![]() |
||||||||
![]() |
||||||||
![]() |
||||||||
![]() |
||||||||
|
Biography
As Sir Ian McKellen so often and so rightly reminds us, the gay population are not well served by Hollywood. Gay stars hold their tongues and stay in the closet, straight stars shy away from gay characters. Paranoia rules, a terrible fear that fame and fortune could be suddenly snatched away if you're tarred with the wrong brush. It's amazing, then, that while X-Men 2
and Van Helsing were turning him into one of the biggest, toughest
action stars in recent memory, Hugh Jackman should be onstage in New
York, nightly wowing audiences in The Boy From Oz, a lavish musical
biography of Peter Allen, a super-camp dancer and lounge singer who
married Liza Minnelli and later died from complications from AIDS. Chris was vehemently English in his demands for good manners at the table and elsewhere, and the kids' friends, disliking the strictness, would often stay away. Aside from this, though, Hugh enjoyed an active life outside the home, spending much time on the beach, feeding his action figures to the squids. He also discovered acting at a very early age, appearing onstage in Camelot at the age of 5, and continuing through a string of musicals and plays, pupils being strongly encouraged by the school to both contribute to official productions and put on their own. At the age of 8 disaster struck when his mother, Grace Watson, decided to return to England. She'd work there as a psychologist, and bear another daughter, but her relationship with Hugh would be forever strained. So Chris was left to raise 5 children on his own, and did so in his own uncompromising manner. Very keen on education, he would pay for extra classes, musical tuition and instruments (Hugh would learn piano for six years, also studying guitar and violin), but if anyone wanted mere fripperies like new trainers they could damn well get a job and buy them themselves. Thus a strong work ethic was born, and
Hugh would later spend years pumping gas from midnight to dawn at a
Shell garage, chatting to visiting insomniacs. This lasted till a fellow
worker was held up with a shotgun, Hugh figuring that $10 an hour was
simply not enough. At one point he and friend Stan were clowns at kids' parties, Hugh being Coco and Stan Bozo. They had no tricks or talents (though Jackman later learned to juggle), they'd simply jump into dustbins and throw eggs at each other, eventually being revealed as imposters by cheated children and fired. He'd also work for the National Parks and
Wildlife Foundation, handing out leaflets, half the time dressed as a
ranger, half as Kooey the Koala. Clad in a huge furry suit, he would
often pass out from the heat and, when expected to run the city's annual
City To Surf marathon dressed as Kooey, he slipped down a side street
and drove to within sight of the finishing line. Coming 600th out of
40,000 he remains the highest-placed marsupial in marathon history. At last realising that he could actually make a living at this, and while waiting for the Neighbours contract to arrive, he applied to WAAPA, the Western Australia Academy of Performing Arts in Perth, and was accepted. With one weekend to decide, what was he to do now? Take the money and the immediate fame, or take the risk? Deciding that he wanted to be a serious actor, he turned down Neighbours and spent three years at WAAPA, gaining an all-round theatre education in the likes of Romeo And Juliet, Translations, Barbarians and Tonight We Improvise. Graduating in 1994, he walked straight into the Australian production of Beauty And The Beast, playing Belle's super-macho and unwanted suitor Gaston. It would be a tough run. At one point Jackman began to suffer terrible headaches and was advised to drink plenty of water. The headaches disappeared but, when
approaching the climax of his signature tune, he realised that to hit
the final high note he was going to have to relax more muscles than was
going to be socially acceptable. Nonetheless, he did it and was relieved
(ho ho) to find that no shameful wet patch was showing. Unfortunately,
back onstage ten minutes later he realised that all that water was just
taking its time soaking through his thick red tights. And everyone could
now see it. Just before meeting Hugh, she'd hit big
again when starring in the TV series Fire, Australia's version of
London's Burning. She and Hugh would marry in February, 1996 and, in
May, 2000, they'd adopt a son, Oscar Maximillian. Later still, Deborra
would move into directing, helming the Harvey Weinstein-financed short
Standing Room Only, featuring such luminaries as her husband, Michael
Gambon and Andy "Gollum" Serkis. Directing would now remain
her profession of choice. Hugh would show up as Duncan Jones, a childhood friend of Rob McGregor, who pops home while his ship is in dry-dock and steals the hearts of teenage Danni McGregor and Rob's sweetheart Montana. Fortunately for Jones, Rob's away, otherwise the world would surely have been treated to a fight between two future Hollywood stars - Rob being played by Guy Pearce. But TV stardom was not his aim - he was
after stage and film roles, and so, from October 1996 to June 1997 took
on a big musical production of Sunset Boulevard. Directed by esteemed
theatre stalwart Trevor Nunn, this saw him as Joe Gillis, played
onscreen by William Holden, the young screenwriter hired by ageing
silent star Norma Desmond (here played by Debra Byrne) to resurrect her
career, a relationship leading to manipulation, madness and death. There was no reply, but Hugh persisted,
phoning Nunn's office when he arrived in the capital. Now he was told
that, though Nunn was off on holiday himself the next day, he would see
Hugh in the morning, so could he come along then - with a song and a
Shakespeare monologue prepared. So Jackman raced to a bookshop, snapped
up a Shakespeare play and retired to Regents Park, where Deborra put him
through his paces for four hours. The song would come a little easier.
