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        <title><![CDATA['Wet Hot American Summer' Cast: Where Are They Now?]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">'Wet Hot American Summer' Cast: Where Are They Now?</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[
										
					<p>It’s just barbecue sauce! <em>Wet Hot American Summer</em> opened to less than stellar reviews in 2001, but <strong>it became a cult classic anyway</strong> — and spawned a Netflix spinoff, too.</p>
<p>Set in 1981 <strong>at the fictional Camp Firewood</strong>, the movie follows a group of counselors as they try to squeeze in one last day of fun before returning home for the summer. The stacked ensemble cast includes <strong><em>Saturday Night Live</em></strong> stalwarts <strong><strong>Amy Poehler</strong></strong> and <strong><strong>Molly Shannon</strong></strong> as well as <strong><strong>Paul Rudd</strong></strong>, <strong><strong>Janeane Garofalo</strong></strong>, <strong><strong>Christopher Meloni</strong></strong>, <strong><strong>Elizabeth Banks</strong></strong> and <strong><strong>Bradley Cooper</strong></strong>.</p>
<p>Camp Firewood is fictional, but cowriters <strong>David Wain</strong> and <strong>Michael Showalter</strong> based their script on their own childhood experiences at summer camps in Maine and Massachusetts, respectively. “I spent most of the time that I was there, from about age 10 to 16, kind of sitting around making friends and trying to make out with girls,” Wain, who also directed the movie, told <strong><em>Entertainment Weekly</em></strong> in 2001.</p>
<p>According to the <em>Wanderlust</em> director, there wasn’t a lot of “sitting around” on the <em>WHAS</em> set. “It was insane,” he told <em>EW</em> of filming the movie. “It was a seven-nights-a-week party. The line between being at summer camp and making a movie about it was very gray. The biggest difference was that we were a little older and nobody was going to take our beer away.”</p>

		<p>In 2015, Netflix released <em>Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp</em>, <strong>an eight-episode prequel series tracking the counselors’ shenanigans</strong> at the beginning of the summer. In 2017, the streaming service debuted <em>Wet Hot American Summer: Ten Years Later</em>, which documented the group’s reunion in 1991.</p>
<p>Despite the fact that <strong>some of the original movie’s stars</strong> became massively famous in the years between 2001 and 2015, Wain and Showalter said that the cast had no trouble picking up right where they left off.</p>
<p>“Obviously, we know that <strong>some people have become movie stars</strong>, but everybody was more confident, everybody was better with what they do and everybody was more savvy about the process,” <strong>Showalter told <em>Collider</em></strong> of <em>First Day of Camp</em> in 2015. “That informed the project itself. Someone like Elizabeth Banks comes on set and just knows it out of the park, the first time. And that’s true of everybody. They’re pros.”</p>
<p>Wain agreed with his cowriter, adding: “They were all just doing it. Bradley Cooper was just playing his character, and Elizabeth Banks was just playing her character.”</p>
<p>Keep scrolling to see what the cast of <em>Wet Hot American Summer</em> has been up to since 2001:</p>
									

				
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<strong></strong><strong><img width="130" height="47.72"  alt="Listen on Google Play Music"  data-src="/uploads/2021/07/27/wet-hot-american-summer-cast-where-are-they-now-0.png"></strong><p>This story originally appeared on: <strong>US Magazine</strong> - Author:<strong>Eliza Thompson</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Eliza Thompson]]></dc:creator>
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