Yankee Review |

| Name: Max
Fischer, student at Rushmore Academy
Affiliations: Yankee Review - Editor-In-Chief,
Publisher, French Club - President, Model UN - Russia,
Stamp & Coin Club - Vice President, Debate Team -
Captain, Lacrosse Team - Manager, Calligraphy Club -
President, Astronomy Society - Founder, Fencing Team -
Captain, Track & Field - JV Decathlon, 2nd Chorale -
Choirmaster, Bombardment Society - Founder, Kung Fu Club
- Yellow Belt, Trap & Skeet Club - Founder, Rushmore
Beekeepers - President, Yankee Racers - Founder, Max
Fischer Players - Director, Piper Cub Club - 4.5 hours
logged, Kite Flying Society - Co-Founder
Played by: Jason Schwartzman
Quote: "Sic transit gloria" |
"Glory fades. I'm Max
Fischer."
The search for and actor to
play Max was a huge challenge. "We didn't really know what we
were getting into," says Anderson. The filmmakers scoured
theatre programs and schools in two continents for nine months,
and advertised on the internet and
in the USA Today and the New York Times. Nancy
Doyle, casting director in New England, reported, "I hung out
in school libraries and cafeterias, accosting kids I thought might
be right. Wes was looking for something very specific, an unknown
who could walk in and just carry the film. He made it clear he
wouldn't go forward with the film without the perfect Max."
A month before production was scheduled to begin, with most of the
other roles already cast, they had no Max. Time was running out.
The fate of the project seemed in doubt. Finally, San
Francisco-based casting director Davia Nelson met Jason
Schwartzman at a party in the Bay area.
Schwartzman recounts the story. "Davia said, `We're looking
for a teenage kid who's really horny and writes plays.' And I
said, `Whoa, that sounds like me.' So I gave her my address and
phone number. When I got back to my house, there was a script
waiting. I read it. I laughed. I freaked out because I thought,
`Oh, this is funky.'"
Recalling his first meeting with director Anderson, Schwartzman
said, "When I went in to read for the first time, I was
really nervous. I wore a blazer and made
my own Rushmore patch. I thought I was being unique. When I got to
the audition, there were at least ten other guys in blazers."
Anderson notes, "But nobody else made a patch."
Schwartzman continues, "So I went in, and there was Wes
wearing Converse sandals, and we started talking. And suddenly I
felt relaxed. I knew instantly that he was a good guy, and I felt
very comfortable with him. I thought, `Hey, I
could have a chance here.' Then after I read, he told me to go for
a walk around the block while he saw the rest of these kids, and
then to come back. I gave him a quizzical look, and he said, `This
is a good thing.'"
Anderson says, "A huge weight was lifted from my shoulders,
because I knew we had him. Jason had a thousand ideas and
incredible energy. He's really
smart and he's funny and he's strange. He had all the right
qualities for the character, and I instantly felt a personal
affection for him."
Seymour Cassel says, "Jason played Max to the hilt. Here's a
kid who's not an actor, although he is an actor because he doesn't
`act'. He just has fun with the role, and he knows and feels Max's
pain."
Credit: Rushmore press kit
About Jason Schwartzman...
When Jason Schwartzman was just 6 or 7 years old, his mother,
Rocky star Talia Shire, took him to a top Beverly Hills
hairdresser. On his way out, the determined child leaned over,
gathered his hair off the floor and deposit-ed it back on his
head. As other customers gaped, he announced, "I'm going out
with my own hair!"
Now 18 (editor's note: when this article was written two years
ago, he was 18...), Schwartzman has maintained his rep as a kid
unlike many others. So much so that when a casting director met
him at a 1997 party, she promptly asked him to audition for the
lead in the film Rushmore as, says Schwartzman, "a horny,
eccentric teenager who likes older women and writes plays."
Though he had never acted before, Schwartzman says, "I
remember thinking, `That sounds like me. I can do me.'"
That he can. As Max Fischer in the quirky comedy Rushmore,
Schwartzman has won accolades from critics and costars alike.
"At first he was quite scared of me," says Olivia
Williams, 30, who plays his older love interest. "But he had
an essay to do for school, and we would sit and talk about Hamlet
together. He's sophisticated in ways that are quite extraordinary
conversationally." Despite his inexperience, she notes that
"he had an amazing ability. He can improvise, and it's very
relaxed and easy in the way he interprets the script."
He was anything but relaxed at his audition. "I don't think
nervous is the word," he says. "I was paranoid, freaked
out." Which, says Rushmore writer-director Wes Anderson, made
him ideal for the role. "We needed somebody who was a little
strange, some sort of rock star kid that was also sort of an
oddball." Out of 1,800 prospects, "he was the
strongest."
Chalk it up to genetics. His mother made her mark in The Godfather
films (as Michael Corleone's sister Connie); his father, Jack
Schwartzman, was a producer and entertainment lawyer who died of
pancreatic cancer in 1994; and his mother's brother is Godfather
director Francis Ford Coppola. "There's a genetic karma in
our family," says Shire. "I'm not a stage mother, but
ultimately I'm a creative artist in a family of artists, and I
hope we can always turn to each other."
Despite the showbiz pedigree, Schwartzman -- who grew up in Los
Angeles, where he still lives with his mother, his brother Robert,
16, and their pugs Bogey, Bella and Stella -- claims to have had a
typical childhood. At Little League games, his father was always
"the one dad sitting in the top bleachers with a big bag of
sunflower seeds, just cheering us on. He was extremely caring,
very sensitive and passionate." Just before he died, says
Schwartzman, "I had time to really sit there with him and
talk to him and make peace with him. I don't feel like there's a
loss."
Schwartzman was an inventive child, often scribbling poems -- a
source of amusement to Robert and half brother Matthew Shire, 23,
Talia's son from a first marriage. "We were like three
clowns," he says. "They're my buddies, my best friends.
They always made fun of me because I was the sensitive one."
Then he got a drum set on his 10th birthday and found a new
calling. Four years ago he and four friends formed the rock band
Phantom Planet, which recently signed a recording contract with
Geffen Records. Schwartzman, who graduated last year from L.A.'s
Windward School, where he was vice president of the student
council, says he plans to go to college someday. But he hasn't
made up his mind about acting. "If I wanted to continue to
act," he says, "it would be a necessity to become more
involved in the Hollywood world. It's a whole aesthetic. Once I
figure it out, then maybe I'd like to pursue it. It's just fun for
now."
Meanwhile, he spends free time going to movies, listening to The
Who and the Beatles and playing Nintendo. Whatever career he
chooses, he's sure he'll succeed. His father, he says,
"taught me to know about everything so I'm always in control.
If you have something you want to do that you love, you should do
it. That's what I've learned in this family."
Credit: People
Magazine.
Jason Schwartzman's Filmography
Rushmore (1998) - Max
Credit:
The
Internet Movie Database
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