The next morning he would perform for Trevor Nunn - and impress him. Sunset Boulevard had raised him to a level where he was asked to sing the National Anthem before 100,000 people at the Bledisloe Cup rugby match between Australia and New Zealand at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. And then Trevor Nunn, now putting on a revival of Oklahoma! at London's National Theatre, chose Hugh to play the lead role of Curly McLain (performed by Gordon McRae in the screen version). He was an instant success. Described in one review as "virile and melodious", he was nominated for an Olivier Award and would have accompanied the production to Broadway but Equity rules demanded an American take the lead role. Jackman was philosophical about it, saying "That's like having an American do Crocodile Dundee". It didn't matter anyway. Without knowing it, Jackman had already made a very important mark. Next he concentrated on movies back home. First up was Paperback Hero which saw him as the tough driver of a road train (a truck with several trailers) who lives out in the outback and secretly loves tomboy crop-duster Claudia Karvan. On the sly, he writes a romantic novel under the pseudonym Ruby Vale and, when it's a success, has to persuade Karvan to pretend to be the author. Of course, complications arise. It was a sweet movie and Hugh was impressive, particularly with his rendition of Roy Orbison's Crying. His next effort would be very different. This was Erskineville Kings, an intensely emotional drama about two sons of an abusive father. When the father dies, Hugh, having stayed
with him to the end, reacts violently to the reappearance of brother
Barky, who has earlier done a runner, just as their mother did years
before. Most of the action takes place in a dingy pub as the brothers
battle for status and the truth as their beliefs and memories are
dragged mercilessly out into the open and battered beyond recognition.
Again, Hugh showed real promise as the physical and thoroughly hostile
Wace, being nominated as Best Actor by the Australian Film Institute. The producers, having seen Jackman in
Oklahoma!, pushed him forward. Singer was unimpressed with this
tousle-headed cowboy but, after lengthy auditions, Hugh was finally
accepted as the feral, cigar-chomping Wolverine, with his razor-packed
hands and problematic feelings for Famke Janssen's Jean Grey. The movie
would see Professor Xavier's good mutants battling Magneto's baddies as
inter-racial war threatens. But much of the interest would be generated
by Wolverine, a tough and cynical newcomer at Xavier's mutant academy. So he took on Someone Like You, based on Laura Zigman's hit novel Animal Husbandry. Here Ashley Judd plays a staffer on Ellen Barkin's chat show who writes a well-received column theorising that men are like bulls (that is, unwilling to service the same cow twice). When her relationship with a married Greg Kinnear breaks down, she's forced to move in with Hugh, a serial womaniser who quite happily proves her theory to be true. With such a good-looking cast, the film
possessed a charm that outweighed its script. But Hugh was on his way,
now taking a lead role in Dominic Sena's Swordfish. Here he played a
brilliant computer hacker, just released after two years in jail for
breaking into FBI files. In the meantime, his wife has taken away his
beloved daughter and Hugh now lives in penury. Enter Halle Berry, a sexy
temptress hired by mastermind John Travolta to seduce Hugh into joining
a fiendishly clever plot to claim billions of lost government dollars.
The plot was complicated, the effects marvellous and Berry famously
revealed her breasts but the film was not a big hit (it was actually
withdrawn from cinemas after three months as its exploding buildings
were made inappropriate by the events of September 11th). It was a sign of great things to come,
though worldwide musical stardom could have come that same year had he
not turned down the role in the movie adaptation of Chicago that
eventually went to Richard
Gere. Hugh felt, and still feels that he was too young for the part. Then there was a fabulously embarrassing
moment when, nude, backlit and running down a corridor, he turned a
corner to find the entire female cast hooting and waving dollar bills at
him. It was a far cry from co-star Halle Berry's Swordfish scene, where
Jackman had personally ensured a closed set. His father's insistence on
good manners had clearly worked well. Three years later, he'd marry her daughter Liza Minnelli, quickly divorce, and then move on to songwriting success, penning I Honestly Love You for Olivia Newton-John and Don't Cry Out Loud for Melissa Manchester, as well as supporting shock-rock band The Tubes and winning an Oscar for Arthur's Theme, before dying in 1992 of AIDS-related throat cancer. It was a hell of a life and made for a
hell of a show. Adapted from the Australian original by Martin
"Bent" Sherman, it saw Hugh take on extravagant new life as
Allen, singing, dancing and bouncing out into the audience to flirt with
both woman and men. It was a huge hit, prompting renowned screenwriter
William Goldman to write in Variety "I have been going to the
theatre for 60-some years. I was there for Brando in Streetcar. But
nothing prepared me for Hugh Jackman". Despite his now burgeoning
film fame, Hugh would continue in the role till September, 2004. Oddly, Hugh did not win this title role through his work as Wolverine. Rather, Bob Ducsay, Sommers' long-time producer and editor, had been another in the audience at the National Theatre during Jackman's run in Oklahoma!, and had put his name forward before a script had ever been written. Interestingly, Frankenstein's Monster would be played by another Oklahoma! veteran, Shuler Hensley, who'd played Jud to Hugh's Curly. Where Hugh had been barred from Broadway,
Hensley had travelled with the production and won a Tony to boot. As Van
Helsing, Jackman must surely have enjoyed kicking his re-animated ass. It says much for his status that he was drafted in as soon as Brad Pitt dropped out. As for the future, it can only hold more surprises from this most unusual of actors. Becoming the next James Bond would surely be too constricting. ~Dominic Wills |
|
|||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
All original content , Copyright ©2004-2005 WestLord.com , All Rights Reserved |
||||||||