The news is by your side.

Bradley Cooper reveals he would make another Hangover movie ‘instantly’… ten years after the comedy franchise ended

0

Bradley Cooper said he would be ready for another episode of The Hangover.

While it appears on The New Yorker Radio Hour On Friday, the 48-year-old actor told host David Remnick, “I would probably do Hangover 4 in a heartbeat.”

“Just because I love Todd [Phillips]I love Zach [Galifianakis]I love Ed [Helms] so much, I probably would,” he added.

But the actor — who spent his Thanksgiving with Leonard Bernstein’s adult children in Connecticut — also noted of the franchise director, “I don’t think Todd is ever going to do that.”

Cooper has been making the press rounds to discuss Maestro, the new film he called “the scariest thing I’ve ever done.”

Open to the idea: Bradley Cooper said he would be considered for another episode of The Hangover; seen in November

Excited: Appearing on The New Yorker Radio Hour on Friday, the 48-year-old actor told host David Remnick: 'I would probably do Hangover 4 in a heartbeat'

Excited: Appearing on The New Yorker Radio Hour on Friday, the 48-year-old actor told host David Remnick: ‘I would probably do Hangover 4 in a heartbeat’

Elsewhere in the conversation with Remnick, Bradley discussed his evolution from comedy to drama.

“There’s nothing more fun I’ve experienced than Maestro and A Star is Born,” he said.

Maestro saw Bradley co-write, direct and star in the film about composer and music director of the New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein.

The undertaking included extensive research, prosthetics and long-lasting makeup so he could transform into the famous musician.

Actress Carey Mulligan stars opposite him in the feature film, which was released in September.

‘If I’m lucky enough that another idea comes along, I’m willing to put in as much energy [in] – if I can do it two, three more times in my life – I would be very lucky,” the father of one said on Friday.

That’s what Bernstein’s late daughter Jamie said People on Cooper: “We had no idea Bradley had such intensity and dedication to something when he took control of it.

“There are even certain moments in the film, when he’s in motion, where he looks so exactly like our father that it makes us gasp.”

Camaraderie: 'Just because I love Todd [Phillips]I love Zach [Galifianakis]I love Ed [Helms] so much, I probably would,” he added;  pictured promoting The Hangover Part II

Camaraderie: ‘Just because I love Todd [Phillips]I love Zach [Galifianakis]I love Ed [Helms] so much, I probably would,” he added; pictured promoting The Hangover Part II

Concerned: But Cooper also noted of the franchise director,

Concerned: But Cooper also noted of the franchise director, “I don’t think Todd will ever do that”; depicted in The Hangover Part III

Latest work: Cooper has been making press rounds to discuss Maestro, the new film he called

Latest work: Cooper has been making press rounds to discuss Maestro, the new film he called “the scariest thing I’ve ever done”

Playing a Legend: Maestro saw Bradley co-write, direct and star in the film about composer and New York Philharmonic music director Leonard Bernstein;  seen quietly

Playing a Legend: Maestro saw Bradley co-write, direct and star in the film about composer and New York Philharmonic music director Leonard Bernstein; seen quietly

The actor’s choice to use a prosthetic nose to play Leonard was the subject of intense scrutiny.

Before the film’s release, he was accused of “Jewface,” with some people on social media calling him out for wearing the exaggerated facial features and playing a Jewish role as a non-Jewish person.

Cooper later revealed that he burst into tears during a phone call with Leonard’s son Alexander, who – along with siblings Jamie and Nina – defended the actor’s choice to wear the fake nose in a public letter.

Maestro starts streaming on Netflix on December 20.

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.