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Filmography
Marlon Brando Biography
Marlon Brando was quite simply one of the most celebrated and
influential screen and stage actors of the postwar era; he rewrote the
rules of performing, and nothing was ever the same again. Brooding,
lusty, and intense, his greatest contribution was popularizing Method
acting, a highly interpretive performance style which brought unforeseen
dimensions of power and depth to the craft; in comparison, most other
screen icons appeared shallow, even a little silly. A combative and
often contradictory man, Brando refused to play by the rules of the
Hollywood game, openly expressing his loathing for the film industry and
for the very nature of celebrity, yet often exploiting his fame to
bring attention to political causes and later accepting any role offered
him as long as the price was right. He is one of the screen's greatest
enigmas, and there will never be another quite like him.
Born April 3, 1924, in Omaha, NE, Brando's rebellious streak
manifested itself early, resulting in his expulsion from military
school. His first career was as a ditch digger, but his father
ultimately grew so frustrated with his son's seeming lack of ambition
that he offered to finance whatever more meaningful path the young man
chose to pursue. Brando opted to become an actor -- his mother operated a
local theatrical group -- and he soon relocated to New York City to
study the Stanislavsky method under Stella Adler.
He later worked at the Actors' Studio under the tutelage of Lee
Strasberg, and his dedication to the principles of Method acting was
to become absolute. After making his professional debut in 1943's
Bobino, Brando bowed on Broadway a year later in I Remember Mama; for
1946's Truckline Cafe, the critics voted him Broadway's Most Promising
Actor.
Brando's groundbreaking star turn in the 1947 production of Tennessee
Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire delivered on all of that promise
and much, much more; as the inarticulate brute Stanley Kowalski, Brando
stunned audiences with a performance of remarkable honesty, sexuality,
and intensity, and overnight he became the rage of Broadway. Hollywood
quickly came calling, but he resisted the studios' overtures with
characteristic contempt -- he was a new breed of star, an anti-star,
really, and he refused to play ball, dismissing influential critics and
making no concessions toward glamour or decorum. It all only served to
make Hollywood want him more, of course, and in 1950 Brando agreed to
star in the independent Stanley
Kramer production The Men as a paraplegic war victim; in typical
Method fashion, he spent a month in an actual veteran's hospital in
preparation for the role.
While The Men was not a commercial hit, critics tripped over
themselves in their attempts to praise Brando's performance, and in 1951
it was announced that he and director Elia Kazan
were set to reprise their earlier work for a screen adaptation of
Streetcar. The results were hugely successful, the picture winning an
Academy Award for Best Film; Brando earned his first Best Actor
nomination, but lost despite Oscars for his co-stars, Vivien
Leigh, Karl Malden,
and Kim
Hunter. Again with Kazan, he next starred in the title role of
1952's Viva
Zapata! After walking out of the French production Le Rouge
et le Noir over a dispute with director Claude
Autant-Lara, Brando portrayed Mark Antony in the 1953 MGM
production of Julius Caesar,
sparking considerable controversy over his idiosyncratic approach to
the Bard and earning a third consecutive Oscar bid.
In 1954, The
Wild One was another curve ball, casting Brando as the rebellious
leader of a motorcycle gang and forever establishing him as a poster boy
for attitude, angst, and anomie. That same year, he delivered perhaps
his definitive screen performance as a washed-up boxer in Kazan's
visceral On the
Waterfront. On his fourth attempt, Brando finally won an Academy
Award, and the film itself also garnered Best Picture honors. However,
his next picture, Desiree, was
his first disappointment. Despite gaining much publicity for his
portrayal of Napoleon, the project made a subpar showing both
artistically and financially. Brando continued to prove his versatility
by co-starring with Frank
Sinatra in a film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical Guys and
Dolls. Another Broadway-to-screen adaptation, The
Teahouse of the August Moon, followed in 1956 before he began work
on the following year's Sayonara, for
which he garnered yet another Oscar nomination.
In 1958's The Young
Lions, Brando co-starred for the first and only time with Montgomery
Clift, another great actor of his generation; it was a hit, but his
next project, 1960's The
Fugitive Kind, was a financial disaster. He then announced plans to
mount his own independent production. After both Stanley
Kubrick and Sam
Peckinpah both walked off the project, Brando himself grabbed the
directorial reins. The result, the idiosyncratic 1961 Western One-Eyed
Jacks, performed respectably at the box office, but was such a
costly proposition that it could hardly be expected ever to earn a
profit. In 1962, Mutiny
on the Bounty underwent a similarly troubled birthing process;
Brando rejected numerous screenplay revisions, and MGM spent a record 19
million dollars to bring the picture to the screen. When it too failed,
his diminishing box-office stature, combined with his increasingly
temperamental behavior, made him a target of scorn for the first time in
his career.
