Christopher Walken
The Academy Award-winning actor has appeared in more than 100 movies and TV shows, including "Annie Hall," "The Deer Hunter," "Pulp Fiction," "Catch Me If You Can," a slew of memorable "Saturday Night Live" skits, and a rhapsodic Fatboy Slim music video.
Born nearly 70 years ago in Queens, New York, Walken trained as a dancer from age 3, and moved from the New York stage to movies in the early '70s in the Sidney Lumet thriller "The Anderson Tapes."
By CBSNews.com senior editor David Morgan
DUANE: I tell you this because, as an artist, I think you'll understand. Sometimes when I'm driving, on the road at night, I see two headlights coming toward me. Fast. I have this sudden impulse to turn the wheel quickly, head-on into the oncoming car. I can anticipate the explosion. The sound of shattering glass. The flames rising out of the flowing gasoline.
ALVY: Right. Well, I have to, I have to go now, Duane, because I'm due back on the planet Earth."
"My early time in the movies had to do with 'Annie Hall' and 'The Deer Hunter,' and both times I was troubled and suicidal," he said. "I think that movies are so expensive that if you do something that works a little bit, you know, whether you're the leading man or best friend or the funny guy or the villain, that you might get asked to do that again."
He doesn't mind if he's asked to repeat himself. "I think that actors who work are lucky," he replied.
In the movie he's a convincing cello player - and rarest of all for him, a nice guy.
"You don't even really do anything strange in this movie," said correspondent Tracy Smith.
"No, I'm really good. I'm a very nice man," he replied.