![]() |
||||||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||||||
|
Biography
It's often been said that pop stars should steer well clear of movies. Their attempts to cross over have such a tawdry and unintentionally hilarious history. Remember Mick Jagger in Ned Kelly and, worse, Freejack? Madonna in Body Of Evidence, Evita, and The Next Best Thing? David Bowie in Labyrinth, Basquiat, and the unbelievably bad The Linguini Incident? Frightening, isn't it, a catalogue of cinematic horrors. And these are the GOOD pop stars. How
awful would the BAD ones be? Well, recent examples have actually been
surprisingly excellent. For one, Donnie Wahlberg from the execrable boy
band New Kids On The Block was quite stunning as the freak in Bruce
Willis's bathroom in The Sixth Sense. And Donnie has nothing on his
brother, Mark, formerly known as Marky Mark. Like a street-cred Matt
Damon, he served his apprenticeship in tough, cool little numbers
like The Basketball Diaries and Fear. Then he went ballistic with his
mega-pecker in Boogie Nights, and alongside George
Clooney in Three Kings and The Perfect Storm, before moving on to
headline blockbusters such as Planet Of The Apes. He almost, ALMOST escaped early. Music entrepreneur Maurice Starr had, in the early Eighties, made a big hit out of New Edition, then split with them acrimoniously. Starr decided he would recruit, mould and promote a white version, and enlisted the help of an old friend, Mary Alford, a talent agent who also worked as a personnel officer at the Massachusetts Department of Education. Quickly, they discovered Donnie Wahlberg, and his little brother Mark. Both hard kids, heavily immersed in
street culture, neither took comfortably to the shiny, inoffensive image
they were ordered to adopt, or the constant evening rehearsals. Donnie
though persisted, while Mark dropped out after three months, being
eventually replaced by Joey McIntyre. At 16, he ended all pretence of school
attendance and concentrated on blue collar labor (he was a bricklayer, a
hospital worker, a trainee mechanic) and more crime. He'd been convicted
of minor felonies already, and arrested for allegedly making racist
comments to school kids, but now he was actually jailed for beating up
two Vietnamese men he was trying to steal beer from. He spent 45 days
inside, at Deer Island. But change he eventually did, with a
great deal of help from Donnie, now a huge star with New Kids On The
Block. Donnie knew his little brother had the talent, he just needed the
chance. So he found the requisite songs, helped score the deal with
Interscope, produced the records and ensured the coverage. Marky Mark
And The Funky Bunch were born. It didn't last long. Mark would have hits in Europe in 1994 with collaborator Prince Ital Joe, and release a solo cover of Nils Lofgren's No Mercy the next year, but his star had already waned. 1992's You Gotta Believe had not sold so well and, worse still, the press had cottoned on to Wahlberg's past offences. There were accusations of racism, not helped by a British TV appearance when fellow guest Shabba Ranks declared that homosexuals should be crucified. Mark's silence was construed as condoning the statement. His gigs were disrupted by demonstrations
by gay and Asian anti-defamation groups. The criticisms would not go
away, and became increasingly confused. Mark's workout video became a
hit in gay bars ("That's cool," said Mark later. "Hell,
yeah. I made that during my get-the-money-while-you-can phase"),
leading to claims that he was gay himself - as well as being a supposed
gay-basher. Next there was the harsh, disturbing
Basketball Diaries - Wahlberg playing Leonardo Di Caprio's thuggish best
friend as he seeks redemption from heroin addiction. This was a part
Wahlberg knew inside-out from his experiences on the streets of Boston,
and it showed. There was extended coverage in the tabloids too, everyone wanting to know whether Mark had needed an extension to portray Diggler's whopping 13-incher. He had, as it happens, and recalls his embarrassment at having to have his penis examined by people from makeup, wardrobe and SFX - 25 in all at his first production meeting. Even now, Wahlberg complains that men openly check him out whenever he's in a public urinal. Now Wahlberg began to expand his range. In The Big Hit, he played Melvin Smiley, a hit man who gets into trouble over some extracurricular kidnapping. The film was an unexpected hit, taking $11 million in its first few days and topping the US charts. Then came explosive thriller The Corruptor, with Fear's director James Foley and John Woo's mainman Chow Yun Fat. For the role, Wahlberg learned some Cantonese, and spent time with real-life Internal Affairs in Chinatown. Now came another surprise smash and,
