Hank Azaria and his pregnant partner, Katie Wright. (Kyle Gustafson / photokyle.com)
D.C. may be known as Hollywood for ugly people, but for a little while last night, it was almost like we were just plain Hollywood. Granted, there was no actual red carpet at last night's "red carpet" U.S. premiere — which was billed as a World Premiere despite Tuesday night's London screening — of Night at the Museum 2: Battle of the Smithsonian at the National Air & Space Museum. But there was a crowd of excited fans lining the steps up to the museum's doors, a red velvet rope line populated with microphone-wielding entertainment journalists inside, stressed-out personal assistants and handlers in headsets, heavily-made-up television correspondents, and discreet but tough-looking bodyguards. Substitute middle-aged male studio execs for the slightly paler middle-aged male government types who got invites to the event, and you could almost imagine you were at Grauman's Chinese Theatre.
Why the unusual site for the premiere? The sequel to 2006's wildly successful, wholly awful star-studded comedy Night at the Museum changes the venue from New York's Museum of Natural History to the Smithsonian, mostly the Air & Space Museum. Additionally, the production was given unprecedented access to film in the actual museum, the one caveat being that they had to film during the museum's regular operating hours without shutting the building down - which often meant filming with hundreds of tourists looking on. Ben Stiller found the experience invigorating: "It was exciting, we only had a few days here, but it was really fun for the energy, and you just don't get that when you're on a sound stage. It gets very insular."
While much has been made of this unusual access to film in the museums, the fact is that, as Stiller indicated, they still only filmed very briefly at the real buildings. The bulk of the film was still shot on sets, including a massive replica of the Air & Space built in Vancouver for the shoot. The only stars DCist spoke to all night who'd actually done any shooting in D.C. were director Shawn Levy and Stiller. For some, like 12-year-old Jake Cherry (who reprises his role as Stiller's son Nick Daley), this was their first visit to the real Air & Space Museum, an odd experience for them after shooting in a replica that was built to mimic the building's details exactly. Excited as he was to be there, Cherry — one of those frighteningly precocious child actors like Haley Joel Osment used to be — is partial to the Natural History Museum, which he'd just visited.
Other stars had been to the museum before, and continued to marvel at the work done in replicating the building for the film. Screenwriter Thomas Lennon (The State, Reno 911!), though a Chicago native, said he visited the museum many times as a kid when his family visited the D.C. area, and used that familiarity with the building in the writing of the movie. While he wasn't here for filming, he was at the Vancouver site, and said of the replica, "It was eerie, it was terrifyingly eerie." Co-writer Robert Ben Garant added, "The carpet's slightly dirtier, and otherwise it's exactly the same."
Lennon wasn't the only one with local connections. Patrick Gallagher, who plays Atilla the Hun, recalled doing a children's play at the Kennedy Center nearly 15 years ago, an experience that has stuck with him. "It's still the most fun I've ever had," he told DCist. And there's even some homegrown talent in the film. Jon Bernthal, who plays Al Capone, is a native of Cabin John and a Sidwell Friends graduate. He didn't get to shoot back home either, but echoed the wonder of his co-stars at the job done on the Vancouver set. When asked what his favorite place in D.C. was, Bernthal replied nostalgically that it was his high school baseball field. "Past hopes and dreams that were never quite realized," he joked.
There were plenty of other big stars in attendance, many of whom were being rushed into the screening by the time they got down to DCist's end of the rope line. We missed out on talking to Amy Adams (who looked far more glamorous than the occasion probably called for, in a satiny floor-length gown), Keith Powell (30 Rock's Toofer), an oddly subdued Robin Williams, and Owen Wilson. Hank Azaria was by far one of the most personable actors there, being among the first to arrive and one of the last to head into the theater, entertaining everyone with various character voices. When asked about being in another film with Robin Williams, he slipped into his Agador Spartacus character and relished the prospect of "squeezing the hind part" of his old Birdcage co-star. Ricky Gervais was also extremely jovial with the press, talking about his affinity for playing characters with no sense of humor, and joking about how he'd like to agree to host an awards show and then bail partway through. "Just start crying. Just go out there, be all fun, just do a song and then go, I can't do this anymore, and have a little breakdown. Ah, that's great. I'm gonna do it." And with that, he was whisked away to find a seat in the IMAX theater with the rest of the stragglers.
