Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall: Why Louie Anderson was in ‘Coming to America’
Entertainment

Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall forced to put white actor in ‘Coming to America’

Call it equal opportunity laughter, but Louie Anderson did not appear in 1988’s “Coming to America” because stars Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall were dying to share the screen with him.

When the two of them appeared on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” to promote the sequel, “Coming 2 America,” they revealed the real reason.

“I love Louie, but I think we were forced to put Louie in it,” Hall, 65, told the host. “We were forced to put in a white person.”

Murphy, 59, agreed: “[The studio was] like, ‘There has to be a white person in the movie.’ I was like, ‘What?’ So who was the funniest white guy around? We knew Louie was cool, so that’s how Louie got in the movie.”

“Coming to America” stars Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall revealed why Louie Anderson was cast in the 1988 movie.Everett Collection

In case there are any doubts on the veracity of this tale, Hall referred to proof. “It was official,” Hall continued. “I had a list. They gave me a list with three white guys. They said, ‘Who would you rather work with?’ I said Louie.”

"Coming 2 America" will debut on Amazon Prime Video on March 5, 2021.
“Coming 2 America” will debut on Amazon Prime Video on Friday. ©Amazon/Courtesy Everett

Whatever the case, Anderson, who scored an Emmy for his performance on the FX comedy “Baskets,” must have done something right: He made it into the sequel. He updates his role of Maurice, a goofball fast-food worker at the golden-arched McDowell’s.

Louie Anderson made it into the sequel, “Coming 2 America.”
Louie Anderson made it into the sequel “Coming 2 America.” ©Amazon/Courtesy Everett

Hall’s list aside, Anderson has maintained that he did a little something to grease the wheels of casting. Back in the late 1980s, while dining at the Ivy — a Beverly Hills hot spot for celebs — Anderson spotted Murphy and his entourage. He told the waiter to put Murphy & company’s tab on his credit card. But, as Anderson recounted to the “Sway in the Morning” satellite radio crew in 2017, he instructed the waiter, “Don’t tell him ‘til after I leave. I’m not doing it to be a big shot. I’m doing it because I’m from the Midwest and that’s how we would do [it].”

The next morning, Anderson received a call from Murphy. He not only offered thanks for the gesture — “Nobody ever bought me anything,” Murphy told Anderson — but also said he wanted to cast Anderson in “a little movie called ‘Coming to America.’”

Marveling at comedic karma, Anderson said, “That’s life, isn’t it? It was the best $660 I ever spent.”