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Borat 2000-2007
In
December 2007, in an interview with John Hiscock
from
The Telegraph, Sacha Baron Cohen confirmed that
he will never play Borat again.
The full interview is
reproduced below:
He became a comedy sensation as the wannabe-gangsta-rapper
Ali G by humiliating the people he interviewed. As
Borat, the outrageously anti-Semitic, homophobic
reporter from Kazakhstan he became a cultural icon
while lampooning and offending virtually everyone he
came across.
But as himself Sacha Baron Cohen is something of an
enigma.
The intensely private comic actor readily admits he
is more comfortable talking in the guise of the
characters he has created, but unfortunately for
him, both Ali G and Borat have had their day. Too
many people know them and he reluctantly
acknowledges that he can no longer retreat behind
their personas.
"When I was being Ali G and Borat I was in character
sometimes 14 hours a day and I came to love them, so
admitting I am never going to play them again is
quite a sad thing," he said. "It is like saying
goodbye to a loved one. It is hard, and the problem
with success, although it's fantastic, is that every
new person who sees the Borat movie is one less
person I 'get' with Borat again, so it's a kind of
self-defeating form, really.
"It's upsetting, but the success has been great and
better than anything I could have dreamed of."
He was talking in a Beverly Hills hotel in a rare
interview he has given as himself and not in
character, and he allows it is an unusual and not
particularly pleasant experience for him.
"It's much easier for me to be in character and it's
a lot more fun," he said. "If I'd done the entire
promotional campaign for Borat as myself it wouldn't
have developed in the same way. I think it can get a
little be tiresome if you're having to be the real
person and talking about how important and
interesting the role was. To me, it should be
entertaining and the entertainment should carry on."
He had attracted a few curious glances as he ambled
through the lobby of the Four Seasons hotel, not
because anybody recognised him but because he looked
oddly out of place. He was bearded, wore
thick-rimmed glasses, was dressed in jeans, a
scruffy, hooded sweater and a baseball cap jammed
down over an unruly mop of hair and had a wide grin
which rarely left his face.
Sacha Baron Cohen is reluctant to divulge any
information that may give an insight into the man
behind the characters he plays. If a question
appeals to him he veers into a funny anecdote almost
as if he is doing a stand-up comedy act for an
audience: he switches characters and assumes their
voices, becoming a Yorkshireman, a female singing
teacher and an Italian in quick succession.
But if for some reason he finds the question
unsuitable or he simply does not want to answer, he
lowers his head and mutters almost inaudibly.
He is submitting to interviews at the behest of
Warner Bros. to promote Sweeney Todd, Tim Burton's
slasher-horror movie musical in which he plays
Pirelli, a flamboyant rival singing barber who meets
an exceedingly bloody end at the hands of Johnny
Depp's Todd.
Wearing exceedingly tight-fitting tights with
appropriate bulges, Pirelli is a wonderful creation
and provides a riotous interlude in the movie.
Burton said of him: "He brought a burst of colour
into the darkness and his suit was tight - that's
how he was able to hit the high notes."
Baron Cohen had just finished Borat when he decided
he would audition for the role of Pirelli, although
he did not know any of Stephen Sondheim's songs from
the show. "When I was at Cambridge University I
played Tevye in Fiddler On The Roof and that was the
only thing I remembered so I went in and sang If I
were A Rich Man for Sondheim," he said.
"That wasn't enough so I had to sing about five
other songs and luckily Sondheim thought they were
okay, but there is one incredibly high note at the
end of my piece and Tim Burton doesn't know this but
when I went in to record the sound I couldn't reach
it, even wearing spandex, so I brought in a very fat
female opera singer to sing the final note."
Then, as if slipping into a well-rehearsed act,
Baron Cohen went on: "I arrived in London the day
before I started shooting and I realised I needed a
singing lesson. So I foolishly called my mother and
asked her to find me a good singing teacher so she
looked in the Yellow Pages and gave me the address
of a woman. I turned up at the woman's door and told
her who I was and she said, 'I was expecting you to
be a girl.' She said, 'Have a cup of tea,' so I had
a cup of tea. I told her I was going to be in
Sweeney Todd and she said, 'Never heard of it.' I
told her it starred Johnny Depp and she said, 'Never
heard of him.' I said Tim Burton was directing it
and she said, 'Never heard of him. New man is he?
