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- <text id=93TT1334>
- <title>
- Apr. 05, 1993: Go Ahead, Make My Career
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 05, 1993 The Generation That Forgot God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 54
- Go Ahead, Make My Career
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clint Eastwood's film Unforgiven confirms that this is one actor
- who can redefine himself, and his genre
- </p>
- <p>By PAUL A. WITTEMAN/LOS ANGELES
- </p>
- <p> Hollywood on a Saturday morning. The world's biggest
- box-office star is pulling his forest green GMC Typhoon out of
- a parking lot when four guys with clipboards dash toward him
- through the traffic. What would Dirty Harry do? Never mind.
- Clint Eastwood is not Dirty Harry. He stops, signs a few
- autographs and produces his patented tight-lipped smile as his
- supplicants bob their heads and murmur profuse thanks.
- </p>
- <p> In real life, Eastwood knows how to play the
- self-deprecating good guy. Just listen to him explain why they
- wanted him to sign blank slips of paper rather than personalized
- greetings to Uncle Cappy in Port Clyde. "It's a business," he
- says. "They trade them." He pauses, grins, then adds, "You get
- one Steve McQueen for four of mine."
- </p>
- <p> Not anymore, even though the inventory of McQueen
- autographs is not going to increase. This is Eastwood's Year of
- Being Taken Seriously. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
- Sciences showered Eastwood and his latest film, Unforgiven, with
- nine Oscar nominations, and the Directors Guild of America
- improved his odds for taking home a statue when it made him its
- choice for his work on Unforgiven. Whatever the results on
- Monday night, Eastwood had crossed the divide that separates a
- constellation from a star and a serious filmmaker from someone
- who merely makes movies.
- </p>
- <p> The puzzle is, How did people miss the big transition?
- It's not that Eastwood has been toiling in obscurity, making
- little jewels about the plight of the sea otter in the Gulf of
- Alaska. This is a man who has been the biggest draw in movie
- theaters for more than 20 years. How big? The 21 movies he has
- made for Warner Bros. since 1971 have had box-office sales of
- $1.2 billion worldwide. (Harrison Ford and Arnold Schwarzenegger
- may one day be contenders.) The videotape sales of his movies
- have brought in an additional $139 million, and the sound tracks
- another $25 million or so. Then there are the rights fees that
- television networks pay every time they broadcast an Eastwood
- classic like Dirty Harry. "It all rolls up," says Barry Reardon,
- president of Warner Bros. Distributing Corp., a man who is not
- intimidated by big numbers. "I suppose if you added everything
- together, you would come up with some astronomical figure." One
- that is constantly growing.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, Eastwood almost fell into the trap
- successful actors sometimes set for themselves. For the better
- part of four decades, he created superficial, though memorable,
- characters. First there was Rowdy Yates, the carefree cowpoke
- in the television series Rawhide. Then came the Man with No
- Name, an avenging angel wearing spurs in Sergio Leone's
- spaghetti westerns. After that it was Dirty Harry, the police
- inspector who cleaned up the streets of San Francisco. Both his
- fans and his critics seemed to conspire to keep him in
- character: they continued to see him, for good or ill, as they
- first saw him, when it was easy to love him or despise him. They
- didn't want to grant him his complexities.
- </p>
- <p> For a considerable time, Eastwood obliged them. "You have
- to do what is realistic for you," he said 15 years ago. "You
- can stretch your machinery, but the audience might not believe
- you." Baloney, argued Eastwood's friend and director Don Siegel
- at the time. "It surprises me that he is not more interested in a
- greater variety of roles. I can't understand why the greatest
- box-office star in the world doesn't get better material to work
- with. He persists in doing the same thing."
