字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 - I have to say, being in the NFL for seven years got me ready for Hollywood. [laughs] It did. You have to learn how to take a punch. [light music] Hi, I'm Terry Crews, and this is the timeline of my career. [light music] - I own everything you got. - Shut up! - You can't - Shut up! - Do this by yourself. - I'm gonna take you and take down right now. My transition into acting was one of necessity. I had moved out to LA to get behind the scenes in entertainment and went broke. I was out here for about two years and about a year and 1/2 in, we ran out of everything. My wife was like, you need a job. So I literally started sweeping floors. I started doing security. One day, when I was bouncing, a friend of mine, who came through this bar in Burbank where I was working, he said, hey man, there's an audition going on for this new show. I think you'd be great for it. It was my first audition ever. Never did anything before that. And it was a show called Battle Dome. I went, did a great job, went back home, and six months later I was still workin'. Nobody called me. There was a call-back six months after I did the first audition. Lo and behold, they call me back for another call-back. I go back to this call-back, this time I try it again, I do all my stuff, and then three months later, nine months after my first audition, they call me in and give me the job. It's a TV show called Battle Dome. What it was, was like American Gladiators on steroids. I mean, it was a sports show, game show. The contestants would come on the show and we would basically beat the living daylights out of 'em. There's been nothing like it ever since because I got sued three times. There was this huge door that they would use and it would open the doors of the Battle Dome stage and I would come out, and every time, right before that door opened, I thought I was going to die. I was so nervous, so scared, my stomach, I'm gonna throw up. But all of a sudden when the doors open and I walked down into the stage area, all of a sudden, the people, the screaming, the shouting, it was like this is my thing. I got into it because I had to. And it's so funny, I do the same thing now with AGT. There's this door, but I don't feel like throwin' up. I feel really good. And a door opens up and they say, your host, Terry Crews. It really lets you know that you can grow and you can learn and life is never static, it's always moving. [intense music] You gonna do this here, rookie? When I did security, I worked for a location manager. The same location manager who did Training Day. And he said, hey man, we got this movie we're doin' with Denzel Washington. You wanna go down and check it out, it's in LA? And I said, yeah, I would love to go see. And I went down there to hang out and the director, Antoine Fuqua, came up to me and said, hey, you wanna be in this movie? Now he didn't even know I was an actor. He didn't even know what I was doin'. It was crazy. I said, yeah. He said, take your shirt off, go up to the roof. I'm the guy that's basically flippin' pigeons in Training Day. And what happened was, I came back every day for two weeks while they were shooting that scene and he would place me in different spots. I didn't get any money. I was just an extra. And I ended up in one of the most iconic scenes in movie history. You gotta understand, I was happy. For me, doing Training Day, it helped me realize that I had to do everything for the love. I didn't get any money for Training Day, but it was so satisfying. I'm part of something bigger than myself. This story is so important and so incredible, I would do it for free. Pardon me. Santa musta come early this year, 'cause you were first on my Christmas list. - Ooh, there it is right there. - I gotta tell you about the day I got White Chicks. I actually have it down in my Franklin planner. Back in the day, that was 2003. I had an audition for my wife and kids that morning and I bombed it. I had the paper in my hand and I was reading the sides and they were shaking. You could see all the executives and all the Wayans, Damon and all the people, they were like ohh, he really messing up. And I just said, forget it. Like, I knew I bombed it. I got in the car and my agent told me, he said, hey man, you gotta go across town. There's this movie called White Chicks and you gotta go meet Keenen Ivory Wayans. I was like, okay, I'll go do this movie and go do the audition for the movie. It might not pick me, whatever. I went in there, and I didn't care anymore. I was just going and being free and whatever and Keenen was like, you're in! When White Chicks came out, I started to get that, hey, you're that guy from White Chicks. It's funny, I still get that. You're the guy from White Chicks. It