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian opens next Friday at theaters all over the area.

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what is UP with stiller's HAIR
Looks like a wig my grandma used to wear.
He's looking kind of James Brown-ish... embalmed is the word I'm looking for.
Is that Blue Steel????
so when a woman is prego, is it customary for her or her husband to place one hand over her bump as if to say, "check it out! he put his penis in my vagina and now i'm fat!"
i'd totally inseminate Marsha Brady.
Annoying!!!! Must be the new fad to highlight your pregnant belly instead of having people say - Wow, what a fat cow! If that's the case, all future photos will have me holding my "bump".
Am I the only one who immediately thinks "Zoolander" at press shots of Stiller?
(Note to self: wear bejeweled necklines only if I want to highlight my neck wrinkles.)
Are you saying Christine Taylor has neck wrinkles? If so, I think you're seeing her hair and the shadow of her hair.
Was the after party an audition for a remake of His Girl Friday? Judging by the picture, Amy Adams thinks she would make a fabulous Hildy Johnson.
So-and-so and his pregnant whatever.
Something's not quite right in the photo captions department.
I think Lennon's wife was holding onto the advance copy of The State on DVD...it'll come out of there on July 14th. I so cannot wait!!
Only pricks make fun of pregnant women.
FIXED!
Only pricks make women pregnant.
Very nice write-up Ian!
I can't wait to see the scene where the ghost of James Smithson has to bend over for a fast-talking Hollywood producer to mount him and ride him around the Mall.
Nice of the producers to recreate Air and Space in Vancouver. While they were at it, why didn't they fix the Smithsonian's real A&I building so it might reopen within our lifetimes.
I think I read somewhere that if this picture is a hit, the Smithsonian will get a whopping [Dr. Evil voice:] $1 million dollars. Wow. Sure, the marketing tie-in for the SI will have lines out the doors on the Mall but doesn't that happen already in the summer. Do they really expect this kind of whoredom of the reknowned Smithsonian to sell enough McNuggets and astronaut ice cream to actually fix the A&I Building?
Is Ben Stiller dying? Seriously...he looks bad.
i think he's preparing for his role as skeletor in the up-and-coming he-man remake, which is in fact nonexistent. he does look pretty scary here...
IMO most of them look pretty bad- worse then the average person on the street bad. Maybe the lighting was off?
I shot about a minute of footage of the with my second camera:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2Iz1vWGNbo
Probably the most media I've ever seen at one place in Washington, DC.
ben stiller is looking rough these days
Ben Stiller proves that just becuase your parents are funny doesnt mean you will be. The least funny person in Hollywood.
Except when he has a supporting role then he is ok.
Now, now, his television show from the early 90's was very funny. And Dodgeball is genius (Dodgeball > Zoolander, IMHO). Plus he's a huge Star Trek fan, which gets him major brownie points.
And yeeeech to all of the shots of men's hands on their wives' pregnant bellies. Such an image of ownership.
I was at the screening last night with an all access pass (thanks to a good friend) and I can tell you that Christine looked quite lovely....this is a bad picture. At one point I stood about 5 feet from her and her daughter. Stiller is so short in person....I was surprised; absolutely tiny. Also in attendance was Justice John Roberts and numerous other politico types. I had a perch at the end of the press line just before the entrance to the theatre so I got a good look at all the attendees. It was a good event. They passed out Hershey bags with Kisses, Reese's Pieces and Fiji Water. The food and drinks served in the main hall under the aircraft after the screening was great. Good times.
Did Robin Williams steal that jacket from Bill Nye the Science Guy?
Did Robin Williams steal that jacket from Bill Nye the Science Guy?
Why is no one talking about Amy Adams' nipple?!??!