FILM
Asner, 80, is tired of stereotypes, eager for work
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BY DAVID GERMAIN
Associated Press
When you need an old grouch, Edward Asner is your man.
Yet the actor best-known as gruff newsman Lou Grant, who expands his resume of grumps as the voice of a curmudgeonly widower in Pixar Animation's Up, wants people to know he can play romance and action, too.
''I can do lovers,'' Asner says during an interview at his Los Angeles home. ``I can do Sir Galahad types. I'm not going to limit myself in voice-overs to irascible old men.
''You better get that straight!'' Asner adds, slyly slipping into the crabby tone he perfected as Grant, the role that won him five of his seven Emmys, first on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and later in the spinoff Lou Grant.
Asner does not want to limit himself, because Hollywood has done that for him throughout the years. He says in only one year during his more-than-half century career has he landed as much work as he wanted, when he was working on Moore's sitcom and shot 1976's Rich Man, Poor Man miniseries that also won him an Emmy.
Turning 80 this November, Asner still wishes more offers would come his way. Asked how often he receives scripts that really interest him, he inquires, ``Did you bring anything with you?''
''No, nothing comes in,'' Asner says. ``I'm not sought after. I never get enough work. It's the history of my career. There just isn't anything to turn down, let me put it that way.''
Asner was sought after for the role of Carl Fredricksen in Up, the latest tale from Pixar and its parent outfit, Walt Disney, whose animated hits include WALL-E, Ratatouille, Finding Nemo and the Toy Story flicks.
Up director Pete Docter says Asner was Pixar's first choice for the voice of Carl, a lonely, cranky widower who renews his spirit of adventure by tying thousands of helium balloons to his house and flying off to the wilds of South America.
Docter says the Pixar animators often zero in on voices by putting on old movies and TV shows with the picture off, listening only to the audio to see who might fit the characters they're developing. Asner's Lou Grant was an icon of the bullying but lovable boss.
''Ed, he has the comedic chops, he's got the acting chops, and he's made a career of playing these types of characters,'' Docter says. ``He's sort of coursing through our entertainment DNA.''
Asner made good use of his prickly persona as a world-weary Santa Claus in Will Ferrell's 2003 hit Elf. His other big-screen credits include JFK and Fort Apache the Bronx, while his many TV guest spots include ER, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and The X-Files. Asner also has done a great deal of TV voice-over work for such shows as The Simpsons and Spider-Man.
He recently got the call to do more voice work for the animated series The Boondocks, on which he has a recurring character. But Asner still wishes the phone would ring more often.
''I keep telling people that I'm a better actor now than I've ever been in my life, in my ability to choose and my ability to interpret,'' he says. ``I'd say most people are probably in that same boat, old people, and it's a shame that they're not given the opportunity to demonstrate that intelligence along with their emotion, that it's not utilized.
``I suppose this occurs in every profession. People are trying to farm you out once you reach a certain age. I think it's an American trait, and I think it's an ugly trait.''
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