Larry A. Thompson has managed a lot of talent and produced a lot of television over the years, but nothing he’s done before has attracted the kind of attention Liz & Dick has. Set to air November 25, the Lifetime TV movie about the stormy love affair between Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton was in the spotlight from the moment Lindsay Lohan was cast as Taylor. Car crashes, filming delays, exhausted crew members and the constant glare of the media hampered the production. Liz & Dick covers the couple’s two marriages, two divorces and career ups and downs. Grant Bowler plays Burton in the film. Lloyd Kramer directs from a script by Temple Grandin scribe Christopher Monger. Thompson talked with me about the trials of making Liz & Dick, hiring Lohan, and his next project on Oprah Winfrey.
DEADLINE: With all the attention on Liz & Dick, this could not have been an easy film to make.
THOMPSON: It was a challenge to make this movie. I certainly was aware of the risk I was taking hiring Lindsay Lohan. I realize now making the right decision is easier than living with the right decision. But it was the right decision nonetheless. Because in our movie none of the reported madness seeps into the story except when the story asks for it. It was a complicated jigsaw puzzle under the best case scenarios and then when you are challenged by new factors, it keeps you on your toes. When you’re promoting a movie, you always have to watch what you say and when you are working with Lindsay Lohan, it gives that piece of advice new meaning.
DEADLINE: So why did you hire her?
THOMPSON: I think by having Lindsay in our movie she will bring a younger generation that might not even know who Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton are. And I think because of their interest in Lindsay Lohan they are going to see a story on Lifetime that’s going to thrill them. I think all the naysayers who think that Lindsay Lohan is a train wreck are going to shocked to see how much of an actress she is. I’ve learned to divorce one’s talent from one’s personal behavior and I think the audience will start doing that too one they start watching the movie.
DEADLINE: Did you see a lot of similarities between the two actresses?
THOMPSON: The fact is Lindsay had so many things in common with the Elizabeth Taylor that we were portraying in our movie. Elizabeth Taylor in our movie is 29 years old when she meets Richard Burton. She had been a child star. She and Richard Burton lived a life of excess, whether it be drinking, carrying on, making love, living in the spotlight under the glare of the paparazzi, having everything they said and did exaggerated. So I think there was a lot that was going on with Elizabeth Taylor that Lindsay Lohan could relate to.
DEADLINE: Would you make another movie with Lindsay Lohan?
THOMPSON: Well, sure. While I certainly have worked with many actresses whose behavior during production was less problematic, I do believe her performance as Elizabeth Taylor is riveting and tragic. I think Grant Bowler as Richard Burton steals your heart and Lindsay Lohan as Elizabeth Taylor breaks it.
DEADLINE: Besides the celebrity factor, what relevancy does Taylor and Burton’s story have to today’s younger viewers?
THOMPSON: Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton were the first Brangelina, they were the first Hollywood international couple. They gave birth to the paparazzi. So I think an audience today will not only see a great love story and learn about two Hollywood icons but they’ll be able to understand why we live in a celebrity crazed world.
DEADLINE: What’s next after Liz & Dick?
THOMPSON: Oprah! I’ve optioned Kitty Kelly’s book on Oprah Winfrey and I have a take on a four-hour miniseries on a women who I think is fascinating. I have a take on the story that I am about to go out and pitch.
DEADLINE: Who’s going to play Oprah?
THOMPSON: Haven’t got there yet.
Deadline's Dominic Patten - tip him here.


Oh, delusion. Thy name is Larry Thompson.
@Mark: What part is delusional? Larry makes a perfectly good case for why the story is relevant and why people will watch (which I think they will, including me!) So,you need to be a bit more specific if you’re going to ‘dis’ someone.
I’m with Rhonda. I’m going to watch. Larry Thompson’s strategy is brilliant. Casting Lindsay will also attract the train-wreck watchers who can’t help themselves. She’s a good actress. Of course, being a good actress and being a train-wreck are not always mutually exclusive. It’s good casting. All you naysayers can suck it. Lindsay lives to “learn” from her mistakes or “lose-it-all” by her negligence another day.
Freeda, the main problem is, Lindsay Lohan is not even a decent actress. The horrid tv trailer reveals the hideousness of Lohan’s acting. I saw the film trailer for The Canyons, again Lindsay’s acting looks horrible. Whether Lohan is clean or sober, the poor girl cannot act.
Yeah, but Elizabeth Taylor at age 26 was one of the most luminous goddesses ever to grace a movie screen. Lindsay Lohan at age 26 looks like Ann-Margret. Not Ann-Margret at age 26, like Ann-Margret NOW. She’s 72 years old.
“I think all the naysayers who think that Lindsay Lohan is a train wreck are going to shocked to see how much of an actress she is.”
Yeah, if you’re gonna sell this line, probably shoulda left Lohan out of the trailer. Really.
Okay, snarking aside for a moment. Between the parents, the very obvious lack of a basic education, and the producers banking on her train wreck tabloid status, I’m starting to feel really bad for this chick.
No one doubts Lindsay Lohan as an actress. Just like no one doubted Whitney Houston as a singer. But how many chances are these people supposed to get?
As for courting younger viewers, if they don’t know Liz and Dick, then that’s tragic. But a Lifetime movie isn’t going to fix that. And I am sick of biopics.
Let’s just call it a ratings ploy and be done with it.
Q- “So, why did you hire Lindsay Lohan?”
A- “Because we’re desperate ratings whores and we know by hiring this train wreck it means a bunch of moronic Americans will watch this piece of crap. Now excuse me while I go kill myself.”
Say what you will – Larry Thompson is a gentleman from the old school of good manner. He does unexpectedly kind things for people and it never gets talked about. So I will shout it out. He is one of the good guys.
This interview makes me feel dirty. This is sleazy exploitation of a lowlife actress, not a celebration of a fascinating dead one.
The movie is already getting awful reviews. One reviewer labeled it “part train wreck…part SNL skit”.
Whoever thinks that Lindsey can act needs to see a real actress. She totally blew in this role. Ms. Taylor deserved to be represented so much better. She was a true actress. Her timing and delivery were always spot on. This was painful to watch, so I stopped. Please, no more from this twit who thinks she’s a star.