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- <text id=91TT2818>
- <title>
- Dec. 16, 1991: Profile:Robin Williams
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 70
- A Peter Pan for Yuppies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In his new movie, Hook, as in his life, ROBIN WILLIAMS shows
- what happens when the boy who won't grow up turns 40 and is
- ready for risks
- </p>
- <p>By Kurt Andersen
- </p>
- <p> He's ubiquitous: every month or so lately, there's been
- a new Robin Williams movie. First came a bit part in Dead Again,
- in which he plays a ruined yuppie wretch who advises the
- movie's hero during the latter's supernatural quest for
- redemption. Then The Fisher King--as a ruined yuppie wretch
- whose wife's murder propels him and the movie's hero on a
- supernatural quest for redemption. Now it's Hook, in which he
- plays a wretched yuppie whose children's kidnapping propels him
- on a supernatural quest for redemption.
- </p>
- <p> In the highly improbable protagonist's role--Peter Pan
- grown up? Peter Pan, a Type A investment banker?--it is hard
- to imagine anyone other than Robin Williams. After all, the arc
- of Hook's Peter Pan--an impish, Dionysian youngster, after a
- painful struggle with worldly temptation, finds his family to
- be the source of true happiness--is a pretty fair summary of
- Robin Williams' life at 40.
- </p>
- <p> During most of the time America was falling in love with
- Williams--charmed by his TV character Mork, thrilled by his
- semi-improvisational comedy on cable-TV specials, charmed again
- by his early movie roles (in Moscow on the Hudson, in Garp)--his life was pretty much a mess. "I think I had my mid-life
- crisis at around 27," says Williams, who was 26 when Mork &
- Mindy went on the air. In addition to too much trivial sex,
- there was too much vodka and bourbon and way too much cocaine.
- "It was like symbiotic abuse. It was Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
- Williams. The bloated fish," he calls his early-'80s self. "The
- Michelin poster child."
- </p>
- <p> He quit both booze (gradually, all by himself) and coke
- (cold turkey, all by himself), but unlike many of today's
- celebrity recoverers, Williams has not succumbed to just-say-no
- zealotry. While he knows cocaine is "a totally selfish drug" and
- a dead end, he's also unafraid to recall the fun. "It was always
- around. `Robin, want to do some blow? Want to do some blow in
- a back room with some very famous people?' `Oh, yeah!'"
- </p>
- <p> But sobriety by no means fixed his life. He and his first
- wife separated when their son Zachary was four, and he
- eventually took up with Marsha Garces, the woman who had once
- been Zachary's baby sitter. A PEOPLE magazine cover story, he
- says, badly distorted the facts ("I had been separated from my
- wife for a year and a half--my wife was living with another
- man") and inaccurately cast Garces as a home-wrecking nanny.
- After almost four years (and marriage to Marsha; and two babies,
- Zelda, 2, and Cody, two weeks), Williams still gets apoplectic
- on the subject.
- </p>
- <p> The story came at a high-stress moment. In addition to the
- marital disarray, his father had just died and his last three
- movies had bombed. "It was starting to look like"--the voice
- assumed is a prissy superego--"`Uh-oh. Have we made several
- wrong choices? Have we just batted out at the bottom of the
- third?' It was a pivotal time."
- </p>
- <p> Because Williams' comic persona is supercharged and
- allusive, and because he was a sex-and-drugs wild man, people
- assume that he has always been a hellion. In fact, he was a
- quiet, dutiful, good son--a not very religious Episcopal
- acolyte, a student-body president, and in 1969, in Marin County,
- Calif., a quiet, dutiful, unrebellious teenager. The blowout
- hedonism of his 20s and 30s was the aberration, because now, at
- 40, he is quiet, dutiful and good once again.
- </p>
- <p> Williams' great charm and his great weakness are, in the
- words of director Paul Mazursky, a desperate desire to be
- wonderful. These days the actor is still effervescent, bubbling
- with notions and takes. During two brief spells in one
- afternoon, he is, at each moment in context, Nastassja Kinski,
- a disco sleaze, a fashion model, Mick Jagger, Ronald Reagan,
- James Brown, George Bush, David Duke, Margaret Thatcher and
- Harold Pinter's answering machine ("Hi, this is Harold"--a
- long pause--"Pinter").
- </p>
- <p> Although he still scribbles as many as a dozen comedy
- premises a week--"Pope from the Deep South," for instance--his only stand-up performances these days are unannounced
- late-night appearances at big-city comedy clubs. Aside from the
- intrinsic pleasures of stand-up--making people laugh, being
- adored by strangers--what Williams misses about it is the
- sense it used to give him of middle America's mood. "As you go
- outside the major cities and get into other places, you go `Oh'
- "--here his voice turns Southern, smirky, menacing--"`maybe
- thangs are a little different than they seem, Mister Smart-Ass
- Liberal.' You cross the Manson-Nixon Line and `It ain't that
- funny, Audi Driver, Mister BMW, Jewish Management.'"
