|
 |
Harrison Ford - Biography
Name :
Harrison Ford
Birth Name : Harrison Ford II
Date of Birth : 13 July 1942
Place of Birth : Chicago, Illinois, USA
Height : 6' 1''
Education :
* Maine Township High School in Park Ridge, Illinois
(graduated in 1960; no athletic star, never above a C
average);
* Ripon College in Ripon,
Nationality : American
Profession : Actor
Claim to Fame : as Han Solo in Star Wars (1977).
Sometimes Called : Jethro the Bus Driver,
Harrison J. Ford |
|
Harrison Ford Detailed
Biography
If Harrison Ford had listened
to the advice of studio heads early in his career, he would have remained a
carpenter and never gone on to star in some of Hollywood's biggest films and
become one of the industry's most bankable stars. Born July 13, 1942, in
Chicago and raised in a middle-class suburb, he had an average childhood. An
introverted loner, he was popular with girls but picked on by school
bullies. Harrison Ford quietly endured their everyday tortures until he one
day lost his cool and beat the tar out of the gang leader responsible for
his being repeatedly thrown off an embankment. He had no special affinity
for films and usually only went to see them on dates because they were
inexpensive and dark. Following high school graduation, Harrison Ford
studied English and Philosophy at Ripon College in Wisconsin. An admittedly
lousy student, he began acting while in college and then worked briefly in
summer stock. He was expelled from the school three days before graduation
because he did not complete his required thesis.
In the mid-'60s, Harrison Ford and his first wife (his college sweetheart)
moved to Hollywood, where he signed as a contract player with Columbia and,
later, Universal. After debuting onscreen in a bit as a bellboy in Dead Heat
on a Merry-Go-Round (1966), he played secondary roles, typically a cowboy,
in several films of the late '60s and in such TV series as Gunsmoke, The
Virginian, and Ironside. Discouraged with both the roles he was getting and
his difficulty in providing for his young family, he abandoned acting and
taught himself carpentry via books borrowed from the local library. Using
his recently purchased run-down Hollywood home for practice, Harrison Ford
proved himself a talented woodworker, and, after successfully completing his
first contract to build an out-building for Sergio Mendez, found himself in
demand with other Hollywood residents (it was also during this time that
Harrison Ford acquired his famous scar, the result of a minor car accident).
Meanwhile, Harrison Ford's luck as an actor began to change when a casting
director friend for whom he was doing some construction helped him get a
part in George Lucas' American Graffiti (1973). The film became an
unexpected blockbuster and greatly increased Harrison Ford's familiarity.
Many audience members, particularly women, responded to his turn as the
gruffly macho Bob Falfa, the kind of subtly charismatic portrayal that would
later become Harrison Ford's trademark. However, Ford's career remained
stagnant until Lucas cast him as space pilot Han Solo in the megahit Star
Wars (1977), after which he became a minor star. He spent the remainder of
the 1970s trapped in mostly forgettable films (such as the comedy Western
The Frisco Kid with Gene Wilder), although he did manage to land the small
role of Colonel G. Lucas in Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (1979).
The early '80s elevated Harrison Ford to major stardom with the combined
impact of The Empire Strikes Back (1980) and his portrayal of
action-adventure hero Indiana Jones in Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), which
proved to be an enormous hit. He went on to play "Indy" twice more, in
1984's Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade in 1989. Harrison Ford moved beyond popular acclaim with his role as
a big-city police detective who finds himself masquerading as an Amish
farmer to protect a young murder witness in Witness (1984), for which he
received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his work, as well as the praise
of critics who had previously ignored his acting ability. Having appeared in
several of the biggest money-makers of all time, Harrison Ford was able to
pick and choose his roles in the '80s and '90s. Following the success of
Witness, Ford re-teamed with the film's director, Peter Weir, to make a film
adaptation of Paul Theroux's novel The Mosquito Coast. The film met with
mixed critical results, and audiences largely stayed away, unused to the
idea of their hero playing a markedly flawed and somewhat insane character.
Undeterred, Harrison Ford went on to choose projects that brought him
further departure from the action films responsible for his reputation. In
1988 he worked with two of the industry's most celebrated directors, Roman
Polanski and Mike Nichols. With Polanski he made Frantic, a dark
psychological thriller that fared poorly among critics and audiences alike.
He had greater success with Nichols, his director in Working Girl, a saucy
comedy in which he co-starred with Melanie Griffith and Sigourney Weaver.
The film was a hit, and displayed Ford's largely unexploited comic talent.
Harrison Ford began the 1990s with Alan J. Pakula's courtroom thriller
Presumed Innocent, which he followed with another Mike Nichols outing,
Regarding Henry (1991). The film was an unmitigated flop with both critics
and audiences, but Ford allayed his disappointment the following year when
he signed an unprecedented 50-million-dollar contract to play CIA agent Jack
Ryan in a series of five movies based upon the novels of Tom Clancy. The
first two films of the series, Patriot Games (1992) and Clear and Present
Danger (1994), met with an overwhelming success mirrored by that of Harrison
Ford's turn as Dr. Richard Kimball in The Fugitive (1993). Harrison Ford's
next effort, Sydney Pollack's 1995 remake of Sabrina, did not meet similar
success, and this bad luck continued with The Devil's Own (which reunited
him with Pakula), despite Ford's seemingly fault-proof pairing with Brad
Pitt. However, Harrison Ford's other 1997 effort, Wolfgang Petersen's Air
Force One, more than made up for the critical and commercial shortcomings of
his previous two films, proving that Harrison Ford, even at 55, was still a
bona fide, butt-kicking action hero. Stranded on an island with Anne Hesche
for his next feature, the moderately successful romantic adventure Six
DaysSeven Nights (1998), Ford subsequently appeared in the less successful
romantic drama Random Hearts. Bouncing back a bit with Robert Zemeckis'
horror-flavored thriller What Lies Beneath, the tension would remain at a
fever pitch as Ford and crew raced to prevent a nuclear catastrophe in the
fact based deep sea thriller K-19: The Widowmaker. Harrison Ford, who does
not like doing interviews and has maintained a strict privacy regarding his
personal life, made a home with his second wife, screenwriter Melissa
Mathison, whose credits include E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982), until
their separation. Prior to that, they lived quietly with their two children,
Malcolm and Georgia (Ford's other children, two sons from his first
marriage, are grown and have chosen careers outside of show business), in
New York City and on an 800-acre ranch near Jackson Hole, WY; Harrison Ford
had clauses inserted in his movie contracts which permitted him to bring his
family with him for location shootings.
|