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Is there anything Al Pacino won't do for a paycheck these days? He just signed on for a supporting role in the creepy, officially-sanctioned John Gotti biopic with John Travolta and Lindsay Lohan, but he's not above taking his show on the road. On June 2nd and 3rd, for example, he's headlining "An Evening With Al Pacino" at the Fallsview Casino and Resort in upstate New York. For $90, you too can participate in a "candid interview and Q&A session...that will highlight [Pacino's] extraordinary career and life."

We won't be attending, but we encourage those who do to ask him if this recent torrid pace might be a way of making up for lost time. It's hard to fathom now, but Pacino was once one of Hollywood's pickiest actors. After Scarface, he waited six years before returning to the screen in Sea of Love. He also turned down roles in some of the most iconic movies of the past 35 years. Among the notable passes:

Lenny (1974)

Pacino told Larry King last year Lenny Bruce is the only role he regrets turning down. "I don't want to embarrass anybody," he says, presumably in reference to Dustin Hoffman, who ended up playing the comedian (Hoffman also got Kramer vs. Kramer when Pacino passed), but it's clear he thinks he could have done a better job.