George Lopez - Interviews


(What's this?) What is the EasyEdit button? This website gets better when people like you add to it. Just click the EasyEdit button to start. (help)


flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster
Artworks Magazine

GEORGE LOPEZ by DINA EASTWOOD

July 8, 2008 – 8:18 am

The art world has a few illustrious Lopezes: muralist Carlos Lopez, Antonio Lopez Garcia (featured in this issue), Smithsonian Institution-featured folk artist George Lopez, and then there’s OUR George Lopez – “America’s Mexican,” as he calls himself. George Lopez, the master of comedy, television, film, recordings, golf and Chicano art.

A Los Angeles native, George grew up poor in the San Fernando Valley. It was not a happy existence, but gave young George fuel for his comedic fire.

He knew, from an early age, that two things were very clear; he had a gift for making people laugh, and he was different from everyone else in his family.
Life was hard, but the jokes came easy. Even his stern grandmother, the person who raised him after his mother left town, would laugh at him on occasion.

Stardom did not come as easily, but it did come in time. Hard at work since the early 1980’s, Lopez became part of the country’s lexicon with the hit television show George Lopez, which ran on ABC from 2002 until 2007. Until that breakthrough run, he had been successful as a radio show host and stand-up comedian. But the prime-time network show catapulted him to a new level of recognition and fame. Still, even during those magical five years, George grabbed at as many other brass rings as he could, peppering life with hit recordings and a Grammy nomination, movie roles and strings of sold-out shows for his stand-up comedy routines. His book, Why You Cryin?, went to the top 20 on the New York Times’ best-sellers list. He became a beloved fixture at the AT&T National Pro-Am golf tournament at Pebble Beach, and the host of the Bob Hope Invitational Golf Tournament in the Palm
Springs area.

In 2005, Lopez gave in to some long-lingering warning signs, and received confirmation that, due to a genetic disorder, his kidneys had deteriorated –
badly. It was a choice between a transplant or slowly but surely watching his life end. Shortly thereafter, he received a transplant of a kidney donated by
his wife, Ann. Now, health wise, they have never felt better.

The renewed health and the end of the long-running television show is giving Lopez a chance to enjoy some of the finer things in life: family, the game of
golf, working with non-profit groups, and art collecting. Although slowing down is out of the question, George is actually getting to enjoy the fruits of 25 years “in the business.” When we spoke, he was just an hour away from leaving for a four-week European vacation – a holiday with no work, all play. He’ll spend one of those weeks touring with his favorite rock band of all time, KISS. Ann says it’s “a teenage fantasy come true.”

George is funny most of the time, but gets very serious about a couple things in life: his background and art.


Dina Eastwood:
With you funny guys, there always seems to be some kind of darker force that originally drove you. What was yours?

GEORGE LOPEZ:
Growing up, I saw a lot of abuse. Abuse of people, of alcohol. I never belonged in my family. I didn’t fit in. I was kind. I had different thoughts than they did.
I was never a taker. They were all takers. I wanted to give back, and I have given back. I wanted to distance myself from everyone I grew up with, and I did. My family (wife and 12-year-old daughter Mayan), my friends and my fans are my
family.

Dina:
Was a sad little guy still able to find humor? Were you funny?

GEORGE:
Yeah, I guess I was. It’s funny. You can’t put a finger on it. The humor, it’s always there. I never question it. And I never ask anything of it. I never grind at
it. I always feel it’ll happen in its time.

Dina:
So what changed for you when you suddenly knew that “funny” could improve your life?

GEORGE:
It changed it in so many ways. With the art, when I used to look at it, I’d think about my past, and I was a bit ashamed of where I came from. Now, I know
I should not be ashamed. I live and do so many more things. I wrote the book and I support the arts. It’s funny because I have never taken a vacation this
long and have never stayed in nice places. It’s all part of the grabbing onto life.

Dina:
That’s right! When was the first time you remember caring about art?

GEORGE:
In high school there was a play called Zoot Suit. There was an oil painting of its star, (actor) Edward James Olmos, and I liked that. That was the first
time I remember noticing. Ann has always been a fan of art, and a collector. One of her favorite painters is Carlos Almaraz. Several years ago, when
Ann’s father passed, she got a little bit of money in an inheritance, and she bought a lithograph or print of one of Almaraz’s paintings. It hung in our condo
for years. I bought her the original, in oil, about three years ago.

Dina:
Was that one of those “I’ve made it” moments?