Could I have his telephone number because I often
have these local concerts here and we're looking for
someone to direct them.'
"So I started singing Pirelli and she had never
heard the music before but she goes 'Oh, no, no, no
you don't do it like that.'" Then the punchline: "So
I ignored everything she said and went to the set
the next day."
Born in North London to a Welsh clothing store owner
and an Israeli aerobics teacher mother, Sacha Baron
Cohen grew up watching Peter Sellers, whom he says
was his inspiration. "I think I was seven when I saw
the first Inspector Clouseau film and I really
believed the character. Then I started to see more
and more of his films. He was this incredibly
realistic actor who was also hilarious and who
managed to bridge the gap between comedy and satire.
"Admittedly he wasn't much of an inspiration in his
personal life because he wasn't the greatest father
or husband, but as an actor and a comedian he is the
guy that I've tried to emulate."
advertisementCohen attended private school and went
on to read history at Christ's College, Cambridge,
where he wrote a dissertation on the role of Jews in
the U.S. civil rights movement.
"I'd gone to Cambridge partly because they had such
a prolific acting department and a lot of really
good actors came from there," he said. He appeared
in a variety of theatrical productions, including My
Fair Lady and Cyrano de Bergerac. "I loved it but I
was a bit embarrassed about telling people I wanted
to be an actor and comedian because it's a bit like
saying, 'I'm so good looking and I want to be a
model.'
"I had the choice of either pursuing my studies and
doing a Ph.D or doing something that was a bit more
fun, so I decided that rather than sit alone in a
library, I'd try and make people laugh."
He moved into television and was hired on Channel
4's 11 O'Clock Show after he sent the producers a
tape of him posing as an Albanian reporter
interviewing fox hunters. Ali G was born shortly
afterwards.
Da Ali G Show crossed the Atlantic and became a cult
favourite on U.S. cable television thanks to
hilariously idiotic and offensive questions to
former presidential candidate Pat Buchanan, Newt
Gingrich, former Attorney General Dick Thornburgh,
Donald Trump and the former Surgeon-General C.
Everett Koop, among others.
Ali G's popularity led to Cohen's first film, Ali G
Indahouse after which he provided one of the voices
in the animated film Madagascar and then played an
obnoxious French racing river in Talladega Nights:
The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.
Then Borat, the film featuring the character who had
first appeared on the Ali G Show. Helped by
objections from the official government of
Kazakhstan and Baron Cohen's wildly funny
promotional appearances on any talk show that would
have him, Borat became a phenomenon, although not
everybody was happy.
"Since last year I've been sued by about 3,000
people," said Baron Cohen. "Some of the letters I
get are quite unusual, like the one where the lawyer
informed me I'm about to be sued for $100,000 and at
the end says, "P.S. Loved the movie.Can you sign a
poster for my son Jeremy?'"
His performance as Borat earned him a Golden Globe
Award as best actor in a comedy or musical, which he
credits with transforming his career. "It broke me
out from being just a pure comedian into something
larger, because in the entertainment business people
are categorised either as comedians or actors," he
said. "The award let people know there was a
performance behind Borat, because the problem was
that when I used to do Ali G and Borat people
assumed that I was them and there was no acting
involved."
He is finishing work on his next project, which
features Bruno, the gay, Austrian fashion reporter
who also made his first appearance with Ali G,
although Baron Cohen is unwilling to discuss it.
"It would probably hurt the film if I started
talking about it, so I prefer to comment once I've
got a finished film," he said.
He is also unwilling to talk about his home life in
Los Angeles with his girlfriend, the Australian
actress Isla Fisher, who recently gave birth to
their daughter, Olive.
"I try and keep that part of my life separate from
the professional part because I don't think it helps
people appreciate the work or the comedy or make me
any funnier if they know what's going on at home,"
he said.
Seeing him a few minutes later waiting, unobtrusive
and incognito, behind a pillar outside the Four
Seasons for the parking valet to bring his car, it
is easy to wonder whether, like Ali G and Borat,
Sacha Baron Cohen himself is a fake and the real
person is even further back in the shadows.
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