was a big adjustment for me becoming famous because I didn't know where my boundaries were. We would be out with my family and people would come up to me and they were like, I wanna autograph. I was like, yeah sure. And my kids were like, but Dad, we're eating. I was like, no, no, no, it's okay, it's okay. And I would sit there for an hour and sign autographs while my family was sitting there. And my wife was like, honey, hey, woo hoo, we're here. And I was like, just this, let me do four more autographs. It'll be okay. And I would do this everywhere we went and finally my wife was like, we're not goin' out with you anymore. I was like, what? She was like, you sat there and you sign autographs with the whole restaurant. This is crazy. And I said, but babe, it's my job. I have to do this. I mean, they're hiring me. This is what they're doing. She said, no they're not. She said, you are with us, and when you're with us, you need to stay with us. And then, I realized something. She was right. And I had to start exercising a no. And that was the big part of our fame, because you realize, do I owe them an autograph? And reality is, I didn't. And the reality is, who did I owe? I owe my family my time. I knew you couldn't resist my shit. I got the shakes that'll make you quake. I got the fries that'll cross your eyes. I got the burgers that'll, I just got burgers. - I'm all right, thank you. - Adam went and saw White Chicks and loved it. Adam saw White Chicks several times in the theater. [laughs] I had already auditioned for The Longest Yard in several different roles and didn't get it. Then I get a call at my house and it's Adam Sandler himself. And he's like, Terry, I saw White Chicks. I love what you did. In fact, I loved it, I kept watching it. He said, man, look. We want you to play Cheeseburger Eddie, and that began the relationship between me and Adam Sandler. And we've done probably 10 different projects together. Adam Sandler has been basically a benefactor of my career. I like to call Keenen Ivory Wayans, he's the one that started my career, but Adam Sandler actually gave me a career, for real, from Blended to Ridiculous Six to Click. I love this man. He's my big brother. Isn't this fun? - What is this stuff anyway? - Asbestos, we're gonna save a lot of money on heat this year. I wanted to keep doing movies. I'm a movie star, this is what I do. And my wife came back to me again and she said, honey, television is very, very good. She said, you need to get on a really good TV show, not some crap, but just some good stuff. And I came back from doing The Longest Yard, we were doing a promotional tour, and we actually went to the Super Bowl with Chris Rock and Adam Sandler. Chris told me on the way back to the car, after the Super Bowl, he said, I got somethin' for you. I got somethin' for you. I was like, wha, wha? He said, no, I got somethin', I got somethin'. I go home and there's a script, literally the next day, there's a script messengered to my house. Now they email it. I'm tryin' to tell you how old that was, you know what I mean. Like, it was pre-email. [laughs] Man, I'm tellin' my age. Everybody Hates Chris, and I crack up at the title, because Everybody Loves Raymond was a very, very popular show at the time. And I went, Everybody Hates Chris, that's funny. And I never stopped laughing until I hit the last page. It turns out, I was the first guy hired to play Chris Rock's dad. I'm the only guy that's named after his actual dad, Julius. Chris actually dedicates his comedic career to his father. I'm honored beyond belief, and Chris Rock is one of the greatest comedians of our time. - [Announcer] Ladies and gentlemen, the President of America. [yells] - Shut up, shut up. Sit your monkey ass down. Chill out. What was wild, is I auditioned for Idiocracy probably 10 times, 10. And when I finally got the job, everyone was just like, man, this is gonna be a career-maker. This is gonna be it. And it bombed so bad. I gotta tell ya, this business, lot of heartache. Years later, it was almost 10 years after the movie came out, Idiocracy, I was getting all these messages from major stars. Will Ferrell, one of the few interactions I've ever had with Will, he came up to me and he said, President Camacho, genius. [laughs] I was like, what? Will Ferrell liked my performance in that movie, one of the comedic gods, to be honest with you. I never forget when Time Magazine called me back in 2016 about the election, and they were like, do you think it's becoming Idiocracy? I'm like, this is Time Magazine askin' me about this stuff. That's when I knew the influence that movies and entertainment has on the whole world. Like everything you do, it just doesn't go away. It actually just grows and grows and grows. [intense music] You know the enemy's always been turned by the noise. Especially shotguns. With this big boy spittin' out 250 rounds a minute, you tell me who's toleratin' that. I was the fourth choice in The Expendables movie series. The first choice was 50 Cent. And then Forest Whitaker came on, but then he had to drop out because he had another commitment. He was trying to go to Wesley Snipes, but Wesley Snipes was not able to because he was serving his time for his tax stuff. And then they came to me. Now first of all, I don't mind at all. Hey look, you finish fourth in the Olympics, you're still better than 20,000 other people. [laughs] It started my whole action movie thing. We did three Expendables movies. