If you Google “who jumped into the cake in ‘November Rain,’” the answer you’ll get is Riki Rachtman. From 1990-1995, Rachman hosted Headbanger’s Ball, a two-hour, late-night, metal-video show on MTV. And he owned the Cathouse, a Hollywood nightclub that served as the headquarters for the heavy metal bands he showcased on television. Guns N’ Roses were regulars at Rachtman’s boîte and even filmed music videos there. I called up Rachtman, now 56, at his home in Mooresville, North Carolina, to talk about his memories of his time on the “November Rain” set. “We had been up all night shooting at the Rainbow,” Rachtman said, referring to a nightclub on the Sunset Strip. “And then we went straight to the wedding reception scene the next morning. Axl wanted it to feel like a real wedding, so all his friends were there. It’s why I was there. When I see the video now, it’s a lot of faces from the old scene. But the biggest misconception of the whole video is that I was the guy getting thrown through the cake. That wasn't me. Everybody seems to think it was, but it wasn't.”
Guns 'N Roses in 1986, five days before they get signed to Geffen Records. Photo by Marc S Canter/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images.
To get to the bottom of this mystery, I figured I should talk to a person with a front-row seat to the cake jump: Daniel Pearl, the cinematographer. Pearl is one of the most prolific cinematographers in music video history, and arguably the most distinguished. Not only was he director of photography for Guns N’ Roses legendary video trilogy, he was behind the camera for R.E.M.’s “Radio Free Europe,” The Police’s “Every Breath You Take,” Missy Elliott’s “The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly),” Brandy’s “What About Us,” and literally hundreds of others. And if you scroll all the way to the bottom of Pearl’s impressive IMDb page, you’ll see that his very first credit is cinematographer on Tobe Hooper’s 1974 classic, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Pearl’s career is the stuff of legend, but I wanted to talk about one thing specifically: The cake jump. I asked him if it was pre-planned or a spur-of-the-moment shot. “It absolutely did come up on the spot,” Pearl said. “All I know is I got my instructions from Andy that we were going to shoot this. And I know we shot it very quickly. I have to say that your choice of verb, that we got the [actor] ‘jumping’ through the cake—it is jumping. It's not like he just falls through it or anything. When we shot it, I went, Well, that's no good, man. It looks like the guy jumps into the cake, and we had only one cake. So there it is, that's it. That's what it is. My reaction at the time was that it looked wrong.”“My reaction at the time was that it looked wrong.” —Daniel Pearl, cinematographer
Axl Rose with his "November Rain" costar, Stephanie Seymour, in 1991. Photo by Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images.
“The concept of ‘November Rain,’ what does it mean?” Morahan said. “It’s like a bad dream. It was deliberately over the top. It's an allegory. When Daniel [Pearl] goes, ‘Oh, I didn't really like the guy going through the cake,’ I'm not saying it's a joke, but it is supposed to be a tongue-in-cheek bad dream, where everything just goes to shit. For me, that scene was like pissing on the wedding reception in ‘The Godfather.’ It’s an upside-down nightmare version of that wedding.”“I showed the cut to Axl, and he said, ‘Where’s the cake? I love the cake.’ So we put it back in.” —Andy Morahan, director
“I love that it's so sincere and really embracing the drama.” —Sofia Coppola, fan
I continued my sleuthing and ended up down a rabbit hole that I believe led to the name of the cake jumper. In the comments section on Blogspot, a man from Sweden named Jim said he was on a train in Malaysia and sat next to an actor, nicknamed “Slow,” who claimed to be the cake jumper. I reached out to Jim and Slow, but neither responded to my emails. So I can’t positively ID him. His identity will remain unknown for now, but I feel like I solved a bigger mystery: After talking to Morahan, I finally understood why the shot of the man careening into the cake has stuck with me all these years. We love when artists take huge swings—from the Sistine Chapel to the Beatles’ White Album. Sometimes projects with outsized ambitions falter, but we’re thrilled when an artist goes big, especially if, like Rachtman said, they bring their friends along for the ride. Pearl told me that a helicopter almost crashed into Slash while they shot his solo. Morahan said that they moved an entire chapel to the middle of nowhere in New Mexico for that same shot. The video’s budget ballooned to $1.5 million. There’s nothing half-assed about “November Rain.” That’s what the cake shot encapsulates: With “November Rain,” Morahan and Guns N’ Roses weren’t just swinging for the fences, they were aiming to demolish them. If the wedding guest had clumsily fallen into the cake, it wouldn’t have worked. He needed to propel himself like a Scud missile into the cake for the shot to belong in the video. As Axl sings, nothin’ lasts forever. But when you go for the glory, people will still be talking about it thirty years later.