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Biography
Ben Affleck's story is, without doubt,
one of the great rags-to-riches tales in recent cinema history. Along
with his childhood buddy, Matt
Damon, he was a struggling actor, in the final stages of being
consigned to Hollywood's dustpile. But together they fought back.
Bucking the system, they wrote their own screenplay, attracted their own
finance, and produced and starred in their own movie. Within a year,
Good Will Hunting had taken off, in 1998 earning them both an Oscar and
propelling them into major roles in such mega-blockbusters as Armageddon
and Saving Private Ryan. Or so the story goes. In fact, the saga
stretches back a good twenty years. But it was his dad's influence and connections that got him started in TV, VERY early in his life. He appeared in ads for Burger King before hitting double-figures and, by 12, had appeared as CT Granville in the cute and educative mini-series The Voyage Of The Mimi. At the age of 12 though, he suffered an emotional setback with the divorce of his parents. Tim had "a severe, chronic problem with alcoholism" which eventually broke the couple up. He left for the Recovery Center in Palm Springs, got back on his feet, and now works counseling others in Rehab. Young Ben's dreams of an acting career
did not depart with his father, for he had begun a far more crucial and
inspiring relationship some years before. At age 8, he'd met and
befriended one Matt
Damon, a boy two years older than himself. Together they attended
Little League, played Dungeons & Dragons and video baseball, and on
Saturdays watched Godzilla and kung-fu double-bills. And they acted.
While at the Rindge And Latin High School, they were members of a group
who won a drama award from the Boston Globe, but their ambitions
stretched far further than this. They even started a joint account for
when they'd have to travel to auditions. His high B average did not gain him a
place at Harvard with his buddy, and instead he enrolled at the
University of Vermont. He lasted one semester, deciding to eschew his
studies in favour a more practical approach to job-winning. He wanted to
take off for Hollywood and his mother OKed this - as long as he stayed
with friends of hers in Echo Park, and continued his studies at the
Occidental College at nearby Eagle Rock. He submitted to her demands and
took up Middle Eastern Studies (for a year, at least). First, in 1992, there had been School Ties. By now, Damon had left Harvard and joined his friend Affleck in LA and, despite debuting alongside Julia Roberts in Mystic Pizza, he too was finding the going tough. Having both appeared as extras in Field Of Dreams, they here featured with Brendan Fraser and Chris O'Donnell in a tale of campus anti-semitism in Fifties America. They'd all become stars eventually - but not yet. With no offers coming in, Affleck took a
part in Richard Linklater's independent classic Dazed And Confused, a
brilliant comic study of Seventies teens, where the debuting Matthew
McConaughey stole the show as an unashamed serial seducer of schoolgirls
("I keep gettin' older, they just stay the same. Yes, they
do"). Affleck also tried directing, with the sensationalist,
satirical I Killed My Lesbian Wife, Hung Her On A Meat Hook And Now I
Have A Three-Picture Deal With Disney. It's better than it sounds. Here Affleck was excellent as the slick
manager of Fashionably Male, who seduces Shannon Doherty, to the chagrin
of her would-be lover. Indeed, so impressed was Smith that he set about
writing his next movie around Affleck - Chasing Amy, about a charming
cartoonist (Affleck) who falls for a lesbian (Joey Lauren Adams) and,
well, you can guess the rest. This is where Affleck's connections came
in. Kevin Smith loved the script and, being hip and important enough to
do so, took it to Harvey Weinstein at Miramax. Suddenly, it was on. Robin
Williams came onboard, as did director Gus Van Sant (Drugstore
Cowboy, To Die For), and Damon and Affleck found themselves not only
starring in their own film, but also $600,000 richer. The film would
gross over $130 million and win them that coveted Oscar, but Damon and
Affleck were hot property even before it opened. Damon became Private
Ryan, while Affleck starred in the Bruce
Willis comeback vehicle Armageddon, which itself grossed over $200
million. Following Daredevil was Gigli, another
starring role, this time alongside such heavyweights as Al
Pacino and Christopher Walken. Here Ben played a thuggish low-life
who's paid to kidnap the psychologically challenged son of a prosecutor
about to try a Mob boss. Not thinking he's up to the job, the Mob send
in lesbian assassin Jennifer
Lopez to help out - with inevitable results. Well, inevitable if you
believe that lesbians are really just straight girls who haven't met the
right guy. In the US, it created a new record when
its takings dropped 81.9% on its second weekend. On a budget of $54
million, it took just $6 million at the box office. In the UK it was
removed from every cinema in the country after one solitary week. And
this a film not just starring a proven action hero and a pop princess
with major movie hits of her own - it was furthermore directed by Martin
Brest, renowned helmsman of Beverly Hills Cop, Midnight Run and the
Oscar-winning Scent Of A Woman. What could possibly have gone so wrong? Unfortunately, as well as his memory of this, his multi-million dollar payment goes missing and, possibly even worse, all thought of a relationship he's enjoyed with Uma Thurman - not something a chap would want to forget. All he has are 19 objects left to him by the pre-wipe Ben. Can he work out what's happened while Woo's usual pyrotechnics explode around him? In its theme, Paycheck was close to Matt
Damon's recent The Bourne Identity, but Affleck's effort was not so
well received. He moved on to reunite with Kevin Smith for Jersey Girl,
based on Smith's own experience of fatherhood. Here Affleck was a
workaholic music promoter who fathers a child during a whirlwind romance
then, after disaster strikes, is left as a single dad, living with his
father back in New Jersey. Would his young daughter and video shop girl Liv
Tyler help him find himself? You betcha. The producers, fearing what had become
known as "the Gigli effect", decided to play down Lopez's
involvement in the movie. After all, Affleck said, she was only in it
for 15 minutes. It was all a major pain for Smith, this being his most
autobiographical effort to date. Having been dumped by Famke
Janssen, he had no one steady for ages, and devoted some of his
spare time to political and humanitarian issues. He campaigned for Al
Gore against George W. Bush and also, along with Damon, visited Harvard
to speak out for a new minimum wage. There's also the Internet company
he runs with Damon, LivePlanet. Affleck had a brief but high-profile romance with actress Gwyneth Paltrow following her breakup with Brad Pitt. He began dating actress/singer Jennifer Lopez, whom he met on the set of Gigli. In 2002 it was announced that he was engaged to Lopez, and the relationship between the two received enormous attention by the entertainment media. Both subsequently lost fans and credibility, probably due in part to the saturation of Affleck/Lopez interviews and projects, and especially after the notorious failure of Gigli, which in part was due to the negative publicity which led to the couple being dubbed "Bennifer". They broke up in 2004, with both blaming the media attention. In 2005 he proposed to his Daredevil costar, Alias star Jennifer Garner after nine months of dating. In May 2005 it was announced that Garner was pregnant, and they were married on June 29, 2005. Garner gave birth to a baby girl named Violet Ann Affleck on November 30th 2005. Affleck is also an avid poker player, regularly entering local events. He has been tutored by poker professionals Amir Vahedi and Annie Duke. He won the California State Poker Championship on June 20, 2004, taking home the first prize of $356,000, and qualifying him for the 2004 World Poker Tour final tournament. In 2006 will begin directing his first feature Gone, Baby, Gone based on the Dennis Lehane novel about two Boston area detectives investigating the kidnapping of a little girl. |
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