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Biography
Ray was born on the 18th of December, 1955, in Newark, New Jersey. His parents, unmarried, had just had an unplanned child and, though poor, had decided to keep it. Looking after Ray, though, was going to be too hard, so they put him up for adoption and, at 6 months old, he was introduced to his new parents, Alfred and Mary Liotta (they'd later adopt a sister for him - Linda). From here on, Ray lived a comfortable life in Union, New Jersey, attending High School there. Not much of an academic, he was a major jock, starring at soccer and basketball. He'd also help out in one of his dad's chain of automotive stores, would canvass, along with his parents, for the local Democrats, and enjoyed many exotic family holidays - to Japan, Hawaii and Europe. When it came time for college, he didn't want to go. Didn't want a future working with his father either. Fortunately, Alfred managed to persuade him to continue his education, so he enrolled at the University of Miami, at the time an easy college to enter - "All you basically needed was a pulse to get in" says Ray. Disliking the harsh discipline of the basketball coach, he soon dropped out of the team and, believing he ought to do SOMETHING after class, took up drama, despite having next-to-no interest in the subject. Encouraged by a "cute" student
to audition for a play, he performed disastrously, forgetting the words
to his song. Somehow, he got in - that charm, probably - and debuted in
a production of Cabaret, moving on to West Side Story, The Sound Of
Music (as one of the Von Trapp kids, alongside Gail Edwards, later to be
a TV star) and The Taming Of The Shrew. Then came tougher projects like
Death Of A Salesman and A Streetcar Named Desire, in which he excelled.
Studying Liberal Arts, he was forced to take history and maths, but
quickly chose to major in Theatre. He also worked in a cemetery, and
made one very important friend in Steven Bauer. Ray became the second incarnation of Joey
Perrini and served three years as a hunky heart-throb. He recalls
visiting a peep-show in New York where the naked girl before him stopped
dancing, shouted "Oh, my God! JOEY!" and called her friends
over. Such is the quality of Liotta's eyes that they are clearly
recognisable, even through a letter-box-like slit. Bauer's wife of the time, Melanie
Griffith, advised Ray to look up her old friend Heidi von Beltz, a model
and stunt-woman who'd been paralysed from the neck down in a car
accident on the set of The Cannonball Run. Ray shied away from the
notion but, finding the numbers of all Griffith's friends scribbled on
the back of a cupboard door, Heidi's name jumped out, so he called her,
saying he knew nobody in town and could he come over. Heidi had yet to
re-enter society after the accident, but eventually assented to his
request. They became friends, then lovers, Liotta taking her everywhere.
For a year, they were never apart. Ray had earlier portrayed a bit of a
nutter on film, when he assaulted Pia Zadora with a garden hose in The
Lonely Lady, but no one could have expected his performance in Something
Wild to be so edgy, so schizoid, so upsettingly explosive. Tellingly,
Ray won the Boston Film Critics Award, tying with Dennis Hopper in Blue
Velvet. Ray stayed cool and explained his position calmly and forcefully, impressing Scorsese who, like most other directors, thought Ray to be a psycho loose cannon, like his character in Something Wild. Thus Ray got the part of Henry Hill - scamming, swearing and snorting elephantine portions of cocaine. He was superb, easily holding his own beside De Niro and a hilariously unpleasant Joe Pesci. Now Liotta was a star and, to keep it
that way, he stayed on the psycho-path by playing Officer Pete Davis in
Unlawful Entry. Here he followed the classic Liotta route as a nice-guy
policeman who saves Kurt Russell and Madeleine Stowe, then becomes
weirder and weirder till something simply HAS to be done. In researching
the role, he spent time with the police, at one point having to seek a
body part in a blown-up building. One detective, recognising him from
Field Of Dreams, asked for an autograph. Another, having found the body
part, asked to be photoed with it and Liotta. Ray refused. After filming Cop Land, Ray proposed, Michelle accepted and the couple were married in a Buddhist temple in Thailand, with nine monks chanting and wrapping them in ribbons. As the marriage was not recognised under US law, they then tied the knot again, this time in Vegas, with Michelle being given away by an Elvis impersonator. Formerly a model, Michelle would appear
with Ray in The Rat Pack and A Rumour Of Angels, the latter also
featuring their new daughter, Carson. Michelle would also form a
production company, Tiara Blue, with Ray and Diane Nabatoff, producing
Ray's Narc, and the HBO series Baseball Wives. These days, one of modern cinema's finest nut-jobs gets to vary his roles at will, and does so with considerable perversity. There was the Nova Scotia-set weepie A Rumour Of Angels, with Vanessa Redgrave: Muppets From Space, with Miss Piggy: and one of the most memorably repulsive scenes in history. Researching his part as a surgeon in
Article 99, back in 1992, Ray had watched operations and even got to
touch a beating human heart. Now, as FBI agent Paul Krendler in
Hannibal, he got to eat his own brain. Yes, having had the top of his
skull taken off by Hannibal Lecter, he sat chatting with Julianne
Moore while Lecter fried a slice of his grey matter and fed it to
him. Mmm MMM. Bearded and deliberately overweight,
Liotta was convincingly unpleasant in one of his best recent
performances. Critics considered his work to be as deep as that of Brian
Cox. And the movie nearly didn't get made. Liotta, as producer, was
having a hard time bringing it to the screen. Then Patric sent the
script to his old buddy Tom
Cruise and, well, there you go. 2003 would see just one appearance, in
Identity, a smart, Agatha Christie-style thriller where ten people find
themselves storm-bound in a remote hotel as the bodycount rises - Ray
playing a cop transporting killer Jake Busey. |
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