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Eddie Murphy Documentary's Biggest Revelations
Music

Eddie Murphy Documentary’s Biggest Revelations

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The documentary Being Eddie isn’t a totally exhaustive portrait of Eddie Murphy, but for the generations who have been entertained by him since he exploded into stardom, it offers a lot of fascinating insight into who he is as a person. Says Murphy, at one point, “My biggest blessing is not my comedic talent — my biggest blessing is that I love myself and I knew what I wanted to do really, really early. That’s why I didn’t fall into any traps or anything. Because at the root of it all, I loved myself.”

In extended interviews with Murphy as well as collaborators including Jerry Seinfeld, Dave Chappelle, Arsenio Hall, Pete Davidson, and more, director Angus Wall explores a lot of fascinating topics with the multi-hyphenate, including the wild stories he has after spending 40 years in the spotlight. There’s also, appropriately enough given the title, a lot of musing on how he sees himself as a performer: “I’m not a stand-up comedian. I’m funny, but I don’t go, ‘I’m a comedian,’ like I don’t go ‘I’m an actor’ or ‘I’m a musician.’ I’m an artist that can express himself a bunch of different ways. Sensitivity is the gauge, not how much talent you have. The most sensitive one will be the artist that’s most in tune.”

He then laughs. “I don’t want to get too artsy. I could get really artsy if you let me.”

Below, find 15 of the biggest revelations to come from Being Eddie about Murphy’s career and life, from his earliest days to his current outlook on family, death, and cats. There’s also a wild Yul Brynner story, and some shockingly highbrow context for his love of MTV’s Ridiculousness.


Eddie Murphy’s First “Showbiz Thing” Was a Ventriloquist’s Dummy

Being Eddie (Netflix)

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The Willie Talk dummy he says he received at a young age was a relatively basic puppet: “Willie Talk’s eyes didn’t move. His mouth just moved.” However, Murphy points out, it reveals that even at a young age, he was very interested in exploring the possibilities of playing multiple characters at once.

Later in the documentary, he reveals an idea for a stand-up bit where he’d have Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor marionettes having a conversation, with him sitting between them. “I’d get at least 10 good minutes of jokes out of it,” he adds, and at the end of the movie we actually do get to see that in action: Murphy playing with his Cosby and Pryor puppets, having a laugh.

Eddie Murphy’s Birth Father Was Murdered When He Was Young

Murphy doesn’t share a lot of happy recollections about the time when his parents were together, sharing that “my very first memory is my mother and father fighting — she threw the Virgin Mary at him.” His father died when he was eight years old, and while Murphy doesn’t know all the details, he believes his father was killed by another woman in a “lover’s quarrel.”

Despite the early loss of his father, Murphy does speak fondly about his stepfather Vernon Lynch, “a solid father figure for the rest of my life.”

Eddie Murphy Has a Photo of Himself Punching Muhammad Ali in the Face

Early into the documentary, Murphy’s going through some memorabilia, which leads him to share the memory of punching the iconic boxer in the face one night. “Ali could talk some shit, and every now and then, Ali be talking too much shit,” is what he shares about that incident.

He does go on to call Ali “my hero,” noting that there was “nobody like Muhammad Ali in American history. He looked like he was plugged into the wall — he had this light. He stood up to the government, stood up for what he felt was right.”

The Co-Founder of Quibi Is Responsible for Eddie Murphy’s Movie Stardom

Yes, it was famed producer and studio exec Jeffrey Katzenberg who, while president of production at Paramount, took a chance on Murphy as the star of 48 Hours, his first major role. “The first two weeks of 48 Hours, they wanted to fire me because they were like ‘this isn’t working,’” Murphy says. “And [Katzenberg] came to them like ‘No, don’t fire him, there’s something there’ and they didn’t fire me. and we’ve just been cool since.”

At that point, Murphy says, he “wasn’t thinking I was going to be a movie star.” His belief is that “my stuff took off the way it took off because they’d never seen a young Black person go take charge in the white world.”

Katzenberg made a multi-picture deal with Murphy when he was just 19, and one unexpected benefit of becoming a huge star at that time: Murphy found himself meeting a slew of major Hollywood legends, who were curious enough about him to ask him to lunch. “I met Brando and Charlton Heston, Sinatra — I met all those guys through them calling my agent,” Murphy says.

