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Monday 14 December 2015

‘Home’ Star Brian Stepanek Talks Working With Kids, Voicing Goofball Aliens And Fainting Over Miley Cyrus [EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW]

The Ohio native loves working with his young co-stars and calls kids the greatest fans in the world.


Brian Stepanek
Brian Stepanek loves working with his young co-stars and calls kids the greatest fans in the world. (Photo : Rich Marchewka Photography) 
 
Brian Stepanek is no stranger to working with kids and teenagers. He directed musical theater for children and high school productions in college, landed his first major role as janitor Arwin on Disney Channel's "The Suite Life of Zack and Cody" and now stars as the father of Nickelodeon's "Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn."
 
"I naturally came full circle to it," Stepanek tells Headlines & Global News in an exclusive interview. "These networks are kind of like musical theater. It's the same sensibilities. Everything's a little bigger. All the turns are a little sharper. That's what I'm good at so I found myself back in the kids' world."

The 44-year-old actor also lends his voice to animated features like "Over the Hedge," "Bolt" and the new Dreamworks movie "Home," which premieres in theaters on March 27. Working on these projects, he interacts frequently with the people he considers to be the "greatest fans on the planet" - kids.

"They are so genuine and so excited to see you," he says.

Stepanek spoke with HNGN about the pride his own three children show in his work, how he got his alien character in "Home" named after him and that time he fainted meeting Hannah Montana (a.k.a. Miley Cyrus) on "The Suite Life."

Headlines & Global News: Do your kids watch your shows and movies?
 
Brian Stepanek: I never know how to answer that question. They watch it. It's very cute to see my 10-year-old be very proud of me. When we're out in public, and kids recognize me, he gets very proud. We don't talk about it a whole lot. It's totally normal to them. They just grew up with it.

When I was a kid, growing up near Cleveland, Ohio, I would have died if John Ritter walked in the room. He was my idol. My kids, they're just used to it.

HNGN: How is working with four child actors and all their energy on the set of "Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn?"
 
Stepanek: It is a blast. Last season, we were just starting, they were pretty green. They hadn't done a whole lot, so they were learning as we went. Everybody knew that and we built it into the schedule. There's something really fun about working with kids on set because they're wide-eyed. They're learning and we get to help teach them. It's really been a blast.

They have a very good sensibility and when they don't, if they ever miss anything and you correct them, they go, 'Oh yeah, I got it.' They hear the music.

HNGN: Working alongside kids for so long, do you feel a sense of responsibility to keep them grounded and humble?
 
Stepanek: Before shooting each episode, we always huddle up and the one thing I always say to them is, 'It's a privilege, not a right. We're all very, very lucky to be here.' I literally say that to them once a week, so they remember how lucky, all of us, are to be a regular on a TV show. It's like winning the lottery. Because they're so young, I want them to really understand how lucky they are.

Brian Stepanek
(Photo : Rich Marchewka Photography)
 
HNGN: What can fans of the show look forward when season two premieres later this year?
 
Stepanek: You'll see me in so many different hair styles. I've worn so many wigs, like I was Amish today. I've been in an '80s costume, like Jon Cryer from "Pretty in Pink."

HNGN: Speaking of "Pretty in Pink," do you notice the writers sneaking in references for parents watching the show with their kids?
 
Stepanek: Oh yes, but think about it, the writers grew up in the '80s. Their references are genius. I love going up to the writers' room because it's like walking into a looney bin. They are hilarious. There are a lot of flashbacks with the mom (Allison Munn) and dad because our history is that we used to be ice dancers. So there's an episode with me with Bon Jovi curly blonde hair. Like the old Bugs Bunny cartoons, they always refer to stuff that the adults would get.

HNGN: Do the kids understand that sometimes they're reenacting iconic scenes from TV and movie history?
 
Stepanek: They have no idea. We have to show it to them on set. We shoot on the same studio that "Happy Days" shot. We have to show them, "This was 'Happy Days.'' They don't know what "Happy Days" was.

We always encourage them to watch Lucille Ball and Dick Van Dyke because all the terms, all the performances, it's all the same. [Ball and Van Dyke] are great people to learn from, the best there ever was.

HNGN: The show also got nominated for its first Kids Choice Award. What was everyone's reaction?
 
Stepanek: Everybody was very excited. Especially in our first year, it's really an honor. That's why we do it, it's for our audience. If they tell us we're doing a good job, we're doing the right thing.

HNGN: Will you be attending the awards show?
 
Stepanek: I will be. I'm going to be a huge draw. That Jonas kid will be there but everybody will be there for me. [Note: Nick Jonas will be hosting the Kids' Choice Awards 2015.]
 
HNGN: You and Nick Jonas have both moved over to Nickelodeon after starring on Disney Channel. Wasn't "The Suite Life" airing about the same time the Jonas Brothers were hitting it big?
 
Stepanek: Yes, but what I remember most is when Miley Cyrus came on our show, as Hannah Montana. [My character Arwin] was the first to greet her on our Disney Channel show. She walked into the Tipton [Hotel] and I see her and go, 'You're Hannah Montana!' and I passed out. When I think back I'm like, "Oh my gosh! I was there the first time she appeared as Hannah Montana."

HNGN: Is it bizarre to see her now, considering everything that has transpired in the last 10 years?
 
Stepanek: Yes, she's all grown up now.

HNGN: You were originally brought in to record just the scratch tracks on "Home." How did you get that job?
 
Stepanek: Tim Johnson, the director, and I worked together on a movie called "Over the Hedge"(starring Bruce Willis and Garry Shandling). I came in early because originally it was Jim Carrey as the lead and I came in about a year and a half prior to Jim Carrey. I would come in and improvise. Things didn't work out with Jim so they brought in Bruce Willis and I would always read opposite Bruce Willis and Garry Shandling, I'd read all the other roles.

