Trending badgeTrendingPosted 1 hour agoSubscribe to Screen Time NewsletterCaret Down101 Interesting Behind-The-Scenes Facts About Iconic '90s TV Shows And MoviesOn Titanic's last day of filming, someone spiked everyone's lunch with a mind-altering substance!by Kristen HarrisBuzzFeed StaffFacebookPinterestLink There are so many iconic '90s TV shows and movies that people love to watch over and over. Over the years, the cast and crew members have shared all kinds of interesting behind-the-scenes tidbits. Here are 101 behind-the-scenes facts about '90s movies and TV shows: 1. Matt Damon and Ben Affleck had to fight back against studio execs who didn't want them to star in Good Will Hunting, which they co-wrote. However, they were inspired by Sylvester Stallone, who wrote and starred in Rocky. At the 2016 National Board of Review awards gala, Matt said, "Believe me, they really wanted to take it away from us. They were like, 'God, Leonardo DiCaprio would be so good in this.' Every time they said, 'You can't do this,' we said, 'Actually, it's been done once before.' [Sylvester Stallone's] story changed my life. He had an incredible amount of courage, and he changed the course of our lives." (C)Miramax/Courtesy Everett Collection 2. James Van Der Beek improvised the Dawson's Creek "crying face" moment that has since become a huge meme. In 2012, he told HuffPost, "It wasn't scripted, I don't think. I mean, it was appropriate for the scene. You know, it was just high drama; you've been living with this character for a while, and a scene like that just kind of drops in your lap, and you just lose it. They yell cut and say, 'Oh my god. That was amazing!' So I remember being completely surprised by it because it was completely sincere. The fact that it's being used to mock me now, I think it's so funny." The WB / Via youtube.com Here's the scene: View this video on YouTube The WB / Via youtube.com 3. At the 2015 ATX Television Festival's Dawson's Creek Writers Room Reunion panel, executive producer Paul Stupin said, "Originally, when Kevin [Williamson] and I started talking, it was pretty clear to both of us it would probably be [Joey] and Dawson. So, the first half of that two-hour [finale], Kevin wrote with the understanding and the awareness that it was going to be, ultimately, those two people who ended up together on our show. But halfway through, Kevin calls me and says, 'You know what? I changed my mind.'" The WB / Via Hulu Writer Kevin Williamson added, "I will tell you, it was hard. When I said, 'Yes, I'm gonna do it,' Dawson was the obvious answer. And then the more I thought about it and the more I was into writing the first hour ... I just kept going, I don't know. This isn't what the show set up to be. Maybe that's where it started, but it evolved, and the show has turned into something else.' I always wanted the show to sort of be surprising and I also wanted it to be honest and young and I also wanted to say something about soul mates. And what I believe soul mates can be... You know, we find our soul mates in our best friends, we find our soul mates in our partners... It's not always romantic... In some ways, Pacey and Joey are soul mates, I think Dawson and Joey are soul mates, I think Pacey and Dawson are soul mates. It's a triangle. That's the show." The WB / Via Hulu 4. For Mrs. Doubtfire, makeup artist Ve Neill spent four and a half hours on Robin Williams's makeup transformation. She applied several pieces of a mask, blended them, then painted and molded on wrinkles and blemishes. 20th Century Fox / Via youtube.com 5. To test the believability of his Mrs. Doubtfire disguise, Robin Williams wore the costume to an adult store. He told Sirius XM, "I was dressed as her in San Francisco, and I walked into a sex shop...I tried to buy a double-headed dildo, and I was going, 'That one right there. The big one. Do you have anything without veins? Something without veins would be lovely'...and I can see this guy behind the counter going, 'Whoa, this old lady.' 'And a scented lube would be nice too. A sandalwood lube, something like that, for a probe.' And finally, the guy realized it was me and went, 'Get out of here, Robin, you asshole!'" 20th Century Fox / Via youtube.com 6. This is how Fran Drescher pitched her idea for The Nanny to Peter Marc Jacobson, her husband and collaborator at the time: "It's kinda a spin on The Sound of Music, only instead of Julie Andrews, I come to the door." CBS / Via Peacock 7. The Nanny costume designer Brenda Cooper spent eight to ten hours a day shopping for Fran Fine's iconic wardrobe - even for pieces that only appeared on screen one time. However, she took things a step further, altering and combining garments to create totally unique looks. She told HuffPost, "Every week I had a team of seamstresses in the fittings - we would be cutting, trimming, pinning. I would be ripping off sleeves, adding sleeves. There was a lot of creative stuff that went on to pump up the volume." CBS P