Everyone Has Been Misinterpreting This One Moment in Beverly Hills Cop for Decades

In an interview, film critic Elvis Mitchell talks about the moment from the 1984 movie where Murphy’s character, Axel Foley, walks by two men wearing leather outfits very similar to his infamous Raw jumpsuit. As Axel passes, he’s seen laughing at them, something Mitchell calls out as a “complex moment in pop culture” — Murphy laughing at himself.

Murphy, meanwhile, would like to re-contextualize that scene now: “Eddie Murphy’s laughing at Eddie Murphy? No, one of those guys… as he walked past, he made a weird face. I was laughing at the face he made.” The way the shot is set up, you can’t see the faces of the men walking away, so we only have Murphy’s word to go on here, but he seems reliable enough.

Eddie Murphy Is Straight-Edge

Murphy reveals that as hard as he might have partied in his youth — “nobody had as much fun as we had in the ’80s” — none of that fun was substance-based. “I’ve never even tried cocaine or touched cocaine or shit like that. I don’t drink, I don’t smoke cigarettes. I was 30 years old when I first smoked a joint.”

And of course he had opportunities to indulge. One story he shares involves him going to a blues bar at the age of 19 with John Belushi and Robin Williams. “They put some blow on a table, and I’m standing there with, you know, two heroes. And I wasn’t even curious. I was just not with it.”

Says Jamie Foxx in an interview, “He’s very introverted. [At a party], he’ll sit in the back of the room with a Coca-Cola.”

Eddie Murphy Has Yul Brynner-Related Regrets

Murphy held his 21st birthday party at the famous New York club Studio 54, and Yul Brynner, star of movies including The King and I, The Magnificent Seven, and Westworld, was also at the club that night with his wife. Brynner, at one point in the evening, asked Murphy, “How would you like to go back to my apartment with my wife and I and party?”

Only later did Murphy realize… “Did he want me to go fuck his wife? Now, I wish I would have went. The story would end better if, you know, ‘Yeah, I went back to Yul Brynner’s spot and fucked his wife and he was watching me fucking, going “et cetera et cetera”…’” The documentary punctuates that moment with a clip of Brynner from The King and I, repeating that famous line.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Zosia Mamet Comments on Matthew Weiner After Revelations in New Book
TV & Streaming

Zosia Mamet Comments on Matthew Weiner After Revelations in New Book

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

After inspiring a heap of headlines about a former verbally abusive boss who led her to quit one of the biggest shows on television, Zosia Mamet touched briefly on her past experience with Matthew Weiner during a conversation at 92NY on Thursday.

Earlier this week, in an exclusive excerpt from her new collection of essays Does This Make Me Funny?, Mamet opened up about being screamed at by a major showrunner in the early days of her career; she left set that day and told her agents she was quitting the show, despite being scheduled for more episodes. The actress doesn’t name the show or the showrunner in her book, but the internet was quick to claim that it was Weiner on the set of Mad Men, as Mamet appears in seasons four and five.

In a chat with former Girls co-star Andrew Rannells, Weiner’s name came up as the two discussed how improv-friendly their show had been compared to other projects. Rannells commented, “We both worked with Matt Weiner, who was like strict, very strict about language.” Mamet responded, “Very strict,” before quickly moving on to comparisons about working on network TV shows like Parenthood.

Elsewhere in the conversation, Mamet explained how she chose what stories to include in the book, noting, “I think for the most part, a lot of these stories were really — even if they’re funny at times — pretty traumatic. I think that they were things that had happened that sort of went away into a box in my head and were never touched again, so they were almost like fossilized. And so I think when I went through the Rolodex of memories in my brain, they were the ones that were the most fully formed and they seemed like the easiest to write about.”

Mamet also commented that she wasn’t trying to “write a shocker” and “I really didn’t think about the fact that [the essays] were that revealing until I had to do the audiobook.” When she had to read her words aloud for the first time, “I was like, ‘Who let me publish this?’” she joked, noting that no one besides her editor and her manager had read it before it went to print.

The actress teased, “I literally didn’t process the fact that this book was coming out until like Sunday night.”