beside his brother Donnie, the most important relationship he'd yet
forged. During the filming of Three Kings, where American troops in Iraq
go after millions-worth of gold bullion, Wahlberg was befriended by George
Clooney, then on the up after Out Of Sight. It was vital to him that they thought his
performance to be accurate and respectful. He went out fishing, being
forced to gut fish while the professionals looked on in amusement. So
sick did it make him that he vomited during filming, something Clooney
made great play of. "It was a drag getting wet all the time,"
said George afterwards "but it wasn't dangerous. It WAS dangerous
with Mark, because he could throw up 15 feet away and still hit
you". Wahlberg claimed it was all down to bad sushi. Another fellow said to see Wahlberg as profoundly "real" is Matt Damon. There were many reports that Damon had become obsessed by Mark. Having written and cast himself as the genius brawler in Good Will Hunting, Damon, it was said, was jealous of Wahlberg. Because, having become a star despite not having Damon's Harvard education, despite being raised in Boston's hardest areas, Wahlberg WAS Will Hunting. One particularly nasty story had Winona
Ryder, then Damon's girlfriend, visiting Wahlberg to clear up the
unpleasantness, but falling for him instead. Not only was this hurtful
for both Damon and Ryder, but also Wahlberg, who had himself just found
love. He'd dated Jaime Rishar, and China Chow, an actress and model he'd
met while filming The Big Hit, but now he had Jordana Brewster,
Panamanian star of The Faculty, soap opera As The World Turns (as was Julianne
Moore) and later The Fast And The Furious. She was also
grand-daughter of Kingman Brewster, the former president of Yale. The
couple were married on New Year's Eve, 1999. He'd follow this with another, far more successful remake, this time of 1968's The Italian Job. Here, having been double-crossed in a gold heist by co-gang-member Ed Norton, he pulls together another team and seeks revenge by way of several Mini Coopers and the biggest traffic jam in Los Angeles' history. The film was a tremendous success. Having taken around $100 million at the US box office on its initial release, it was re-launched some three months later, reaping further dividends. After the relative failures of Planet Of The Apes and The Truth About Charlie, Mark was now back on the up. He moved on to I Heart Huckabees, re-teaming him with Three Kings director David O. Russell. Here Dustin Hoffman and Lily Tomlin played a happy husband and wife who help other people with their more existential problems. Imagine Hart To Hart starring Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beavoir. Mark would appear in a complicated love triangle with Jude Law and Naomi Watts, playing a rare comic role as a fireman who loathes SUVs and responds to emergency calls by leaping onto his trusty bike. Following this - having dropped out of
Brian De Palma's noir thriller The Black Dahlia and the Truman Capote
biopic Every Word Is True - he'd further ride his recent wave of success
with a sequel to The Italian Job. Negotiations would also start to have
him star alongside Ice Cube in John Singleton's Four Brothers,
concerning adopted siblings who seek revenge for the death of their
mother. Not only is there that youth foundation,
but he likes to write his own scripts and has already made several short
movies, including Chippendale: A Murder Mystery, where a dancer kills
the leader of his troupe in order to star himself, and Damn Van Damme,
about a Belgian cult-army that travels to Hollywood to get Jean-Claude
for giving away their kickboxing secrets. His production company also,
in 2004, delivered HBO's Entourage, a TV series about a movie star and
his friends and employees that uncovered some of the murk and madness of
Hollywood. |
|
|||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
All original content , Copyright ©2004-2006 WestLord.com , All Rights Reserved |
||||||||||||||||