By Doug Brunk, San Diego Bureau
Writer and film director Woody Allen was about to leave Dr. Kenneth L. Edelson's dermatology office on Manhattan's Upper East Side in March of 1986, when he turned to Dr. Edelson and made him a promise.
"In his inimitable manner, Woody scratched his head and said, 'You know Dr. Edelson, you're a real funny guy,'" recalled Dr. Edelson, who did not know Mr. Allen prior to that office visit. "'I'm going to put you in my next film.' I thought, 'Yeah, right, I'll be in the movies!'"
The next day, Mr. Allen's longtime casting director Juliet Taylor called Dr. Edelson to confirm that Mr. Allen's pledge was genuine and to inquire about his acting history. Dr. Edelson's "credits" included an acting and singing role in a summer-camp version of "Damn Yankees" and dancing to Chubby Checker's "Twist" in a high school theater production. "She just laughed, not having been forewarned that I was Woody's dermatologist and not really an actor,"he said.
Dr. Edelson maintains that his sincere, warm bedside manner and quick wit caught Mr. Allen's attention during that first office visit. "It wasn't anything I said or did, it was just my persona," he said. "Woody is known for liking to take the normal regular guy from everyday life and put him in his films. My patients always get a kick out of me. They often remark to me, 'You're a real funny guy.'"
To date, he has appeared in 12 Woody Allen filmsmore than any other actormost recently as a screenwriter in "Cassandra's Dream" (2007). He describes his roles as "cameo appearances with funny lines." His first character was a Christmas party guest in "Alice" (1990). Dr. Edelson filmed a scene for his 13th Woody Allen film last month in New York City that will star Larry David, Patricia Clarkson, and Evan Rachel Wood.
Other roles have included a doctor in "Husbands and Wives" (1992); the character Ken in "Mighty Aphrodite" (1995); a bar mitzvah guest in "Deconstructing Harry" (1997); a rabbi in "Celebrity" (1998); a party guest in "Sweet and Lowdown" (1999) and in "Small Time Crooks" (2000); a magician's volunteer in "The Curse of the Jade Scorpion" (2001); an eye doctor in "Hollywood Ending" (2002); a hotel desk clerk in "Anything Else" (2003); and a disco guest in "Melinda and Melinda" (2005). Along the way, he has rubbed elbows with scores of celebrities, including Helena Bonham Carter, Mia Farrow, Will Ferrell, Dustin Hoffman, Helen Hunt, Sean Penn, Cybill Shepherd, Peter Weller, and Uma Thurman.
Acting "allows some stress and tension release," said Dr. Edelson, who listed Jackie Gleason, Red Skelton, Steve Allen, Laurel and Hardy, Abbott and Costello, and the Three Stooges among his favorite comics/actors growing up. "It's fun to be spontaneously creative and artistic in a film, especially when I am told to ad lib on the spot for a scene that has just been set up for me," he said. "That's the fun part, seeing how much I can stretch my lines! It's truly an avenue to express myself and be in a real different role than my normal everyday life in medicine. It's a nice outlet."
Months before the filming of "Alice," Dr. Edelson had memorized his one line for the movie: "My beloved, my dream come true." While walking to the set with Mr. Allena 10th-floor apartment in a prewar building on the Upper West Side near Columbia University in New YorkDr. Edelson told him, "I'm ready for my line: 'My beloved, my dream come true!'"
When they arrived in the lobby of the building ready to go on set, Mr. Allen caught Dr. Edelson off guard and said, "You know what? Forget your line. I want you to ad lib."
Rattled, Dr. Edelson collected his thoughts in the bathroom of the apartment being used for the set. When it came time for filming his scene, he parlayed his 1 line into 10. As a Christmas present that year, Mr. Allen sent Dr. Edelson a videotape of all 26 out-takes of the scene.
"It was an amazing gift," he said. "To see myself over and over again on that reel… and it wasn't reshot because of anything I did wrong, of course!"
On the set of "Deconstructing Harry," he spent a morning with Billy Crystal, Robin Williams, Demi Moore, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Richard Benjamin. "I'm treated like a celebrity because I'm Woody's doctor, so the stars were as much taken with me as I was with them," said Dr. Edelson, who has been a member of the Screen Actors Guild since 1990. "They got free skin advice, and I got free acting advice. It was a good barter system for me. Robin Williams did a whole number with me on how many places we could inject collagen on him for 'enhancement' purposes! Imagine hanging out with Billy Crystal and Robin Williams together! I had trouble catching my breath from all the laughter."