GEORGE:
Yeah, definitely.

Dina:
About three years ago, you generously gave us an amazing abstract cowboy by Frank Romero. What happened in your life to keep the interest in art expanding?

GEORGE:
Well, we met (actor) Cheech (Marin). We spent the night at Cheech’s house ten years ago, and his house, at that time, contained all the works that make
up the exhibit of Chicano art that he now has on the road. It’s an exhibit that has made it to the Smithsonian Institution, and now will be at the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art.

Staying with Cheech was like staying at the Mexican Louvre. You see a Chicano art book featuring the painting Little Girl With Yellow Dress by Patssi
Valdez (1995). Well, you look in Cheech’s hallway and there it is. Or the artwork La Pistola y El Corozon, which is on the cover of a Los Lobos CD. You
look in the house, and there it is! Next, I stumbled upon Frank Romero. I always liked Frank’s stuff. I always wanted a ‘54 Chevy Bel Air, and Ann got him
to paint one for me for my birthday. He does a lot of cars in his works. When I sold out six straight shows at Nokia Center last year, the guys at AEG, the
promotion company, they got me an Almaraz of police chasing a car and the people in the car shooting back. The bullets are all done in deep oil paint. It’s
so cool. Almaraz died in the late 1980’s.

A dear friend of ours, Lisa Coscino, owns the Lisa Coscino Gallery in Pacific Grove and she is really into Chicano art, a huge supporter. She turned us on to Jorge Lozano’s art. We go there and buy a lot. They keep their ear to the ground. She found an Almaraz on eBay, and we checked it out. It was being sold for $8,500, so we got it. We think it was his last painting. Check this out, on the back of the painting it says, “To Barry and George, NFS” which means “not for sale,” then all that is crossed out and re-titled Death Rides By. The back is more interesting than the front, man! I had gotten away from art for many years, but then the chain started from Ann, to Cheech to Lisa. Now, I consider myself a collector.

Dina:
Were you able to bring any of that collector’s knowledge to your work?

GEORGE:
When we started to do the George Lopez Show, we wanted the Lopez house to be traditional American, not Spanish style or anything. But, we wanted the art in the house to be Chicano. So, the house itself looks like the lobby of the Hilton in Apsen, Colorado, but the art is all Chicano.

Dina:
You and Ann do a lot of non-profit work and in the past it had a lot to do with funding art in education. Has your health scare shifted your focus?

GEORGE:
We are the spokespeople for the National Kidney Foundation. I am a great example and a bad example of health. I did not go to the doctor when I was
sick. I had all the signs and was not aware of them. Now that I am healthy, I am diligent and meticulous in checking everything: blood pressure, cholesterol, creatine levels. My message is to everyone, get checked out! Make it happen.

Dina:
You can’t buy happiness or health. But money must bring some kind of confidence for you?

GEORGE:
Not having money, I was really very uncomfortable, like in a way you could never relax. I didn’t take advantage of living. I was always worried about being
poor. The worst thing I did, for my mind, was finding my grandfather’s bankbook at the age of 14 and it had nothing in it. Nothing. I lived never being able
to be comfortable. Living was week-to-week, hand to mouth, and it added a bit of stress. I wouldn’t ever even go window-shopping. If I couldn’t buy it, I didn’t want it. The value of that was it made me want to work harder to become
secure – to see something good come in instead of idly wasting my time. I didn’t know it was going to be this, but I knew that I didn’t want it to be that.

Being poor was no fun at all. I didn’t want to go to the window and have to give back a cheeseburger because we didn’t have all the money to pay for it – go to a picnic and our whole group takes a bite out of a burger and passes around one coke. Someone would say, “Hey wanna go to the park and hear a band?” Well, it was never “yes or no” to go to a concert in the park or the carnival. It was “how much is it?” How about the one where you hold a torn ticket in your hand so when you present it, it looks like you have a non-torn ticket?

Dina:
Well, I am afraid that our children will be doing the “torn ticket reuse gag” for fun. Don’t you?

GEORGE:
You might as well be talking to your kids about the Incas when you talk to your kids about how things were 20 years ago. I told my daughter, “Just 20 years ago, I put three dollars of gas in my car. And she says back to me. ‘Why, dad? You were in a hurry?’ No, it’s all I had!” I’d like to have an archaeological dig sometime in my backyard. You know, take them in the backyard and start digging with a chisel and toothbrush. We’d try to unearth a game of jacks, or maybe a tennis ball that we had wrapped with duct tape in order to make it last longer. We could really shock our kids. “Look what we had to play with? Daddy had to throw the tennis ball against the wall, alone, because he couldn’t have friends over.” I’m afraid kids these days can’t even put their DVDs back in the case.

