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Fame Burst

The Role Jim Carrey Says Made Him Lose His Identity

Author

William Clark

Updated on March 08, 2026

"Man on the Moon" tells the story of real-world entertainer Andy Kaufman, a performer whose elaborate characters earned him fame throughout the 1970s and '80s as one of the world's premiere anti-comedians. Kaufman's characters, such as obnoxious lounge singer Tony Clifton, were strange and often put off audiences. He also rarely broke character, usually only appearing as himself if there was some other twist, such as the time he took his entire audience out for milk and cookies. So, when it came time for Jim Carrey to portray Kaufman — along with his multitude of strange characters — in "Man on the Moon," Carrey pulled out all the stops.

"The true author of the project is Andy and his genius," Carrey told The Hollywood Reporter. "The fact that he committed so completely to what he did, really made that possible and made it essential for me to lose myself. I don't feel like I made the film at all. I feel like Andy made the film."

Across its entire production, Carrey never stopped his impersonation of either Kaufman or one of his characters, per NPR. Even while working on "How the Grinch Stole Christmas," it was "Kaufman," not Carrey, who helped give notes to director Ron Howard. Carrey would go on to win a Golden Globe for the performance, which later became the focus of a 2017 Netflix documentary "Jim and Andy: The Great Beyond."