Shia LaBeouf, on Letterman, talks about his feud with Alec Baldwin
- Share via
Shia LaBeouf, a guest Monday night on David Letterman’s “The Late Show,” decided to speak (instead of tweet) about his abrupt exit from the play “Orphans” weeks before his would-be Broadway debut.
LaBeouf described himself as “passionate and impulsive” and suggested that similar qualities in costar Alec Baldwin resulted in the “fireworks.”
“We had tension as men, not as artists, but as men,” he told David Letterman. (Cue nervous audience laughter.)
Letterman asked if Baldwin could be behind LaBeouf’s pink slip. “Alec went to the producers and said, ‘I can’t take it another day. Fire him,’” the host suggested.
“I think that might’ve been what happened,” LaBeouf responded. (LaBeouf’s premature departure was originally credited to “creative differences.”)
LaBeouf assured Letterman that he still admires the production and praised his replacement, Ben Foster. Last week, LaBeouf “showed up as a fan” in the front row of the show’s first preview performance.
“It was the only ticket I could get, actually,” he told Letterman.
LaBeouf called Baldwin “a good dude” and “great actor.”
As for a reconciliation? “Here it is, right here,” LaBeouf said. “Alec, I think you’re awesome man; that’s it.”
ALSO:
Shia LaBeouf opens up on Twitter over ‘Orphans’ exit
Shia LaBeouf quits Broadway play over ‘creative differences’
Shia LaBeouf has a front-row seat to the Broadway show he left
MORE
INTERACTIVE: Christopher Hawthorne’s On the Boulevards
Depictions of violence in theater and more
PHOTOS: Arts and culture in pictures
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.