Dina:
What’s left for you to master?

GEORGE:
Even though I have been nominated, my goal is to win a Grammy. I think of all the times I wrote jokes on the cover of the phone book or wrote jokes on a
napkin. The journey of coming from that to the Grammy is one that I have to make.

Dina:
I better let you off the phone now or there is a European journey you will not be making! And Ann will kill me.

GEORGE:
Well, talk later then, and give that Clint a big kiss on the lips from me.

Dina:
Will do!


After his “Europe 2008″ summer tour, George Lopez will focus on his next Live HBO special, which will air in 2009. He has three movies being released soon: Swing Vote with Kevin Costner will be in theaters August 1, Henry Poole with Luke Wilson comes out August 15, and George will be the voice of a dog named Papi in Beverly Hills Chihuahua with Andy Garcia and Drew Barrymore, which will be out on September 26. And, look for him in comedy clubs all through the year, including in San Francisco at the Warfield Theater on September 13 and 14.

artworksmagazine.com
ARTWORKS - A Voice For The Arts


flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster
Seriously Funny
Non-Stop George Lopez Gets Big Laughs While Tackling Heavy Topics
BY BRETT WILBUR
2007

George Lopez doesn’t know how to slow down.The comedian, who recently received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, ended 2006 with a new comedy CD and a sold-out stand-up run in Los Angeles. He’s blasting into 2007 with a new movie—“Balls of Fury” opens April 27—and the sixth season of his ABC sitcom, “George Lopez.” He’s also got a live comedy special airing on HBO February 24th: “George Lopez: America’s Mexican.” The show plans to cover such controversial topics as immigration, minute men, interracial relationships and disciplining children. In the meantime, Lopez is busy doing charity work, acting as spokesperson for the National Kidney Foundation, and working on his golf swing. Carmel Magazine caught up with him by phone a few weeks before he was scheduled to play in the 2007 AT & T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am golf tournament.

flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster
CM: You’ve got so much going on, books, DVDs, television, movies, standup, how do you pull it all off?

George Lopez: I do everything one at a time, one day at a time. It’s the only way I can do all of those things. I stopped watching [most of] the news and entertainment shows. I think it’s helped me to stay a little clearer. Do I need to know what Kevin Federline is doing? And I don’t sleep a lot. I’m always connected to [my work].

CM: What is it about always doing something that’s important to you?

GL: The whole run of it, the whole show, playing at the AT&T, the whole golf celebrity thing and the whole comedy thing playing larger venues is all kind of a luck shot anyways. That it’s happened to me and I’m that blessed. I’m going to run hard and my wife understands that and I’ve got her complete support.

CM: So how do you find time to fit in golf games?

GL: Oh, there will always be time for golf! I play weekends at Lakeside in Toluca Lake, and that’s where Bob Hope was a member and Ray Romano, Joe Pesci, Andy Garcia and Jack Nicholson.

CM: When did you first start picking up the game?

GL: I hit lemons in the backyard of my grandmother’s yard. I was probably 12 to 15.Then in 1981, my friend and I went to go play on Christmas Day, since that day, I haven’t put a club down.

CM: What’s fun about the Pro-Am for you?

GL: You’re never going to be a Yankee for a day, or you’re never going to be a Laker, but with Pro-Ams, they allow you to feel like you’re a professional golfer and play under their conditions. Sometimes you make good shots and sometimes you make bad shots, but you’re still in the mix of the best players in the world. And if you get to know them, it’s a bonus. Mike Weir and I are good friends, I talk to Dean Wilson, and I play with Justin Leonard every year. The first year I played, in 2004, I came in third. I took my [trophy cup] and filled it with lemons.

CM: What would you say the strangest thing is about the Carmel area?

GL: I’ve been to Tijuana and bought souvenirs, Carmel is a high-end Tijuana! There’s things that you buy that you would never buy anywhere else. T-shirts, knicknacks, ornaments, shoes, sweaters, kites...you’re buying a kite, it’s just going to end up in your garage.

CM: What’s good about the area?

