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'Ferris Bueller's Day Off': Why Matthew Broderick hesitated to take one of his best roles

Matthew Broderick wasn’t so sure he wanted to play one of his most famous roles.

As he revealed on Thursday’s edition of Sirius XM’s Quarantined with Bruce, the actor worried the title part in the 1986 movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off — still one of his most famous — would pigeonhole him as someone who talks to the camera.

“I thought [the script] was great, and I had a teeny hesitation because having just done [the plays] ‘Brighton Beach [Memoirs]’ and ‘Biloxi [Blues],’” Broderick said, “I was like, ‘Wow, I’m talking to the audience, just like in these plays… and even in [the 1985 movie] Ladyhawke he talks to the camera a bit. …

“You know, when you’re young or starting out you think, ‘I have to do something different.’”

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Bueller famously broke the fourth wall several times as he ditched school for an unforgettable day with his girlfriend and his best guy friend during his last days of high school. Writer and director John Hughes used the storytelling technique to illustrate Ferris’s plot to feign sickness in order to stay home from school.

Matthew Broderick addresses the audience in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off." (Photo: CBS via Getty Images)
Matthew Broderick addresses the audience in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off." (Photo: CBS via Getty Images)

While Broderick wondered if making the movie was the right thing for his career, everyone else encouraged him to do it. The actor knew that Hughes was “known as the [Steven] Spielberg of teen film at the time,” cranking out several hits starring Molly Ringwald and other so-called Brat Packers beginning in 1984. Broderick’s agent, for one, was all about it.

Read more: Breakfast Club would be different if made today, says star Ally Sheedy

“My memory is, before I had hung up the phone, he was like behind me in the room, saying, ‘Yes, you should do it.’” Broderick recalled.

“He flew to New York. ‘I’ll see you tomorrow. Let’s just not talk about it anymore now, I’ll see you tomorrow,’ and he came and was suddenly in the room with me, saying, ‘Yeah, I do think you should do it.’”

Matthew Broderick didn't jump at the chance to be Ferris Bueller. (Photo: Bruce Glikas/WireImage)
Matthew Broderick didn't jump at the chance to be Ferris Bueller. (Photo: Bruce Glikas/WireImage)

More than three decades after the now-iconic movie was released, Broderick acknowledged, “He was right.”

Hughes’s films eventually won over the actor.

“I rented Sixteen Candles at, you know, Blockbuster or whatever was before Blockbuster… and I went to a screening of The Breakfast Club, and I loved them,” Broderick said.

LOS ANGELES - JUNE 11: The movie "Ferris Bueller's Day Off", written and directed by John Hughes. Seen here from left, Alan Ruck as Cameron Frye, Mia Sara as Sloane Peterson and Matthew Broderick as Ferris Bueller in the Art Institute of Chicago. Initial theatrical release June 11, 1986.  Screen capture. Paramount Pictures. (Photo by CBS via Getty Images)
"Ferris Bueller's Day Off", written and directed by John Hughes. L-R: Alan Ruck as Cameron Frye, Mia Sara as Sloane Peterson and Matthew Broderick as Ferris Bueller. (CBS via Getty Images)

The star made another smart decision in 1997, when he married fellow actor Sarah Jessica Parker. The two celebrated their 23rd wedding anniversary this year.

“I don’t know,” Broderick said when he was asked about the secret to their long union. “I keep reading communication, and she’s my best friend. Uh, any cliché you want?”

Watch: Alan Ruck shares idea for Ferris Bueller 2