Paul Reubens on Jay Leno, 7/30/99

JL: Welcome back everybody! Paul Reubens on his way out. My first guest, best known of course as Pee-wee Herman, Emmy-winning performer, currently starring in new film called Mystery Men which opens next Friday.

JL: This is his first talk-show appearance ever as himself, please welcome Paul Reubens!

JL: Well thanks for coming! Well you usually come on, well you have come on in the past as Pee-wee, are you a little nervous?

PR: [hold up secret-word-type card that says, "NO."]

JL: No. No, you're not nervous. Are you gonna talk at all tonight, do you think?

PR: [holds up a card that reads, "MAYBE."]

JL: Okay, I'm going to ask you a question that doesn't require a "yes-or-no" answer. OK, um, Paul, what time is it?

PR: [presses button on watch: *BEEP* (computer voice):"It is twelve-oh-five a.m."]

JL: Oh, very good! Now, people want to know what you're like so you have to, you have to speak.

PR: [in Pee-wee voice]: OK

JL: Okay, that's very good. That's what we call a beginning. Ok that's very good. But that sounded like Pee-wee though.

PR: [in Pee-wee voice] It did?

JL: See, that sounds like Pee-wee, it doesn't sound like Paul.

PR: [lowers voice] No, that's...this is my real voice.

[*cheering*]

JL: Ooohh..very Cary Grant-like. Now, let me ask you about your childhood. I've always wondered about this. What kind of a kid were you?

PR: Well, you're probably going to find this a little difficult to believe, I was kind of a weird kid.

JL: Come on, come on.

PR: Probably no one will care for this story except my sister, but when I was a kid, probably six, seven years old, I had this great whale wallpaper.

JL: Whale wallpaper.

PR: Whale wallpaper.

JL: Big whales or little whales?

PR: Wallpaper with...whales about this big. I had, and I'm not bragging about this, I had a booger chart. And one of the whales, on my wallpaper was completely, like, 3-dimensional.

[laughter]

JL: The part that fascinates me is, why your sister would love this story.

PR: Well, because she used to tease me about it and, now the secret's out about my booger chart.

JL: Right, right. I'd imagine, um, that's pretty much your childhood in a nutshell?

PR: That's it.

JL: How about this movie. You're in this movie as someone other than Pee-wee.

PR: Yeah, I play a character called "the Spleen."

JL: The Spleen!

PR: The Spleen. My superpower is flatulance.

JL: I think we need to explain what the movie is about.

PR: And I'm not bragging...

JL: Yeah, again, not bragging. And when it comes to that, even as Pee-wee, you were the king.

PR: Yeah, thank you.

JL: Yeah. Let me ask you, now in this movie Mystery Men, these are all superheroes?

PR: Superhero-wannabes.

JL: Superheroe wannabes.

PR: Mostly people who don't have huge superskills.

JL: Right. But they want to be superheroes.

PR: There's the Shoveler....The Shoveler, Invisible Boy...phenomenal cast, a real amazing group of people.

JL: Right. It's a wonderful group. But how does someone prepare for the role as The Spleen, the flatulance guy? How do you even...

PR: Well, I made, you know, some slight modifications in my diet. More roughage...

JL: Roughage.

PR: Brocolli, cabbage, beans, legumes...

JL: You don't smoke, do you?

PR: No.

JL: All right. You have a clip of yourself as The Spleen? And what's happening in this clip? You're meeting the other superheroes?

PR: This is, I think, my first appearance in the film.

JL: I think you did a wonderful job in the film...

PR: Thank you, thank you.

JL: Let's take a look. Here, you're meeting with the other superheroes, trying to get yourself into their group. Let's take a look.

[Mystery Men film clip plays]

JL: So what's next for Paul Reubens after this?

PR: I start next week writing, a, a new movie called The Pee-wee Herman Story.

JL: Okay, all right, you're gonna do Pee-wee again?

PR: I am.

PR: It's a movie about fame. Pee-wee Herman becomes famous in this movie and turns into a monster.

JL: Into a monster?

PR: Yeah.

JL: You've been traveling, too?

PR: I've been traveling, I've been all over the world, I was just in Africa, I've been everywhere.

JL: You've brought some photos, of your trip?

PR: I did.

JL: What's this first one of?

[screen shows picture of Pee-wee superimposed next to Cindy Crawford.]

PR: This is Cindy, obviously, everyone knows Cindy.

JL: You were traveling with Cindy Crawford?

PR: Yeah. Cindy and I on, I think it's the Loveboat, I can't make out the...background. This was a great day.

JL: And you have another one?

[shows another superimposed picture]

PR: Next one is me and Vendela.

JL: Vendela?

PR: Yeah. That's, I believe, the Sahara. Really hot that day.

JL: Really warm? Yeah, but it's dry heat.

PR: Yeah. It would've been fantastic if you could have been there.

PR: I just finished a western...played a cowboy murderer rapist bank-robber.

JL: And you're the hero?

PR: No, I'm the bad guy.

JL: Okay, you're the bad guy. Let me ask you about traveling. Do you learn languages? Are you good at that?

PR: I've been studying languages, yeah, for a couple years now.

JL: How many languages do you know?

PR: I know probably fifteen languages.

JL: Fifteen!?

PR: Yeah. 1-5, not 5-0.

JL: Okay now, can you say something in, uh, let's try Middle East, Farsi?

PR: Farsi is one of the ones I really don't know that well yet.

JL: French?

PR: I'm still working on French.

JL: Now Spanish is a language almost the world...

PR: Spanish, si.

JL: Now, I don't want to tax you too much, I mean obviously you can only do so much. It was fun to have you, will you come back to see us some more?

PR: I hope so.

JL: Always a pleasure. Paul Reubens, ladies and gentlemen.