AceShowbiz
 
Nicolas Cage Accepts Getting Slapped by Fans as 'Part of the Job'
AceShowbiz
Celebrity

The 'Renfield' star says the bizarre trend inspired by his 1987 romantic comedy 'Moonstruck', which also stars Cher, did get him slapped by fans a few times at the airport.

AceShowbiz - Nicolas Cage used to get slapped by fans at the airport. The 59-year-old actor has recalled the bizarre trend inspired by 1987 romantic comedy "Moonstruck", which he starred in with "Believe" hitmaker Cher.

Speaking to "Entertainment Tonight", he said, "For the longest time, back from 'Moonstruck', I would walk to the airport and people just had a habit of saying, 'Snap out of it!' from 'Moonstruck' - the Cher 'snap out of it' [line] - and I did get slapped a few times."

He added, "Oh yeah, I did! And that, you know, it's part of the job."

When it comes to why fans felt compelled to act in such a way, Nicolas joked they might have been aiming for a role. He quipped, "I think maybe [they think] I'll cast them in something. Who knows?"

The actor admitted he almost turned down the movie but agreed to take the role in a deal with his agent because he actually wanted to make 1989 horror comedy "Vampire's Kiss".

He previously told USA Today, "I made that movie on a deal with my then-agent Ed Limato. I was desperately trying to get him to say yes to me doing 'Vampire's Kiss'. He said: 'No, you're not going to wear those stupid plastic things. I want you to look handsome! Do Moonstruck!' And I said, 'I don't want to do Moonstruck!' I wanted to be punk rock – I didn't want to do a schmaltzy movie about opera. But I said, 'If I do Moonstruck, will you let me do Vampire's Kiss?' And he said OK. The truth is, I love 'Moonstruck'. Now that I'm older, I see the value in [it]. I haven't seen 'Moonstruck' in a million years, but I think it's powerfully romantic and I love all the performances."

Meanwhile, his enduring memory of the movie was him and Cher being "freezing in Brooklyn in the winter at night." He added, "It was that whole big diatribe about, 'The snowflakes are perfect. The stars are perfect. Not us. Not us! We are here to ruin ourselves.' That was my favorite bit of writing by [screenwriter] John Patrick Shanley, this powerful soliloquy. That being said, our mouths were frozen and it was so hard to move. It's very hard to act when you're freezing."

About This Article

AI-Assisted Content: This article was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence technology under human editorial oversight. Our editorial team reviews and verifies all AI-generated content for accuracy.

Sources: Information in this article may be aggregated from publicly available sources including press releases, news agencies, and entertainment industry sources. We provide attribution where applicable and strive to ensure factual accuracy.

Learn More: For details about our editorial standards and practices, visit our Editorial Standards page.

Contact: Questions or concerns? Email us at [email protected]

Follow AceShowbiz.com @ Google News

You can share this post!

You might also like
Related Posts