15 Trivia Tidbits About Bill Hader
William Thomas Hader Jr. has come a long way from once working on the set of Playboyâs call-in sex series Night Calls. The actor, comedian and chameleon voice artist became famous for myriad characters â from Saturday Night Liveâs adorkable Stefon to Amy Schumerâs love interest in Trainwreck to his now Emmy-award-winning character in Barry. You might know about his struggles with anxiety while working on SNL or that he never even intended to become an actor, but there are many more layers to the Bill Hader onion, likeâŠ
He Was Once the Voice of Mr. Peanut (Even Though Heâs Allergic to Peanuts)
Hader replaced Robert Downey Jr. as the voice of the nut with a monocle back in 2013, which is a bit odd as he is deathly allergic to peanuts. Hader told Conan that while working on the movie The Skeleton Twins, he was rushed to the hospital after someone gave him chocolates containing peanut butter. Apparently, the person who gave it to him didnât know that peanut butter is made from peanuts.
He Was Arnold Schwarzeneggerâs Personal Assistant on âCollateral Damageâ
Hader told Andy Cohen on Watch What Happens Live that Schwarzenegger only ate schnitzels on set, had his meals flown in and that the muscle man really didnât like it when anyone interrupted him during a game of chess.
He Doesnât Sign Merchandise After a Terrible Experience With a Fan
Even though Hader did half of the voice for BB-8 in Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the actor told Josh Horowitz on the Happy Sad Confused podcast that he no longer signs any merchandise after a terrible experience with a fan. âI used to sign stuff, and then one time I saw somebody, and they had their kid come up to me to sign a BB-8 thing, and it was three in the morning,â Hader explained. âI was leaving the Inside Out premiere, and then we went to an after-party thing. It was super late, and this guy kept his kid up all night, and he was like, âGo over there so heâll sign it so I can sell it online.ââ
The â SNLâ Sketch Heâs Most Proud Of
Hader told redditors during an AMA that he was most proud of writing âDonâ You Go Rouninâ Roun to Re Ro,â the spoof about British gangster movies and âhow we Americans canât understand what the actors are saying with those thick Yorkshire accents and all.â
Heâs Friends With Guillermo del Toro (Who Gave Him Shit on âBarryâ)
In the third episode of the final season of Barry, del Toro makes a cameo appearance. Hader told Deadline that the two of them are friends and that the famed horror director gave him some flak about his scene. âHe was fucking with me a little bit,â Hader revealed. âHe was like, âAre you really going to block it like this?â I was like, âYeah, I am.â And heâs like, âReally? Thatâs it? OkayâŠâ No, he was really funny, and weâre all friends. Iâm friends with him, and Iâm friends with Alfonso CuarĂłn, and Alfonso was texting me, âGuillermo says you donât know how to direct.ââ
The Inspiration Behind Stefon
Arguably his most famous SNL character, Stefon, was co-written with John Mulaney, with Hader saying that the entire idea spawned from an email Mulaney received inviting him to the hottest new gay club called Push. Hader himself found inspiration in a barista at Joeâs Coffee who had a lot of mannerisms he ended up applying to Stefon.
Barry Has a Lot in Common With Another Old âSNLâ Character
As weâve pointed out, Barry and Haderâs SNL character Anthony Peter Coleman have a couple of things in common: Theyâre both haunted by their military pasts, hide behind their theater alter-egos and are the kind of romantic partners you should be scared of. They both also crave the approval of their mentors, if you can call Seth MacFarlane that.
He Has a List of â200 Essential Movies Every Comedy Writer Should Seeâ
The top five on Haderâs recommended comedies list are 9 to 5, 1941, Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, Ace in the Hole and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen. Some underrated gems include Drag Me to Hell (he seems to be a huge Sam Raimi fan), Four Lions and The Player.
He Has Written and Done a Lot of Voices for âSouth Parkâ
Hader has done numerous voice acting gigs (think Toy Story 4, Bobâs Burgers and Inside Out), including voicing an impressive amount of South Park characters. He was initially part of the showâs writing team from 2008 to 2009, and since then, heâs done the voices for Alec Baldwin, Steve the customer service representative, as well as Ike Broflovski in the 2014 game South Park: The Stick of Truth. He also helped create the âKanye Fish-Sticksâ joke.
He Was Fired From His Theater Usher Job for Spoiling âTitanicâ
Hader told Howard Stern that he got fired from working as a movie theater usher after spoiling the ending of Titanic in front of a group of sorority girls. He explained that they were being âassholesâ to him as he was introducing the movie, so he stood there and told the entire theater the whole ending where Jack dies.
His Third Child Was a Product of a Deal Made During âTrainwreckâ
According to Hader, he and his former wife Maggie Carey made a deal during the production of Trainwreck that theyâd have sex after every shoot where he and Amy Schumer had to simulate a boink fest. He credits it with Carey becoming pregnant with their third child.
He Joined Second City to Have a Creative Outlet
During an interview with Danny McBride, Hader said that he was working in post-production when a friend told him about the sketch comedy troupeâs branch in Los Angeles. âI started taking classes there, not thinking that I would get anywhere,â Hader remembered. âI didnât get a headshot. I wasnât trying to be an actor. I just needed the creative outlet â youâre just going up every week and doing something.â Megan Mullally happened to see him during one of his shows and recommended him to Lorne Michaels at SNL.
He Pitched âBarryâ as âUnforgivenâ Meets âWaiting for Guffmanâ
The actor said that he went in pitching the show to HBO as Clint Eastwoodâs rotten soul character in Unforgiven meeting the folks from Waiting for Guffman, and then, you know, things happen.
This Is How He and Fred Armisen Came Up with âSNLâs âCaliforniansâ Sketch
Hader explained that the âCaliforniansâ sketch came from a bit that he and Armisen would do while waiting for Lorne Michaels, who was always late for table reads. The bit would follow them just returning from L.A. and then doing the whole ânavigating through L.A.â joke that would go on forever. Hader said they were doing it for years, leading to other cast members joining in until it was turned into an actual sketch.
Dan Aykroyd Gave Him Some Good Advice at âSNLâ
Hader revealed that when he first started at SNL, Aykroyd sat him down and (correctly) told him how his career at the sketch comedy show would go.Â
âHe said, âHereâs whatâs going to happen: Your first couple years, youâre going to be on unsteady ground, youâre going to think youâre gonna be fired at any moment and the audience will not know you. Itâs your job to get the audience to know you and like you. Then the audience will know you, youâll go out to your mark and get a little applause break because they know you, then you can start doing weird things, and theyâll go with you. Youâll do that for a couple years and get to a place where youâre just clocking in. Youâll get to a place where you come in, do your impression, do your character, play a game show host, do whateverâs needed of you, do it really well⊠and then you clock out and go home. Once you know youâre just clocking in, though, itâs time to leave.ââ