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Funnyman Eddie Murphy has been on the national stage for nearly 30 years now, so it’s understandable that audiences think they know the comedian and actor inside and out. Here are five things you might not know about the man who brought Axel Foley to life:
Murphy’s high school yearbook photo featured the caption, “Future plans: Comedian,” and the young Murphy got down to business pretty quickly. He started working Long Island clubs like the Comic Strip, and his act proved to be so popular that within two years he was a full cast member on Saturday Night Live. It was a pretty quick start for someone who was such a lethargic student that he had to repeat the 10th grade.
Murphy was a natural for SNL, where his impersonations included Buckwheat, Bill Cosby, Muhammad Ali, and Jerry Lewis. Murphy wasn’t as at home off-screen, though, where he had trouble using his paychecks responsibly. As he later put it, “Give any 19-year-old kid $1,000 a week and he’ll freak out.” In 1982 Murphy told People that he had blown his previous year’s earnings on a Trans-Am and gifts for friends.
John Landis’ 1988 film Coming to America cracked up audiences and piled up a worldwide gross of over $288 million. Not only did Murphy star in the film, he also received the sole story credit. Writing and starring in such a smash hit would have been a major coup for even a big star like Murphy, but there was something fishy about the writing credit.
After the film became a huge success, humorist Art Buchwald sued Paramount for $5 million on the grounds that the movie was based on a treatment Buchwald had sold to Paramount in 1983. It turned out that Paramount had indeed optioned a very similar story in 1983 before terminating the project in 1985. Curiously, though, the Murphy-penned story for Coming to America came out three years later in 1988.
Buchwald and agent Alan Bernheim realized that Paramount was trying to bilk them out of some serious cash, and they sued the studio. After a seven-year legal battle, the pair received $825,000 from Paramount. Although Murphy was never personally implicated in the plotline pilfering, it’s pretty clear that his writing credit may not have been a true solo project.
Yes, Murphy did the obligatory celebrity record. His 1985 musical debut, How Could It Be, reached #26 on the Billboard 200. Although Aquil Fudge produced most of the album, it did have one Rick James-produced track in “Party All the Time.” The song was quite a hit; it even spent three weeks at the second spot on the Billboard Hot 100 behind topper Lionel Richie’s “Say You, Say Me.”
When MTV wanted Murphy to host the Video Music Awards that year, Murphy joked that he’d do it only if the channel would air his video. To Murphy’s surprise—he didn’t even have a video—MTV agreed. Murphy and James quickly threw together a video for the song, and James’ hair alone makes it a masterpiece:
One of Murphy’s first major triumphs as a solo comedian was the 1983 stand-up special Delirious. Today the special is remembered for two things: its raunchy content and the form-fitting red leather suit that Murphy wore on stage for the taping. In fact, so many fans remembered the trademark suit that they would often ask Murphy what happened to the snappy duds.
In 2007, Murphy revealed the truth: Keenen Ivory Wayans had ruined the suit. According to Murphy, he once dared Wayans to wear the suit out for a night on the town and remain in character. Although the suit was tight on the much smaller Murphy, the 6’3” Wayans took his friend up on the dare. As Murphy later remembered, “He met girls, he had a sausage in his pants, there was dancing.” The suit, though, was seriously stretched out after Wayans’ adventures.
As a child, Murphy was such a neat freak that his stepfather would joke that the lad needed to get a degree and a good job so other people would have to do his dirty work.
Fame didn’t change Murphy’s clean habits; if anything, it magnified them. Murphy has said he takes several showers a day and constantly washes his hands. As he explained it in an interview with Playboy, the process of meeting fans is just an inherently unsanitary one. “Because I always figure somebody might have dug in his nose…then he comes to shake my hand, ‘Hey, Eddie!’ Sometimes you pee and get a little pee on your hands and then it’s, “Hey, Ed!’”
‘5 Things You Didn’t Know About…’ appears every Friday. Read the previous installments here.