- </p>
- <p> But in 1980, with the making of Bronco Billy, Eastwood
- began to reach for a richer cinematic legacy. In this Capraesque
- comedy about a New Jersey shoe salesman turned Wild West show
- impresario, no guns are fired in anger. Instead Eastwood began
- to explore the limits of his often damaged characters in a
- quieter, more reflective way. Nor were villains dispatched
- bloodily three years later in Honkytonk Man, a melancholy movie
- about a drunken musician in which Eastwood starred with his son
- Kyle. "I'd hate to look back on my portfolio someday and think,
- `Well, I did 100 Magnum films and one car-wreck film," he said
- after Honkytonk Man was released. "I'd like to think that I had
- a broad career of various types of films and roles."
- Unfortunately, nobody out there but Eastwood was paying much
- attention. The film was a bomb.
- </p>
- <p> Not compared to Bird, however. This dense but compelling
- biography of the saxophone player Charlie Parker disappeared
- without a ripple after its release in 1990. It was Eastwood's
- most ambitious and uncompromising effort as a director, shot at
- length in murky, natural light. If Bird established that
- Eastwood was willing to take chances behind the camera, White
- Hunter, Black Heart proved he was willing to take huge and
- potentially embarrassing risks as an actor. His portrayal of a
- film director modeled on John Huston was as removed from the
- characters his public had come to expect as Orson Welles is from
- Donald Duck. Like Bird, it was a commercial failure.
- </p>
- <p> Yet each experience taught him more about his craft and
- prepared him for Unforgiven, a lean and provocative antiwestern
- in which the good guys are not so swell and the bad guys are not
- entirely deserving of their fate. For Eastwood it was something
- new, garbed in familiar cowboy clothing. Only after the final
- gunfight does the director allow his alter ego, the actor, to
- indulge in a brief valedictory to the satiric excess that
- characterized the Eastwood of an earlier era. "Any son of a
- bitch who takes a shot at me," gunman William Munny bellows into
- the night, "I'm not only going to kill him, I'm going to kill
- his wife, all his friends and burn his damn house down." As
- Eastwood likes to say, "Just another one of my flawed
- characters." Moviegoers were impressed enough to make Unforgiven
- the biggest box-office success Eastwood has ever produced.
- </p>
- <p> His willingness and ability to transcend his image helps
- answer some of the questions about the trajectory of his career,
- among them: How come he isn't Doug McClure, one of those
- TV-series hunks of the '60s who faded into anonymity? Or merely
- a Sylvester Stallone, one of those action heroes who have
- achieved nothing like the longevity Eastwood has? Neither could
- have, or would have, made a movie like Unforgiven. With the
- intelligent shyness that empowers many great actors, Eastwood
- embraced the entire craft of filmmaking, wandering the sets and
- picking up insights even as he was churning out B movies in his
- early days. Even now, he keeps a VCR on location to study movies
- new and old. "My involvement goes deeper than acting or
- directing," he once said. "I love every aspect of the creation
- of motion pictures, and I guess I'm committed to it for life."
- </p>
- <p> He takes the work seriously, but not himself. During the
- Unforgiven shoot, he regaled the crew with his wicked John Wayne
- impersonation. When Gene Hackman kicked the hell out of him in
- their first saloon encounter, the script called for Hackman to
- stride over to the bar and pour a drink. From his position on
- the floor, where he was miming grievous hurt, Eastwood didn't
- call cut. Instead he groaned, "Pour one of those for me."
- </p>
- <p> He is quick to spread the credit for his success to a
- loyal and veteran production crew. His wardrobe man, Glenn
- Wright, has been with him since Rawhide in the early '60s.
- Cameraman Jack Green has worked on 18 Eastwood films, and
- production designer Henry Bumstead has been on board for two
- decades. "Henry Bumstead likes to say that I take the bullsout
- of moviemaking. It's pros like Henry who do that for me," says
- Eastwood. "All I'm doing is encouraging them."
- </p>
- <p> Eastwood plans his productions like military campaigns and
- compares his role to that of an officer in combat. "Making a
- film takes on a life of its own," he says. "You guide that life
- along like a platoon leader, getting everybody kind of enthused
- to charge the hill." To a relative newcomer like actress Frances
- Fisher, who plays the prostitute Strawberry Alice in Unforgiven
- and is Eastwood's current companion, it all seems seamless. "He
- is the most confident director I have ever seen. He kind of
- glides through it all." Distractions are kept to a minimum and
- posturing discouraged. "He says very little to you," says
- Hackman, whom Eastwood lured to play the sheriff in Unforgiven.
