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All-Time Great Moments From Inside the Actors Studio – US News

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Videos can use content-based copyright law contains reasonable use Fair Use (https://www.youtube.com/yt/copyright/). If heaven exists, maybe for you it involves a sit-down with Brad Pitt or George Clooney. Or Meryl Streep, perhaps. Or maybe coming face to face with the cast of The Simpsons is more your idea of eternal bliss. All of the above and dozens more have sat down opposite James Lipton on Inside the Actors Studio over the course of 25 years, the format reliably the same time after time: an in-depth interview, followed by a list of 10 questions. Which is why we know that Pitt’s favorite curse word is “c–k.” For its 23rd season, the show has moved to a new network, Ovation, and will be under the care of a rotating cast of hosts (the ageless Lipton somehow turned 93 along the way), starting with Alec Baldwininterviewing Henry Winkler. Baldwin was Lipton’s first-ever guest in 1994, but the series premiere featured Paul Newman. Because, Paul Newman. Photos  60 Actors You Forgot Appeared in Marvel Movies  Figuring there was no better time to take a quick look at the past before the new era begins tonight at 10 p.m., here are some of the best moments wrought by Inside the Actors Studio over the years:  1. Everything Involving Bradley Cooper: An inquisitive student at Pace University’s Actors Studio Drama School who got more screen time than some during the audience Q&A portion of the show was none other than Bradley Cooper, who made several unwitting cameos that were handily unearthed once he himself became a huge star. You could see the future Oscar nominee picking Robert De Niroand Sean Penn’s brains in the late ’90s (about Awakenings and Hurlyburly, respectively), the De Niro episode coming 14 years before Cooper would play his son in Silver Linings Playbook. Cooper also was in the front row for Steven Spielberg in 1999, listening intently. No wonder, when Lipton welcomed Cooper to the show in 2011, he introduced him as the guest he was looking forward to the most—a former student who had unequivocally made it. Cooper got memorably emotional talking about his acting teacher Elizabeth Kemp, who was in the audience. “I’m a really loud crier, too,” he joked. “I’m not like a sobber…it’s ugly, so I apologize.”  “He kept bursting into tears,” Lipton fondly recalled on One on One With Steve Adubato in 2016. “He’s a wonderful man and, as we all know now, a brilliant actor. I auditioned him. If I’d turned him down, he would have stayed at Georgetown and become a diplomat—and a great one.” (Kemp died in 2017, but not before working with Cooper and Lady Gaga, who paid public tribute to her, on A Star Is Born.) Cooper returned along with some fellow former students for the series’ 250th episode in 2013, and when they inevitably ran the De Niro clip again, out walked De Niro. Incidentally, Cooper also said, during the questionna

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