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TOM
CRUISE BIOGRAPHY
TOM CRUISE CAREER
While in New York, Thomas Cruise Mapother IV
shortened his name to the far snappier Tom Cruise. He
went to Los Angeles to audition for TV roles (there's
a famous clip of him trying out with a very young Heather
Locklear - neither got the part), but got none. He did
though sign with the Creative Artists Agency and got
film work. First was Endless Love, directed by Franco
Zeffirelli, renowned for Jesus Of Nazareth. Brooke Shields
starred but Cruise, way down the bill (with James Spader,
also making his debut), had a foot on the ladder. Or
not, considering the film was so dismal. Returning to
New Jersey, he was surprised to hear he had another
audition, for a one-line part in Taps, the tale of military
academy students so loyal the fight to prevent its closure.
Where before Cruise's intensity had been a drawback,
now it made him. Director Harold Becker (who'd earlier
made The Onion Field, and would later helm Sea Of Love
and Malice) was so impressed by his test he lifted Cruise
to third on the bill, as belligerent cadet Dick Shawn.
Holding his own alongside Timothy Hutton, Sean Penn
and even George C. Scott, Cruise was now headline material.
Next came Losin' It, about four kids trying to lose
their virginity in Tijuana (smooth Cruise gets an older,
married woman), then the big one, Risky Business. Here
Cruise played a smart teenager who, his parents out
of town, gets tied up with a high-class prostitute and
a bunch of shady figures. Wisecracking, dancing in his
undies and sporting those classic Ray-Bans, he was a
sensation (and he would, for a while, date his co-star
Rebecca DeMornay).
He could have settled for this, used that killer smile
to become the face of the go-getting, sharp-suited Eighties
generation. Instead, he chose to work with another legendary
director, Francis Ford Coppola, briefly joining the
Brat Pack for The Outsiders. Then he starred in the
slow, testing All The Right Moves, about a High School
football star dreaming of scholarship and escape from
his miserable Pennsylvania mill town. He was clearly
attempting to widen his scope, next taking an even wilder
shot with Ridley Scott's Legend, playing canny pixie
Jack opposite Tim Curry's magnificent clomping demon.
Now came the first huge hit, Top Gun, with Ridley Scott's
brother Tony. Here Cruise was Pete "Maverick"
Mitchell, a slick and arrogant fighter-pilot, extremely
casual with the millions of dollars-worth of hardware
he's riding. Promoted with Berlin's Take My Breath Away,
it was a silly, macho, flag-waving monster of a hit
(particularly amongst the gay community, though that's
seldom mentioned) but again Cruise was intent upon growing
as an actor, not simply as a star. Now he played Vincent,
the cocky pool-player who draws Paul Newman's Fast Eddie
(first seen in The Hustler) out of retirement in The
Color of Money.
As a willing foil, Cruise helped win Newman the Oscar,
but Newman changed Cruise forever. A renowned worker
for charity, Newman raised his consciousness and got
him interested in car-racing (he drove for Newman's
team and thus got the idea for his later vehicle, Days
Of Thunder). And, inadvertently, he got him married,
Cruise meeting actress Mimi Rogers (Someone To Watch
Over Me, The Doors) at Newman's Road Racing Classic
Show in Georgia. Having dated Cher and Melissa Gilbert,
Cruise would be with Rogers (six years his senior) for
three years. Together they would serve on the board
of the environmentally concerned Earth Communications
Office.
Having dared to play alongside Newman, now there was
Dustin Hoffman, and Hoffman in a show-stealing Oscar
role to boot. But it should be noted that Cruise, as
Charlie Babbitt, a flash yuppie who discovers a less
superficial life with his retarded brother, was the
one who made that film. Hoffman needed someone onscreen
to react to him, to lend him humanity, to connect with
the audience - and Cruise, his performance ignored in
the rush to praise Hoffman's, did it brilliantly. Then
came Cocktail. Director Roger Donaldson had just done
the superior Kevin Costner thriller No Way Out, the
producers were expecting an update of The Graduate;
it turned out to be an empty-headed jumble (though Cruise
made an impressive tequila juggler).