GL: I used to have an impression that the people were stuffy and high class and you know, they are the nicest, most down-to-earth, supportive people ever. The first year I played in the AT &T, I had just bought my house on Bird Rock. I’ve moved since then, but I’m walking up to the green and a woman is holding a sign that says, ‘Hey George, thanks for buying my house, welcome to the neighborhood.’ And man, I almost started crying, it was so wonderful and people started clapping, and it was great. I’ll never forget that.

I also have to mention Clint Eastwood. Our families have become very close. You know how powerful he is, he’s an American icon. It’s great for everyone that Clint’s in the area. He’s the one who first invited me to play at the AT&T.

CM: You use humor to disarm people to get some pretty serious topics across. If there is a driving force behind everything you do, what is it?

GL: I think it’s inclusion. I’ve always felt excluded from pie charts and America. If you go to Salinas and look in the fields and at how we get food to the table, those people are very important and they’re not in a position to speak for themselves. That’s really hard work. I come from that; my father was a migrant farmworker. I think it’s important to acknowledge their work. If Mexicans were to go away, you’d put people in there who were Americans with health and dental, and a head of lettuce would cost $125.You’d get a salad and it would be like, ‘That’ll be $775.’ Historically we’ve never really done anybody justice in this country and yet we’re asked to live together and kind of forget what happened.

CM: So do you feel people are getting what you’re saying?

GL: I’m not ever going to be on stage and there’s going to be five minutes of dead silence and people are going, ‘This guy is really angry.’ It always has to come through laughter. I did this run at the Gibson Amphitheatre [in Los Angeles] between Christmas and New Year’s where I sold out eight shows. It was like 50,000 people and it was pretty hard-edged but it was also really funny. A lot of it had to do with Schwarzenegger wanting an English-only initiative and he doesn’t speak English. You know he has that accent! It isn’t anti-white, the set up is white.The forefathers and the Constitution was all white men, and we still adhere to that, but the country has changed. And it’s changed for women and it’s changed for people who are gay and it’s changed for a lot of people and it includes us, so it’s out of that that the humor tries to come. But if it ever got to a point that it wasn’t funny or it was really angry…what do I have to be angry about? No particular race is the enemy, ignorance is the enemy.There’s a joke that I’ve done forever: ‘In 2015 they say that the largest majority of people will be Latino and you’ll tell scary stories to your grandkids: “A long time ago when I was growing up, there used to be people who were white,” and the kid says, “Really?” and you say, “Yeah, like the man who cuts our grass.”’ I’ve had that line forever and I love it.

CM: What’s a side to you that most people don’t see?

GL: I spend a lot of time alone and my wife understands that I need to be alone. I’m never lonely. I enjoy being alone.

CM: What accomplishment are you proudest of?

GL: I grew up with nothing and nobody ever told me I could do anything. I never knew my father, and my mother wasn’t the best, most stable person. My grandparents raised me, and my grandmother never really connected with me. I just had a home. So I was kind of left to my own self. When I found out that nobody had ever graduated from high school in our family, I wanted to be the first one to graduate. By the time I was 11, I wanted to be a comedian. So all those years later, I’ve managed to achieve my dream as a kid, and it wasn’t easy. I’m on the Walk of Fame and I’m one of the 25 most influential Hispanics in America, according to Time Magazine. I think my duty is to go back and tell kids, ‘Whatever color you are, wherever you come from, anything and everything is possible.’ And I’m living proof.

CM: Anything else you want to add?

GL: I want everybody in that area and Salinas and the surrounding areas to know that to me, everyone there is fantastic. The people are great, the restaurants are great, the communities are great. I don’t feel like there’s any cultural divide and I think that’s a testament to everybody who lives there. There are have and have nots in every area, but the people don’t carry themselves that way.

I don’t get there enough, but to know I can makes me feel good. I sleep good up there, and I love the house. I never thought I’d live in a place where you’d have to pay to get in!


www.carmelmagazine.com


Latina.com
flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster
George Lopez
"I've Never Been Happier to Not Be a White Male"

by Monica Herrera | 03.25.2009 | 3:35pm

On the heels of announcing his own late night talk show with TBS—slated to premiere in November—George Lopez spoke to Latina.com about why he wants to knock down walls, who will top his list of must-have celebrity guests, and how he plans to shake things up in the nighttime hours.


Why is this the right time to host your own talk show?

GL: We’re looking at an incredibly diverse and ethnically enhanced audience that wasn’t there 20 years ago, 30 years ago, even 10 years ago. I’m not sure if you can reinvent the talk show format, but I think you can paint it with different colors, and we’re gonna use more brown and taupe and mauve and more colors than I think are being used right now on late night.

