I wouldn’t put that off for a second because I think that it would just be fun," he adds. I would definitely come back and cameo in a musical way. "You’re talking about a 65-year-old musician. My assumption is it’s not gonna be Better Call Saul, and that’s not to put them down, I’ll give it a look." We’re in this Golden Age of TV, but there are still very few shows that are really on that level, that have budget and writing. It’s gonna quality of the writing and whether there’s a reason to update it. "I hope it’s good," Cappello exclusively tells SYFY WIRE. Similar to its source material, the small screen project follows a pair of Gen Z brothers, who move to a new town with their mother, only to learn that the local cool kids are a pack of nocturnal bloodsuckers. Cappello to get his thoughts on working with the late filmmaker, as well as The CW's Lost Boys TV show. Now, over three decades after his short, yet iconic, appearance in Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys, musician Tim Cappello continues to enjoy a sense of cultural immortality - not unlike the movie's infamous vampire bikers.įollowing Schumacher's unfortunate passing last week, SYFY WIRE caught up with Mr. In the summer of 1987, he made us all believe with a shirtless, muscled, and oiled-up saxophone performance on the Santa Cruz boardwalk.
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