Yet Cruise's trajectory was upwards, and now came Oliver
Stone's Born On The Fourth Of July (something of a cheat,
that, as Cruise was actually born on the 3rd). Here
Cruise played real-life Vietnam vet-turned-anti-war-activist
Ron Kovic, a man physically destroyed yet spiritually
raised by the paralysis of his lower body. He won his
first Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination. He moved
on to Days Of Thunder, again with Tony Scott. And his
second wife. Cruise had come across Nicole Kidman at
the premiere of her excellent Dead Calm. She amused
him. Now, starring together, she won him completely,
and he starred with her again in his next picture, Far
And Away (directed by Ron Howard), about Irish lovers
battling for a decent life on the American frontier.
For Cruise, this tale was close to home as his great-great-grandfather,
Dillon Henry Mapother, had moved from southern Ireland
to Louisville back in 1850.
The movie was not a raging hit, but Cruise was by now
super-bankable. His presence made the fairly average
conspiracy flick The Firm into a smash. Still, he was
trying to shake his pretty-boy image, be seen as the
"actor-artist" he believed himself to be.
He worked constantly at this. On Days Of Thunder he
was so intense the crew dubbed him Laserhead. On Far
And Away, Ron Howard noted that he actually ran to the
toilet and back. He is NEVER late, and demands the same
professionalism from his co-workers. So next he took
on Interview With The Vampire, as the murderous Lestat,
drunk on power and immortality. Fans of the book denounced
this casting, as did its author Anne Rice though, having
seen the picture, she made an abrupt u-turn, claiming
Cruise's Lestat would be remembered like Olivier's Hamlet.
His charm and intensity had coupled well again.
Now it was massive hits all the way. Cruise - cool,
smart and pumped - made an excellent Ethan Hunt in Brian
De Palma's Mission: Impossible. Then came Cameron Crowe.
Cruise knew him already - Crowe had written Cruise's
first ever cover feature, for Interview Magazine. Now
a director, Crowe was working on Jerry Maguire, about
a sports agent discovering his humanity while teetering
on the brink of financial ruin. Cruise was brilliant
- harassed, arrogant, sweet and triumphant - and again
happily played second fiddle where necessary, to Cuba
Gooding Jr ("Show me the money!"), Renee Zellweger
("You complete me"), and even toddler Jonathan
Lipnicki. Another mighty hit, another Golden Globe,
another Oscar nomination.
Now Cruise took the chance to work with another of
the great directors. Along with Kidman, he spent three
years on Stanley Kubrick's slow, ultra-considered Eyes
Wide Shut. Sadly, the film was a little TOO considered
for most and, oddly, Cruise gained more respect and
attention for his far shorter role in Magnolia. As Frank
TJ Mackey, a rabble-rousing male therapist, he was tremendous
- posing, cajoling, demanding ("Respect the cock!").
And he was moving, particularly beside his father's
(Jason Robards) death-bed. Deservedly, there was another
Golden Globe, and another Oscar nomination - that Michael
Caine pipped him was nothing short of outrageous.
Mission: Impossible 2, with John Woo, was another mega-hit.
Then it was back to Crowe with Vanilla Sky, a "rock'n'roll"
remake of the Spanish weird-out Open Your Eyes - Cruise
had bought the remake rights after seeing the movie
with production partner Paula Wagner, then got Crowe
involved. It's worth noting that Cruise was now such
a massive star that the film's poster was simply a picture
of his head and shoulders beside a list of words reading
"Love, Hate, Dreams, Life, Work, Play, Friendship,
Sex". Completely meaningless, that list, when it
comes to explaining what the film was about, but it
absolutely did not matter. Everyone was only going to
see Cruise anyway
The movie featured Cruise as a New York playboy, the
inheritor of a publishing empire, in a bizarre love
triangle with Cameron Diaz and Penelope Cruz (herself
the star of the original). Then there's a car accident
and everything goes mad - Cruise is so horrifically
scarred he spends the rest of the movie in a mask. It
actually went mad for Cruise %u2018n' Cruz in real life
too. After the movie wrapped, the media went into feeding-frenzy
at the news that Cruise had split with Kidman after
10 years of marriage (they have two adopted children
- Isabella and Connor) and begun seeing Cruz. Tom and
Nicole tried to keep a lid on it, but it was impossible,
what with Cruise having to attend the premiere of Kidman's
The Others (directed by Amenabar, Cruise had produced
the film - no doubt as part of the Open Your Eyes/ Vanilla
Sky deal). Of course, everyone was interested in the
splitting of Tom and Nicole's mighty fortune, and fascinated
when Kidman revealed that in March, 2001, one month
after Cruise filed for divorce, she had suffered a miscarriage.
