Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Less recognizable with clothes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Less recognizable with clothes

    Less recognizable with clothes

    Borat's infamous wrestling partner is hot these days
    after the hit film and a golden Globe speech.

    ACADEMY AWARDS

    The Envelope
    February 25, 2007

    By Robin Abcarian, Times Staff Writer

    When you think of Ken Davitian, you probably think of him naked, obese
    and pendulous, nearly suffocating the tall but waifish Sacha Baron
    Cohen in their famous naked hotel room fight in the hit movie "Borat."

    But there is so much more to Davitian, the 53-year-old actor who so
    completely inhabited the part of Borat's humorless Kazakh producer
    Azamat Bagatov that industry people with whom he is taking meetings
    even now don't realize he is a thoroughly local American actor.

    "Last week, I met with executives at Disney," said Davitian, who
    speaks slowly and deliberately. "They said, 'We wanted to call you in
    because we thought you'd already gone back to some foreign land. We
    had no idea you were an American actor.'

    "And I said, 'But I was in 'Holes' - one of your movies!" (He played
    the pig farmer Igor Barkov in the 2003 Disney adaptation of Louis
    Sachar's popular teen novel.)

    As it happens, Davitian, who always yearned for the life of a
    Hollywood actor, grew up in East L.A., graduated from Garfield High
    School, spent most of his adulthood in Walnut, owns a sandwich joint
    called the Dip in Sherman Oaks, and lives modestly with his family in
    Granada Hills.

    It was like that at the "Borat" audition too, Davitian said. When his
    now- 28-year-old son, Robert, a cinema major at Cal State Northridge,
    heard that "the great Larry Charles from 'Seinfeld' " was directing a
    picture with the guy from "Da Ali G Show," he insisted his dad read
    for the part of the "frumpy Eastern European."

    "My perfect character!" said Davitian, sitting on a white pleather
    banquette one recent morning in a darkened, empty nightclub in the
    Hollywood & Highland complex, where the Oscar ceremony will be held
    tonight. The club is next door to Davitian's second location for the
    Dip. "All my relatives are frumpy Eastern Europeans, Armenians with
    accents. This is the character I have been doing since I was a child,"
    he said, lapsing into broken English to prove it.

    Davitian, who has been riding high since "Borat" became a movie
    phenomenon last fall, has arrived at his moment in the sun through a
    rather circuitous route.

    Though he studied theater arts in college and later had a small role
    in an Albert Brooks movie (he ended up on the cutting-room floor),
    Davitian went into his family's waste management business and for
    years made a good living picking up other people's trash, including
    for the city of Malibu.

    "With the rubbish money that was coming in," he said, "we were doing
    very well."

    And then he made a disastrous business foray into Mexico, securing a
    waste management contract for a suburb of Mexico City. According to
    legal documents, this would prove an enterprise for which his company
    was ill prepared, and Davitian maintains he was victimized by a
    corrupt system. The fiasco ended in multinational litigation, NAFTA
    arbitration, bankruptcy ... and a move to the Valley.

    "It was the worst experience of my life," said Davitian of his Mexican
    misadventure. "I neglected my family, I neglected my rubbish business
    here. I lost everything. I came home broke, broke, broke. My family
    was mad. I worked as a car salesman, a telemarketer, a salesman for
    another rubbish company. It was horrible."

    But he also had years of restaurant experience, so with help from his
    father-in-law, he and his family opened a cafe in Burbank called
    Gotham Grounds and later the first Dip.

    His two sons and wife went to work, and he decided to put as much
    energy as he could into getting his acting career off the ground. He
    took acting classes and about seven years ago began getting cast more
    often, mostly guest spots on TV shows. "We all did our jobs," said
    Davitian, "and around this time, I started making headway in the movie
    industry, getting bigger and better parts."

    Like many swarthy actors with caterpillar eyebrows, Davitian has been
    typecast. He's had dozens of small roles in TV shows and a few movies,
    often playing Armenian-surnamed characters - Sarcasian on "The
    Closer," Hovanessian on "Six Feet Under," Papazian on "ER."

    At the "Borat" audition in front of Baron Cohen, director Charles and
    writer Dan Mazer, Davitian showed up in character, wearing the
    ill-fitting beige suit he later wore in most of the movie, his 8-by-10
    head shot folded to fit in his pocket. "I did the audition in
    character without giving them a résumé or telling them I am an
    American actor," Davitian said.