I remember playing Party All The Time on the radio. The followup, a novelty song called Boogie In Your Butt, drove us crazy because we had constant requests from little kids.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4le6Zr86ojs
posted by Miss Cellania on 11-20-2009 at 11:06 am
Ed Murphy was CLASSIC in Bowfinger (one of my favorite and most underrated comedies). And, by no real coincidence, probably the last movie of his I have enjoyed.
posted by Ian from Baltimore on 11-20-2009 at 11:42 am
I have to strongly disagree on Bowfinger. That is the one movie I’ve ever considered walking out on and I’ve seen Battlefield Earth in the theater.
posted by Chris on 11-20-2009 at 12:20 pm
I have to back Ian up on Bowfinger, which I thought was hilarious. A lot of the humor was very subtle too.
posted by Greg on 11-20-2009 at 12:46 pm
One of my favorite skits of his on SNL is the Little Richard Simmons.
http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/video/clips/little-richard-simmons-show/280641/
And of course Mr. Robinson is great!
posted by Kels on 11-20-2009 at 12:48 pm
Images by Tyrone Greene
Dark and lonely on the summer night.
Kill my landlord, kill my landlord.
Watchdog barking – Do he bite?
Kill my landlord, kill my landlord.
Slip in his window, Break his neck!
Then his house I start to wreck!
Got no reason — What the heck!
Kill my landlord, kill my landlord.
C-I-L-L …
My landlord
posted by Nick on 11-20-2009 at 1:21 pm
Bowfinger was a funny movie no doubt, and underrated, but I think Eddies’ funniest scene was the one in The Nutty Professor, seated at the table and doing all the farts jokes. Other than Jada Pinkett and the little boy, he is the only one in the scene, playing off the characters he created. There is something about that juvenile joke that just cracks me up. Genius!
Lets not forget his antics with his brother are the inspiration of some of Dave Chappelle’s funniest comedy bits.
posted by Don on 11-20-2009 at 2:07 pm
Nick! You remembered, “Prose by Cons,” :)
That, and the whole, “Mr. White” sketch were absolutely perfect.
posted by Helenann on 11-20-2009 at 3:31 pm
I loved Bowfinger as well. I thought it was very subtle in its humor and poked fun at a lot of Hollywood stereotypes.
My favorite SNL sketch with Eddie Murphy is with his impression of James Brown. “Owwww! It’s too hot in the hot tub!”
posted by Mavis on 11-20-2009 at 3:50 pm
@ Nick,
Thank you man, you made my day.
@ Helenann
That Mr White sketch has been ripped off so much, by white people trying to be black. The Daily Show did a thing recently about black face w/ Larry Wilmore (TDS’s Senior Black Correspondent), and there was a white guy going in black makeup to experience what it was like to be black in Germany. Wilmore pointed out, that there was a black man right next to him that he could have just asked. The whole piece made me remember “Mr White” – “Silly Negroes”.
posted by Jonny on 11-20-2009 at 4:07 pm
I bet most people don’t know that in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, it was seriously considered to have Murphy’s Axel Foley a main character in the time travel portion. The deal fell through of course and I think the movie is probably better for it! This was when Murphy had his big movie deal with Paramount Pictures back in the ’80’s.
posted by Jenny on 11-20-2009 at 7:19 pm
The video for party all the time now has a lifetime ban from mtv because its so bad. As does ice ice baby.
posted by CJ on 11-21-2009 at 11:37 am
@ Nick- You forgot the last line, “To death!” It’s obscured by laughter. Hy-larious!
posted by g1nks on 11-21-2009 at 4:37 pm
My four year old has been obsessed with the “Party All The Time” song. Sings it all the time…
posted by Blacksunshine on 11-22-2009 at 2:51 pm
Bowfinger was hilarious and Eddie’s best work. I could never understand why it didn’t do better. That scene when he runs across the highway traffic has me spitting on myself every time I watch it. I have bought the DVD 3 times just to make sure I always have it.
posted by Shaaron on 11-24-2009 at 9:43 pm