Mike Schank Dies: ‘American Movie’ Documentary Co-Star Was 53

Mike Schank, a musician who was featured prominently in American Movie, the cult 1999 documentary that won a big prize at the Sundance Film Festival, has died. He was 53.

His close friend, Jackie Bogenberger, told the Associated Press that Schank died October 13 after a months-long battle with cancer. Several big-name actors and filmmaker mourned Schank on social media; read a sampling below.

Director Doug Smith’s American Movie premiered at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival and won the Grand Jury Prize — the first of several festival and critics’ awards and nominations it would glean. It centered on aspiring filmmaker Mark Borchardt’s attempts to finance his dream project by completing Coven, the low-budget horror short film he’d abandoned years before. Schank co-starred as his best friend since childhood, a guitarist and recovering substance abuser who was among the most reliable members of Borchardt’s crew.

Related Story

'Southern Charm' Spinoff 'Southern Hospitality' Drops Trailer Plus Premiere Date & Has Leva Bonaparte Calling The Shots

He also provided a much-lauded scream for Coven whose recording was featured in the documentary. Watch a trailer American Movie below, with Schank’s scream at the 3:04 mark.

Schank’s deadpan delivery and aw-shucks charm made him a popular character, and he went on to land a handful of film and TV roles, most notably a guest spots as himself in a 2006 episode of Family Guy. Creator Seth MacFarlane cast Schenk and Borchardt in “Brian Sings and Swings” as part of Quagmire’s filmmaking team who attempt secretly to document interaction between Meg and her new friend Sarah, who is part of an afterschool club called the Lesbian Alliance.

Schenk and Borchardt also appeared in the 2002 indie comedy Britney, Baby, One More Time. Schank had bit roles in other features including Black Licorice, Hamlet A.D.D., Small Change, Modus Operandi and a couple of short films. He tweeted in August that he’d been clean and sober for 27 years.

Borchardt tweeted a brief remembrance of his friend, which garnered about 4,000 likes and scores of comments:

A number of celebrities also remembered Schank on Twitter:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=23usoyDRLtQ%3Ffeature%3Doembed

Must Read Stories

Harrison Ford Set To Play Thunderbolt Ross In Marvel’s ‘Captain America: New World Order’

Universal & Amblin Have Shortlist For ‘Twisters’ Director; Sequel Eyes Spring Start

Kevin Spacey Takes Stand In Civil Trial; ‘Flash’s Ezra Miller Pleads In Felony Burglary Case

“Rattled” Netflix Delays Harry & Meghan Doc After Attacks Undermining ‘The Crown’

Read More About:

Source: Read Full Article