Kyle Allen: Well these are good questions. You know what I mean? I can’t keep taking up space in time.ĭio Anthony: That’s a very existential answer. I have to get out of the way for the next generation. Out of your 24 years, is there an age you'd choose to stay for the rest of your days? When you have a bunch of good days, you're like, gosh, I would repeat that one, but I would also repeat this one, but this one doesn't have that one in it…ĭio Anthony: How about when it comes to age? I’m obsessed with aging. Kyle Allen: You know.I’ve just had so many good days. However, much like Groundhog Day, I’m more interested in what day of your life, if given a choice, you’d choose to live over and over? Yes-it is in fact a lot like Groundhog day.ĭio Anthony: Sure. I'm gonna have to stop coming to class,’ and she’d be like, ‘No, you're good.Kyle Allen: So, we’re here to talk about my movie. I would always come in and be like, ‘Hey, I'm fresh out. I think I owed her like upwards of $1,000 bucks before I booked anything. “Before I had ever really been able to do this as a living I had an acting teacher, Lauren Patrice Nadler. It was pretty epic.”Īllen also shared a story about an invaluable person in his life when he was first trying to get his acting career off the ground: “My buddy Branner, one of my best buddies, he was making his Broadway debut in New York City and I was flying in to see it with our other best friend and my flight got diverted because of the weather, so I ended up in Chicago and not New York, and I had like 12 hours until he was taking the stage so I rented a car and just drove through the morning/afternoon, and I got there before he got on stage. Given the fact that Chickie’s journey is inspired by a desire to support his friends in dire times, I opted to ask the group for a time when they went above and beyond for a friend or for a time when a friend did that for them when they really needed it. He kind of laces this whole story, which is set in this very serious world, but laces it with a lot of light-hearted and funny, funny moments.” “I was speaking to Tom today, the real Tom Collins, and he was saying, ‘Well, you know, it’s in such a serious situation, a dangerous situation and a dangerous environment, there is still that camaraderie of all the guys being in this together and there's still a fair amount of jokes and pranks going on.’ And that's what Peter does. Renaux spoke a bit about the value of Farrelly’s ability to juggle both: Yes, The Greatest Beer Run Ever is a wild ride, but it’s also a story that demands a balance between the fun and sincere respect for the fact that it is a life-or-death situation. It was just wild, so it's a really cool experience for me.” I was literally in middle school playing a character that he originated and now we're doing a film together. No, but I told Zac that when I got on set and he got a little emotional because it was like some full circle weird thing. “One of the first roles I ever played in middle school on stage was Troy Bolton in High School Musical 2 and some say I might have done it even better than Zac. Ropp jumped in to share a personal connection to Efron’s work. One by one, Allen, Renaux, Picking, and Ropp’s characters all have encounters with Chickie in the movie, so I opted to ask the group about their experience collaborating with Efron.
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