- "I appreciate that. Most of what directors say to actors is said
- for the benefit of the people standing around the camera."
- </p>
- <p> "I don't want to intellectualize it too much," Eastwood
- says of his preference for keeping rehearsals to a minimum and
- putting the first take in the can. As a result, Eastwood films
- are delivered under budget and ahead of schedule. "He gets the
- most out of a dollar spent," says Warner Bros. chairman Bob
- Daly. "Ninety-five percent of his movies are hugely profitable."
- Eastwood says producing appeals to his practical side. "I like
- to ask myself, `What is the best way we can do this without
- slighting the film?' "
- </p>
- <p> Eastwood developed his prudence as a child of the
- Depression. His family roamed Northern California and the
- Northwest as his father searched for work. The determination of
- the father shaped the son's bedrock respect for honest labor.
- There are no exceptions. Of the potential career of his
- 21-year-old daughter Alison as an actress, Eastwood says, "She
- has to decide if she wants to work at it."
- </p>
- <p> Eastwood attended eight grammar schools in eight years, an
- experience that taught him self-reliance and a suspicion of the
- intentions of strangers. "When you're the new kid in town, you
- always have to punch it out with the other kids the first day
- or so before they accept you," he says. If they didn't, Eastwood
- did not let it trouble him.
- </p>
- <p> Like most natives of the San Francisco area, Eastwood grew
- up scorning Los Angeles. Unlike other actors whose careers drew
- them toward the studios, Eastwood kept his distance. He created
- two lives, one based in his office on the Warner lot in
- Burbank, the other up the coast in Carmel. His friends there
- have included a schoolteacher, a former bar owner and an
- itinerant barber. Film is rarely a topic of conversation. Carmel
- residents protect his privacy, even those who disagreed with his
- policies--such as a modest liberalization of the zoning laws--when he was mayor in 1986-87.
- </p>
- <p> No one in L.A. could figure out why the most powerful
- actor in the industry would want to be mayor of a village of
- 4,700 people. Unless, of course, Eastwood had larger ambitions.
- That made sense to them. The more Eastwood denied it, the more
- convinced became those who breathe the rarefied air in Bel Air
- and Beverly Hills that Eastwood was grooming himself to become
- the next Ronald Reagan. It was far simpler than that. Eastwood
- felt his town government wasn't working, and he was willing to
- sacrifice his privacy to try to fix it. Eastwood, like the Man
- with No Name or Dirty Harry, acts decisively on his convictions.
- </p>
- <p> "I wasn't wild when he became mayor," Daly says. "He went
- from two films to one a year." Once in office, Eastwood
- discovered that it is easier to build consensus when directing
- a film crew than in a city council. Sessions descended into
- fights over such topics as whether ice cream cones should be
- banned in public and whether fireworks would be permitted on the
- village beach for the Fourth of July. He says now he is happy
- he did not run for city council instead, where the term is four
- years instead of two.
- </p>
- <p> At 63, Eastwood stands at another juncture. Finally, he
- has been embraced by those who practice his craft. He reigns as
- the richest and most powerful man in an industry where the two
- attributes are virtually synonymous. Yet his focus is on the
- next task. In the Line of Fire, a film about the Secret
- Service, is due for release this spring. He'll be taking the
- crew to Texas soon to get started on A Perfect World, a crime
- drama about a Texas sheriff chasing an escaped convict who has
- kidnapped a child. Neither may win any awards. "Hollywood pays
- too much attention to home runs," he says. "Singles and doubles
- can win the game when longevity is the goal. Besides, if all I
- ever did was hit one home run, the only thing I'd be now is a
- celebrity has-been."
- </p>
- <p> That would be out of character.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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