Billy Eichner is aware of he has a repute for being loud, brash and in-your-face.
While you discover fame yelling questions at strangers on New York Metropolis streets as he did because the host of “Billy on the Street,” it’s certain to occur.
And that’s the reason his new memoir, “Billy on Billy,” was solely launched as an audio-only e book. “Sometimes people don’t know if [‘Billy on the Street’] is a persona or not,” Eichner tells me over Zoom from his New York Metropolis condo. “I’m 47 years previous, and also you attain a degree the place you need individuals to know you’re an actual individual and get a way of the actual me and I assumed this could be a very good alternative to try this, particularly if individuals may hear it in my actual voice.
“I didn’t want people to inadvertently hear me tell what I think are very sweet, heartwarming stories about my parents and about growing up and the pop culture I love, I didn’t want them to accidentally hear that in my shouting ‘Street’ voice,” he continues. “This is a different tone entirely, and it’s extremely personal.”
Eicher grew up in Queens, N.Y. He’s the one baby of Debbie and Jay Eichner. “I think you can divide people into two groups — those who were successful in spite of their parents, and those who were successful because of their parents,” Eichner says. “I know a lot of people. I know a lot of LGBTQ people, and I know a lot of artists who were successful in spite of being discouraged or their parents not being comfortable with something about them. I am very much a product of my parents’ love, and the book is just chock full of stories about how my parents supported me and always let me be me — their default mode — even when maybe they were confused by the intensity of my passion for entertainment.”
Eichner was solely 20 years previous when his mother died of a coronary heart assault at age 54. His dad handed in 2011 simply earlier than “Billy on the “Street” took off. “Whenever I think about my mom, I’m mostly sad for her,” he says, his eyes tearing up. “I’m sorry I don’t get through an interview about the book without crying, even over Zoom. I’m mostly sad for her that she didn’t have a longer life, having nothing to do with my career…[But] it is a cruel and unfair fact about my life is that you could not have found two more supportive parents. My parents did everything that they could to make sure I had a shot at this dream coming true.”
In 2022, Eichner turned a poster child of sorts for queer movies. “Bros,” a rom-com about an unlikely couple (Eichner and Luke Macfarlane) that he co-wrote and starred in, was heralded as the subsequent huge factor for LGBTQ storytelling. Not solely was it directed by Nicholas Stoller and co-produced by Judd Apatow, however Common Photos poured as much as $40 million into its advertising, predicting it could enchantment to queer and straight moviegoers.
Nevertheless, “Bros” was a box office failure. The $22 million characteristic grossed solely $14 million. On the time, Eicher’s tweet blaming straight people for the gloomy outcome went viral. “Even with glowing reviews, great Rotten Tomatoes scores, an A CinemaScore, etc., straight people, especially in certain parts of the country, just didn’t show up for ‘Bros,’” Eichner wrote. “And that’s disappointing but it is what it is.”
“Obviously, from a commercial standpoint, we wanted a better opening weekend and all that. But hindsight is 20/20,” Eichner now says. “I’ll say for all of the noise in regards to the field workplace and all that, it’s nearly 4 years since ‘Bros,’ and folks, not solely homosexual males, however lots of homosexual males, come as much as me on a regular basis and discuss ‘Bros’ in a really emotional means…Generally they actually pour their hearts out. The issues they are saying should not the varieties of issues that anybody would say about ‘Billy on the Street.’
“’Billy on the Street’ makes people laugh a lot, and I appreciate that, but for the people who saw ‘Bros’ and understood ‘Bros,’ I think it really moved them and that moves me, and so I’m proud of it,” he continues. “And that’s that.”
“Billy on the Street” could return someday. “It’s something that we always talk about,” Eichner says. “I really can’t believe how popular it still is. I mean, the clips are everywhere.”
Meryl Steep is his dream visitor. “The internet being usually such a toxic, negative place, the comments under ‘Billy on the Street’ videos are so positive, and it’s just people begging me to bring it back,” Eichner says. “I don’t exactly know what shape that takes, but part of me does want to honor that.”
Then there’s his years-in-the-making biopic in regards to the late comedian actor and “Bewitched” and “Hollywood Squares” icon Paul Lynde. “I’ve been working on the script for a long time on and off,” Eichner says. “I started to get into it again last year. I have a take on it now that I didn’t have before.”
He says there could possibly be a “Billy on Billy” film. “I’ve had real conversations about adapting it,” Eichner says, earlier than cracking, “Connor Storrie is going to play my mom, Hudson Williams as my dad and the barista (Robbie G.K.) will play my 10-year-old self. That’s the only way we’re going to get financing for it.”
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