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Biography
He was born Elijah Jordan Wood on the
28th of January, 1981, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, a town of some 200,000
souls a couple of hundred miles due west of Chicago. His parents, Warren
and Debbie, ran a deli in town, and were already supporting 7-year-old
Zack, later a video game producer in San Diego (sister Hannah, later a
poet, would arrive two years after Elijah). Naturally, he took to the stage early, at
6 winning a bit part in his elementary school's adaptation of The Sound
Of Music. By the next year he had graduated to the title role in The
Wizard Of Oz, as well as serving as a choir boy in the Marion Creative
Council production of See How They Run. Mother Debbie was not slow to
notice the effect of her boy's looks and nascent talents, in 1988
enrolling him at Avant Studios, a modelling school and agency in Cedar
Rapids. Immediately the endless round of auditions and studio calls
would begin. Now she was being pushed as a solo star
and her debut album, Forever Your Girl, promoted by such classic singles
as Straight Up and Cold Hearted, was about to prove a massive success.
Another single would be the title track, the video for which would see
Elijah playing a pint-sized business executive. As Abdul's inventive and
hi-octane videos (most of them, including Forever Your Girl, being
directed by David Fincher) were her main strength, it was excellent
exposure for the young wannabe. At this stage it was more than likely that Elijah would go the way of Felix, the natty little dude who'd taken centre stage in a Madonna video then disappeared entirely. But Debbie Wood and Gary Scarzo were careful in their handling of him, seeking out meaty roles in lower budget productions, rather than pushing too hard too soon. The first result of their canny strategy was the lead in a TV movie called Child In The Night. This saw Elijah as a young kid who has
seen his father murdered with a cargo hook and, quite naturally under
the circumstances, locked the ugly memory in the darkest recesses of his
mind. Thus child psychologist JoBeth Williams is called in the discover
the truth, attempting to clarify the boy's visions where he sees himself
as Peter Pan and the mystery killer as Captain Hook. If it had been going well so far, 1992
saw Elijah really push ahead, appearing in no fewer than four
productions. First came Radio Flyer, directed by Richard
"Superman" Donner. Set in 1969, this saw mother Lorraine
Bracco divorce and take her two sons (one being Elijah) to California.
Unfortunately, rather than embarking on a bright new start, she hooks up
with drunken bully Adam Baldwin, who demands to be called The King and
beats up Elijah's little brother. Afraid to discuss this dreadful
situation, the kids instead decide to build a flying machine out of a
toy wagon so the persecuted sibling can soar to safety. Though the child
abuse angle was weakly handled, the movie was appealing in its depiction
of the children together, and Elijah at last snapped up that elusive
Young Artist award. He also became something of a pre-teen idol - a
dangerous place to be. It could even have been viewed as a step
backwards when he became a mere kid again when appearing alongside Mel
Gibson in Forever Young. Here Gibson played a pilot in the 1930s who
loses the love of his life and allows cryogenics pioneer George Wendt to
use him as a guinea pig. Somehow, he's forgotten about and only awoken
50 years later by young Elijah - Gibson gradually rediscovering love by
teaching Wood to fly an old Air Force bomber and getting it on with his
mum, Jamie Lee Curtis. Much like Radio Flyer and Paradise, it was a fair
effort to portray kids and their wild imaginings. One reason for this was the smart guidance he'd received from Gary Scalzo and from Debbie, who'd taken over as his manager after 3 years in Los Angeles. Having never placed him in a film aimed wholly at children, they'd ensured he would overcome his teenie-star status and not suffer from a short shelf-life, and the success of this was brought into sharp relief when he now joined the cast of The Good Son, playing opposite Macauley Culkin. Culkin was now on the wane and, in a final bid to lend him depth (and thus prolong his career), the infamous Culkin family were using all their power to re-cast him as a super-villain - much to the chagrin of the movie's writer Ian McEwan. The Good Son saw Elijah as a kid who's sent by his recently widowered dad to stay with relatives on an island in Maine. Enter Culkin as cousin Henry, a satanic
beast of a child who kills dogs, causes car crashes and may well be on a
mission to terminate his entire family. Wood finds all this out the hard
