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- <text id=90TT0082>
- <title>
- Jan. 08, 1990: In The Driver's Seat
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 08, 1990 When Tyrants Fall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 75
- In the Driver's Seat
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Actor Morgan Freeman eases into high gear
- </p>
- <p>By Janice C. Simpson
- </p>
- <p> There were few black faces on the big screen back in the
- 1940s, when young Morgan Freeman collected soda bottles to pay
- his way into the local movie matinee. And the one or two who
- did appear made the young moviegoer squirm. He did not object
- to their playing servants, jobs his own parents had
- occasionally held, but it bothered him that these celluloid
- domestics were presented as empty caricatures, devoid of human
- dignity. "I didn't know anybody who acted like that," recalls
- Freeman.
- </p>
- <p> Good roles for black actors are still hard to come by, but
- audiences currently have a chance to see two unusually
- full-bodied movie portrayals of the black experience: Driving
- Miss Daisy, the critically acclaimed drama about the 25-year
- relationship between an elderly Southern Jewish woman and her
- black chauffeur, and Glory, a stirring account of the first
- black regiment to serve in the Civil War. Morgan Freeman, now
- 52, stars in both.
- </p>
- <p> In less capable hands, John Rawlins, the illiterate
- gravedigger who becomes a sergeant major in Glory, and Hoke
- Colburn, the courtly chauffeur in Miss Daisy, could have become
- sterile symbols of good intentions. But Freeman's performances
- are so finely calibrated that these characters emerge as men
- of true heft and substance. Says Glory director Edward Zwick:
- "Morgan inhabits a role rather than performs it."
- </p>
- <p> Although he took acting classes when starting out, Freeman
- follows no special school of acting. "I read Stanislavsky
- recently," he says, referring to the high guru of acting
- technique, "but that business of peeling away layers of skin
- was too murky and deep for me. I haven't found that I've had
- to do that in any intellectual sense. What I do, I do
- intuitively. It just comes easy for me."
- </p>
- <p> Freeman first fell in love with acting in the third grade,
- when he played the title role in a school play, Little Boy
- Blue. Teachers along the way encouraged him to channel his
- rambunctiousness into acting, and after a brief stint in the
- Air Force he headed for Hollywood, naively believing he could
- get an acting job just by showing up at a studio. But he wasn't
- pretty like Sidney Poitier or Harry Belafonte, the black
- leading men of the day, and he soon realized that his chances
- would be better in New York City's grittier theater scene.
- </p>
- <p> There Freeman found steady employment. He sometimes did what
- he calls dungeon work, appearing in small workshop productions
- in dusty church basements and drafty warehouse lofts, but he
- also performed in an all-black cast of Hello Dolly! and with
- a multiracial theater company at the New York Shakespeare
- Festival. "He had very good speech, bore himself with a certain
- grace and looked like a king," recalls producer Joseph Papp.
- </p>
- <p> On his agent's advice, Freeman passed up the
- black-exploitation films of the early 1970s and instead took
- the role of the hip character Easy Reader on the
- public-television series The Electric Company. The job provided
- a steady income and made Freeman so famous with the preteen set
- that, to his great chagrin, he is still stopped in the street
- by fans. After a while, he felt trapped, hungering for meatier
- roles but needing the money to put bread on the table for his
- wife and two daughters. He began drinking heavily. "I'm not an
- alcoholic or anything," he says. "But I can get out of
- control." One morning in 1975 he awoke to find himself lying
- on the floor, passed out from the previous night's binge.
- Freeman stopped drinking cold turkey. The series ended too, and
- soon he was back to serious acting.
- </p>
- <p> His big break seemed to come in 1978, when Actors' Equity
- named him best male newcomer of the season for his powerful
- performance as a disillusioned wino in the short-lived Broadway
- drama The Mighty Gents. Freeman was 40, and he thought he had
- finally made it. Instead, a two-year drought followed. He was
- considering chucking the business and driving a cab, when
- offers began to dribble in. Then, along came the role of Fast
- Black, the mercurial pimp, in the movie Street Smart.
- </p>
- <p> Taking the part seemed an odd choice for Freeman, who had
- remained prickly about the kinds of roles offered to black
- actors, but in Fast Black he saw a chance to flesh out the
- stereotype. "I had no intention of wearing crushed-velvet jump
- suits, big hats or high-heeled pumps," he says. But the changes
- went far beyond the cosmetic, as Freeman transformed what could
- have been another cliched pimp caricature into a harrowing
- portrait of a desperately brutal man. The performance won three
- major critics awards, an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting
- Actor and Freeman his first crack at a starring role as the
- bat-toting New Jersey high school principal Joe Clark in last
- year's commercial success Lean on Me.
- </p>
- <p> Insiders are predicting that Freeman will win another Oscar
- nomination for his portrayal of the chauffeur in Miss Daisy,
- a role he originated in the off-Broadway production, and
- producers have anointed him a bankable star. "People will be
- making parts for Morgan," declares producer Richard Zanuck. But
- Freeman has heard such talk before, and he is taking all the
- praise in stride. Recently, he, his second wife, costume
- designer Myrna Colley-Lee, and their seven-year-old
- granddaughter E'Dena began to live part time on their 38-ft.
- ketch Sojourner, which is moored in the Caribbean. "When you
- live in the world of make-believe, you need something real,"
- says Freeman. "I go sailing, I'm in the real world."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-