Did James Franco really deserve that D he got in an NYU acting class—the one that may or may not have gotten his acting professor fired? R. John Williams doesn’t think so, and he should know: He’s Franco’s English adviser at Yale, and in a glowing Slate
essay, he insists that Franco is actually a model student for whom
“blowing off class” would be “highly uncharacteristic.” Franco kept all
but one of his weekly “directed reading” meetings with Williams, and
held them via video conference since he was filming a movie in Detroit
at the same time.
Though
Williams did reprimand Franco for the one meeting he missed, the
professor admits that it was “interesting, even thrilling” to study film
theory with an Oscar-nominated actor. For one weekly meeting, Williams
flew out to Franco’s set, an experience he found “breathtaking.” And for
all those who wonder how Franco manages to juggle acting and scholarly
work, Williams reveals that actors actually have a lot of down time
while filming movies, and says he is no longer surprised when Franco
does extra work. “James Franco is becoming a scholar,” he concludes,
“and I suggest we take him seriously."
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