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis, Jean-Claude van Damme. I was acting next to Harrison Ford. This is crazy. By the time I was doing Expendables, you understand that all these stars want you to bring your A game. When I was in the NFL, you were hitting your heroes, people that you grew up watching. And you're like, yeah, but you gotta hit 'em in the face. [laughs] And you realize that these guys don't want you to take it easy on 'em either because they know that they wanna get better too. So I decided, you know what, even if you are a fan, or star-struck by somebody, you gotta bring your A game every time, give them the challenge that they're seeking. I learned to do that a long time ago, which is really good. Expendables was awesome in that way. When you're a Crews, you're a Crews all the way, from the set to the family, it's work every day. You know, I got a offer to do a reality show called, The Family Crews for BET with my family. What was crazy about that is that everyone didn't want me to do it. At the time, reality TV was viewed as you are on the way out. There were several actors and actresses who had reality shows that were on the tail ends of their career. My agent was like, dude, you do this, this is the end for you, it's over. And I said, you know what, then let it end. I said, let's try it. I wanna be a guinea pig. I wanna do everything. And so I tried it, and what was crazy is my wife was like, no, I don't want these cameras in my house. The day before they were supposed to come, my wife was like, I'm out. We're not doin' this, we're not doin' this. I said, okay, I'll call them. I'll tell them don't bring the cameras, but I want you to know that you're probably gonna regret this for the rest of your life. But she was like, damn you, damn you, okay, okay. And I was like, hey, I'm just sayin'. Turns out when those cameras got there, my wife couldn't get enough. She was like, where my cameras at? I was like, hey, whoa, what about me. She's like, nuh uh, it's my life. This is my life. Excuse me, that's your scene. You go over there. And she loved it. And what I have now are the most deluxe home movies of all time. I'm serious. I'm watching my son grow up. My son's first day of school was the first episode of our reality show, and he's 14 right now. We can always watch it together. We always look at it, we go. We're so glad we did it. - Please, Sarge, just come. Do it for me. Do it for love? - Damn, Jake, you know Terry loves love. I'm in. - All right! Now put on your phoniest smile, 'cause we're goin' in to the belly of the beast. - I met with Dan Gore and Mike Shore before there was even, before even Andy Samberg was involved. It was untitled, cop pilot comedy. I met with these guys and they were like, dude, dude, we really like you. We like Idiocracy, you know, 'cause he's really good. I was like, thank you, guys, I like it. I knew that they had worked on The Office and I knew that they had done Parks and Rec, which was one of my favorite sitcoms of all time. All of a sudden, things start coming together, but what was weird was that I had two other offers for other shows. Mike and Dan Gore call me up outta nowhere. They knew that I had these offers, and I was like, hey guys, you know, I got a lot comin', you know, lots boilin'. [laughs] And they were like, okay, we understand that. So we just want you to know that your character, we named him Terry, so you're gonna feel real bad if somebody else takes this job, and you'll always know it was meant for you. The trick I did on my wife to do the reality show, they did on me. Damn you! Damn you, Dan Gore! [laughs] In the car on the way home, I said, I'm in. I'm in, and lo and behold, here we are on top of season seven, February 6 debuts Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Season seven, and we already go picked up for season eight, so this is nuts. This is nuts. I am living the dream in so many ways. - Super powers? - I can distort electrical fields. [sizzles] Including the one inside your brain, causing anxiety, confusion, pain. Deadpool 2, [laughs] we trolled the