Richard Dreyfuss says Bill Murray was abusive during 'What About Bob?'
PEOPLE
Richard Dreyfuss

Richard Dreyfuss says Bill Murray threw an ashtray at him while filming 'What About Bob?'

Bill Keveney
USA TODAY

During an illustrious film career, Richard Dreyfuss has enjoyed the highs, stardom and an Oscar, and the lows, including taking abuse from co-star Bill Murray during the shooting of 1991's "What About Bob?"

In a wide-ranging interview with Yahoo!, Dreyfuss, now starring in "Daughter of the Wolf," recounts animosity with Murray, his doubts about blockbuster "Jaws" and getting pushed into a pool by Harrison Ford during the filming of George Lucas' "American Graffiti."

Of Murray, who played a patient who harasses his therapist (Dreyfuss) during his family vacation, Dreyfuss says: "I didn't talk about it for years. … Bill just got drunk at dinner. He was an Irish drunken bully, is what he was. … He came back from dinner (one night) and I said, 'Read this (script tweak), I think it's really funny.' And he put his face next to me, nose-to-nose. And he screamed at the top of his lungs, 'Everyone hates you! You are tolerated!'"

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In a wide-ranging interview, Oscar winner Richard Dreyfuss claims Bill Murray behaved abusively during the filming of 1991's 'What About Bob?' and that he doubted the prospects of Steven Spielberg's 1975 classic, 'Jaws.'

Murray then "leaned back and he took a modern glass-blown ashtray. He threw it at my face from (only a couple feet away)," says Dreyfuss, who won an Oscar for 1977's "The Goodbye Girl." "And it weighed about three quarters of a pound. And he missed me. He tried to hit me. I got up and left."

Dreyfuss, who starred in Steven Spielberg's 1975 film "Jaws," said he didn't have faith in what would become a blockbuster and a classic. 

Bill Murray, seen here applauding at an NCAA basketball game, starred with Richard Dreyfuss in 1991's 'What About Bob?'

"Everyone had thought they had struck gold, and I said, 'What are you talking about? It's just a little movie.' So when the film was released, I found myself going back to the talk shows and saying 'I'm the guy who didn't believe in it,'" he says.

He praises the generosity of Lucas. "He took one of his (profit) points, and he divided it up among the 10 leading actors. And I have made more money off that one-tenth of that one gross point than I have on anything else. That's a pure gesture."

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