Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Actor finds fame as the butt of a joke

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

  • Actor finds fame as the butt of a joke

    The Vancouver Sun (British Columbia)
    March 9, 2007 Friday
    Final Edition

    Actor finds fame as the butt of a joke: After Borat, actor Ken
    Davitian wonders if his best work is behind him

    by Katherine Monk, CanWest News Service


    When movie stars hit the big screen in the sky, news outlets
    generally pull a memorable eight-by-10 production still from a
    signature role, and offer a 30-second eulogy in voiceover.

    Actor Ken Davitian doesn't mind the obituary tradition. It's the
    choice of picture that has him reflecting on his place, and claim to
    fame, in the larger film universe.

    "When they look for an eight-by-10 that represents my body of work
    upon my passing, it's going to be a picture of my naked butt," says
    Davitian.

    The California-born actor isn't being facetious. As the man beside
    faux newsman Borat Sagdiyev -- a.k.a Sacha Baron Cohen -- Davitian is
    now better known as faux Kazakhstani producer Azamat Bagatov, the
    other on-camera personality in Borat!: Cultural Learnings of America
    for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan, which finally hits
    DVD this week.

    Some actors may have an ego problem with a bare derriere defining
    their career, but Davitian says he remains grateful to Baron Cohen
    for the opportunity to explore the backroads of America, and make his
    backside famous in the process.

    "I feel like I've arrived," says Davitian. "My life before Borat was
    about going crazy in a terrible way. Now my life is going crazy in a
    good way."

    A working actor for the better part of his 53 years, Davitian has a
    long list of credits to his name, but most of them add up to little
    more than a few seconds of screen time and a credit as the "fat man,"
    or "fat bartender" or plain old "pawnshop owner."

    "I was going out for auditions all the time, hoping I'd get the job.
    That was my life -- that and my sandwich shop, The Dip, where I work
    all day long. I'd get to auditions smelling like roast beef."

    While Davitian doesn't know if it was the roast beef smell that
    landed him the part of Azamat, he says the Borat audition was
    relatively mysterious.

    "Usually it will say who the producers of the film are, but Larry
    Charles was nowhere on the sheet. I was told it was a really
    low-budget movie by two guys -- and my audition was on the last day
    of callbacks. All I knew is they were looking for an Eastern European
    look, and I went in character -- as a dumpy guy who spoke in broken
    English," says Davitian. "The only reason I even went to the audition
    was because I liked the [script] breakdown."

    Once Davitian got the news he had the part, more information emerged
    -- such as the names Sacha Baron Cohen and Larry Charles. He was
    excited at the prospect of working with a Seinfeld producer and the
    Brit comic behind Da Ali G Show, but he still had no idea Borat would
    be the year's biggest comic and cultural sensation.

    "It was my son who thought it could be a big deal," says Davitian.
    "Once we started shooting, it didn't take long before I realized what
    it could be. We'd be in character the whole time, because in
    character, we could get away with just about anything."

    For the most part, Davitian was simply told the day's objectives and
    general scenarios, and the rest was left to film fate. Because they
    never broke character outside the privacy of their own hotel rooms,
    and were shooting with a skeletal crew of five people, most observers
    assumed they were a visiting news team with a crazy host.

    Now famous for his haunting, bare veritas in the part of Azamat, the
    only challenge Davitian faces at auditions is clarifying his status
    as a born and bred American. What you see onscreen is all
    performance, and while Davitian credits his extended Armenian family
    for certain inspirations of character, Azamat is all his creation.

    "I can't tell you how lucky I feel, considering I was told that I
    wouldn't even be in the film. Not only am I getting offers, and
    getting work . . . but my butt is legend."

    Indeed, the story of Davitian's derriere -- and the now-infamous
    naked wrestling sequence -- is the stuff Hollywood dreams are made
    of. It's also the source of a fleshy bond between the two performers.

    "I think Sacha and I will be friends for life. We don't have to call
    each other or see each other. It's more like having a brother. And
    let's face it, when you wrestle naked with another man, you can't
    help but form a special bond."

    Davitian says there's plenty more off-colour hijinks on the DVD, and
    those seeking even more time in the presence of Davitian and his
    message of hope -- and hair -- can check out his personal appearance
    schedule, which has him giving motivational lectures to college kids
    across North America.
Working...
X