    When it was over, in perfectly enunciated English, Davitian announced:
    " 'Thank you very much, gentlemen. If you liked the audition, please
    call me, I had a great time.' They stopped me, and said, 'Wait a
    minute - ' "

    After winning the role (for which there was no script but a detailed
    outline), he was told not to expect much screen time. "So I thought,
    'OK, I will take this job, and if I am lucky and good, I'll get screen
    time.' Larry and Sacha always said, 'Be dressed, be ready, be in the
    van, we're leaving at 6. If we can use you, we will.' "

    About three weeks into the four-month shoot, a cross-country romp in
    search of Borat's love object, Pamela Anderson, during which the
    faux-naif Borat elicits racist, sexist and anti-Semitic views from
    unsuspecting Americans, Davitian was pretty sure of a couple of
    things: He was in a good movie. And he'd be getting plenty of screen
    time.

    "I don't want to sound immodest, but I thought, 'This is edgy, this is
    different, this is new. And there is a chemistry between this tall,
    skinny Cambridge-educated genius and the short, fat guy. It works!' "

    On screen, when they were supposed to be speaking Kazakh, Davitian
    spoke Armenian; Baron Cohen spoke Hebrew. Davitian said he usually had
    no idea what Baron Cohen was saying.

    As Borat's grim-faced straight man, he blow dries Borat's hair and
    other body parts, chastises Borat for running late, perches
    expressionlessly in the front of the rickety ice cream truck they use
    for their cross country travels. He is also licked in the ear by a
    bear and turns up as Charlie Chaplin on Hollywood Boulevard after the
    pair have a falling-out.

    But the scene that will confer cinematic immortality is the horrifying
    naked fight, which begins in a hotel room, spills into a hotel
    elevator, and ends with his character tumbling off a low stage in a
    hotel ballroom during a banquet for mortgage brokers.

    At 5-foot-5 and weighing over 300 pounds (and having just undergone a
    hip replacement), one might assume Davitian would be reticent about
    taking his clothes off. That's true, he admitted. He tried to persuade
    Charles and Baron Cohen to keep him in boxers, or at least briefs. "I
    kept saying, 'Fat, naked guy: not funny. That's a Wes Craven
    movie. Fat guy in boxers: hilarious."

    And yet, when it came time to film the fight, he didn't hesitate to
    disrobe. "I will tell you why not," said Davitian. "Because you are in
    a room with what you consider geniuses, and if the genius is gonna get
    naked, I am following the genius."

    It was this scene that Baron Cohen relived when he brought the house
    down at last month's Golden Globes, accepting for best actor in a
    comedy or musical. He recalled how "my 300-pound costar decided to sit
    on my face and squeeze the oxygen from my lungs," and the awful,
    "rancid" predicament he was then faced with.

    Reaction shots of Davitian, who hadn't been invited to the Globes but
    was slipped tickets by a member of the Hollywood Foreign Press
    Assn. at the last minute, showed him first shrugging and raising his
    wine glass to Baron Cohen, then finally, as the actor lampooned him,
    swigging from a wine bottle. "I was anticipating being on the list of
    thank-yous," said Davitian. "But not that."

    He recently treated himself to a new Cadillac and picked up some fancy
    designer sunglasses at Golden Globes-related swag suites. ("There's a
    lot of stuff you can't use," he said. "A lot is girlie stuff, and
    second of all, they don't have anything that's 3X.")

    Though he worked for close to scale on "Borat," which cost an
    estimated $18 million and has grossed $247 million, Davitian has no
    regrets.

    "I am doing 'E.R.' next week. Special guest. First time for me - no
    audition, no nothing, they called and said, 'We want you.' People are
    calling. This has the potential to change my life."

    He is scheduled to appear on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," has been asked to
    hand out water at the Los Angeles Marathon next Sunday, will appear on
    "The View" and travel to London, all to help promote the March 6
    release of the "Borat" DVD.

    As of midweek, he had not been asked to the Oscars ("Borat" has been
    nominated for adapted screenplay), but was hoping for a last-minute
    invitation. When he heard that Baron Cohen turned down an offer to be
    a presenter last week, he fell silent.

    "Wow," he said after a pause. "Why would he do that? Well, call the
    people who invited him and tell them I am available."


    http://theenvelope.latimes.com/ awards/oscars/env-davitian25feb25-1,0,1423485.stor y?page=1

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X