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New York Post
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- New York Post
Meat Loaf was 'always loud' on 'Rocky Horror Picture Show' set
Meat Loaf is still being remembered for his role in 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show' 50 years after the musical comedy's premiere. Richard O'Brien, who created 'Rocky Horror' and starred as the hunchbacked handyman Riff Raff in the beloved cult classic, opened up about the film and Meat Loaf's time on set while commemorating the movie's 50th anniversary of its world premiere on Aug. 14. 12 Meat Loaf as Eddie in 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show' 1975 film adaptation. Everett Collection / Everett Col Advertisement 12 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show' creator Richard O'Brien as Riff Raff in the 1975 film adaptation. 20th Century Fox Film Corp. All rights reserved. Courtesy: Everett Collection 'Working with Meat Loaf was always fun,' O'Brien, 83, exclusively told The Post. 'He was loud and always needed laughter around him all the time, even if things weren't funny.' 'He was a good old boy,' the actor and writer added. 'He was fun.' Advertisement 'Rocky Horror,' which began as a musical stage production in 1973, was adapted into a feature film in 1975. 12 Meat Loaf as the motorcycle-riding, former delivery boy Eddie in 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show.' Getty Images 12 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show' co-stars Meat Loaf and Tim Curry together at an event in 1995. Getty Images Besides starring Meat Loaf as a raucous, motorcycle-riding former delivery boy named Eddie, it also starred Tim Curry (Dr. Frank-N-Furter), Susan Sarandon (Janet Weiss), Barry Bostwick (Brad Majors) and Patricia Quinn (Magenta). Advertisement Meat Loaf, whose real name was Michael Lee Aday and who went on to release hits like 'I'd Do Anything for Love' and 'Bat Out of Hell,' tragically passed away in January 2022 following a serious battle with Covid-19. He was 74. However, the 'Paradise by the Dashboard Light' hitmaker discussed 'Rocky Horror' and his role as Eddie years before his shocking death. 12 Meat Loaf in 1979. Getty Images 12 Meat Loaf at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, on October 3, 2013. FilmMagic Advertisement 'The first two weeks when we were doing the play, all we did was the music; they had not given us a script,' Meat Loaf, who starred in both the stage production and the film, explained in a 2007 interview. 'They come to me on the part of 'Hot Patootie,' and Richard O'Brien is here at these rehearsals,' the singer continued. 'He said, 'On this song, you'll never be able to get all the words in. I wrote it, and I can't sing all the words.'' 'I looked at him and said, 'I can sing all the words,'' Meat Loaf recalled. 'Nobody could ever get in and just make those words fly through it. I just love telling people 'I can do that' and then being able to do it.' 12 The 'Bat Out of Hell' singer riding a motorcycle while portraying Eddie in 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show.' Getty Images 12 Meat Loaf and Richard O'Brien during the BRIT Awards in London, England, on February 16, 1993. Getty Images O'Brien also gushed about working with Curry, 79, while looking back at 'Rocky Horror' after 50 years. 'Working with Tim was a dream,' O'Brien said of the 'Home Alone 2' star. 'We were actors, and we approached it very seriously.' As for Sarandon, 78, and Bostwick, 80, being cast as Janet and Brad, O'Brien said that it was a 'happy accident' and the film was 'very lucky' to land the pair as its two leads. Advertisement 12 Richard O'Brien and Tim Curry at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards at the Savoy Hotel in London, England, on January 22, 1974. Getty Images 12 Richard O'Brien as Riff Raff, Tim Curry as Dr. Frank-N-Furter and Patricia Quinn as Magenta in 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show.' ©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection 'That was fascinating,' he shared. 'We'd been doing the stage show for a year and a half, and then arriving into that comes these two hapless Americans who didn't really know what it was about.' 'But they came into our world, which was perfect,' O'Brien continued. 'It was Barry who first came along, and he took Susan along with him, which was just wonderful.' Advertisement 'Instead of looking for anyone else, looking for a Janet to go with them, there she was, and there they were,' O'Brien added. 'It was perfect.' 12 Richard O'Brien performing at the Playhouse Theatre in London, England, on September 17, 2015. Getty Images 12 Richard O'Brien at Picturehouse Central in London, England, on September 17, 2015. David M. Benett 'Rocky Horror' first premiered at the Rialto Theatre in London, England, on Aug. 14, 1975. Advertisement Directed by Jim Sharman with a screenplay by him and O'Brien, the musical comedy horror film is still in limited release 50 years later, making it one of the longest-running theatrical releases in movie history. 'We were all happy,' O'Brien said while looking back on shooting the 'Rocky Horror' film. 'It didn't matter how cold it was. We were all happy.' 'We understood what we were doing, and we wanted to make this as good as possible,' he concluded.


Daily Mirror
07-08-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mirror
Meat Loaf fans are just learning where singer's stage name comes from
Singer and actor Meat Loaf first rose to fame in 1968 and continued to be a household name up until his death in 2022, but fans are only just learning the meaning of his name Despite having been a famous musician and actor for over 60 years, fans still have no idea where Meat Loaf first got his name from and what the meaning is behind it. The American-born singer first released music with his band, Meat Loaf Soul, who had their first performance in California in 1968. At the same time, the singer also started his acting career, with the singer mainly starring in different musicals. Throughout his career, Meat Loaf released 12 studio albums, which included hit songs like 'I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)', 'Paradise by the Dashboard Light'. After having sold sold more than 100 million records worldwide, making him one of the best-selling music artists of all time, the singer died at age 74 in January 2022. While no official cause of death was released, he was reportedly sick with COVID-19 earlier that same month. The performer, who was born Marvin Lee Aday and later known as Michael Lee Aday, was known by his singular stage name. But where did the name come from and what does it mean? Taking to Reddit's Today I Learned forum, one user was eager to reveal the supposed origin of the singer's name. "TIL according to the singer Meat Loaf (born Marvin Lee Aday), when he was born his father thought looked like 'nine-and-a-half pounds of ground chuck' and nicknamed him 'Meat'," the post said. "Years later, when he was a heavyset teenage football player, the players and coaches expanded the name to 'Meat Loaf'." Over the years, Meat Loaf offered various explanations for his moniker and even told The Guardian in 2003 that "names and ages piss me off. So I just continually lie." Despite the ever-changing origin story of his name, Meat Loaf appears to have begun using the nickname years before his music and acting career began. Meat Loaf claimed he got the first half of his name from his father shortly after he was born. The musician said on Oprah Winfrey's Where Are They Now series in 2016 that he was "born bright red," explaining that his father told the hospital to put a "Meat" tag in front of his crib because he "looked like nine-and-a-half pounds of ground chuck" as a newborn. Meat Loaf told Winfrey he received the "Loaf" half of his nickname in eighth grade, when he "stepped on a coach's foot and he screamed, 'Get off my foot, you hunk of meatloaf!' " However, the singer offered a different version of the story to PEOPLE decades earlier in 1978. He said at the time that his name was inspired by his size while growing up in Dallas. The rocker said he couldn't remember ever weighing less than 185 pounds. He also spun another tale about his name's origins, according to The New York Times, which reports that the artist also claimed an incident with a Volkswagen was responsible for his nickname. "Meat Loaf … told numerous stories about how he got his stage name, including one about a high school stunt in which he let a Volkswagen run over his head," the Times reports. "Afterward, a child shouted, 'You're as dumb as a hunk of meat loaf.'"