Why Eddie Murphy Declined to Do Coke With Robin Williams and John Belushi

why eddie murphy declined to do coke with robin williams and john belushi

Critics' Choice Association The Celebration Of Black Cinema, Eddie Murphy

Eddie Murphy partially credits a night out with Robin Williams and John Belushi in the 1980s for helping him realize he "wasn't interested" in drugs - something he sees as a gift from up above.

"I remember I was 19, I went to the Blues Bar. It was me, [John] Belushi and Robin Williams. They start doing coke, and I was like, ‘No, I'm cool,'" Murphy, 63, shared with David Marchese during the upcoming episode of the New York Times' "The Interview" podcast. "I wasn't taking some moral stance. I just wasn't interested in it. To not have the desire or the curiosity, I'd say that's providence. God was looking over me in that moment. When you get famous really young, especially a Black artist, it's like living in a minefield. Any moment something could happen that can undo everything."

Belushi died of a heroin overdose at the age of 33 in 1982. Williams, meanwhile, died by suicide in 2014 after a lifelong battle with depression. Murphy reflected on the tragic endings of Williams, Belushi and other legendary stars, like Elvis, Michael Jackson and Prince, calling them "cautionary tales" for his own life.

"I don't drink. I smoked a joint for the first time when I was 30 years old," he shared. "The extent of drugs is some weed."

Meet Eddie Murphy's 10 Kids With Nicole Mitchell, Mel B and More: Pics

Saturday Night Live was on the verge of cancellation when Murphy joined the cast in 1980. His characters, like Gumby and his Mr. Rogers parody, Mr. Robinson, helped skyrocket the show to late-night success. His career quickly reached new heights with movies like Beverly Hills Cop and 48 Hrs. While speaking to the NYT, the comedian said he knew from a young age he would eventually become famous, but in hindsight, he didn't always appreciate his level of success once he found it.

why eddie murphy declined to do coke with robin williams and john belushi

image-req-tg-24

"I started at maybe around 13, 14, saying that I was going to be famous," he recalled. "I'd tell my mother, ‘When I'm famous. …' So when I got famous, it was like, See, I told you.' I was having these famous people that I grew up watching on television wanting to have a meal with me. After 48 Hrs, Marlon Brando calls my agent and wants to meet me. Now I look back and go, ‘Wow, that's crazy, the greatest actor of all time wants to have dinner with you!' But back then I just thought, ‘Well, that's the way it is - you make a movie, and Marlon Brando calls.'"

Keep scrolling for more from Murphy's upcoming interview with the New York Times:

New York Times: You said you took [your fame] for granted, which, that's crazy.

Eddie Murphy: I started at maybe around 13, 14, saying that I was going to be famous. I'd tell my mother, "When I'm famous. …" So when I got famous, it was like, "See, I told you." I was having these famous people that I grew up watching on television wanting to have a meal with me. After 48 Hrs. Marlon Brando calls my agent and wants to meet me. Now I look back and go, "Wow, that's crazy: The greatest actor of all time wants to have dinner with you!" But back then I just thought, Well, that's the way it is: You make a movie, and Marlon Brando calls.

NYT: Is [standup comedy] appealing to you?

Murphy: Here's a good analogy. It's like somebody that was in the military. They were on the front line in Vietnam, and they got all these medals because they did all this amazing stuff. Then they moved up and became a general. So it's like going to the general and saying: "Hey, you ever think about going back to the front line? You want to have bullets whiz past your ear again?" No!

NYT: Elvis, Michael Jackson, these guys achieved the apex of fame. Prince is another like that. And there was a period when you were at that level.

Murphy: Yeah, I went through all of that.

NYT: Those guys all came to tragic ends. Do you understand the pitfalls that present themselves at that level of fame?

Murphy: Those guys are all cautionary tales for me. I don't drink. I smoked a joint for the first time when I was 30 years old - the extent of drugs is some weed. I remember I was 19, I went to the Blues Bar. It was me, [John] Belushi and Robin Williams. They start doing coke, and I was like, "No, I'm cool." I wasn't taking some moral stance. I just wasn't interested in it. To not have the desire or the curiosity, I'd say that's providence. God was looking over me in that moment. When you get famous really young, especially a Black artist, it's like living in a minefield. Any moment something could happen that can undo everything.

NYT: Do you feel as if you've taken cheap shots from the press over the years?

Murphy: Back in the old days, they used to be relentless on me, and a lot of it was racist stuff. It was the '80s and just a whole different world. … When David Spade said that [expletive] about my career on [Saturday Night Live] it was like: "Yo, it's in-house! I'm one of the family, and you're [expletive] with me like that?" It hurt my feelings like that, yeah.

He showed a picture of me, and he said, "Hey, everybody, catch a falling star." It was like: Wait, hold on. This is Saturday Night Live. I'm the biggest thing that ever came off that show. The show would have been off the air if I didn't go back on the show, and now you got somebody from the cast making a crack about my career? And I know that he can't just say that. A joke has to go through these channels. So the producers thought it was OK to say that. And all the people that have been on that show, you've never heard nobody make no joke about anybody's career. Most people that get off that show, they don't go on and have these amazing careers. It was personal. It was like, "Yo, how could you do that?" My career? Really? A joke about my career? So I thought that was a cheap shot. And it was kind of, I thought - I felt it was racist.

NYT: I had also asked you a question about how you think about your relationship with your audience. You said you approach it from the perspective of, you're going to make what you think is funny, and hopefully, the audience likes it. You also said that you're looking to do projects that you're confident will succeed. But don't you have to think about the audience's needs in order to have a sense if something is going to work or not.

