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- <text id=93TT2163>
- <title>
- Sep. 06, 1993: Hot Damn, He's Good
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 65
- Hot Damn, He's Good
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Rancher, polo player, champion eyeballer--and now the Southwest
- Bogart
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS--With reporting by Jeffrey Ressner/Memphis
- </p>
- <p> Ornery is a good Texas word. It's probably the word Tommy Lee
- Jones' teachers were searching for when, on a report card at
- his Dallas prep school, they described him as "sullen, morose
- and belligerent." But ornery is just a corruption of ordinary.
- And this eighth-generation Texan has never been ordinary. Not
- at Harvard, where he roomed with Al Gore, played on the football
- team and graduated cum laude. Not in his two-decade career as
- a charismatic character actor. Not in his parallel career as
- a Texas cattle rancher, or in his passion for polo. And surely
- not now, when he is Hollywood's new best bet for middle-aged
- stardom. If there were a word for Jones, it'd have to be extraornery.
- </p>
- <p> In the summer smash The Fugitive, he plays Gerard, the relentless
- U.S. marshal. When told by the hero, "I didn't kill my wife,"
- he replies, "I don't care"--he just has this job to do. In
- last year's Under Siege he was Strannix, a renegade CIA operative
- turned nuclear hijacker. "My, my, my," Strannix chortles, high
- on his own magnificent malevolence, "how hell doth quicken the
- spirit!" Good guy, bad guy, these are the same man: a smart,
- volatile, mean sumbitch with too much on his mind. "Damn, I'm
- good," Jones murmurs in Under Siege, implying few others merit
- that appraisal. He has the stare that kills. His eyes can burn
- holes in your ego.
- </p>
- <p> And a chat with Jones can be like an entrance exam to a higher,
- harder life form. Sit with him at a restaurant in Memphis, where
- he is shooting the John Grisham thriller The Client, and ask
- something innocuous, like what he reads. "The New York Times
- once a week...and also some secret trash books that will
- go unnamed, stashed hither and yon. I don't trust you enough
- to tell you the titles of all the books I'm reading." Well,
- which of his parts might he call a breakthrough role? A frown.
- "Breakfast roll? Oh, breakthrough role. I don't have time to
- think that way. I've never lived in a world where that question
- makes any sense." How does this busy man balance his interests?
- "I don't consider my life a balancing act," he says. "I consider
- these things to be the components of balance. And if it doesn't
- jibe to anybody, I've gotten to the point where I just don't
- care." Marshal Gerard, meet Mr. Jones.
- </p>
- <p> O.K., so he is not a genial, bobble-head doll; he is a demanding
- actor immersed in his craft. "He'll put a spin on each take,"
- says Oliver Stone, who cast Jones in JFK and in the forthcoming
- Heaven and Earth and Natural Born Killers. "He can deliver different
- pitches: slow balls, fastballs, curves, sliders." Stone says
- Jones is "not a party animal. He's reticent, taciturn." A crew
- member on The Client notes that Jones "won't talk much about
- personal things. But he talked to a friend of mine for an hour
- about Texas horny toads."
- </p>
- <p> His father Clyde worked in the oil fields; his mother Lucille
- owned a beauty-shop. They married and divorced twice, with Lucille
- gaining custody of the boy after she accused Clyde of haranguing
- her in drunken rages. Their son has a more settled sense of
- self: "I'm a family man. I have two children, a wife. I'm in
- the cattle business. I'm an actor. I've made my living with
- my imagination all my adult life. And I hope to continue to
- grow every day."
- </p>
- <p> Theater-trained, he quickly found a niche in films and TV. He
- could play thugs with dumb cunning, in Jackson County Jail and
- as Gary Gilmore in The Executioner's Song, or frog consorts
- to movie divas (Faye Dunaway in Eyes of Laura Mars, Sissy Spa
- cek in Coal Miner's Daughter, Kathleen Turner in the recent
- House of Cards). He approached both avant-garde stage work (Ulysses
- in Nighttown, Sam Shepard's True West) and high movie schlock
- (The Betsy, Rolling Thunder) with energy and respect. "It's
- no mean calling," he says, "to bring fun into the afternoons
- of large numbers of people. That too is part of my job, and
- I'm happy to serve when called on."
- </p>
- <p> On screen, he radiates a dangerous intelligence--a big brain
- with a short fuse--that is so intense it's erotic. "There's
- an energy that is sexual and intellectual," says Joel Schumacher,
- director of The Client, "and it's a great combination." Andrew
- Davis, who directed Jones in The Package, Under Siege and The
- Fugitive, has heard him referred to as "the new Bogart. He's
- not the most attractive, smooth-faced guy in the world, yet
- he has this sexuality. He really is the Southwestern Bogart."
- Which is why the character closest to Jones may be Woodrow Call
- in the Lonesome Dove mini-series: a haggard Texan who loves
- horses and leads men.
- </p>
- <p> Whether acting up a dust storm or working the ranch or raising
- horses for polo (his team recently won the U.S. Polo Association's
- Western Challenge Cup), Jones stays rooted in the Texas soil.
- "Natives of my region," he says, "are heirs to a society whose
- language, manners, cuisine, habits of dress, transportation,
- ways of socializing with one another are not so removed from
- location as others are. We're still tied to a place. We happen
- to think it's important to be from some place."
- </p>
- <p> He will never go Hollywood, but Hollywood is welcome to go Tommy
- Lee Jones--if it can look him in the eye and not flinch.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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