation?

David Pevsner: I read the book, and I really wanted to get a sense – instead of the nastiness and lack of heart usually associated with Scrooge – as to why he was the way he was. I got a bit of it from the book, but I had to get most of it by exploring the universality of all of us being a ‘scrooge’ at times in our life, and why we become like that.

HollywoodChicago.com: What is more fun about the character of Scrooge, his mean side or his redemptive side and why?

Pevsner: Honestly, I had a good time with both of them. Richard [Knight Jr., the director] wanted me to be really mean before the transformation, and at the end just to enjoy the redemption. So I got the opportunity on either end of those sides to go really dark, and really light.

HollywoodChicago.com: The original is set in Victorian London, your version is set in the modern day. In observing our world as it is now, in what time period do you think the character of Scrooge fits better and why?

Pevsner: The language that Scrooge uses makes him fit better back then, but my challenge was to make it fit for now. That was real fun, to find the level that works in the modern day. I hope I succeeded.

StarBruce Vilanch, Portrays Fezziwig in “Scrooge & Marley

Bruce Vilanch
The Always Subtle Bruce Vilanch as Fezziwig in ‘Scrooge & Marley’
Photo credit: Sam I Am Films

Bruce Vilanch is a Hollywood legend, a comedy writer known for working up material backstage at the Academy Awards, and developing jokes for Bette Midler, Lily Tomlin, Billy Crystal, Roseanne Barr and Robin Williams. He also spent four years on “Hollywood Squares” and wrote/performed a one-man show, “Bruce Vilanch: Almost Famous.”

HollywoodChicago.com: You seem like you were born to play a party coordinator like Fezziwig. What impresses you about his character in the source novel that you wanted to make sure was in this version of the story?

Bruce Vilanch: I viewed him as being crazy, over-the-top and flamboyant, at least as far as Dickens could go with that character back then, and it seemed to coincide with what the writers did in this movie. My Fezziwig spends a lot of time in the 1970s, when it seemed like everyone was having a party, and he was the party provider. [laughs] It was a nice match.

HollywoodChicago.com: Which line or piece of written material first got you noticed as the joke writer that eventually got you backstage at the Academy Awards?

Vilanch: I started writing with Bette Midler, having met her in Chicago at Mr. Kelly’s nightclub, and my reputation grew as she started doing more. I don’t know if it was one single line, but I remember I sold Johnny Carson a one-liner a long time ago. There was a football player named Lance Rentzel in the 1970s, and he was arrested for exposing himself. So the joke was ‘it was cold today…how cold was it?…it was so cold that Lance Rentzel stopped me on the street and just described himself to me.’ It got me a lot of notice, and I started writing more jokes for him and other people. So I’ll use that line as a first.

HollywoodChicago.com: What was the most controversial line you’ve ever written, who said it and what was the circumstance and setting?

Vilanch: I can’t think about the specific line, but I was involved when Ted Danson did blackface at Whoopi Goldberg’s Friars Club roast. It was Whoopi’s idea, and Ted went along with it because their relationship at the time was ending, and they both thought it would be a good way to put a period on it. It was wildly controversial.

HollywoodChicago.com: Finally, if you had to write a saying on one of your famous tee-shirts that best describes this film, what would that line be?

Vilanch: We put the ‘dick’ back in Dickens. [laughs]

Read more: http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/20734/interviews-red-carpet-premiere-of-new-christmas-film-scrooge-marley#ixzz2E2bIyVjy

By Abbe Sparks

Abbe Sparks is the Founder of Abbe Sparks Media Group & Socially Sparked News. A social entrepreneur, she is a social media and content influencer who has been covering the entertainment, music, tech and advocacy sectors for over 25 years. A member of US Press Association, she has written for many online and print publications including the UK's Blues Matters Magazine, Big City Rythm & Blues & her former column 'Abbe's Sparks' for RFPalooza. You can also find her stories on Medium & Tumbler. Twitter: @asparks01

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