The Day

The family business

McCarthy and Falcone love collaborat­ing on comic movies

- By LINDSEY BAHR

Melissa McCarthy hasn’t had a movie in theaters since “Ghostbuste­rs” two years ago, but it’s not like she’s been taking a break.

She’s been hard at work preparing multiple projects with her husband, Ben Falcone (not to mention her side gig parodying Sean Spicer on “Saturday Night Live”). Two of their films hit theaters this summer. One is about a woman attending college with her daughter and the other has a scene in which McCarthy’s character does drugs with a hoard of degenerate puppets.

Both “Life of the Party” (May 11) and “The Happytime Murders” (Aug. 17) are produced by McCarthy and Falcone’s company, On the Day, which they formed just over five years ago, making movies like “Tammy” and “The Boss,” both of which McCarthy starred in and Falcone directed, and the television series “Nobodies.” The endeavor allows them to have more control in choosing what they spend their time on. It also allows them to spend time together, especially in the scriptwrit­ing stage.

“Melissa and I have been sort of busy lately, and it’s actually a great chance for us to sit together in a room and try to make each other laugh,” Falcone said. “I always say I’m sort of the boring structure guy and she’s the one who has all the fun stuff.”

“Life of the Party” is about a woman who is going through a divorce and trying to get her life back on track by getting her college degree (at the same college her daughter is attending). It was inspired by their parents, and both of their dads are in the movie.

Falcone, who directed, had the initial idea, rememberin­g times when his father would join him at college parties. McCarthy took the pitch another way.

“I was like, ‘Oh, that would be great.’ And he’s like, ‘What?’ And I was like, ‘I’d love to go to school with Viv and Georgie,’” McCarthy said. “He’s like, ‘They don’t want you in college with them!’”

Neither has seen the finished product of “The Happytime Murders,” but distributo­r STX showed a trailer at the industry convention CinemaCon of the very R-rated comedy from

director Brian Henson (son of Jim Henson). McCarthy plays a human detective who is teamed up with a puppet partner to investigat­e some grisly puppet murders. It makes “Ted” look tame.

Despite the success of their films, they keep their shop small — it’s basically McCarthy, Falcone and a production executive, and that’s the way they like it.

“Liz Banks, our friend, is a total mogul. (She and her husband) are like mighty power wielders. And that’s a cool way to go, too, and I love the stuff that they’re putting out there, but I like having a smaller amount of stuff that I have a handle on,” Falcone said. “I guess I’m a control freak.”

McCarthy, who says she’s learned a lot from just sitting in the editing room, loves having the ability to pick and choose and craft roles that she finds interestin­g.

“I read so many things for so many years, and I just thought, it’s just not that interestin­g to watch people be perfect,” she said. “I don’t really know perfect people. All the people I know and love are terribly weird and flawed, myself included, the friends we love are just a combinatio­n of ticks and eccentrici­ties and all that stuff. I think for a long time we were having women play perfect — in the perfect job and a perfect-looking person and the perfect mother, and I just keep thinking, ‘Oh, we’re so much more interestin­g. We can show all of our different sides, and you can still root for them. In life, those are the women we love, so why not show it in movies?’”

This summer, Falcone and McCarthy will start shooting “Super-Intelligen­ce,” an “apocalypti­c end-of-days love story,” and they have a musical in the near future, too. Later this fall, McCarthy will take a dramatic turn as literary forger Lee Israel in Marielle Heller’s “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”

And McCarthy hopes to get in the director’s seat herself — she directed episodes of her TV show “Mike & Molly” and a short Walmart ad that showed the night of the Oscars — but hasn’t found the right story for her feature debut.

“It’s intimidati­ng but I would love to give myself that challenge,” she said. “It’s definitely something I think about. When I read stories, it’s always in the back of my head.”

 ?? HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP ?? Melissa McCarthy returns to the movie screen on Friday with “Life of the Party,” which she co-wrote with her husband, Ben Falcone, who also directed.
HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP Melissa McCarthy returns to the movie screen on Friday with “Life of the Party,” which she co-wrote with her husband, Ben Falcone, who also directed.
 ?? JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP ?? Ben Falcone, left, and Melissa McCarthy arrive at the premiere of “CHIPS” last year.
JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP Ben Falcone, left, and Melissa McCarthy arrive at the premiere of “CHIPS” last year.
 ?? HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP ?? “Life of the Party” features Molly Gordon, left, and Melissa McCarthy.
HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP “Life of the Party” features Molly Gordon, left, and Melissa McCarthy.

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