whole world. Gotta say, I got a call from David Leitch, the director, and Ryan Reynolds and they're like, hey man, we're gonna fool all these fan boys. Because you gotta understand what the fan boys do. They wanna spoil everything. They want to tell you the secrets, we already figured that out. Somebody got a blog where they're like da-da-da-da. I got the secret. We got the pictures. So, Ryan Reynolds in all his glory, and David Leitch, director extreme, and premiere, put together a whole scheme that we would set up the whole world as exports, featuring Terry and his groove with all these ragtag heroes, who are gonna do all this stuff. And we'd even film stuff that we knew would never be in the movie. Oh it hurt. I was watchin' it like, oh, they're gonna be so hurt. [laughs] And when the movie came out, I'll never forget sitting in the premiere in New York, and I was sitting there and I watched as all these faces were like. No! [laughs] and you could hear it in the audience. They're like, whoa no! And each one of us died in the movie as soon as we were introduced, literally. And Ryan and I and all of us had the biggest laugh, and we got to know that, hey, guess what. You still gotta go see the movie. But this is the thing, if you ever watch the movie, I really am not dead. They're on the ground basically giving me this electric shock, but I'm not dead. Anything can happen. [laughs] [upbeat music] You know, years ago, I hosted Who Wants to be a Millionaire. And I hosted it 197 episodes of daytime Millionaire while I was doing Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Now you have to understand this too. I was shooting Who Wants to be a Millionaire on the East Coast and shooting Brooklyn Nine-Nine on the West Coast, but I wanted to learn how to host. I wanted to learn how to be that guy, how to interact with people, how to really connect. It was literally the best way to do it. I got to really, really go at it and talk to people and find out who they were, and also all the while playing a game. So Millionaire was the beginning and I ended up hosting another show called World's Funniest Fails. I was hosting the thousandth episode of Cops. I was hosting the TV Land Awards. Any opportunity to be a host, I took, because first thing you see when you see me, you know, a 240 pound giant, muscular guy, you think host, right? Right, nobody thought that. So I had to show them. I had to show them my willingness, what I wanted to do. And when I got the call, I'll never forget. I was in the kitchen. My agent, Andrew Lear, from UTA called me and he said, Terry, they have a spin-off of America's Got Talent called The Champions. They want you to host it. And I was like, what? I love America's Got Talent! You gotta understand. My whole family had been watchin' America's Got Talent for years. They were like, look, you are gonna host this spin-off for NBC called The Champions. It's gonna be like the Olympics of talent. And my God, it was a dream come true. You gotta understand, when I did Millionaire, I only did one year because they didn't invite me back. And I was hurt. I was like oh, maybe I didn't do somethin' right. But it was not up to my control and I was just thinkin' oh well. But one thing I realized is that you have to look at your failures as things that were not meant to be there. Like, there's no way AGT can come if another job is in the way. So I began to look at it like the things that go away or are canceled or whatever, it's so that what's better can come. That's the way I started to reframe it. Now it might be a lie, but that's the way I started to frame it. In high school, my mother was very, very strict. She would not let me listen to secular music, she wouldn't let us dance, she wouldn't let us go to the movies. Everything I do now, I was not allowed to do as a little boy. I wanted to do talent shows. She said, Terry, no. I'm not gonna have you shakin' your butt and the whole thing. I'd say, well can I host it? Can I host it? She said, okay. I hosted my high school talent show not knowing that that would be the dream, that is the destiny, that I would end up hosting the world's biggest, greatest talent show. I'm telling you, it started there, and I did it for free then, and I'd do it for free now. I truly am the most grateful man in the world. I am living a very wild roller coaster of a life, but I realize now that the dips are just as important as the highs. You need to feel all of it. You need to enjoy all of it. And you need to know that it's all necessary in the grand scheme of things.
A2 初級 泰瑞-克魯斯講述他的職業生涯,從《白色小雞》到《布魯克林九九》|《名利場》。 (Terry Crews Breaks Down His Career, from 'White Chicks' to 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' | Vanity Fair) 8 1 林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字