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Richard Gere Says ‘Pretty Woman’ Part Was ‘Underwritten’


Richard Gere thinks the script for “Pretty Woman” left a lot to be desired when it came to his character, millionaire playboy Edward Lewis.

While speaking during a masterclass at the Venice Film Festival on Sunday, the leading man joked that his part in the Garry Marshall-directed picture was “almost criminally underwritten.”

“It was basically a suit and a good haircut,” he laughed in a clip shared by The Hollywood Reporter’s Chris Gardner.

To help bring his character to life, Gere revealed how he and Marshall ended up improvising one of “Pretty Woman’s” most pivotal scenes: a steamy sequence where Lewis plays the piano for Julia Roberts’ spirited sex worker character, Vivian, before things get hot and heavy between the two.

After the clip rolled during the masterclass, the star smirked and said, “This actor and this actress obviously had no chemistry between them.”

Richard Gere appeared at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival back in May. He opened up about making “Pretty Woman” during a masterclass at the Venice Film Festival.

Stephane Cardinale – Corbis via Getty Images

Gere then shared how the scene was “never in the script” but “ended up being integral to the film.”

“Garry said to me, ‘What do you do late at night in a hotel?’ And I said, ‘Well, I’m usually jet lagged, [that] would be the time I’m in a hotel. So I’m up all night and usually there’s a ballroom somewhere or a bar, and I’ll find a piano and I’ll play the piano,’” Gere remembered.

“He said, ‘Well, let’s do something with that.’ So we just basically improvised this scene, and he said, ‘Play something moody.’ I just started playing something moody that was this character’s interior life.”

Unveiling Lewis’ soft side let Roberts’ character see him “in a completely different way,” the “Unfaithful” actor explained.

“There was a mysterious yearning and maybe a damaged quality to this guy that she didn’t know.”

While “Pretty Woman” was a smash hit, grossing a reported $463.4 million worldwide, Gere remembered the project more modestly.

“We were having fun making this,” he told his audience in Venice. “The whole time we made the movie, we didn’t know if anyone would ever see this.”



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