arnold schwarzenegger biog.




Austrian Icon
(b. 1947)




schwarzenegger




Date of Birth
30 July 1947, Thal, Styria, Austria


Biography:

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    Throughout his career the uber-star Arnold Schwarzenegger has made films which have made loads of money. How much? Oceans of it. Obscene amounts of dosh ... the kind of money you and I can only dream about. For that 'crime', in the UK at least, a large part of the movie fraternity have been sniffy about his acting ability. As I will argue below, this is totally wrong: Arnie is one of the most important actors of the 20th-centry.

    One misconception is that Arnie can't do comedy. That was started by the esteemed former BBC film critic, Barry Norman. Well, Barry, if you want to tell Arnie face to face then I will stand behind Arnie giving it large over his shoulder. Arnie does comedy and does it well. His deadpan Germanic delivery is perfectly suited for gentle comedy as evidenced in Twins (1988) or Junior (1994). Schwarzenegger going through morning sickness is one of those things you must see before you die!

    The beauty of Arnie's comedic roles is that he plays them as seriously as he would terminating things. When he's bouncing off a more animated Danny DeVito then it just makes you laugh. As perfect a comedy duo as Laurel & Hardy say. Stan couldn't do the things Ollie could and vice versa.

    Surely it is better to concentrate on what an actor can do and not what he can't.

    Laurence Olivier may have been one of the finest actors of any era but could he have made Dutch in Predator (1987) as believable as Arnie? Of course not. Would he have been as menacing as the Terminator? I for one wouldn't be wetting my pants. I'm sorry but 'I'l be back, darling' doesn't strike fear in me.

    Talking of Predator (1987), that has to be one of the scariest movies ever (apart from the ending) and at the center of it all is Schwarzenegger, a warrior of almost Shakesperian proportions battling in an unforgiving jungle. Of course his muscular physique helps: it's perfectly suited for action roles and he has turned that genre into an art.

    No better example than the Terminator films which have turned him into an icon.

    Arnie fits the Terminator like a glove. Like Sean Connery as Bond or Olivier as Hamlet, Arnie makes the cyborg role his own. Truly, the films rank up there with Jaws and Psycho as the most frightening movies ever seen. Classic scenes seem to come at will. Of course, much of the credit must go to the director James Cameron who, by all accounts, is a perfectionist, but the way Arnold looks, the shades, the robotic muscularity, what he says, how he says it ... these are all things that should have won him an Oscar.

    Arnie is the Terminator - is that not the definition of great acting?

    But then Schwarzenegger's iconic status isn't dependant on what the critics say. The true test of fame is whether it has passed into everyday life. 'I'll be back' and 'hasta la vista, baby': heard them said?? No? Do you live on planet Earth?

    And that says nothing of the endless times the films have been parodied and sent-up. Why? Because the makers know that everyone knows the original films.

    Filmwise, it's a pity he's become governor of California as it would have been fascinating to see how his film career would have developed in late middle/early old age. What parts would he have taken? Would there have been more comedy? Would he have wanted to play parts like father of Terminator? Or would he have settled in supporting roles in dot.com romances? It is almost impossible to say what course his career would have gone: we'll have to wait until his govenor tenure is over and see if he returns to films.

    One thing's for sure: whatever he'd done alot of people would have paid to see it.

    © ~ Paul Page, Lenin

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    Schwarzenegger was born in Thal, Austria, four miles (6 km) from Graz, to a Gendarmerie-Kommandant policeman, Gustav Schwarzenegger (1907-1972) and his wife Aurelia Jadrny (1922-1998). His parents were members of the Nazi party.

    With $20 in his pocket, and not fluent in English, he moved to the U.S. in 1968.


    Over the last two decades, this charismatic Austrian bodybuilder has become one of the world's leading box-office attractions, married into one of America's foremost families and built a thriving business and real estate empire.

    After conquering the world as arguably the greatest bodybuilder who ever lived, he went to America to make his name in motion pictures.

    Schwarzenegger played forgettable roles in several 1970s movies, first gaining attention as the subject of George Butler's fine documentary, Pumping Iron (1976). He earned a Golden Globe Award as Most Promising Male Newcomer for his role in Bob Rafelson's Stay Hungry (1977) and starred in two sword-and-sorcery sagas, Conan the Barbarian (1982) and Conan the Destroyer (1984), each of which grossed over $100 million worldwide.

