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- <text id=90TT0467>
- <title>
- Feb. 19, 1990: Everybody's All American
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 19, 1990 Starting Over
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 95
- Everybody's All American
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>John Goodman is Hollywood's hottest character actor
- </p>
- <p> Sprawled across a rose-patterned armchair in his new
- Hollywood Hills home, John Goodman looks like a baby elephant
- lolling in a flower bed. The oversize (6 ft. 3 in., 260 lbs.),
- overworked actor is taking a rare five-day respite from his
- nonstop schedule. Says Goodman, with a sigh of exhaustion: "I'm
- drained."
- </p>
- <p> It isn't hard to see why. Since September alone, Goodman has
- helped Al Pacino catch a serial murderer in Sea of Love,
- watched Richard Dreyfuss crash to earth in Always, and dried
- Bette Midler's tears in the just released weeper Stella. He is
- currently shooting a sci-fi film for Steven Spielberg,
- Arachnophobia, in which he plays an exterminator battling
- killer spiders. All that in addition to his regular weekday
- job: playing Roseanne Barr's TV husband in the top-rated ABC
- sitcom Roseanne. "More has happened to me in the last year,"
- says Goodman, "than anybody except maybe Nicolae Ceausescu."
- </p>
- <p> With his beer-barrel physique and pliant pudding face,
- Goodman, 37, has become Hollywood's hottest character actor.
- He has the nimble, dancer-like grace of such portly clowns as
- Oliver Hardy and Jackie Gleason, anchored by a
- straight-from-the-heartland believability. After a sweetly
- engaging turn as a lovelorn Texan in David Byrne's True
- Stories, he literally burst onto the scene in the 1987 comedy
- Raising Arizona, playing an escaping convict who, drenched in
- mud, erupts from the ground with a roar. He shone again, and
- added new shadings, as an over-the-hill athlete reliving past
- glories in Everybody's All American.
- </p>
- <p> Even as his lovable-sidekick roles have begun to grow
- familiar, Goodman shows a knack for making the best of tired
- circumstances: as an alcoholic ex-bartender in Stella, he is
- just about the only credible touch in a film reeking of
- Hollywood sham. In Roseanne, Goodman has created a full-blooded
- portrait of a working-class lug, equally credible whether
- giving heartfelt advice to a teenage daughter or doing
- boisterous pirouettes in a bowling alley. He seems to mesh
- perfectly with Barr; Goodman can be deferential even while he
- is stealing the show.
- </p>
- <p> Goodman's co-workers speak enthusiastically of his talent
- and dedication, as well as his offscreen antics. "John is a lot
- of fun," says Barr. "He puts us on the floor." Director John
- Pasquin praises Goodman's "fertile imagination" as an actor.
- In one upcoming episode, his character is caught eating ice
- cream when he is supposed to be on a diet. Goodman improvised
- the notion of quickly swallowing the ice cream and then
- fighting off a piercing headache from the cold. Marvels Pasquin:
- </p>
- <p>would ordinarily think of, and hysterically funny."
- </p>
- <p> One of three children of a working-class St. Louis family,
- Goodman was raised by his mother from the age of two, when his
- father died of a heart attack. After graduating from Southwest
- Missouri State University (Kathleen Turner was a classmate),
- Goodman hopped a train for New York City, helped by $1,000
- saved for him by his brother. A decade of stage work culminated
- in 1985 with a major Broadway role: as Huck Finn's "Pap" in the
- hit musical Big River. In 1987, while appearing in a Los
- Angeles production of Antony and Cleopatra, Goodman was asked
- to audition for a new sitcom opposite Roseanne Barr. The
- reading was an instant success. "I knew I had the part when I
- walked out," he recalls. The producers were so sold on Goodman
- that they delayed the show until he could finish shooting
- Everybody's All American.
- </p>
- <p> Goodman retains strong roots in the Midwest, returning
- frequently to St. Louis for visits. Once known for his
- hard-partying bachelor life-style, he got married last October
- to Annabeth Hartzog, 21, a college student he met in New
- Orleans in 1987. Teases Goodman: "She was just a country girl
- looking for a gravy train."
- </p>
- <p> He seems little affected by the much publicized turmoil that
- has plagued the Roseanne set. While Barr has staged tantrums,
- battled with producers and talked about quitting, Goodman has
- been a stabilizing force through his sheer professionalism. "I
- just don't involve myself," he says. "Roseanne is committed to
- doing a quality show on her own terms, and she's got her terms.
- I'm an actor and a reactor. I do what they set down in front
- of me."
- </p>
- <p> And they do keep setting things in front of him. Goodman
- will shoot two more films this spring and summer, both with
- lead roles: a Las Vegas lounge singer who inherits the English
- throne in King Ralph, and a salesman in 1940s Hollywood in
- Barton Fink. Meanwhile, he and Annabeth are preparing for a
- baby (due in September) and looking forward to a relatively
- settled life. "Unless," notes Goodman, "I fall hopelessly out
- of fashion and we have to work in a carnival." Fat chance.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin. Reported by Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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