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Mel Brooks Talks About Meeting Gene Wilder For The First Time

“Gene Wilder, one of the truly great talents of our time, is gone”, Brooks wrote in a statement Monday.

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We’ll leave you with his attractive rendition of “Pure Imagination” from 1971’s WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY.

Always encouraging people to use their imaginations, Wilder will forever be remembered as the man who taught us if we wanted to change the world, there’s nothing to it. The Late Late Show host James Corden even uploaded a special video on how Wilder had “rejected” an opportunity to appear on the show. He went backstage at a play Wilder was in called “Luv” and told him the good news. Gene Wilder, who brought a wild-eyed desperation to a series of memorable and iconic comedy roles in the 1970s and 1980s, has died, his lawyer, Eric Weissmann, said, reports CNN.

Brooks did secure financing for the comedy musical, and after learning he would be heading to the big screen for the first time, Wilder became emotional.

He used his new name, Gene Wilder, for the off-Broadway and Broadway roles. I’m still reeling from.no more Gene. With lines as “There is no life I know / To compare with / Pure imagination / Living there, you’ll be free / If you truly wish to be”, the song is a ideal fit to pay homage to Wilder.

Plus, Paul Dergarabedian, a senior media analyst at Comscore, says theaters have more than that to gain by re-releasing films after the death of a revered actor or celebrity. “And he burst into tears, and held his face, and cried, and then I hugged him”. Radner died of ovarian cancer in 1989, which left the actor utterly devastated.

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Mel, 90, recalled the early days of his friendship with Gene, who he met when his late wife Anne Bancroft starred in a stage production of “Mother Courage and Her Children” alongside the actor, who played Chaplain. Brooks replied, “Look in the mirror, blame it on God”.

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