Next came Minority Report, a sci-fi thriller from the
pen of Philip K. Dick (screenplay by Frank Darabont
of Shawshank Redemption fame), about future-cops who,
with the aid of Pre-Cogs (weird, bald types who float
in big tanks and see the future) can arrest criminals
before they commit their crimes. Cruise played the head
of Washington's Pre-Crime unit, who's himself accused
and pursued by rival Colin Farrell. Adding Steven Spielberg
to Tom's incredible list of directors, it was hugely
inventive stuff, action-packed but still teeming with
intelligence, Spielberg having got together some of
the deepest minds in America to help build his future-world.
It cost over $100 million yet, with Cruise attached
(unlike Spielberg's relative failure A:I), it still
made money.
For his next project, Cruise would step back in time
with The Last Samurai. Here he was Nathan Algren, a
US cavalryman and hero of the American civil war, who's
invited to modernise the army of the Emperor of Japan,
then under threat from the samurai warriors of a rebel
leader. He agrees but, captured by the enemy, he learns
and comes to respect their codes of honour (in return
teaching their children baseball). It was an interesting
premise, and expertly filmed by Edward Zwick - after
Glory a veteran of major battle sequences - yet many
found it a little too close to Kevin Costner's Dances
With Wolves for comfort. As ever, Cruise drove the film
to success, promoting it with huge vigour. In the process,
he became the first man ever to appear on Marie Claire's
front cover, and publicly sang Elvis Presley's I Want
You, I Need You, I Love You with Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi.
Cruise's next project would be on a far smaller scale,
when he teamed up with Michael Mann for Collateral.
Here cab driver Jamie Foxx played an LA cabbie who picks
up a fare only to discover the guy's a hit-man. This
is Cruise, probably the world's most charming assassin,
who then forces Foxx to drive him around town as he
carries out his bloody work. Can Foxx out-wit this deadly
fellow and perhaps save himself and the final victim?
Surely Cruise will soon direct himself. He did helm
an episode of TV series Fallen Angels back in 1993 and
is a producer too, having worked on both Mission: Impossibles,
plus Without Limits (directed by Robert Towne, writer
of Chinatown, and The Firm, Days Of Thunder and the
Mission movies), Narc and The Others.
Of course, being the biggest movie star in the world,
Cruise receives attention of another kind. He's had
to sue people for claiming he's gay, one being "erotic
wrestler" Chad Slater (AKA Kyle Bradford) who went
so far as to claim he'd had an affair with Cruise which
had ended his marriage to Kidman. June 2001 saw Cruise
launch another $100 million suit against one Michael
Davis who approached various news services claiming
he had a video of Cruise in a homosexual relationship.
Cruise often sues when he feels lies are being told
and his reputation damaged. He gives all proceeds to
charity - now taking a big percentage of his film's
grosses (he made $75 million from M:I2), he hardly needs
the money. He also gets gyp for his membership of the
Church of Scientology, which he joined in 1990, despite
his stated opinion that it's aided him enormously, and
even helped clear up his dyslexia.
Away from the industry, Cruise likes to scuba-dive and
sky-dive. He also pilots aircraft, including a Pitts
Special S-2B stunt plane. He occasionally involves himself
in politics - in 2000 he backed Hillary Clinton's Senate
campaign and in 2003 spoke out against the often absurd
diagnosis of ADD and willy-nilly prescription of the
likes of Ritalin. But mostly it's about work. Cruise
resents being thought of as a beefcake actor or a pretty-boy
maker of pulp entertainment. He did, after all, turn
down Top Gun 2, despite a promised 500% wage rise, made
Born On The Fourth Of July for scale (plus percentage)
and took no upfront fee for The Last Samurai. He's tested
himself against the best for so long, he's been involved
in so many award-winning projects, he feels he deserves
better. And he does.
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