Al Pacino says he’d make a good short order cook

SHARE Al Pacino says he’d make a good short order cook

By Lauri Neff | Associated Press

NEW YORK — Bob Dylan said he’d have been a teacher, if he had it to do all over again.

Now come Al Pacino’s career contemplations.

Pacino has been acting for nearly half a century and during that time, he says he’s never really considered what other job he might be suited for — until now.

Pacino says he thinks he’d be a good short order cook.

He does have experience. Pacino played an ex-con who works in a diner in the 1991 film “Frankie and Johnny,” which was shot in a working eatery.

“‘I could do this, be a short order cook,’” he remembers thinking at the time.

In a recent interview to promote his new film “The Humbling,” about an aging actor who is questioning his career, Pacino said being a cook was “really fun to be for the lunch hour or two when you’re working back there; very creative and the time just flies by.”

The actor notes he never finished high school or went to college and says he “got educated through acting,” picking up skills from playing doctors, lawyers, and a cook.

He says that on the diner shoot, his celebrity status gained him “access.”

“These guys would just let me sit in the luncheonette,” Pacino says. “I’d be with them through the lunches and I would study them by just doing it and watching, waiting and hoping I’d absorb something.”

Associated Press

The Latest
William Dukes Jr. was acquitted of the 1993 killings of a Cicero woman and her granddaughter after a second trial in 2019. In 2022, he was arrested in an unrelated sexual assault case in Chicago.
An NFL-style two-minute warning was also OK’d.
From Connor Bedard to Lukas Reichel, from Alex Vlasic to Arvid Soderblom, from leadership to coaching, the Hawks’ just-finished season was full of both good and bad signs for the future.
Hundreds gathered for a memorial service for Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough, a mysterious QR code mural enticed Taylor Swift fans on the Near North Side, and a weekend mass shooting in Back of the Yards left 9-year-old Ariana Molina dead and 10 other people wounded, including her mother and other children.
The artist at Goodkind Tattoo in Lake View incorporates hidden messages and inside jokes to help memorialize people’s furry friends.