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Biography
For a while back there, it wasn't looking
too good for Tobey Maguire. Crazily ambitious, having chosen to leave
school and forge an acting career at the tender age of 13, he had
conspicuously failed to become the new De Niro. Beyond that, his best
buddy, Leonardo
DiCaprio had hit massively with Titanic and was one of the biggest
stars in the world. So Tobey - sensitive, struggling Tobey - was better
known as a member of DiCaprio's posse. All feelings of loyalty apart, it
must have hurt. Worse still, with his parents struggling
to make ends meet, the family was always poor. His mother worked hard
but still they spent time on Welfare, using food stamps and Medi-Cal.
Tobey recalls running from a store when his mother paid with stamps
(he's sorry now, recognising that his actions added to his mother's own
humiliation). For father Vincent, the situation never got any better. In
1993, he robbed a bank in his hometown, Reseda and, caught just one hour
later, was jailed for two years. It was taken into account that he was
desperate, and this was a first offence. He did, and proved straight away to have
some talent. Coupled with this, there was his ambition. Tobey has said
that his insecurity made him feel that people were always nay-saying
him, doing him down. He says this gave him "an angry ambition that
cannot be stopped", jokingly adding that "I look forward to
finding a therapist and working on that". When auditions were announced for a TV
series based on Ron Howard's Parenthood, Tobey went along, and met
another young actor looking for a part. This was Leonardo
DiCaprio. The pair became good friends, and Tobey managed to wangle
a small part in Leo's next production, alongside Ellen Barkin and Robert
De Niro in This Boy's Life. The critics were charmed, but audience figures were not high. Only 13 episodes were shot, and only six were screened, between October and November, 1992. But Tobey did make a new friend, Kevin Connelly, who co-starred as Scott's best friend, Larry O'Donnell. After This Boy's Life came more work with DiCaprio and Connelly. Actually, whether it was work or not depends on who you ask. What certainly happened was that the three actors, along with Amber Benson and several others, were filmed in a bar, flirting, joking, and discussing drink, drugs and love. Then, in 1998, after DiCaprio's Titanic success and Maguire's first steps into the big-time, the film appeared again, put together as a feature named Don's Plum. Leo and Tobey sued to prevent its
release, claiming they had believed it to just be an acting exercise and
had received an agreement that it would never be released as a feature.
Co-producer David Stutman sued them back for - amongst other things -
trying to stop him making a living. Eventually a secret agreement was
reached. Money changed hands, and it was agreed that Don's Plum would
never be commercially released in Canada or the USA. Only this time the Baron is not there in the flesh, he's possessing a model tri-plane and wisecracking away as he enacts his vile exploits. Tobey played Mickey's grand-son, struggling against the weirdness. And it wasn't half bad, gaining some respect amongst true genre experts. From the outside, it looked like it was going OK, but really Tobey's insecurity was now getting the better of him. Both to cover his own emotional vulnerability and to make people laugh (and thus like him) he'd use his intelligence to cut other people down. He was basically mean, far from how he wanted to be. And it all came to a head when he was 19, down in North Carolina, filming the indie hit Empire Records. He had auditioned for a lead part, alongside Liv Tyler and Rene Zellweger, but was given only a small role. Another kick in the teeth, another reason
for insecurity. Maguire has since said that he recognises his
abandonment issues and a terrible fear of poverty. They made him, as his
friends have put it, ridiculously competitive - at basketball, poker,
even backgammon. And down in Carolina, amongst all these smart, budding
stars, he lost it, found that he could not communicate at all. "I
was a little self-destructive", he later admitted. He asked
director Alan Moyle to let him go, and he went home, spending the next
few months re-evaluating his life and attitudes. His scenes hit the
cutting-room floor. And then there was another lead role, in
Joyride. Here Tobey played the son of a motel owner. One day a
beautiful, enigmatic woman shows up in a cool car. Tobey, desperate to
impress Amy Hathaway, a guest who's giving him the eye, steals the
motor, and takes off with Amy and a friend. Unfortunately, they get
tailed by detective Benicio Del Toro and, infinitely worse, part of the
