The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Original ‘Baywatch’ TV star rides wave of renewed interest

- By Steven Zeitchik Los Angeles Times

MIAMI BEACH, FLA. — David Hasselhoff wasn’t actively stalking Zac Efron on the way to the beachside port-a-potty. But now that they were both there he figured, well, why not make the most of it?

“You’ve gotta check out ‘Hoff the Record’!” Hasselhoff said about his little-known mockumenta­ry sitcom as the two stood on the sand outside the bathroom at the “Baywatch” premiere on a recent Saturday night.

“Oh, you were able to make it?” Efron said, sounding convincing in his interest.

“We made it! In England. We have two seasons already. Come over to my house! I’ll show it to you!” “OK!” Efron said. “It’s my best work. You’ll love it,” Hasselhoff assured him of the comedy series about the actor’s post-prime-time life in which he plays a version of himself. “Do you have my number?” He pulled out a phone and implored Efron to do the same. “Let me give you my number. Here, take my number,” he repeated.

To say David Hasselhoff is enjoying a moment toying with his image is to imply there was a time he wasn’t doing that. In the 16 years since he left behind Mitch Buchannon, the all-American lifeguard character of the “Baywatch” franchise, Hasselhoff has played himself — or an outsized simulacrum known as “The Hoff ” — more times than you can count, though he certainly could.

“There was ‘SpongeBob’ and ‘Dodgeball,’ and (the parody music video) ‘True Survivor.’ And, oh, yeah, the Swedish talk show,” he said, beginning a list that also includes an A&E series, a Jamie Kennedy series, another parody music video, a Finnish talk show, an upcoming indie movie titled “Killing Hasselhoff ” and of course, “Hoff the Record.”

Even Hasselhoff ’s most infamous moment — that footage of him crawling in a drunken stupor toward a cheeseburg­er — had the feel of a viral-video character about it.

But a few months shy of his 65th birthday, the actor who first became ubiquitous as “Knight Rider’s” Michael Knight, has been giving it all a bit of a turbo boost. Millions this spring have been seeing the Hoff in “Guardians of the Galaxy 2,” in which he plays the distillati­on of ego (literally) in a late-movie cameo.

Somewhat fewer people, to his chagrin, have been watching “Hoff the Record.” A second season was released last year — it can be found on Netflix if you know where to look — and he nervously awaits word of a third-season pickup.

Now, as a new “Baywatch” film arrives in theaters from Paramount after a long South Florida shoot, the Hoff strikes again: He has a scene playing “the Mentor,” a nod to his original Mitch, guiding the new Mitch, played by Dwayne Johnson.

In the Escalade on the way to the premiere, Hasselhoff polled other passengers on how to handle the question of the “Baywatch” film. In 1991, Hasselhoff backed a new version of the lifeguard series with his own money when the series was canceled after a dismal debut season on NBC. The revived program would turn into a global phenomenon and help create a market for so-called first-run syndicatio­n.

After all that, Hasselhoff is irked that the makers of the movie, directed by Seth Gordon, didn’t solicit much of his input. (“It’s a doubleedge­d sword, being here,” he’d said earlier in the day.) He wanted to know how to deal with the subject gracefully and turned for guidance to a reporter in the car versed in the art of the actor sound bite.

Maybe, “It’s a new creation but the DNA of the original is still in there,” the reporter said.

He pondered that idea. “The DNA, that’s not bad.” Then he thought about it for another minute. “But would the Hoff say that?”

Hasselhoff began strategizi­ng various ways to work in “Hoff the Record” on the carpet — how, when playing a character based on yourself, do you tout a show in which you’re playing a character based on yourself ? After all, there’s a beauty to sourcing your public image to a meta character: nothing ever fails. Even when a quip doesn’t land, you’re not making a bad joke; you’re simply commenting on the idea of yourself making a bad joke.

But where does the Hoff end and David begin? “To be honest, I don’t know,” he said.

The car was populated by Hasselhoff ’s small entourage: His fiancee, Hayley Roberts, a 37-year-old Brit; his longtime publicist, an old-school New York character named Judy Katz; and Katz’s adult son, who serves as a kind of advance man for Hasselhoff ’s publicity appearance­s.

The conversati­on turned to some of the original show’s producers, whom Hasselhoff had once clashed with and now hoped to avoid on this evening. “You’ll have to steer me around that,” he said quietly to Katz. She nodded.

The car crept along a main drag in South Beach. Soon crowds outside the premiere came into view — 1,000 fans at least. “What’s the security situation here?” Hasselhoff said to no one in particular. “I’m going to get annihilate­d.” It seemed like narcissism, but his concern was quickly validated: Getting out of the car and making his way the 100 yards down the carpet extension toward the beginning of the press line, Hasselhoff was bombarded by a military-grade cacophony. Shrieks mixed with chants, “Mitch, Mitch.” “Michael, Michael.” “Hoff, Hoff.” A few security guards came to meet the Hoff posse, but they provided thin cover. Hasselhoff slowed periodical­ly and slapped some palms, signed some memorabili­a and posed for selfies, often using his reliable two-handed gun salute.

The press line, on a boardwalk, was seemingly endless. Either because of innate charisma or his general habit of repeating the same stories as if he were telling them for the first time, Hasselhoff worked it expertly. Two ideas were nearly constant: One was that he had joined the new film reluctantl­y. “My daughters said to me, ‘Dad, you can sit here and whine or you could get out there and make a difference,’” a point that befuddled some reporters because they weren’t aware he had been annoyed in the first place.

The other was about “Hoff the Record.” “You’ve got to see it,” he said, enthusiast­ically and insistentl­y to one reporter. He would echo the message down the line. “It’s really something for everyone. It shows the behind the scenes.” Few reporters picked up on it.

Hasselhoff and his posse piled back in the Escalade. As the car snaked to the theater, he repeated the bathroom story several times, in each telling embellishi­ng Efron’s eagerness and downplayin­g his own a little more. “Zac wanted to see the show. He was really excited. He was asking if he could come over to watch it,” he was saying by the third recounting.

A moment later, Hasselhoff chastised himself for missing a carpet opportunit­y. “I only got in a mention of the show about 10 times. I was so overwhelme­d at the beginning I forgot about it.”

He turned to a reporter. “Write whatever you want. Just make sure you mention ‘Hoff the Record.’”

 ?? BY JOERG CARSTENSEN/DPA VIA AP CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Actors David Hasselhoff, from left, Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron pose during a photo call prior to the European premiere of “Baywatch” in Berlin on Tuesday.
BY JOERG CARSTENSEN/DPA VIA AP CONTRIBUTE­D Actors David Hasselhoff, from left, Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron pose during a photo call prior to the European premiere of “Baywatch” in Berlin on Tuesday.

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