Marlon Brando : Biography
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Legendary screen presence Marlon Brando performed for more
than 50 years and is famous for such films as A Streetcar Named Desire and The
Godfather.
Marlon Brando was born April 3, 1924, in Omaha, Nebraska.
After early promise in the 1940s and '50s, including a legendary performance in
the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire, Brando's film career had more downs than up until his
starring role in The Godfather.
Later, he received huge salaries for small parts. He became known for
self-indulgence but was always respected for his finest work.
Early Broadway Roles
Actor
Marlon Brando was born on April 3, 1924, in Omaha, Nebraska. Brando grew up in
Illinois, and after expulsion from a military academy, he dug ditches until his
father offered to finance his education. Brando moved to New York to study with
acting coach Stella Adler and at Lee Strasberg's Actors' Studio. Adler has
often been credited as the principal inspiration in Brando's early career, and
with opening the actor to great works of literature, music and theater.
While at
the Actors' Studio, Brando adopted the "method approach," which
emphasizes characters' motivations for actions. He made his Broadway debut in
John Van Druten's sentimental I Remember Mama (1944). New York
theater critics voted him Broadway's Most Promising Actor for his performance
in Truckline Caf (1946). In 1947, he played his greatest stage
role, Stanley Kowalski -- the brute who rapes his sister-in-law, the fragile
Blanche du Bois in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire.
Hollywood Bad Boy
Hollywood
beckoned to Brando, and he made his motion picture debut as a paraplegic World
War II veteran in The Men (1950). Although he did not
cooperate with the Hollywood publicity machine, he went on to play Kowalski in
the 1951 film version of A Streetcar Named Desire, a popular and
critical success that earned four Academy Awards.
Brando's
next movie, Viva Zapata! (1952), with a script by John
Steinbeck, traces Emiliano Zapata's rise from peasant to revolutionary. Brando
followed that with Julius Caesar and then The Wild One (1954),
in which he played a motorcycle-gang leader in all his leather-jacketed glory.
Next came his Academy Award-winning role as a longshoreman fighting the system
in On the Waterfront, a hard-hitting look at New York City labor
unions.
During
the rest of the decade, Brando's screen roles ranged from Napoleon Bonaparte in Désirée (1954),
to Sky Masterson in 1955's Guys and Dolls, in which he sang and
danced, to a Nazi soldier in The Young Lions (1958). From 1955
to 1958, movie exhibitors voted him one of the top 10 box-office draws in the
nation.
During
the 1960s, however, his career had more downs than ups, especially after the
MGM studio's disastrous 1962 remake of Mutiny on the Bounty, which
failed to recoup even half of its enormous budget. Brando portrayed Fletcher Christian,
Clark Gable's role in the 1935 original. Brando's excessive self-indulgence
reached a pinnacle during the filming of this movie. He was criticized for his
on-set tantrums and for trying to alter the script. Off the set, he had
numerous affairs, ate too much, and distanced himself from the cast and crew.
His contract for making the movie included $5,000 for every day the film went
over its original schedule. He made $1.25 million when all was said and done.
'The Godfather'
Brando's
career was reborn in 1972 with his depiction of Mafia chieftain Don Corleone in
Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather, a role for which he received
the Academy Award for Best Actor. He turned down the Oscar, however, in protest
of Hollywood's treatment of Native Americans. Brando himself did not appear at
the awards show. Instead, he sent a Native American Apache named Sacheen
Littlefeather (who was later determined to be an actress portraying a Native
American) to decline the award on his behalf.
Later Roles
Brando
proceeded the following year to the highly controversial yet highly acclaimed Last
Tango in Paris, which was rated X. Since then, Brando has received huge
salaries for playing small parts in such movies as Superman(1978)
and Apocalypse Now (1979). Nominated for an Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actor for A Dry White Season in 1989, Brando
also appeared in the comedy The Freshman with Matthew
Broderick.
In 1995,
Brando costarred in Don Juan DeMarco with Johnny Depp. In
early 1996, Brando costarred in the poorly received The Island of Dr.
Moreau.Entertainment Weekly reported that the actor was using
an earpiece to remember his lines. His costar in the film, David Thewlis, told
the magazine that Brando nonetheless impressed him. "When he walks into a
room," Thewlis noted, "you know he's around."
In 2001,
Brando starred as an aging jewel thief in pursuit of one last payoff inThe
Score, also starring Robert De Niro, Edward Norton, and Angela Bassett.
Personal Life
It has
been observed that Brando has perhaps loved food and womanizing too much. His
best acting performances are roles that required him to show a constrained and
displayed rage and suffering. His own rage may have come from parents who did
not care about him.
Time magazine reported,
"Brando had a stern, cold father and a dream-disheveled mother- both
alcoholics, both sexually promiscuous-and he encompassed both their natures
without resolving the conflict." Brando himself wrote in his
autobiography, "If my father were alive today, I don't know what I would
do. After he died, I used to think, 'God, just give him to me alive for eight
seconds because I want to break his jaw.'"
Although
Brando avoids speaking in detail about his marriages, even in his
autobiography, it is known that he has been married three times to three
ex-actresses. He has at least 11 children. Five of the children are with his
three wives, three are with his Guatemalan housekeeper, and the other three
children are from affairs. One of Brando's sons, Christian Brando, told Peoplemagazine,
"The family kept changing shape. I'd sit down at the breakfast table and
say, 'Who are you?'"
In 1991,
Christian was convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the death of his sister's
fiancee, Dag Drollet, and received a 10-year sentence. He claimed Drollet was
physically abusing his pregnant sister, Cheyenne. Christian said he struggled
with Drollet and accidentally shot him in the face. Brando, in the house at the
time, gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to Drollet and called 911. At
Christian's trial, People reported one of Brando's comments on
the witness stand, "I tried to be a good father. I did the best I
could."
Brando's
daughter, Cheyenne, was a troubled young woman. In and out of drug
rehabilitation centers and mental hospitals for much of her life, she lived in
Tahiti with her mother Tarita (one of Brando's wives, whom he met on the set of Mutiny
on the Bounty). People reported in 1990 that Cheyenne said
of Brando, "I have come to despise my father for the way he ignored me as
a child."
After
Drollet's death, Cheyenne became even more reclusive and depressed. A judge
ruled that she was too depressed to raise her child and gave custody of the boy
to her mother, Tarita. Cheyenne took a leave from a mental hospital on Easter
Sunday in 1995 to visit her family. At her mother's home that day, Cheyenne,
who had attempted suicide before, hanged herself.
Death and Legacy
Brando's
years of self-indulgence are visible, as he weighed well over 300 pounds in the
mid-1990s. The actor died of pulmonary fibrosis in a Los Angeles hospital in
2004 at the age of 80. But to judge Brando by his appearance and dismiss his
work because of his later, less significant acting jobs, however, would be a
mistake. His performance in A Streetcar Named Desire brought
audiences to their knees, and his range of roles is a testament to his
capability to explore many aspects of the human psyche.
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