The downward spiral continued: Brando himself remained compulsively
watchable, but suddenly the material itself, like 1963's The Ugly
American, 1966's The Chase, and 1967's A
Countess From Hong Kong, was self-indulgent and far beneath his
abilities. His mysterious career choices, as well as his often
inscrutable personal and professional behavior -- he was quoted as
declaring acting a "neurotic, unimportant job" -- became the topic of
much discussion throughout the industry. He continued to push himself in
risky projects like 1967's Reflections in a Golden Eye, an adaptation
of a Carson McCullers novel in which he portrayed a closeted homosexual,
but the end result lacked the old magic. While Brando still commanded
respect from the media and his fellow performers, much of Hollywood
began to perceive him as a bad and unnecessary risk, a perception which
features like 1968's Candy, 1969's Queimada!,
and 1971's The
Nightcomers did little to alter.
The Brando renaissance began with 1972's The Godfather;
against the objections of Paramount, director Francis
Ford Coppola cast him to play the aging head of a Mafia crime
family, and according to most reports, his on-set behavior was
impeccable. Onscreen, Brando was brilliant, delivering his best
performance in well over a decade. He won his second Academy Award, but
became the subject of much controversy when he refused the honor,
instead sending one Sacheen
Littlefeather -- supposedly a Native American spokeswoman, but
later revealed to be a Hispanic actress -- to the Oscar telecast podium
to deliver a speech attacking the U.S. government's history of crimes
against the native population. Controversy continued to dog Brando upon
the release of 1973's Last
Tango in Paris, Bernardo
Bertolucci's masterful examination of a sexual liaison between an
American widower and a young Frenchwoman; though critically acclaimed,
the picture was denounced as obscene in many quarters.
Despite his resurrection, Brando did not reappear onscreen for three
years, finally resurfacing in The
Missouri Breaks opposite Jack
Nicholson. Although he had by now long maintained that he continued
to act only for the money, the eccentricity of his career choices
allowed many fans to shrug off such assertions; however, never before
had Brando appeared in so blatantly commercial a project as 1978's
Superman, earning an unprecedented 3.7 million dollars for what
essentially amounted to a cameo performance. His next appearance, in
Coppola's 1979 Vietnam epic Apocalypse
Now, was largely incoherent, while for 1980's The Formula,
he appeared in only three scenes. And for a decade, that was it: Brando
vanished, living in self-imposed exile on his island in the Pacific,
growing obese, and refusing the few overtures producers made for him to
come back to Hollywood.
Only in 1989 did a project appeal to Brando's deep political
convictions, and he co-starred in the anti-Apartheid drama A Dry
White Season, earning an Academy Award nomination for his supporting
role as an attorney. A year later, he headlined The Freshman,
gracefully parodying his Godfather
performance. Tragedy struck in 1990 when his son, Christian, killed the
lover of Brando's pregnant daughter, Cheyenne; a long legal battle
ensued, and Christian was found guilty of murder and imprisoned. Even
more tragically, Cheyenne later committed suicide. The trial placed a
severe strain on Brando's finances, and he reluctantly returned to
performing, appearing in the atrocious Christopher
Columbus: The Discovery in 1992. He also wrote an autobiography,
Songs My Mother Taught Me. Don Juan
DeMarco, co-starring Johnny Depp,
followed in 1995, and after 1996's The
Island of Dr. Moreau, Brando starred in Depp's directorial debut The
Brave. In 1998, he appeared in Yves
Simoneau's Free Money,
headlining a cast that included Donald
Sutherland, Mira
Sorvino, Martin
Sheen, and Charlie
Sheen.
Again absent from the public eye for a spell, Brando made news again
in 2001 as health problems forced him out of a cameo role in director
Keenan Ivory Wayans' horror spoof sequel Scary Movie 2 (he was replaced
on short notice by actor James Woods). Brando made his first film
appearance in three years with a considerably more prestigous role in
director Frank Oz's one-last-heist thriller The Score (2001). Though the
film's production was plagued with the by-then de rigeur rumors of
Brando's curious on-set tirades and bizarre behavior, filmgoers remained
eager to see the actor re-teamed with former Godfather
cohort Robert DeNiro, with Edward Norton and Angela
Bassett rounding out the cast. Later that year, director Francis
Ford Coppola added to Brando's legend by lengthening his infamously
slurred speeches for the director's recut Apocalypse Now Redux.
Absent from the screen for the next three years, Brando passed away
suddenly in 2004 of pulmonary fibrosis. While The Score was his last
onscreen performance, shortly before his death he recorded voice parts
for an animated film called Big Bug Man and a Godfather
videogame. Marking an increasingly popular trend, the visage of Brando
was even resurrected for a "new" performance in director Bryan Singer's
big-budget Superman Returns in the summer of 2006. Culled from old
outtakes from the first two films, the digitally manipulated clips added
to the film's passing-of-the-torch feel. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie
Guide
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