    Schwarzenegger's screen persona--a physique that strains the imagination combined with a thick Austrian accent--received a major credibility boost with The Terminator (1984), which cast him as an alien Ubermensch and established his trademark, automaton-like delivery of minimal lines such as "I'll be back". The modestly-budgeted film secured his status as an international star, established the careers of director James Cameron and producer Gale Ann Hurd, and set the pace for many of the violent, action-adventure, special effects-driven movies that would dominate the global market in the second half of 1980s. Schwarzenegger continued to star in such films for the rest of the 80s with the notable exception of the successful, Twins, a 1988 comedy that paired him with Danny De Vito.

    Schwarzenegger's career has been a carefully orchestrated one, reflecting an aggressive business and marketing acumen which has also brought him success in other fields (e.g., he now produces the Mr. Universe and Mr. Olympia pageants in which he once competed). With an eagerness not only to adapt to American life but to conquer it, reminiscent of the earlier immigrants who founded America's entertainment industry, he became a naturalized citizen in 1983 and joined the country's nobility with his 1986 marriage to newscaster Maria Shriver, a member of the Kennedy family.

    Schwarzenegger started the 90s with a big-budget sci-fi actioner, Paul Verhoeven's Total Recall (1990), which some reviewers found repellent and violent. Audiences embraced it, making it one of the highest grossing films of its year. It was, however, trounced at the box office by more modest and seemingly harmless hits such as Home Alone and Ghost.

    Schwarzenegger scored another hit in 1990 with Kindergarten Cop, a change-of-pace comedy pitting the muscular tough guy against a classroom full of rowdy kids. This solidified the "kinder, gentler" nature that characterized his persona of the 90s. Prior to this conscious change in strategy, he had killed over 275 people onscreen in films that grossed over $1 billion worldwide.

    With a budget estimated as high as $95 million, Cameron's Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) was a blockbuster sequel to the $6.5 million original. After a violent opening, the Terminator becomes a relatively paternalistic softy who merely wounds those foolish enough to get in his way while reserving his most lethal weapons for a new improved robot (Robert Patrick). Virtually a lavish remake, the film grossed over $200 million.

    As an encore, Schwarzenegger made his executive producing debut starring in a kiddie-oriented action comedy-fantasy, The Last Action Hero (1993). The most expensive film of the summer season (perhaps as much as $100 million), the film reunited the star with Predator (1987) director John McTiernan. It turned out to be a resounding flop, Schwarzenegger's first since achieving stardom. By contrast, his follow-up the next summer, True Lies (1994), gained a favorable response from critics and audiences who liked its good humor, astounding action sequences and more suitable use of its star. Written and directed by Cameron, this "domestic epic"-cum-Bond spoof successfully expanded the action hero's range and demonstrated that Schwarzenegger could play a suave tuxedo-clad spy dancing a tango with elegant bad girl Tia Carrere as well as a credible family man breaking bread in the suburbs with his wife (Jamie Lee Curtis) and child. He and Curtis also proved surprisingly well matched as co-stars.

    Schwarzenegger turned to gentler, more farcical material with Junior (1994), spoofing his own body image as a man who becomes pregnant. Despite the auspicious reteaming with Twins director Ivan Reitman and co-star De Vito, the film proved a critical and commercial disappointment.

    He returned to familiar territory playing a US marshal with the witness protection program in Eraser, a high-tech actioner for the 1996 summer season. The industry buzzed with news of Schwarzenegger's next project--playing the cool, cruel Mr. Freeze in the high-profile sequel Batman and Robin (1997). He has also made a few discreet forays behind the camera, helming a 1990 episode of HBO's Tales from the Crypt entitled The Switch and a 1992 TNT made-for-cable movie remake of Christmas in Connecticut. The latter starred Dyan Cannon, Kris Kristofferson and Tony Curtis.

    In 2002, after a series of box office bombs, Schwarzenegger announced he was parting ways with the William Morris Agency, where he had been repped since 1997. The following year, Schwarzenegger reprised his role in Terminator 3: The Rise of the Machines, receiving his biggest earnings yet (reportedly over $30 million) for a feature film, despite the fact that the franchise's originator, writer-director James Cameron, and its nominal central character, Linda Hamilton, had both opted out of the sequel. Instead, Schwarzenegger would approve a script by up-and-coming writer-director Jonathan Mostow, and play another heroic version of his android character, caught in a conflict between a more adult John Connor and the villainous female TX (Kristana Lokken). The film proved to capture some the steel-crunching power stunts and the time-bending twists of the original two movies, if lacking some of their original spark and intensity; nevertheless, despite a heavy promotional push from its star (who at the time was the center of much media attention due to his "will he, won't he?" plan to run for governor of California) and mostly favorable reviews, T3 performed merely adequately amid several other sequels in the American box office, making the majority of its profits internationally.

