The actors celebrity spoofs get nearly as much play as his movie roles. He mocked Tom Cruise in a hilarious skit for the 2000 MTV Movie Awards, by suiting up as the actors clingy stunt double, Tom Crooze. A year later, at the Video Music Awards, Stiller goofed on P. Diddys name changes.
Hes not just being funny. Stiller, 38, has little tolerance for Americas 24/7 obsession with celebrity. He believes too much significance is given to the ordinary things stars say and do, which makes interviewing him about as much fun as the fishhook in the mouth he got in Theres Something About Mary.
He keeps an eye on the clock during the conversation and bristles when questions stray from his next film project. "Im not leading a life people should care about," Stiller insists. "Its not like Ive made a sex tape or anything. Not that I think anybody would want to watch a Ben Stiller sex tape."
It doesnt take a psychology degree to see why Stiller, whos made more than 30 movies but is still something of a Hollywood underdog, sounds so jaded. Growing up in a showbiz family (his parents are comedians Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara), Ben couldnt escape fame. Francis Ford Coppola would drop by the familys Manhattan apartment on New Years Eve; Rodney Dangerfield and Andy Kaufman were Thanksgiving guests. Things were just as surreal away from home. His dad recalls: "Once, when Anne and I were playing Vegas, we stayed at a motel with Gladys Knight. We came back from work and Ben was in the pool with the Pips."
Stiller opted to begin acting after high school rather than earn a degree (he attended UCLA briefly), something he regrets. Instead, he became a student of entertainment. "Ben has this very nerd pop-culture-encyclopedic recall," says Janeane Garofalo, a friend who co-starred on The Ben Stiller Show, an early-90s sketch series. "Ben can recite every line from Star Trek and a hundred movies. We always said Ben was so determined to be a part of the industry that he became it."
Stiller continues to be a pop junkie, despite his protests that "the mania over finding out things about people like Michael Jackson and J.Lo has never been worse."
"Bens not a down-the-middle comedy guy," says Starsky & Hutch co-star Vince Vaughn. "He has excellent taste. Even in a film like Mary, he finds the high road within that, and you go, Wow this guy makes interesting choices."
That includes his latest project. Starsky & Hutch is a disco-era buddy-cop comedy that reunites uptight David Starsky (Stiller) and roguish Ken Hutchinson (Owen Wilson), the grooviest detectives ever to drive a Ford Gran Torino. In the movie version of the hit TV series (1975 to 1979), we learn how the duo met and watch them hunt down a drug kingpin (Vaughn).
"The thing that makes Ben so funny is his sincerity," says frequent collaborator Will Ferrell. "[Audiences] feel like they know him and want to be friends with him." Adds Garofalo: "John Q. Public looks at Ben Stiller and says, Hes the class nerd; hes like me even though Bens nothing like them."
Starsky director Todd Phillips says: "Ben has a very East Coast approach. Things dont sit and simmer with him. He lets you know right up front what hes thinking. Hell fire off e-mails at 2 in the morning if hes unhappy with a scene."
Part of it comes down to Stillers issues with fame. Making Starsky reminded him there was a time when celebrity culture was different. "It was way more simple [in the 70s]," he says. "A few actors would break out and become huge. Now there are so many stars, so many channels, so much stuff everybodys famous."
Opening soon across the Philippines, Starsky & Hutch is distributed by Buena Vista International through Columbia Pictures.