- </p>
- <p> For all his heartfelt leftism--he performs at a dozen
- benefits a year, including the annual Comic Relief telethon for
- the homeless--Williams is not blind to the particular
- self-satisfactions of Beverly Hills limousine liberals. "There
- can be an ain't-we-swell smugness about it that can be
- oppressive." Although he didn't attend the recent Hollywood
- benefit for Oxfam America, at which 15% of the beautiful people
- had a posh dinner, 25% ate only rice and beans, and 60% had rice
- and water, the very thought of it made him giddy: "And then 20%
- actually get electrodes attached to their testicles and
- interrogated. And then at the very end, 7% draw straws and get
- shot. What effect will it have? For two weeks they'll go, `Hola,
- Margarita? No hablos se tacos. Thank you.'"
- </p>
- <p> Williams is equally clear-eyed about his own work in films
- and his earlier tendency toward shtick. His director on Garp,
- George Roy Hill, "basically would say, `Don't improvise. Try
- something much simpler.' And that was a good thing." After the
- great success of Good Morning, Vietnam (1987) and Dead Poets
- Society (1989), Williams' Hollywood ascendancy seems inevitable.
- But before those breakthroughs, Williams was just another
- mortified, covetous, B-list actor. He auditioned for the Charles
- Grodin role in Midnight Run. And he talked to the producers of
- Batman about playing the Joker: "I think I was used for bait to
- get Nicholson."
- </p>
- <p> But Good Morning, Vietnam's success gave him the
- confidence and clout to star in the riskier Dead Poets Society,
- and without that film, he says, he wouldn't have been cast in
- Awakenings: bankability and a reputation for range in three easy
- steps. But it was serendipity, not five-year-plan calculation.
- "I haven't orchestrated it. It doesn't seem like I have to do
- one serious, one comedy, one serious, one comedy. I'm more like
- a child--`That'd be neat!'"
- </p>
- <p> And now Hook, a very high-stakes, special-effects-laden
- megapicture. For Williams, who is in nearly every scene, making
- the movie was a grueling six months on the set. He was obliged
- to shave his arms and upper body every other day. And the acting
- wasn't easy, either: in a 40-year-old man, Mary Martin feyness--"Come on, Lost Boys!"--could be awful. Williams says Bob
- Hoskins, who plays Hook's first mate, Smee, gave him a key piece
- of advice: make Pan ever so slightly insane.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of Hook, the Williams character, swearing off
- both youthful recklessness and play-it-safe overmaturity,
- declares himself ready for adult adventures. And so does the
- actor seem to be plunging headlong toward intriguing,
- invigorating professional risk. Williams reads several scripts
- a week, and of the half a dozen he is considering, only one,
- Mazursky's proposed sequel to Moscow on the Hudson, seems
- surefire commercially. Williams' next movie, Toys, a surreal
- comedy about a general who takes over a toy company, is to be
- directed by Barry Levinson, who directed Good Morning, Vietnam.
- Williams is also talking with director Bill Forsyth about
- starring in Becoming Human, a series of sketches about
- evolution; and with Oliver Stone about playing assassinated gay
- politician Harvey Milk in Mayor of Castro Street. Some comedies,
- some full-bore dramas, some possible box-office hits, some
- certainly not. But Williams doesn't think of himself as a
- latter-day Woody Allen. He has no auteurist ambitions. "It takes
- a lot of discipline and vision, and I am too lazy for that. I
- have never been able to really write." The only thing of which
- he's professionally certain is his feeling about network TV:
- never again. "This one [ABC executive] came up one day and
- said, `I used to think Jack Carter was funny. Now it's you.'"
- </p>
- <p> So he doesn't obsess about bigger paychecks. He feels he
- has enough power to get the movie roles he wants. He's no
- ascetic (there's a 500-acre ranch in Napa and a glorious new
- house overlooking San Francisco Bay), but the movie-star
- pampering is minimal: he drives himself everywhere and schlepps
- his own wardrobe--actually, a bunch of old shirts--to a
- photo session. He's happy with the way things have worked out
- but not, he wants you to know, complacent.
- </p>
- <p> "It isn't a question of doing more work," he says of his
- goals. "It's more of your own internal critic that goes, `You
- could do better than that. Take the higher road, and not the
- easy route.'" Having thrown off his desperate need to be
- wonderful, Robin Williams can now start being wonderful.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-