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Topic: Mike Myers came up with "Get in my belly" on the spot—presumably because he was hungry (Read 14 times) previous topic - next topic

Mike Myers came up with "Get in my belly" on the spot—presumably because he was hungry

Mike Myers came up with "Get in my belly" on the spot—presumably because he was hungry

[html]For a good 15 years, no one was shooting more catchphrase free throws than Mike Myers. From "party on" to "donkey," Myers was providing middle schoolers everywhere...
     

For a good 15 years, no one was shooting more catchphrase free throws than Mike Myers. From "party on" to "donkey," Myers was providing middle schoolers everywhere with a new vocabulary for responding to just about anything. It was a shagadelic time. Yet, despite his ability to unleash co*edic earworms throughout the world, he does not plan them. At Vulture Fest this weekend, Myers explained he "never designed a catchphrase." Instead, he just "likes how people talk," and if there's one thing people always say, it's "Groovy, baby, yeah." For example, one of his most enduring turns of phrase and the unofficial motto of cannibalistic Scottish henchmen everywhere, "Get in my belly," was ad-libbed. As he accepted his honorary degree from Vulture, declaring the Love Guru a "Master of Culture," Myers said, "Remember 'Get in my belly?' That was improv. It wasn't' Ladies and gentlemen, my next catchphrase.'" However, he didn't explain how long that shoot day was or whether or not the crew had already taken lunch. It's entirely possible that he was just hungry and wanted a break. Either way, a catchphrase was born.

As easy as it is to imagine Myers sitting down with his feather quill and scribbling, "Oh, behave," on a tea-stained bit of parchment, that's not how he works. Apparently, while at SNL, he learned the hard way not to put the catchphrase before the character. In the writers' room, he and fellow catchphrase maestro Dana Carvey used to annoy Lorne Michaels by pitching catchphrase-focused co*edians, eliciting a hardy "Fuck you" from Michaels. But, who praytell came up with Lorne Michaels' catchphrase: "Ri-i-ight." Do you want us to believe he improvised that? We will assume it was a Jim Downey creation until we hear otherwise.

 

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Source: Mike Myers came up with "Get in my belly" on the spot—presumably because he was hungry (http://ht**://www.avclub.c**/mike-myers-improv-austin-powers-lines)