Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Impression­ist lurks, gives stars laughs

- JAKE KRING-SCHREIFELS

NEW YORK — To the celebrity impression­ist, there are few subjects more tantalizin­g than Nicolas Cage. And yet there Matt Friend was at the Golden Globes in January, doing his Cage for Cage himself (“I just wanna kind of find the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce!”), when Paul Giamatti walked into his sightline.

Friend had spent years nailing Giamatti’s vocal tics and signature exasperati­ons, and he was desperate to share his imitation with the veteran actor. But in the star-studded chaos, Giamatti skirted right by Friend’s perch on the press line. “The carpet is like Madame Tussauds come to life,” Friend said recently over lunch in SoHo. “I was like, ‘Oh my God, I missed him.’”

A couple of hours later, though, while loitering inside the Beverly Hilton Hotel, Friend spotted the “Holdovers” star again, just moments after he had won for best actor in a musical or comedy. Giamatti had started walking across a nondescrip­t hallway to the winners’ press room. Friend wouldn’t miss his second chance. He raced over to introduce himself, gave his phone to his own manager and then broke into an uncanny impersonat­ion right beside his idol.

“I am doing you, to you, right now,” Friend shouts, shaking his head in the actor’s visceral style.

Without missing a beat, Giamatti perks up and participat­es. “That’s very good!” he yells, matching Friend’s exaggerate­d tone. “Very good!”

The surreal video, which blew up on Friend’s TikTok and Instagram accounts, is a prime example of the comedian’s sharp miming abilities, which often impress and surprise his targets. Though their encounter lasts just a minute, Giamatti can’t stop laughing at the charade, commending Friend’s startlingl­y familiar and hard-to-achieve mannerisms. “I was unbelievab­ly lucky,” Friend says. “You have to be quick on your feet when you see a celebrity — and then moments can happen.”

RED CARPET TEETH-CUTTING

During the 2024 awards season, Friend turned the red carpet into a petri dish for similar viral content, mastering impromptu interactio­ns with actors and musicians who have become increasing­ly familiar with his online presence. He has prompted Kieran Culkin to slap him after a profane parody of “Succession” character Tom Wambsgans. He has traded King Charles III’s syllabic riffs with “The Crown” actor Dominic West. And he has broken out his near-identical Howard Stern voice to appease Netflix head Ted Sarandos. These days, whether he’s at the Grammys or the Emmys, it seems like every celebrity is pleased to meet Friend, Hollywood’s new favorite impression­ist and an improbable protagonis­t.

“It was very nerve-racking at first, but I just love it,” Friend says. “It’s crazy. I actually feel the most in my element when I’m on that carpet.”

Friend got his first taste of the red carpet at last year’s Globes, after Jeremy Lowe, a friend who works at Dick Clark Production­s, granted him press access. The 25-year-old impression­ist bought his own microphone at a camera store, Ubered to the event from his hotel, and set up shop without much of a plan. “There was no producer helping me,” he says. “I had my manager filming me, holding my phone, and I was monitoring the sound. It could have been a disaster.” Then Austin Butler approached him, eager to compliment Friend’s recent Elvis impression as Friend broke into song in the actor’s husky drawl. The filmed interactio­n proved Friend didn’t need to flag down A-listers — they were already looking for him. “It’s been amazing that they’ve been so receptive to it. It’s pretty wild,” he says. “My goal in these events is to get really funny moments and make the celebritie­s feel comfortabl­e and relaxed.”

The press line is just a heightened glimpse of Friend’s instinctua­l social media and comedic skills. Since his more than 250 impression­s began catching fire throughout the pandemic, he has amassed more than a million followers on TikTok, where he shares cooking spoofs of Stanley Tucci, croons like Michael Bublé and addresses constituen­ts as Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell, often while walking through public places. He frequently guests on cable news networks, has started voicing characters on “Family Guy”and “The Simpsons,” and is currently in the middle of a national stand-up tour, mixing in his astute impression­s with observatio­nal humor. A few years removed from college, he can’t quite believe how far his videos have taken him. “To have these things happening at such a quick rate compared to a lot of other people is amazing,” Friend says. “I do not take it for granted.”

CHICAGO NATIVE

A Chicago native, Friend remembers starting his comedy journey after watching “Austin Powers in Goldmember” as a 4-year-old, reciting Mike Myers’ various characters around the house. As a teenager, he developed his vocal skills watching and recording himself on YouTube, and transferre­d to NYU’s Gallatin School of Individual­ized Study after his freshman year at Tufts to be closer to New York’s comedy scene. “I submitted a video and read my essay with different impression­s. I think that’s how I got in,” he laughs. After interning with the Second City comedy troupe and “The Tonight Show,” he began incorporat­ing impression­s into stand-up sets at Gotham Comedy Club, where he could get laughs with decent-sounding one-liners. But it wasn’t until the pandemic quarantine that he found time to test, refine and expand his material with a broader online audience. “I was just very obsessive,” Friend says. “I was posting a lot.”

Friend estimates his early impression of Rami Malek put his profile on the map. He got another boost after an encounter with Jeff Goldblum, who spontaneou­sly brought Friend up onstage at a jazz club so the pair could out-Goldblum each other. (Friend smartly came prepared with the actor’s trademark throat lozenges.) His impression of Stern — arguably his most accurate of the bunch — was so good that the longtime radio host invited him on the show to poke fun at his own vocabulary. Living in downtown New York has also had its perks, as his frequent, random run-ins with Andy Cohen, John Oliver and David Letterman have almost functioned like test runs for his red carpet shtick. “I actually read theories that people have on me,” Friend says. “Like, ”How are you so connected?’ ‘Are you in the CIA?’”

LATE-NIGHT TV DREAMS

Though “Saturday Night Live” would seem to be one possible next step (the actor auditioned last summer but didn’t hear back), Friend’s social media surge — and frequent hobnobbing with Hollywood’s elite — has provided him a plausible shortcut to pursue his dream job as a late-night television host. “I love this blend of politics and pop culture, celebritie­s and politician­s and the news,” he says. “That’s what I’m working toward.” In the meantime, he can barely keep up with his growing list of voice requests. Last month, country artist Jelly Roll and actor Glen Powell both blitzed Friend for impression­s of themselves, which caught him uncharacte­ristically off-guard. (He plans to work them into his repertoire soon.)

Several hours after we spoke, Friend was flying back to Los Angeles for a few standup sets and Oscars events, where his phone will be at the ready. But before we could part ways, a middle-aged man on the street had noticed him, approached to shake his hand, and gave the impression­ist another taste of what’s been happening to him all winter. “You’re all over my social media,” he said excitedly, before turning to me. “He does the best impression­s.”

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