September 12, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix Doc's 17 Biggest Revelations
Music

Netflix Doc’s 17 Biggest Revelations

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

aka Charlie Sheen does its best to let its titular star tell his story, arguably one of Hollywood’s wildest up-and-down rides. The new Netflix documentary features home videos, tons of clips from Charlie Sheen’s projects, and interviews with key figures from his life — this includes ex-wives Denise Richards and Brooke Mueller, lifelong friend Sean Penn, Two and a Half Men creator Chuck Lorre, two of Sheen’s children, and Sheen’s drug dealer Marco.

It’s all in the quest to unpack the journey that’s led to Sheen’s notorious rise and fall, one of many projects being launched as Sheen tries to return from tabloid exile (he also has a new memoir out). Many interview subjects appear at least a little ambivalent about participating: former co-star Jon Cryer opens the documentary by saying “I’m not here to build him up and i’m not here to tear him down, but I sure hope this doesn’t go bad.” But there are a lot of kind things said about the movie star-turned-addict, in addition to some big revelations about the past 40 years of Sheen’s career, and the self-sabotage that occurred along the way.


At the Time of His Interview, Charlie Sheen Is 7 Years Sober

This is one of the first questions he’s asked in the documentary, to which he responds, “I knew you were going to ask that.”

Sheen Was Offered the Lead Role in The Karate Kid

Before Sheen traveled to Budapest to film his first movie role in Grizzly II: Revenge (alongside George Clooney and Laura Dern), he auditioned for “the biggest project in town.” While he thought he’d blown the audition, director John G. Avildsen thought differently, and offered him the role of Daniel Russo, asking him how quickly he could get into karate training. Unfortunately, he was already committed to Griz, and his father Martin Sheen told him that he had to abide by his word. When he asked to push the production start of The Karate Kid by two weeks, the movie said no, and Ralph Macchio ended up with the part.

Charlie Sheen and Martin Sheen Played a Stunt Basketball Game Against Michael Jordan

For West Wing fans who fondly remember a Season 1 cold open, this one’s fun: In 1987, father and son squared off against the NBA GOAT for a three-part basketball contest. The full video is available online — there were a lot of rules to theoretically even the playing field (Jordan having to shoot free throws with his eyes closed, for example), but the Sheens did ultimately win it.

Clint Eastwood Convinced Sheen to Go to Rehab for the First Time

Sheen’s first trip to rehab in 1990 was preceded by an awkward intervention that culminated in a phone call from the iconic Hollywood figure, who told him “You gotta get the train back on the tracks, kid.” No spoilers, but this did not work out long-term. He did, however, get the Hot Shots script while still in treatment, one of many opportunities he found immediately followed a setback.

Sheen Lost His Virginity at 15 to a Sex Worker

Her name was Candy, he says, and in the doc he thanks her for her service. He also paid for Candy’s services by stealing his father’s credit card.

Heidi Fleiss Doesn’t Love that Sheen Sold Her Out

aka Charlie Sheen (Netflix)

Related Video

The infamous madam, arrested in 1993 for charges that ended up culminating in federal tax evasion, is interviewed for this documentary in her home/bird sanctuary. Wearing comfortable clothes and speaking frankly, she reveals that the only reason Sheen was busted for his involvement in her sex work operation was that he paid her with travelers’ checks at one point, which were discovered by the cops — “I never said anything, I never said anything about anyone.”

Still, he was threatened with a few years of jail time for procuring girls for his friends, and so the only way out of facing charges was to rat her out. Something Fleiss didn’t think he had to do, as she doesn’t think “a rich kid from Malibu” would have really faced any consequences. She also says that she was paid a visit by Martin Sheen after her conviction, who asked her to “go easy on Charlie.”

Sheen Insisted on Chris Tucker Getting First Billing in Money Talks

As you might expect, Chris Tucker (interviewed for the documentary) is very grateful for this. “He’s this huge star, you know, not being selfish. Who does that in Hollywood?”

High on Drugs, Sheen Found a Unique Way to Get Through a Scene

While filming a supporting role in a 1998 movie called Free Money, Sheen says he did so much cocaine that he could not keep his eyes open in the middle of a take. So, he asked for a glass of ice, went to the bathroom, and stuck an ice cube “up my butt.” The documentary then shows the actual scene (labeled on screen as “The Actual Scene”) to show how effective a technique it ended up being. His eyes do at least appear to stay open.

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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