Variety

PASSION PROJECT INSPIRES ACCLAIM

- BY M E K E I SHA MADDE N TOBY

Tony Vallelonga’s treasure trove of stories proved irresistib­le to the talent behind quintuple Academy Award® nominee

GREEN BOOK” IS AN IMPROBABLE dream come true. The entire project could easily have died on the vine. So much of it was unlikely: The friendship between Lip, an Italian-american bouncer with antiquated views on race; the pairing of comedy director Peter Farrelly with a period drama; and the very concept of a story about the bond that forms between a brilliant black musician and his loquacious white driver navigating the racially segregated South as the Civil Rights movement was nearing its peak.

Then, once in production, Viggo Mortensen had to gain over 50 pounds to play the chunky driver while Mahershala Ali worked with “Green Book”

composer and piano virtuoso Kris Bowers in order to convincing­ly embody the mannerisms and poise of a classicall­y trained musician.

Yet here is “Green Book,” nominat including picture, original screenplay, actor for Mortensen, supporting actor for Ali and

sprouted from anecdotes Anthony “Tony Lip” Vallelonga told his son Nick about Shirley during the early 1960s. Nick enlisted Brian Hayes Currie to help him write the story as a screenplay. Currie, in turn, mentioned to his friend Peter Farrelly that he was working on a script about his friend’s father, who’d chauf- feured a Carnegie Hall-dwelling black with the help of a guide that told AfricanAme­rican motorists which restaurant­s and hotels would accommodat­e them.

Farrelly was intrigued. “I just kept thinking about it,” he recalls. “For a month, two months, I’d be lying in bed and think, ‘God, that’s a good story.’ I’d be driving along: ‘Man, that’s a good [story].’ ” Finally, he asked Currie if he could help write it.

Tony Lip had left hours of taped interviews with his son, writer and producer Nick Vallelonga, as well as the letters from the trip. It was great fodder, but there was much work to do. “The hardest thing making a movie by far is writing it,” says Farrelly. “Once you have a script people want to be in, it becomes way easier for me. But it’s because you’ve done that really hard work by writing a script that pulls in a Viggo Mortensen, a Mahershala Ali, a Linda Cardellini [as

When Mortensen read the script, though, it wasn’t an easy sell. He had a long talk with Farrelly about whether the

“I just wasn’t quite sure I’d be right for it because I hadn’t played a guy like this,” Mortensen says. “Part of it was that I was afraid I wouldn’t do justice to the character.” Paradoxica­lly, those concerns ended up helping prod him to take the role. “Whenever I end up doing something, if it’s something out of choice, creatively, it’s maybe always an element of fear involved.

was still a little worried,” he adds with a laugh. “But once we got going, I got more and more comfortabl­e.”

Ali, though, was enticed by the script’s unusual blend of comedy and drama. “Peter Farrelly, Brian Currie and Nick Vallelonga just so perfectly sculpted this script. They really struck a beautiful balance,” he says. “They pull you to the heights of laughter, and bring you to the depths of someone’s struggle and their pain. I don’t think it ever leans one way or the other too much, so it’s hard to compare to other other projects.”

As it happens, Mortensen and Ali had met when both were up for Academy Awards ® — Ali for “Moonlight” and Mortensen for “Captain Fantastic.”

- ter: “It was at one of these sort of cocktail party situations. I just looked at him and he looked at me, and there was this connection. Right away.”

The two talked for half an hour, he says. “We both kinda said, ‘Well, maybe we’ll get to do something sometime together.’ And we laughed, because we were saying the same thing, same time.”

When Ali, Mortensen and Farrelly began emailing during prep for “Green Book,” Ali remembered that conversati­on: “Well, here we are,” he wrote.

For producer Jim Burke, the dream was seeing his friend Farrelly, famous for comedies, pursue a dramatic story Burke always knew he had in him.

“I know that he has a tender heart,” Burke says of Farrelly. “And I do believe that in this story, which could have some sharp edges on it with both of these characters, that he would handle it tenderly.”

Burke admires Farrelly’s overall approach. “He’s both collaborat­ive and has a point of view,” he says. “And they don’t interfere with each other. He knows what he wants to do, but he’s open to other ideas.”

Farrelly’s democratic approach also appealed to Ali. “Peter is by far the most collaborat­ive, open director I’ve ever worked with,” the actor says. “I can hon with him, Peter has said, ‘Hey, if you’ve got ideas, if you think something should

“Because, as a director, he clearly openly, unapologet­ically approaches directing as a student.”

“For a month, two months, I’d be lying in bed and think ‘ God, that’s a good story.’” Peter Farrelly

 ??  ?? Writer-director Peter Farrelly with stars Mahershala Ali and Viggo Mortensen
Writer-director Peter Farrelly with stars Mahershala Ali and Viggo Mortensen
 ??  ?? Viggo Mortensen as Tony Lip at the Copacabana, where the real Tony mingled with stars and mobsters alike
Viggo Mortensen as Tony Lip at the Copacabana, where the real Tony mingled with stars and mobsters alike

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