Crispin Glover
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| Crispin Glover | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Crispin Hellion Glover |
| Born | April 20, 1964 |
Crispin Hellion Glover (born April 20, 1964) is an American primarily known as a film actor, but is also a painter, filmmaker, author, musician, and collector and archivist of esoterica. Glover is known for portraying eccentric people on screen, such as George McFly in Back to the Future and Willard Stiles in Willard. In the early 2000s, Glover started his own production company, Volcanic Eruptions.
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Born in New York City, Glover moved to Los Angeles at the age of four. As a child, he attended the Mirman School for the academically gifted. His mother, Mary Elizabeth Lillian Betty Krachey Bloom Koerber,[1] was an actress and dancer who retired upon his birth, and his father, Bruce Herbert Glover, was a character actor remembered for playing the offbeat SPECTRE assassin Mr. Wint in the James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever, and the hood Duffy in Chinatown. Crispin attended Beverly Hills High School and graduated in 1982.
Glover appeared in several sitcoms as a teenager, including Happy Days and Family Ties. His first film role was in 1983's My Tutor. That led to roles in Teachers (1984) and Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984). His breakout role was as George McFly in Robert Zemeckis's Back to the Future. Glover refused to participate in the film's two sequels, reportedly because he wanted more money and his salary demands were not met. Nevertheless, Zemeckis used previously filmed footage and body prosthetics on another actor, Jeffrey Weissman, to simulate Glover on screen. Glover then sued the producers (including Steven Spielberg) and won a landmark victory, setting a precedent for how actors' images may be used in films.[2] At the same time, the suit put something of a dark mark on Glover's reputation as an actor.
Back to the Future was an international box office smash following its release in 1985. Glover followed it with The Orkly Kid, in which he portrayed a young man whose obsession with Olivia Newton-John raises the ire of his small-town neighbours. From that point, Glover pursued a defiantly individualistic path. His characters were notable for the peculiar personality tics and unconventional thought processes. He played Andy Warhol in Oliver Stone's The Doors in (1991). He has continued to play exceedingly eccentric types, e.g. the title characters in Bartleby (2001) and Willard (2003). He has received some considerable mainstream attention recently as the "Creepy Thin Man" in the Charlie's Angels films.
In 1987, Glover appeared on Late Night with David Letterman to promote his new movie River's Edge and his album. Dressed as his character from the film Rubin and Ed, he wore a long wig and platform shoes. His bizarre appearance was exceeded only by his strange behavior, which was thought by some to have been influenced by drugs, while others presume it was an Andy Kaufman-style stunt. After a failed attempt to challenge Letterman to an arm-wrestling match, Glover delivered an impromptu karate kick just inches from Letterman's face while shouting, "I'm strong... I can kick!". A noticeably irked Dave abruptly ended the segment and cut to commercial. Glover has later commented, on The Adam Carolla Show and Tom Green Live among others, that he neither denies nor admits any of the rumors surrounding the incident.
Glover mediates the special feature commentary on the DVD of Werner Herzog's Even Dwarfs Started Small and Fata Morgana.
When Christopher Nolan rebooted the Batman franchise, Glover was an early fan-based choice for the Joker. An October 16, 2006 article in The New Yorker magazine (The Anxieties of YouTube Fame, by Ben McGrath) depicts Glover as a predatory Hollywood actor who corrupts the YouTube starlet Little Loca (played by Stevie Ryan) into turning one of her signature videos into an advertisement for Glover's latest film project, What Is It.
Glover portrays the villain Grendel in Robert Zemeckis's motion capture film adaptation of the epic poem Beowulf.
In 1989, during a hiatus from films, Glover released an album called The Big Problem Does Not Equal the Solution, The Solution Equals Let It Be through Restless Records, produced by Barnes & Barnes (of "Fish Heads" fame). The album features original songs like "Clowny Clown Clown" , warped covers of Lee Hazlewood's "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" and Charles Manson's "I'll Never Say Never to Always" (sung in falsetto), and readings from his art books Rat Catching and Oak Mot (Glover modified old books with expired copyrights by adding or deleting pictures, text, and drawings). Sample pages from these books are featured in the album's liner notes. The music itself is similar to outsider music, with seemingly absurd, dream-like lyrics.
The back cover of the album is a collage of figures relating to each track on the album, with a puzzle: "All words and lyrics point to THE BIG PROBLEM. The solution lay within the title; LET IT BE. Crispin Hellion Glover wants to know what you think these nine things all have in common." He included his home phone number with copies of the album, encouraging listeners to phone when they had "solved" his puzzle. Glover later commented that he was surprised how many people figured it out.
In 2003, he recorded a cover version of the Michael Jackson classic song "Ben" to coincide with the release of the film Willard. In the eccentric music video for the song, which is included on the Willard DVD, he sings to a rat named Ben. In the commentary for the film, he remarks that he has recorded a second album.
A handful of songs using Glover's name as the title have been recorded by various artists, including New Jersey-based band Children In Adult Jails, rapper P.O.S., band Scarling., as well as Wesley Willis. Rapcore band Warlock Pinchers released a song entitled "Where the Hell is Crispin Glover?" featured as a B-side to "Morrissey Rides a Cockhorse." Alternative rock band Smile released the song "Crispin Glover vs. Tom Snyder" on their 1996 Masterlocks EP. In addition, some members of the pop punk rock band Reggie and the Full Effect were once in a local Kansas City band known as Onward Crispin Glover.
Glover made his directorial debut with 2005's What is It?, a strange and surreal art film similar in style to the work of Alejandro Jodorowsky and has been described as "The adventures of a young man whose principal interests are snails, salt, a pipe, and how to get home, and is tormented by a hubristic, racist inner psyche." The movie had a budget of only $125,000 and took almost a decade to complete, originally intended to be a short film with shooting beginning in Los Angeles. Most of the primary footage was shot in 12 days, stretched over a two-and-a-half year period. From the late-1990s into the early 2000s, he toured with prints of the film, showing parts of it before it was completed, along with various slides and read excerpts from his works. Production was mostly funded by the actor's roles in Willard and the Charlie's Angels films. Glover's second film, It is Fine. Everything is Fine! was written by Utah writer-actor Steven C. Stewart. It premiered at the 2007 Sundance film festival. Glover is planning a third film called It is Mine. It is an original screenplay written by Ryan Page, Mike Pallagi and Glover and is the third part of the What is It? Trilogy.
- ^ http://www.angelfire.com/celeb/crispinglover/spin2.html
- ^ Glover Clarifies “Back to the Future” Squabble. Zap2it.com (2003-03-13). Retrieved on 2006-08-31.
- Official site
- Crispin Glover at the Internet Movie Database
- Crispin Glover's MySpace profile
- TV Tome bio and filmography
- CHG Online (fansite)
- Oct 2006 retroCRUSH audio and text interview with Crispin Glover
- Willard-era interview, film stills
- Transcript of Glover's notorious first appearance on Late Night with David Letterman
- Video of Glover's appearance on Late Night with David Letterman
- A 2006 interview with Crispin Glover conducted by Under the Radar magazine.
- February, 2007 interview with Crispin Glover on Eros-Zine.com
- November 27 Gerry Visco interviews Crispin Glover for New York Press
- 2007 Interview with Crispin Glover on Deviant Nation