beautiful car-owner's enigma is that she's a hit-woman. And sister is Christina Ricci, rifling
through everyone's belongings at every opportunity. Close by is a very
predatory Sigourney Weaver. Amidst the chaos, Tobey's character is lost,
and lovestruck too, hooked by rich girl Libbets Casey, played by Katie
Holmes. After an impressive cameo as a hitch-hiker in Terry Gilliam's Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas, getting involved as Johnny Depp and Del Toro cross America in a stoned haze, came the intriguing Pleasantville. Here Tobey played a lonely, repressed guy, constantly battling with his far more sexually active sister, Reese Witherspoon (who'd earlier appeared with him in SFW). He likes to lose himself in the sheer niceness of a Fifties soap opera on TV and, during another fight with his sister and thanks to a magic remote control, he literally does it, disappears into the show, along with Witherspoon. Now living in a black and white world, he discovers that his super-nice parents in this super-nice town are William H. Macy and, for the second time, Joan Allen. He loves the pleasantness here in
Pleasantville and, being an expert on the show, already knows everyone
and their history, so he fits in seamlessly. Witherspoon, on the other
hand, wants some REAL fun and, when she starts getting it, colours begin
to spring up, freaking out EVERYONE. Larch is a junkie and secret abortionist,
but a decent fellow who wants Homer to continue his good work. Homer, on
the other hand, wants to see the world and, when Paul Rudd and Charlize
Theron show up for an abortion, he leaves with them to work on
Rudd's apple farm. Then, when Rudd goes off to war, he's left with the
really rather attractive Theron. But is what he was looking for actually
back at the orphanage, where it was all along? Douglas
takes him under his wing but, at a party, Douglas is attacked by the
host's dog and Tobey blows it away - maximum embarrassment is on the
cards. Worse still, the host's dearest possession, a jacket worn by
Marilyn Monroe on her wedding day, has gone missing. Man! And then there was the big one, Spider-Man. Directed by Sam (Evil Dead) Raimi, this was to be one of the biggest blockbusters of all time. Many star-names were bandied about. Freddie Prinze Jr, Heath Ledger and Tobey's mate Leonardo were suggested to play Peter Parker, the nerd who gets bitten by a genetically modified spider and becomes a super-hero. As his arch-enemy, The Green Goblin, Nicolas Cage and John Malkovich were mentioned. As it turned out, the Goblin would be Willem Dafoe, love interest Mary Jane Watson would be Kirsten Dunst and Spidey would be Tobey Maguire. A perfect choice, though he'd never read
the comics. Who else could deliver that shy grin when he realises his
super-powers are for real? Besides, Maguire had much in common with
Peter Parker. "The responsibilities, the loneliness, the
sacrifices. I went through some of these things in my life", he
said and certainly, after the last couple of years, he understood how
life could be utterly transformed. Instead, once Spider-Man was done, he
moved on to Seabiscuit, the tale of a small, lazy horse who, due to the
efforts of a dedicated owner (Jeff Bridges), visionary trainer (Chris
Cooper) and desperate jockey (Maguire), took on and beat the great War
Admiral, thereby boosting the hopes of all Americans struggling through
the Great Depression. It was another hit, taking $120 million at the US
box-office and, perhaps more importantly, selling 5.5 million DVDs, then
a record for a drama. And there were problems with Spider-Man 2. It was reported that, due to the success of the original movie, Maguire was holding out for a bigger cheque and had been replaced by Jake Gyllenhaal. In fact, Tobey had suffered a herniated disc in his back due to the physical nature of the Spider-Man and Seabiscuit shoots and wasn't sure he could handle another like role. However, after working with stunt-crews it was decided Maguire could see it through and signed up for SM2, still pining after Kirsten Dunst but this time battling Alfred Molina's aggressively limbed Dr Octopus. With its SFX far more convincing than those of SM1, it was another huge success. A second sequel would be planned for 2007. Now a teetotal, non-smoking ,vegetarian
yoga-fiend, Maguire does still have one vice to be proud of - gambling.
In 2004 he entered the Commerce Casino's California State Poker
Championship (eventually won by Ben
Affleck), but was knocked out in the early stages. Now that the
Spider-Man franchise has made him rich it's a dead cert that he'll
fulfil his main ambition - to excel on stage and screen, just like his
heroes De
Niro, Pacino
and Hoffman.
He's certainly made a hell of a start. |
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