way but cannot share his knowledge because, well, who's going to believe
Macauley Culkin is a psycho killer? Indeed, this was the movie's
problem. In turning The Good Son into Home Alone with real death, the
Culkins alienated Macauley's youth audience and failed to find a
replacement. Yet Elijah was now receiving some serious
attention, being named by critic Robert Ebert as the most talented actor
of his generation. His face was very well known, too. Aside from the
film roles, January 1994 had seen him appear alongside ex-Vice President
Dan Quayle and Troy Aikman in an advert for Wavy Lays screened during
the Superbowl. Come 1996 and there was more turmoil when his parents finally divorced, Warren returning to Cedar Rapids. From now on he would have very little contact with his father. In interviews he would accuse him of always being emotionally unavailable, his words often backed by what appeared to be a deep resentment. 1996 brought Flipper, a remake of the 1963 hit, where Wood played a sullen Chicago youth sent to Florida after his parents' divorce. Here he stays with salty old uncle Paul Hogan, befriends the dolphin of the title and, together, all three battle against the swine who's dumping toxic waste into the sea. It was good, cheery fun, unlike his following project, The Ice Storm. Directed by Ang Lee, this was a Seventies-set drama where middle-class families, adults and children alike, are trying to escape their existential angst by experimenting with drugs, drink and sex. Kevin
Kline's having an affair with
Sigourney Weaver, while her son (Elijah), a precocious dope-smoker, is
getting it on his daughter, Christina Ricci. It was dark stuff,
brilliant but wholly depressing. And it taught Wood a new way of
working. Before turning up for the shoot, he received a 300-page
info-pack about the Seventies, which included a questionnaire on his
character's views. Much time was spent discussing and rehearsing with
Lee, Ricci and his co-stars - a very new and profitable experience. It was a cross between The Breakfast Club
and The Thing, and proved a big success, making up somewhat for Wood's
disappointment in missing out on leads in Rushmore and Pleasantville.
Interestingly, Wood was often mistaken for Tobey Maguire,
Pleasantville's eventual star. The resulting tape was carefully edited, sent to the relevant Los Angeles casting agents and passed on to Jackson in New Zealand. Within months, the part of Frodo Baggins was his. The movie would dominate his life for the next four years. After spending 18 months in New Zealand on the original shoot, he would then be required for much re-shooting and many promotional trips as the ludicrously successful trilogy was put together and released over consecutive Christmases. Before he began, though, there was time for three independent productions, none of which would garner a widespread release. James Toback's drama-documentary Black And White showed the interplay between street kids and the middle classes in Manhattan while recounting a tale of bribery, blackmail and murder, Wood playing a hip-hop wannabe indulging in drugs and sex alongside the likes of Robert Downey Jr, Mike Tyson, Claudia Schiffer and the Wu-Tang Clan. Then came The Bumblebee Flies Anyway
where he was a (possible) amnesiac undergoing experimental therapy in a
last-gasp hospital for terminally ill kids. Following this was the
violent comedy Chain Of Fools, a Pulp Fiction-style multi-storied piece,
featuring Jeff Goldblum, Tom Wilkinson and Elijah's Faculty co-star
Salma Hayek, with Wood himself appearing as a teenage hit-man. Elizabeth Perkins would appear as his mum
for the second time (after Avalon), this time very, very drunk. Mandy
Moore would be an aspiring actress, Deborah Harry a lusty furniture
retailer and Franka Potente a photographer with a serious attitude. The
movie was certainly fun, but a tad too wacky for its own good and only
given a limited release. Wood, though, did enjoy a year-long
relationship with his co-star Potente, seven years his senior. Here Jim Carrey discovers ex-lover Kate Winslet has had all memory of him removed by some ingenious new process and decides to undergo the same treatment. Halfway through, though, he rediscovers his love for her and tries to reverse the operation - something doctor Tom Wilkinson and tech-supporters Elijah and Kirsten Dunst cannot allow. Next would come his first genuinely tough lead, in The Yank, formerly known as Hooligans. Here he would play an expelled Harvard student who, while in London, is introduced to the brutish underworld of British football violence. It would be a major step into the unknown, a real risk. And perhaps the best way possible to both grow up fast and kick Frodo into touch. ~ Dominic Wills |
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