So I got to know Tim really well. Whenever he has a project, he always brings me in early to help put things to storyboard and have a voice. I came in and did a lot of the voices for the Jim Parsons character and the Steve Martin character [in "Home"] before they were even cast.

I think they cast brilliantly. Steve Martin in that role, it's such a touch of genius to have him in that role. What they did was I ended up playing another alien named Brian. Then there's this big bad alien that comes at the end of the movie called The Gorg and I'm the voice of The Gorg.

HNGN: What takes place during a scratch track recording? Do you put your own on the characters or is it straight line reading?
 
Stepanek: It's a combination. It's [the writers and director] trying to find it. Once you bring in Jim Parsons and Steve Martin, it's theirs. I was just doing preliminary stuff, whatever I could come up with and helping them try different lines and different directions so they could hear it out loud. Once they hear it out loud, they go, "Oh you know what, let's try this this way," to guide the film.

HNGN: Was your character Brian originally in the movie or did the writers add him later in production?
 
Stepanek: What's funny is these aliens are goofballs. When they come to Earth, in order to make themselves more accessible to Earthlings, they take Earthlings' names. That was much more evident in an earlier version of the movie. They were trying to figure out, because I was this alien that kept popping up with these little one-liners, and they were like, "What are we going to call him? What are we going to call him?" and then they went, "Why don't we just name him Brian?" That's how I ended up as Brian the alien.

"Home" opens in theaters on March 27. "Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn" will return for season two later this year on Nickelodeon.

Brian Stepanek finds 'Home' voicing two characters in new DreamWorks film

Brian Stepanek voices multiple characters in the new DreamWorks Animation film 'Home.'
Brian Stepanek voices multiple characters in the new DreamWorks Animation film 'Home.'
Rich Marchewka Photography/Courtesy of Persona PR
If you went to see DreamWorks Animation's new film Home this past weekend, you heard the voice of actor Brian Stepanek. Brian lends his pipes to not one, but two characters in the film that stars Rihanna and Jim Parsons as a girl and the alien she befriends. We caught up with him on Tuesday to learn a bit more about voice acting in the latest family movie.

Brian's work on Home began when he was brought on to provide the scratch tracks for the film's villain, portrayed by Steve Martin. For those of you who don't speak animation, "Scratch track means temporary voices," Brian explained. "The directors bring in actors to voice characters early on in the process so that they can lay those voices over storyboards and get a feel for how the movie is playing out in a macro sense (the overall direction of the story) and in a micro sense (how are these characters relating to one another)."

He so impressed the creative team that they kept him on to handle not one, but two supporting characters, one of which they actually named Brian. Had he ever had a character named after him before. "It was the first time," he laughed. "I don’t think the name is even used in the film, but it is in the written script. The writers and director were trying to find a funny, mundane human name for this alien that kept popping up with one-liners. I don’t know how they came up with Brian!"

Home represents another example of big-name talent that you wouldn't expect to hear migrating over to the voice acting world, with Rihanna, Parsons and Jennifer Lopez toplining its cast. What's it like for a voice actor like Brian to see these major names from music and TV also working in the recording booth?

"There are people out here in Los Angeles that are truly amazing voice actors, that can do anything in terms of characters and impressions. Any time I’m in the booth with them, I am in awe of how fantastic they are. I would like to see these talented people work as much as possible," he reflected, "but I understand the audience that these huge names bring to the theater. Not to mention Rihanna, Jennifer Lopez and Jim Parsons are wonderful in this film. Oh, and that 'Steve' guy," he joked.

Who are some of those aforementioned amazing voice actors in his book?

"Peter Cullen, Frank Welker, Jeff Bennett, Maurice LaMarche…these are just a few. And occasionally I get to be in the same booth with them," Brian told us. "I love watching Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels with my ten-year-old son. I would have never left the house if those were on when I was a kid."

He is one of the many voice actors who also does live-action work, such as appearing in the new Nickelodeon comedy series Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn, and his recurring role on Disney Channel's The Suite Life of Zack and Cody. Do people ever connect the dots that the same guy they're seeing on screen is the one they just heard in a movie, or vice versa?

"So far, I get recognized more for The Suite Life than anything else," he said. "I think kids (now adults) are pleasantly surprised when I show up in other places like Transformers or Mom or Two and A Half Men. Nicky, Ricky, Dicky and Dawn is just getting started so it’ll be a while before that’s what I’m recognized for. I am very excited that I’m now getting recognized by two generations of kids, especially since younger kids are not only watching NRDD, but also watching The Suite Life on Netflix."

His favorite role of all time is one you probably wouldn't expect.

"Years ago back in Chicago, I played Bill Snibson in a musical called Me and My Girl. I won a Jeff Award for it and had a blast," Brian reflected. "When you get to perform a show eight times a week for ten weeks, you really fall into a groove and start to let loose. Film and TV are so much faster in terms of turnaround that I don’t often feel like I am really able to fall in to a character. Touring with The Second City out of Chicago was fun too."

"I’m in a short film called Simon Says that is making the rounds in the festival circuit right now. I’m very proud of it," he continued. "I play two characters, one of which is a pretty despicable bad guy. The film follows a lonely man, as well as the hateful voice in his head that tells him he 'can’t.' I play both characters. Shooting NRDD is keeping me pretty busy otherwise."

Is there an animated character he'd want to step behind the microphone for someday?

"I auditioned once for the voice of Jiminy Cricket. I didn’t book it but would love to play that little guy," Brian enthused. "Ironically, he’s the good voice in your head…I’ve already played the bad voice!"
 
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