Who is on your list of must-have celebrity guests?


GL: Samuel L. Jackson was in my production pilot, and so was Eva Longoria and Dane Cook…and I used Shakira’s band. Also, I’m a huge fan of Maná...I can’t remember the last time I saw Maná on English-speaking TV, and now they have the opportunity to do that. Why shouldn’t Latinos have a show where they can see Denzel Washington and Maná? You know, and obviously everybody from Juanes, to Santana, to will.i.am, to Garth Brooks...everybody’s in play. Except maybe Erik Estrada.

Why not?

GL: Uh, not a fan.

How will your late night show stand out from all the rest?


GL: Well first of all, I’m not a white male. You put me and Craig Ferguson right next to each other, and you’ll see a huge difference already...I’ve never been happier to not be a white male than I am today. [The audience] will be a little closer, and what I want to do is sometimes do interviews right in the middle of the people. I don’t think there has to be this kind of imaginary wall. I’m a Latino, so I’m not for walls. When I interviewed Eva, I let the audience ask three questions, and we didn’t screen the questions. I think you have to pay somebodyevery time they talk, but TBS has got some bank. They’ll be alright with that.

Since you'll be on a cable network, will you take more risks?


GL: The head of TBS said, "Listen, George, we’re cable so take some liberties with the language." I think that might come back to bite him in the ass. I’m sure a "motherf***er" will slip out now and then. I’m not afraid to take on somebody or say something that somebody will find offensive. Unfortunately in comedy, you can’t say something really good without offending somebody.

Why not just do another sitcom?

GL: Oh man, I’m out of the sitcom business. I never thought I would get a sitcom, nor did I ever think I would be in syndication, nor did I ever think the show would be more successful in syndication than it was in production. But that’s kind of the way my career’s been, where it’s all been unexpected. I grew up dirt poor, so I’ve exceeded my own expectations.


latina.com

George Lopez Interview
Beverly Hills Chihuahua

By Izumi Hasegawa

Visit the official Site
Beverly Hills Chihuahua

Beverly Hills Chihuahua is a Walt Disney Picture. It was released in 2008, stars Papi (voiced by George Lopez) an amusing Chihuahua who's crazy about Chloe (voiced about Drew Barrymore), a pampered Beverly Hills Chihuahua who gets lost while on vacation in Mexico. Papi springs into action and heads south of the border to rescue her.

Izumi Hasegawa sat down with George Lopez to talk about the film and his role.


flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster


Izumi Hasegawa: You have Chihuahuas, right?

George Lopez: I have three of them.

IH: Are they from the pound or rescued?

GL: One was born naturally, from a result of the relationship between the mother and the father, and one was a rescue, and one we bought.

IH: So you were familiar with them before you had to play one?

GL: Yeah. I mean, look, there’s a lot of compelling stories in Hollywood of how people make it against all odds, but to be one day from being put down and then the next day you’re on every billboard and you’re the star of a movie is unbelievable. It’s unfortunate that he’s a canine and really won’t ever understand what that means, but I think it’s a metaphor for all of us. I had kidney disease and I didn’t know what my life was going to be like after my surgery, or even before what the quality of life was going to be. In this movie, it’s Disney, and they always do movies that pull at your heartstrings, and this one’s no different. It was more of a romantic story than I imagined it to be when I was recording. You read the script initially, and then you go in there and you just read your pages. So when I saw the movie, I was impressed by the sweetness of Drew Barrymore’s voice, how brilliant that is and how sweet it is when she’s talking on the train to the puppy and the mom. It’s very Disney and the fact that this movie had such a dynamic trailer with the big production number with the Chihuahuas in headdresses that The New York Times called incredibly insulting on someone’s image, and then, at the same time, people can’t wait to see the movie. So when The New York Times says it’s annoying but yet there’s a certain amount of people who can’t wait, and on YouTube, there were videos of how much they loved it; there was a YouTube video on how much they didn’t like it. But that just created this great energy for the movie.

IH: How did you like the “no más” movie?

GL: Placido Domingo does the “no más” speech in the movie, but I did it virally. You know, “enough is enough,” and all that stuff really helped. I enjoyed that “no más/enough is enough” campaign.

IH: Do you think these little dogs have been over-exploited in Hollywood?

