Texarkana Gazette

Disabled actors shine in basketball film ‘Champions’

- BROOKE LEFFERTS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — The new comedy “Champions” stars Woody Harrelson and Kaitlin Olson, but the veteran actors have tough competitio­n for the spotlight with some charismati­c newcomers.

Harrelson plays a college basketball coach with a bad temper who’s facing jail time or community service for some bad behavior. To avoid punishment, he finds himself coaching a basketball team of young adults with intellectu­al disabiliti­e , who help him rediscover the joy of the game.

Harrelson’s agent and another producer wanted to remake the original film, called “Campeones” — Spain’s biggest box-office hit in 2018 — and thought the actor and basketball lover would be a great fit. Harrelson loved the story and signed on as star and executive producer, and tapped his longtime friend Bobby Farrelly to direct.

Casting was challengin­g as the producers wanted the athletes played by disabled actors, who also needed basketball skills. They auditioned hundreds of people before finding the 10 standout personalit­ies who make up the Friends basketball team.

Harrelson says he wasn’t sure what to expect on the first day of shooting. “Once I came in and met everybody and we started at it, I was like, ‘Oh, this is going to be so much fun!’ And it really was,” Harrelson told the Associated Press. “They taught me that they can nail the lines, no problem. But also they just taught me, just the great fluidity of being who they are.”

The 10 actors have different intellectu­al challenges but many found their comedy chops on screen.

“Everybody brought something so unique and different to it,” Olson said. “And parts of their actual personalit­ies shone through, which is probably why they … got the role in the first place. There was a lot… of wonderful acting, but there’s also a lot of wonderful just being themselves, and it gave us an opportunit­y to just play off of that.”

The film was a chance for Harrelson to collaborat­e again with Farrelly after making the bowling comedy “Kingpin” in 1996. The director said he thinks audiences are more open to disabled actors on screen and seeing their stories. He recalled making the 2005 movie “The Ringer” with his brother, Pete Farrelly, where Johnny Knoxville infiltrate­d the Special Olympics. Farrelly said they cast nondisable­d actors in disabled roles back then.

“We would never do that nowadays so the world has changed in that regard,” Farrelly said.

Casey Metcalfe, who plays Marlon, said he hopes disabled actors have a place in Hollywood going forward. “The more people we have in this industry who are diverse, like myself … not just racially diverse … but you’re neurodiver­se. I think that’s exactly, you know, what the industry needs,” Metcalfe said.

Some of the actors, like Madison Tevlin who plays the only woman on the team, said learning the basketball moves was harder than acting.

“I’m really natural on camera when it comes to acting, but with basketball, I never played before … so the team helped me a lot.”

“Champions” is in theaters.

 ?? (Shauna Townley/ Focus Features via AP) ?? This image released by Focus Features shows, from left, Kevin Iannucci, Kaitlin Olson, James Day Keith, Madison Tevlin, Cheech Marin and Woody Harrelson in a scene from "Champions."
(Shauna Townley/ Focus Features via AP) This image released by Focus Features shows, from left, Kevin Iannucci, Kaitlin Olson, James Day Keith, Madison Tevlin, Cheech Marin and Woody Harrelson in a scene from "Champions."

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