Murphy’s rise

Paramount

In a 2013 oral history about the making of “Trading Places,” director John Landis claimed that the “studio was very unhappy with almost everybody they wanted me to cast.” When the movie was initially conceived, it was going to star Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder, casting a huge shadow over any other prospective stars. When you consider that Dan Aykroyd — playing moneyed clown Louis Winthorpe III — was a weak box office draw since the death of his comedy partner John Belushi, it made sense for the studio to be nervous about his co-star as well.

Coming off the buddy cop classic “48 Hrs.,” Eddie Murphy’s casting in “Trading Places” played a major role in his rise stardom. It led not just to funnier roles and greater comedic influence, it impacted his box office. Beyond his comedy hits, his stand-up performance film “Eddie Murphy Raw” became the highest-grossing film of its type, making $50 million. It could be said he owed a lot to “Trading Places,” and in turn to Landis. When Landis was making “Trading Places,” however, he had just come off a major incident on the set of 1982’s “Twilight Zone: The Movie,” an anthology piece that featured four filmmakers creating their own take on the classic television show. During the filming of Landis’ segment, the star (Vic Morrow) and two children (Renee Shin-Yi Chen and Myca Dinh Lee) were killed.

Murphy got Landis the directing job

Paramount

Eddie Murphy didn’t go to John Landis’ trial for the “Twilight Zone” deaths. Instead, as he claimed in a 1990 interview for Playboy, Murphy returned the “Trading Places” favor for Landis, getting Paramount to hire him to direct “Coming to America.” Murphy was originally set to direct, from a story he conceived (for which he and the studio were later sued on plagiarism charges), but he was motivated to hire Landis by the sorry slate of films his old collaborator had made since. Murphy would say, “the one fun experience I had with a director… was with Landis.” But his experience on “Coming to America” would not be fun.

Whatever the reason for the clash between the two, it began immediately. As Landis told Collider in 2005, “the guy on ‘Trading Places’ was young and full of energy and curious and funny and fresh and great. The guy on ‘Coming to America’ was the pig of the world.” Landis took issue with Murphy’s inflated ego, and really saw it coming out in contrast to the performance Murphy gave in the movie. As Prince Akeem, Murphy plays a big-hearted, sophisticated nobleman. Not exactly a “pig of the world.”

Coming To America Caused A Lot Of Friction Between Eddie Murphy And John Landis

Paramount

By Anthony Crislip/April 18, 2022 3:46 pm EST

When filmmaker John Landis first met with Murphy about playing con man Billy Ray Valentine in 1983’s “Trading Places,” he didn’t know of Murphy’s work on “SNL.” Landis was impressed enough with the comedian to convince the studio to cast him, and even let him improvise while filming. Murphy was proud of those abilities, asking Rolling Stone in 1984, “If what you say is funnier than what’s on paper, how could you not change the dialogue?” That confidence hinted at the future tension between the two.

Murphy’s rise

In a 2013 oral history about the making of “Trading Places,” director John Landis claimed that the “studio was very unhappy with almost everybody they wanted me to cast.” When the movie was initially conceived, it was going to star Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder, casting a huge shadow over any other prospective stars. When you consider that Dan Aykroyd — playing moneyed clown Louis Winthorpe III — was a weak box office draw since the death of his comedy partner John Belushi, it made sense for the studio to be nervous about his co-star as well.

Coming off the buddy cop classic “48 Hrs.,” Eddie Murphy’s casting in “Trading Places” played a major role in his rise stardom. It led not just to funnier roles and greater comedic influence, it impacted his box office. Beyond his comedy hits, his stand-up performance film “Eddie Murphy Raw” became the highest-grossing film of its type, making $50 million. It could be said he owed a lot to “Trading Places,” and in turn to Landis. When Landis was making “Trading Places,” however, he had just come off a major incident on the set of 1982’s “Twilight Zone: The Movie,” an anthology piece that featured four filmmakers creating their own take on the classic television show. During the filming of Landis’ segment, the star (Vic Morrow) and two children (Renee Shin-Yi Chen and Myca Dinh Lee) were killed.

Coming off the buddy cop classic “48 Hrs.,” Eddie Murphy’s casting in “Trading Places” played a major role in his rise stardom. It led not just to funnier roles and greater comedic influence, it impacted his box office. Beyond his comedy hits, his stand-up performance film “Eddie Murphy Raw” became the highest-grossing film of its type, making $50 million. It could be said he owed a lot to “Trading Places,” and in turn to Landis.

When Landis was making “Trading Places,” however, he had just come off a major incident on the set of 1982’s “Twilight Zone: The Movie,” an anthology piece that featured four filmmakers creating their own take on the classic television show. During the filming of Landis’ segment, the star (Vic Morrow) and two children (Renee Shin-Yi Chen and Myca Dinh Lee) were killed.

Murphy got Landis the directing job

Eddie Murphy didn’t go to John Landis’ trial for the “Twilight Zone” deaths. Instead, as he claimed in a 1990 interview for Playboy, Murphy returned the “Trading Places” favor for Landis, getting Paramount to hire him to direct “Coming to America.” Murphy was originally set to direct, from a story he conceived (for which he and the studio were later sued on plagiarism charges), but he was motivated to hire Landis by the sorry slate of films his old collaborator had made since. Murphy would say, “the one fun experience I had with a director… was with Landis.” But his experience on “Coming to America” would not be fun.

Whatever the reason for the clash between the two, it began immediately. As Landis told Collider in 2005, “the guy on ‘Trading Places’ was young and full of energy and curious and funny and fresh and great. The guy on ‘Coming to America’ was the pig of the world.” Landis took issue with Murphy’s inflated ego, and really saw it coming out in contrast to the performance Murphy gave in the movie. As Prince Akeem, Murphy plays a big-hearted, sophisticated nobleman. Not exactly a “pig of the world.”

Whatever the reason for the clash between the two, it began immediately. As Landis told Collider in 2005, “the guy on ‘Trading Places’ was young and full of energy and curious and funny and fresh and great. The guy on ‘Coming to America’ was the pig of the world.” Landis took issue with Murphy’s inflated ego, and really saw it coming out in contrast to the performance Murphy gave in the movie. As Prince Akeem, Murphy plays a big-hearted, sophisticated nobleman. Not exactly a “pig of the world.”

Working together again

In the same interview, Murphy claimed to have gotten into a slight physical altercation with Landis after the director publicly aired out some of Murphy’s business details on-set. The incident left Landis running away and later confronting Murphy in his trailer, with Landis telling him he never thought he was talented. Murphy responded by darkly joking at a “Coming to America” press conference that it would be more likely for Landis to work with the late Vic Morrow than Murphy ever again.