GL:Well, they’re accessories. Paris Hilton and different actors and actresses that carry them around… Yes, they’re cute dogs. They’re small but they think that they can take anyone on. I’ve seen my dogs at a dog park where I have to put them in the car because they were going to beat up everyone in the park. You’re like, “Come on, what’s going on?” You’re carrying them under your arm. You’re like, “Are you crazy? What’s going on?” And it’s like, “Let me back out there! Let me back out there!”

Papi from Beverly Hills Chihuahua
flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster
IH: Do you relate to Papi’s strong romantic streak? Do you have a strong romantic streak?

GL: I don’t. It’s funny because, when I did the voice, Disney people would say, “God, he’s so romantic. He’s so great.” And I’m like, “You know that’s me, right?” And even when I saw the movie, I was like, “That is more romance than I thought I put in it.” Just the vulnerability. I think all the years of rejection from women. I finally found an outlet to let it go! Where it wasn’t me personally, but it was a dog. When I recorded the first time, I recorded with Drew the first hour and a half, and I only was supposed to have one recording session, that was it. That was just one hour, or one hour and a half, two hours, and that was it for me. But when her and I got together, and I sang to her and she rejected me, and everybody was in there like, “Awww…” they were like, “Hey, we might have something here.” So they started to see that, and then every time they prepared it. Everywhere this dog has a camera on him, they tried to get me to put a line in there, and a lot of them work. And it created a part where the dog was kind of invisible in the middle of the movie, and now he became the dog that runs through the whole film.

IH: How much time did you spend recording the part, and how much did it change, depending on what the dog did?

GL: What was great was in the beginning, I recorded for an hour and a half, and then we got that whole kind of romantic thing where I sang to Drew Barrymore through Plexiglas. That’s really the only way I should be close to Drew Barrymore, is through plastic, you know? And then when I started to record and they started to shoot in Mexico, and they were bringing back footage and you got a chance to see what was going on, I went and asked them if I could re-record a lot of the stuff from the beginning because I didn’t have a reference point. And I said to Raja [Gosnell], the director, “Can I re-record this?” And he’s like, “It’s fine.” And I’m like, “To me, it seemed a little flat, so I wanted to re-do it and bump it up a little bit.” So it was great to be able to do that. I even saw him yesterday and said, “Can I go in there and re-record stuff?” And he’s like, “No, there’s 3,000 prints already.”

George Lopez and Rusco the Chihuahua on the red carpet
flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster
IH: Did you get to interact with Rusco?

GL: I didn’t until last July. Three months ago, he and I were together for the first time and we did a couple of promos for Disney. And I gotta say, he was very good. I think he was a lot better than I was. He was more centered than I was. I was everywhere. And then he gave me a high-five on command and he was getting a manicure, so he had his paws in water, and I was talking to him and we were both sitting there with cucumbers over our eyes, just kind of relaxing with cucumbers. After they took the take, they were looking for the cucumber. He ate his cucumbers while they were resetting the camera.

IH: Who’s got more game: Papi or Pepe Le Pew?

GL: Pepe Le Pew. That’s a tough one to take down, man. I think if we do a sequel, Papi can contend. But Pepe Le Pew, for a skunk to be that romantic and whenever he got close to somebody, there’s fumes that come out and chase the girls away. No, Pepe Le Pew, I think he’s got it.

IH: Did you learn anything from Papi’s romantic streak to impress your wife with?

GL: I do it with jewelry. I say it best. I say it with jewelry. I say it with small boxes.

IH: You’re trained well…

GL: Yes, I’m trained well. When they give you a kidney, there’s not a lot of “no”s you have left.

IH: I assume you don’t dress up your dogs at all…

GL: I do not. But I’ve had dogs dressed up in my house. Here’s the craziest thing. And I’ve said it anyway, I might as well say it. A year ago, our friends have a brown Chihuahua that was a female, and we have our youngest Chihuahua, which is a male. And my wife and the other person’s owner and the kids decided that it would be great if we had a Chihuahua wedding in the backyard. And I tried to get out of it, but I came home at the wrong time. They were just starting the wedding. So my smallest dog has a top hat on. They found a top hat. And they found a bow-tie and a tuxedo shirt. So there he is, and they’re holding them in their hand, and he’s like, “What the hell do I have on?” And then the other dog had a wedding dress on, and they were going to marry them. My daughter was doing the services. But in the middle of the wedding, the mother-in-laws fought, the two dogs got in a fight in the backyard, the bride lost her dress in the middle of the ceremony, and the father went missing and nobody could find him. And I thought, “I’ve been to this wedding!”

IH: What do you contribute your wide demographic and mainstream appeal to?

