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How Donnie Wahlberg suffered for his role in ‘The Sixth Sense’

- Bryan Alexander

There are some roles actors will do anything to pull off.

For Donnie Wahlberg that was Vincent Gray, the disturbed former mental patient who propels 1999’s “The Sixth Sense” into darkness after he breaks in and kills his former psychiatri­st, Dr. Malcolm Crowe (Bruce Willis), before shooting himself.

The 28-year-old Wahlberg, who jumped to fame as a founding member of New Kids On the Block, had to fight to convince writer/director M. Night Shyamalan that he could take on the pivotal part – Gray serves as the tragic predecesso­r to Cole Sear (11-year-old Haley Joel Osment), who sees “dead people.”

Shyamalan’s leap-of-faith casting compelled Wahlberg to take an allconsumi­ng journey, losing 43 pounds, to enter Gray’s disturbed mindset.

As “The Sixth Sense” turns 20 on Aug. 6, the three-minute Gray scene remains utterly unforgetta­ble, more so in light of how perfecting it haunted Wahlberg.

“This was a game-changer for me. Every day for years people would say, ‘Dude, I didn’t know that was you,’ ” says “Blue Bloods” star Wahlberg, now 49. “At that time, I did exactly what I needed to do for the role. I had to look like I was going through hell.”

He cried when he read the script

Wahlberg, who starred as a kidnapper in 1996’s “Ransom,” picked up the “Sixth Sense” script during a 1998 flight and was consumed as he turned the pages. “I totally started crying on the plane,” he says. But he was convinced there was not a part for him, especially not heroin-abusing, emaciated Gray.

“Nothing about me was right for the part, except for my total enthusiasm for

the script,” says Wahlberg, who was too old for the character and too physically fit. (“I was really working out at the time.”) But he flew to New York City to meet with Shyamalan, even just to profess his script love.

The director calculated that conceivabl­y Gray could be 20, a workable number. After another meeting six months later he offered Wahlberg the part. When his agent balked at the low pay offer for the day of filming, Wahlberg overruled him.

“I said, ‘I don’t care, I’d do it for free,’ ” says Wahlberg. “So I took the part and I subsequent­ly fired my manager.”

Wahlberg wanted to play Vincent nude

During a film workshop with Willis and Olivia Williams (Malcolm’s wife, Anna), Wahlberg proposed playing Gray nude rather than the goth clothing detailed in the script.

“If Vincent is coming to stop his suffering and end his own life, then why is he wearing anything? To me, he strips down and is in the bathroom fully naked, clothes on the floor,” says Wahlberg. “Bruce thought that was awesome and pitched the idea to M. Night, who was like, ‘That’s insane. I love it.’ ”

Mad preparatio­n

Wahlberg left his then-wife, Kimberly Fey, and two kids, moving to a sparse New York City apartment to get into the Vincent Gray mindset, bringing no credit cards.

“I starved myself. I would fast for two days then only eat steamed cabbage and drink beet juice. I would chew gum all day and I would literally walk around the streets to burn thousands of calories. I didn’t shower for weeks,” says Wahlberg. “I just wasn’t taking care of myself and I was a loner. That was as close as I could come to this guy.”

“I was so hungry. I was depressed,” he says. “I cut off my life to get ready for the role.”

Five weeks later, he showed up to “The Sixth Sense” set having dropped 43 pounds to a scary 139. “I passed Night and he didn’t recognize me. He just walked right past,” says Wahlberg.

Sent to wardrobe, the actor found out that the film would be rated PG-13, so that would require clothes after all.

“I was like ‘Oh (expletive), I just lost 40 (expletive) pounds. And now I have to just wear clothes.’ I was so conflicted,” says Wahlberg. He struck a quick compromise: wearing Vincent’s “tidy-whitey” underwear.

“I asked to make (the underwear) look like I hadn’t changed them in, like, two years,” he says. “They soiled them up. That became the wardrobe.”

Wowing Willis, Shyamalan

Shooting the first take where Vincent confronts his former doctor, Wahlberg was told to cut before Vincent’s final act – putting the gun to his own head. But “out of my mind” in emotion, he pulled off the whole scene. To perfection.

“I fell on the floor, and I remember Bruce was like, ‘Whoa!’ and I was bawling my eyes out. M. Night came running over and was hugging me. He was like, ‘That was so unbelievab­le.’ I was thinking that I’m done. And M. Night was like, ‘OK. Can you do it again?’ I was like, ‘What?’ ”

Wahlberg had forgotten the filmmaking process, which required a full day of specialty shots. “I thought I had to nail it in one shot,” says Wahlberg. “But I had, like, eight hours of work ahead of me.”

He pushed through and Willis gave a speech thanking him at the end of the day. Wahlberg still looks in awe at pictures from that time. (“I looked like a crazy person.”)

He has never had to dig that deep for a part since. But Gray lives on with “The Sixth Sense.”

“The movie is such a great source of pride for me. Not just my work but to be part of that group,” says Wahlberg of the film that would go on to earn six Academy Award nomination­s. “Everyone brought it so hard for that movie.”

 ?? WALT DISNEY STUDIOS ?? Donnie Wahlberg embodied the troubled Vincent Gray in "The Sixth Sense."
WALT DISNEY STUDIOS Donnie Wahlberg embodied the troubled Vincent Gray in "The Sixth Sense."
 ?? DAN MACMEDAN/USA TODAY ?? Donnie Wahlberg and his wife, Kim, at the Emmys in 2002. The actor left his wife and kids to prepare for “The Sixth Sense.”
DAN MACMEDAN/USA TODAY Donnie Wahlberg and his wife, Kim, at the Emmys in 2002. The actor left his wife and kids to prepare for “The Sixth Sense.”
 ?? RON PHILLIPS/SPYGLASS ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? Director M. Night Shyamalan on the set of “The Sixth Sense.”
RON PHILLIPS/SPYGLASS ENTERTAINM­ENT Director M. Night Shyamalan on the set of “The Sixth Sense.”

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