"Love Island" narrator Matthew Hoffman recreates iconic Hollywood films with golden-aged stars

TV host teaches acting class for senior citizens

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A California TV host turned his passion into an opportunity to give back with "Tuesdays with Matthew," a program that sees senior citizens recreate famous movie scenes in a fun environment. By day, Matthew Hoffman works on various projects including lending his voice to narrate "Love Island" on CBS, but on his off-hours, he teaches performance to students as old as 97 years old.

"It changed my life," he told CBS News' Jamie Yuccas. "I have learned so much about being an adult, kindness, compassion."

His students seemed to feel the same. "I just want to take him home and keep him, but he won't come home with me," laughed Francesca Friday, an 85-year-old in Hoffman's class.

Hoffman moved to Hollywood 15 years ago to become a TV host, but realized he needed an audition reel. He revealed that he would drive by a local senior center every day when he decided to interview some "funny seniors" to add to his tape.

However, once inside, Hoffman was so inspired by the people he met that he created a scene-study class called "Tuesdays with Matthew." It soon became a place he filmed mini-movies from "Wizard of Oz" to "Gone with the Wind" using his golden-aged actors.

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WELP. This may be one of my favorite #TuesdaysWithMatthew videos. It is impossible for me to describe the feeling of our movie day “Premiere’s” without seeming like a complete weirdo who has lived in California wayyyy too long BUT - the energy in the room skates on a completely different level of happiness that I have never experienced. To produce a TWM SCENE-ior Road Trip takes an unbelievable amount of time and I am always nervous that after driving for five hours that none of the residents will want to put on a movie with me. Moments before the class I feel like a High School student waiting to see if anyone will show up to their party. Spoiler alert - the SCENE-iors always show up, and within the first ten minutes of teaching the workshop it is clear that I have new friends for life. That night and the following day we spend about 12 hours editing the film, and the next morning I hit the local grocery store before we premiere the film. I pick up a cake, and a twelve pack of Ensure to put in champagne glasses to toast our movie stars because THAT IS HOW WE ROLL. The entire community and staff show up to see the film, and I am always overwhelmed when relatives attend to cheer on their Mothers, Fathers, Siblings or Grandparents. It is the most amazing thing to watch them - watch their loved ones- on the big screen having the time of their lives. I can’t thank the #fronteirmanagement family enough for sponsoring these workshops. Their generosity has allowed me to use TWM as a vehicle to spread joy and also help feed seniors we will never meet. If you are looking to help Seniors please consider giving to www.MealsOnWheelsAmerica.org/Matthew 👵🏽👴🏼❤️🎬

A post shared by Matthew Hoffman (@matthewhoffman.tv) on

Hoffman not only directs the films, but he creates the costumes and props that are used and stores them in the back of his car. He then screens the films at a "premiere" where he invites the families of his actors to toast the performances with glasses of Ensure rather than champagne.

"I get so caught up in how funny the movies could be, how entertaining the movies could be, that it really started to turn into a vanity project," he said.

The seniors working with Matthew get more out of their projects than just laughs.

"Singing and music and reading these scripts, I forget my pain," senior Nick Pietroforte said. "I have serious spinal stenosis. Matthew doesn't give up on anybody."

Francesca Friday called Hoffman a "role model" despite their age gap. "I'm learning how to treat people, how to be kinder."

Hoffman's message to others is that volunteering "will change your life."

"Get off Instagram. Go for an hour. Change somebody's life – not even change a life, make their afternoon." 

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