GL: I think that there’s a naturalness to me that I’ve always had, even when I did stand-up, when I wasn’t very good at it, that there was just this general kind of being in the place and warmness that I’m not sure if I have when I’m not on camera, when I’m not in public, because I’m still really shy. But I think that there’s a genuineness, and I think it draws people together. We did it in the show, and I think that’s one of the reasons why the show is bigger in syndication than it was in production, because more kids have got a chance to see it. I think movies like this. And even my stand-up, that’s very adult, but it’s still not mean. It’s just edgier, it’s not mean. Mean closes people off. And even though you’re talking about subjects that are really kind of edgy and different and deal with race, it’s not where I turn everybody off. So I’ve been able to be a nice mix. I think one of the things that benefited that was just being ignored for so many years and how that feels. Today there was a reporter here that was from Ohio and wanted to go to the game and he was talking about how he’s going to go back and he didn’t have money for a ticket. And I go, “How much are they? A thousand?” He’s like, “No, they’re probably like $400.” I said, “I’m going to give you $400 and you can go to the game.” He’s like, “No you’re not.” And I gave him $600. So I gave him $600 in cash and he’s going to the game. And the cameraman found two tickets, so he’s taking the cameraman. Both of them are going to go to the USC/Ohio State game. One’s a USC fan; one’s an Ohio State fan. I mean, fortunate in having some financial thing, it’s not just all about me. I actually enjoy doing that, that somebody was going to go and have a nice time.

IH: Do you subscribe to any philosophies, like The Secret’s Law of Attraction?

GL: Yeah, I do. I started to do that and it hasn’t let me down yet. I’m going to keep doing it until it doesn’t work. It really has been working. I mean, I get so much. And to be kind to people and to help and to be generous to people, and to help people who are in poor health as I was, that my wife and I do, is great. I’m getting a Make-A-Wish award in Phoenix next month because I’ve done a lot of Make-A-Wish with kids and things like that. I’ve heard stories of entertainers who have promised to be there and then have not been there, and then the child goes away. So when you think that there’s nothing probably sadder than a kid that’s sick or nothing happier than to hear laughter in a room with kids, is great. And this movie is that. So many times now we expect much more than just being entertained. We should just remain simple and go to a movie and be entertained, and walk out with your kids and say, “That was fun,” and go get ice cream and go home.

IH: You’ve talked about retiring in the near future. What if they want to make sequels to Beverly Hills Chihuahua?

GL: I will come back from my house in Hawaii for a Beverly Hills Chihuahua 2! I’m almost 30 years doing stand-up. I’m going to have a big party next year. I’m doing an HBO special in Chicago. I hope to film it at the United Arena live in front of 15,000 people on HBO. And Chicago’s been a great town for me, when I first started doing stand-up. It’ll be 30 years, my 30-year anniversary. So I’m going to have a huge party. So far, I think I’m going to get Ambrosia and REO Speedwagon. I’m going to throw it back. I’ve got a huge party with a lot of bands. I think Peter Frampton, REO Speedwagon, Ambrosia, and maybe somebody else. I’m not sure yet.

IH: When you say “retire,” do you mean just from stand-up?

GL: I was in poor health and now I’m in good health. I think this business gets you in and doesn’t allow you to leave on your own terms. I’d like to leave while there’s still a bit left in the tank and enjoy my life, because I don’t know if this thing will last ten years, 20 years, five months. So I’d like to be able to enjoy a little bit of life.

IH: How much improv did you do in English and Spanish?

GL: I don’t know about the other actors, but I, being a comedian, would look at the thing and go, “I could do something better than this.” And he’s like, “Oh yeah? Well let’s do it like that and then we’ll do it the way you want to do it.” And then, in most cases, they used mine. Like that scene where Piper was walking out, they’re in the police office; Sam and Papi, Papi’s sitting in the chair, you know, he’s just sitting there in the chair… [Laughs] And Piper walks up and the dog just kind of looks over to the side, as a dog would, you know, somebody walking up behind him. So I said, “Hannah Montana at three o’clock!” It was funny, you know? All the dog did was that and I put a joke in there. So that kind of stuff was nice, and it adds to the movie. I did the same thing in the ping pong movie, Balls of Fury. I did stuff that was at the end of the scene, just always a tag at the end.

IH: Some people like voiceover because they feel it’s a different way to use their talent…

GL: Right.

IH: Are you more comfortable with it, or do you miss the audience?

