It's hard to forgive John Lithgow for trying to cramp Kevin Bacon's style in the 1984 film "Footloose." Rest assured, according to Lithgow himself, little of his character's oppressive nature came to him naturally.
The "Love Is Strange" star said in a HuffPost Live interview on Tuesday that he had to sit down with an "Assembly of God minister" who he found via the Yellow Pages to get into the character of Reverend Shaw Moore.
"If you remember the film, he [Reverend Shaw Moore] had lost a son in a car accident the night of the prom and [there had been] drunken kids getting wild, driving a car off a viaduct. That was the hook for me," Lithgow told host Ricky Camilleri, explaining his character's impetus to place a city-wide ban on dancing. "Beyond that, I'm not a man who's grown up religious, and I had to find some sort of spine of reality there."
The actor proceeded to seek out "counseling" with a minister, whom he asked to talk to him "about Jesus."
"It was an incredibly valuable thing to do," he said. "I did feel like a total hypocrite, a snake in the grass, but without that -- this man was extremely kind and very persuasive. That's what I needed to play that part and deliver those sermons."
Catch the rest of what John Lithgow had to tell HuffPost Live here.
Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live's new morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!
The "Love Is Strange" star said in a HuffPost Live interview on Tuesday that he had to sit down with an "Assembly of God minister" who he found via the Yellow Pages to get into the character of Reverend Shaw Moore.
"If you remember the film, he [Reverend Shaw Moore] had lost a son in a car accident the night of the prom and [there had been] drunken kids getting wild, driving a car off a viaduct. That was the hook for me," Lithgow told host Ricky Camilleri, explaining his character's impetus to place a city-wide ban on dancing. "Beyond that, I'm not a man who's grown up religious, and I had to find some sort of spine of reality there."
The actor proceeded to seek out "counseling" with a minister, whom he asked to talk to him "about Jesus."
"It was an incredibly valuable thing to do," he said. "I did feel like a total hypocrite, a snake in the grass, but without that -- this man was extremely kind and very persuasive. That's what I needed to play that part and deliver those sermons."
Catch the rest of what John Lithgow had to tell HuffPost Live here.
Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live's new morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!
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