Murphy: How could you think about the audience's needs? Eight billion people on the planet. They don't know - that's a better way of putting it: The audience has no clue what's funny. You've got to show them what's funny. They don't know. And if something is funny to me - I've never had anything that made me laugh that then when I said it to an audience, the audience just sat there and looked at me. If I think it's funny, it's always funny.

Former ‘Saturday Night Live' Stars: Where Are They Now?

NYT: Do you understand what you mean to comedians like Kevin Hart and Dave Chappelle and Chris Rock and Chris Tucker?

Murphy: Well, I didn't lay down a path. They took their own path. The comic used to be the sidekick, the comic was the opening act, and I changed it to where the comic can be the main attraction. They thought of comics one way, and it was like, no, a comic could sell out the arena, and a comic could be in hundred-million-dollar movies. All of that changed. And with Black actors, it was, like, the Black guy could be the star of the movie, and it doesn't have to be a Black exploitation movie. It could be a movie that's accessible to everyone all around the world.

NYT: One of the other things that stuck with me from our first conversation was that you described getting to do what you do for a living as a blessing. I was thinking about that in the context of how you also said that you knew you were going to be famous. When did you stop taking success for granted?

Murphy: I knew it was a blessing from the beginning.

NYT: So you didn't take it for granted?

Murphy: I took how fast everything was moving for granted. Like, I guess this happens for everybody; this is what happens when you get famous. So I took all of that for granted but I was never like, "I'm the [expletive]." There's no higher blessing: You make people laugh, that's more than anything. That's more than making them dance, making them feel drama. To look around and see that all the good things that came in my life all came from making somebody laugh? That's a beautiful feeling, man.

OTHER NEWS

15 minutes ago

Meet the first Latino leading a national gun violence prevention organization

18 minutes ago

USA Today Editor-In-Chief Terence Samuel Departs After One Year

20 minutes ago

Man United 'aim to appoint former Chelsea technical director on short-term deal' to support summer transfer window after Dan Ashworth arrival

20 minutes ago

Gisele Bundchen wows in strapless bikini as boyfriend Joaquim Valente bonds with her children in Costa Rica - where she shared many happy memories with ex Tom Brady

21 minutes ago

Let freedom ring: Contracts NFC teams would love to jettison

21 minutes ago

Sky Sports commentator calls out Sam Matterface after Clive Tyldesley sent home from Euros

21 minutes ago

Mansfield HS alum Joseph Brown throws his way on to Team USA

21 minutes ago

Sources: Warriors signing De'Anthony Melton to one-year deal

21 minutes ago

Coco Gauff wins all-American showdown, buries 2023 demons

21 minutes ago

Wimbledon favourite Jannik Sinner passes first-round test to set up intriguing clash

21 minutes ago

Nick Kyrgios defends his controversial role in BBC’s Wimbledon coverage

21 minutes ago

Andy Murray leaves Wimbledon decision to the last minute

21 minutes ago

Naomi Osaka through as Aryna Sabalenka’s withdrawal blows women’s draw wide open

21 minutes ago

LIV's Richard Bland claims U.S. Senior Open playoff, back-to-back majors

21 minutes ago

Belgium lament another poor tournament

21 minutes ago

Sinner subdues feisty Hanfmann to advance at Wimbledon

21 minutes ago

This Boar's Head Deli Meat Is By Far The Best You Can Buy

21 minutes ago

Six athletes, including one woman, in Palestine team for Paris Olympics

21 minutes ago

C.J. Stroud spends time in Miami working out with receivers

21 minutes ago

LIV Golf star equals Jack Nicklaus with remarkable feat and sends message to PGA Tour

21 minutes ago

Cowboys face major Dak Prescott problem

21 minutes ago

Contract length a huge sticking point for Steelers and Cam Heyward

24 minutes ago

‘NEETS' and ‘new unemployables' — why some young adults aren't working

26 minutes ago

Sonic Drive-In enters fast-food value meal wars with $1.99 menu to lure in inflation-rocked customers

26 minutes ago

North Carolina conservative activists attempting to flip GOP’s view on early voting in the swing state

27 minutes ago

ANC postpones Gauteng cabinet announcement after DA rejects unity provincial government

27 minutes ago

POPCRU weighs in on the appointment of Pieter Groenewald

27 minutes ago

Paul Finebaum Clarifies Bold Arch Manning Comments

27 minutes ago

Kylian Mbappe celebrates in Jan Vertonghen's face minutes after heated exchange... after the Belgian defender accused the France captain of diving during Euro 2024 last-16 clash

27 minutes ago

Jimmy Anderson to mentor England’s bowlers after final Test appearance

27 minutes ago

Bucs' Offensive Line Disrespected in Rankings

27 minutes ago

Hurricane Beryl gains power as it nears populated Caribbean islands

27 minutes ago

‘Lorch and Hotto’s beef affected the team’ Pirates defender reveals

27 minutes ago

Hotel Inspector Alex Polizzi's faces backlash after one-word remark to staff

27 minutes ago

Patriots LB Matthew Judon Contract ‘Worth Watching?’

27 minutes ago

Could Zeke Lose Starting Job to Rico?

27 minutes ago

9 games live on TV across this week's GAA inter-county schedule

27 minutes ago

KwaZulu-Natal Athletics names and shames Comrades Marathon cheats

28 minutes ago

Georgia QB Carson Beck embraces 'pressure situations' at helm of Bulldogs

28 minutes ago

Ravens News 7/1: Open-Target Rate