And allegedly, Lloyd's signature glasses were a result of a director (or agent?) telling him he was "too handsome to do comedy."
I always read that the Glasses character was exactly for that sense of normality, that Lloyd was playing a real person, neither a comic grotesque nor a rarefied star. (He was legitimately difficult to recognize without the glasses, too, which I find hilarious because in real life that almost never works.)
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I always read that the Glasses character was exactly for that sense of normality, that Lloyd was playing a real person, neither a comic grotesque nor a rarefied star. (He was legitimately difficult to recognize without the glasses, too, which I find hilarious because in real life that almost never works.)