GL: For not having done it, I enjoyed it, and when you have a good director and producers that are open to it… But I was watching Aladdin with my daughter, and I don’t think that there’s ever been a performance like Robin Williams in Aladdin. It was brilliant. Those jokes that come flying out of that Genie, that’s great. I’m not at that level yet, but I’d like to be able to get to that. A little bit of that. That was fantastic.

IH: We don’t see many popular family movies where we see Mexico in a positive light…

GL: [Laughs]

IH: How did you feel about this movie showing the positive side?

GL: I think it’s great. Mexico and the United States, there are obviously a lot of political issues going on, but it doesn’t take away from the fact that Mexico’s a beautiful place and very historical. Mexicans invented the calendar, how we keep time, which is amazing because we’re always late. I don’t know how that happened. Maybe they only had one. But to invent the calendar and then always be waiting, I’ve spent my whole life waiting on people! And I’m like, “Dude, we invented the calendar!” I got caught up. So it is great. And the pyramids, and the history of it and I named my daughter Mayan. The fact that Disney, the validation of a Disney studio movie and having it come out as romantic and sweet. If you guys saw the movie and you saw it with kids, they loved the movie. That’s all you can ask from a Disney film. And when they get behind it, it’s big-time.

IH: What amazed you the most about what they could teach a dog to do on cue?

GL: Well, I have three Chihuahuas, and they’re not as still as that dog, I’ll tell you that much. I mean, these dogs, they go everywhere, and their heads move everywhere, and they shake. I have a dog. the middle dog, the female, that it could be 90 degrees outside, and if she’s outside, she’ll run up to the window and just start shaking like she’s in Antarctica. And you’re like, “It’s 90 degrees outside!” But they know. They’re like, “You gotta let me in, man, I’m shaking! It’s freezing!” So the fact that they had them so still and moving so freely that they do look like human actors, you forget that these are dogs. When they run out of the dogfight thing, you’re not surprised they don’t run in 20 different directions. They all run in the same direction! I don’t know what kind of bacon they have over there, or what kind of chicken they use, but that’s some powerful stuff.

George Lopez, the voice of Papi and actress Jamie Lee Curtis as Aunt Viv, posing with movie pups, Angel and Rusco in Los Angeles for the movie premiere.
flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster
IH: How long were they training the dogs? Some of these were rescues with no previous experience.

GL: Well, I don’t think it was a long time. But when you see these trainers, they do amazing things. Rusco, if you look at him now, he’s locked in. So I think they just know how to approach a dog, and then they gave those dogs homes that they used in Mexico. They used a lot of strays that they found and then they gave them homes, which is great.

IH: What are your dogs’ names?

GL:
You’re going to make me say the names publicly?

IH: If you want.

GL: Chico is the black and white one. There’s a picture of me in People magazine that I’m trying to get the negative for. And then Trixie is the female. And then Monty, because he was born in Monterey, California, the one I paid for the $1,000 Cesarean, is the third one.

IH: What do you think of the overall casting, live actors and voice actors?

GL: I thought it was very good. Somebody pointed out to me that Sam and Piper’s character, and Chloe and Papi are almost like the same union in dog and human form. I didn’t realize that until someone pointed it out. But Jamie Lee Curtis is great in everything that she does, and Andy Garcia and Placido Domingo, and Drew Barrymore, the voice. So I thought they did a really good job. And Cheech, who’s like a staple at Disney. I thought they did a really good job of finding the right voices for the dogs.

IH: Did you have to match the dog’s mouth, or did they add that afterwards?

GL: What happened in the beginning, we didn’t because there wasn’t any footage. So when they started to get footage and send it back, then we started to match with the dog, because you don’t want to do four sentences and the dog only moves his mouth a little bit. And then they did it with CGI, so we were able to make it seem real. In the old days, they just took peanut butter and put it under the mouth and the dog would talk forever, like a lecture.

IH: Did you put in the Spanish improvisations?

GL: No, all English.

IH: The little phrases?

GL: Oh yeah. A little bit.

IH: Were they written?

GL: No, they were my improvisations. But just a little bit. I mean, they kept it really on point and they kept it really universal, and they kept it really clean. I had some stuff in there that was not un-G, but it was probably “G-almost-H,” so they took all that out and they made me do it really straight. It’s better for the movie. But how can you have Chihuahuas and not want to do some pee jokes, you know?


flixster.actor.user.162652717.823171374.QME8ZNEzt6z9ZBb - flixster