    In 2003, before promoting T3, Schwarzenegger, an avowed Republican despite his wife's Kennedy connections, had dangled the possibility of his bid for the California governorship amid talks of a recall of the then-top official, Democrat Gray Davis, but cannily kept mum on his plans and his possible policies during interviews to promote his film. Perhaps waiting to see if he still had a A-level movie career ahead of him, the actor was expected to announce he would not run if the recall proceeded, then stunned everyone by jumping into the race with an announcement to Jay Leno on The Tonight Show. Steered by a cadre of top California Republicans and receiving the endorsement of President George W. Bush, Schwarzenegger leapt into the political fray and was criticized early on for failing to fully define his campaign platform and refusing to participate in several debates; nevertheless he did prove a popular candidate and potential threat to Davis, gaining in polls as his campaign matured (he was also famously egged at a public appearance). He was dogged by a 1970s-era interview with Oui magazine in which he claimed to have experimented with illegal drugs and group sex. Schwarzenegger would appear with his wife on The Oprah Winfrey Show to deny the claims, asserting that he had made them up to sensationalize his background and pump up his then nascent career. Just a few days before California's recall election, The Los Angeles Times ran a story featuring interviews with several women who alleged that, on various occasions betwen the mid-1970s and the year 2000, the actor had groped them against their will and/or made crude sexual remarks to them (many of the allegations first surfaced in a 2001 article in Premiere but were denied). Schwarzenegger did not admit to the latest round accusations, but he did make a public apology if he had offended anyone. The information did not dissuade the majority of California voters, who overwhelmingly approved the recall and elected Schwarzenegger to a three-year term as the governor of California on Oct. 7, 2003.

    The actor announced that his movie career would be shelved during his tenure as a public official, but he had one more film in the pipeline that had been filmed before he announced his political intentions. Ironically, his cameo role in the ensemble of the remake Around the World in 80 Days (2004) featured Schwarzenegger as Prince Halpi, a rakish Turkish potentate with many of the boorish characteristics that he himself was criticized for during his campaign: leering, groping, hot-tubbing and making uninvited advances toward the scantily clad women in his presence. The film's producers said Schwarzenegger took an active role in designing his character's appearance, right down to the prince's skin color and hairstyle, resulting vain, bejeweled, silk-robed ruler with visible wrinkles, unusual tan and shoulder-length hair who invites Phileas Fogg (Steve Coogan) and his globetrotting friends into his opulent palace. Perhaps as a courtesy to the governor, the film's distributor Disney did not make available any images of Schwarzenegger in character, and the governor's office remained mum on the film.

    Meanwhile, Schwarzenegger secretly slipped away from Sacramento in 2004 to film sequences for "The Kid and I" (2005), written by his friend Tom Arnold and featuring the governor and Jamie Lee Curtis reprising their roles as True Lies heroes Harry and Helen Tasker for a cameo fantasy sequence in the story about a boy with cerebral palsy who is obsessed with the 1994 film.

    Though Schwarzenegger had a sometime rocky first term as governor and often stoked the ire of his more liberal Hollywood colleagues, he enforce legislation aimed at helping celebrities, signing a law which enforced new penalties against paparazzi who commit assaults in order to shoot potentially high-paying celebrity "money shots" after dangerous incidents involving such famous names as Reese Witherspoon, Lindsey Lohan and Scarlett Johannson.

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    schwarzenegger

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    Height 6' 2"

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    Marries Shiver in 1986. 4 children

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    Smokes cigars

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    Owns the company Oak Productions

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    Gallery:

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    Pumping Iron The Terminator Pumping Iron Arnold Schwarzenegger The Terminator Kindergarten Cop Conan The Barbarian
    Arnold Schwarzenegger - Commando Terminator 2 - Judgement Day True Lies Eraser Raw Deal Batman And Robin Villains Arnold Schwarzenegger
    Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger

    Arnold Schwarzenegger autographs, photographs and more @ ebay.com (direct link to photographs) - just checked and a great selection

    hachi



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