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Tim Robbins ranks among contemporary cinema's most acclaimed and provocative
voices; a multifaceted talent, he has proved so adept at wearing the various
hats of actor, writer, and director that no less a figure than the legendary
filmmaker Robert Altman declared him the second coming of Orson Welles. Born
October 16, 1958, in West Covina, CA, he was the son of folk singer Gil Robbins;
raised in Greenwich Village, he made his performing debut alongside his father
on a duet of the protest song "Ink Is Black, Page Is White." At the age of 12,
Robbins joined the Theater for the New City, remaining a member for the next
seven years; he also joined his high school drama club, an experience which
afforded him his first opportunities to direct for the stage. After briefly
attending the State University of New York at Plattsburgh, he relocated to Los
Angeles to study at U.C.L.A.; there he also joined the Male Death Cult, an
intramural softball team comprised of his fellow drama students. After
graduating, the teammates reunited to form the Actor's Gang, an avant-garde
theater troupe noted for productions of works by the likes of Bertolt Brecht and
Alfred Jarry.
After guest starring on television series including Hill Street Blues and St.
Elsewhere, in 1984 Robbins made his film debut with a bit part in the feature
Toy Soldiers. His first starring role came in 1985's teen sex romp Fraternity
Vacation. Small roles in hits including Top Gun and The Sure Thing followed
before a breakout performance as a doltish fastballer in Ron Shelton's hit 1988
baseball comedy Bull Durham. An onscreen romance with co-star Susan Sarandon
soon expanded into their offscreen lives as well, and the twosome became one of
Hollywood's most prominent couples. A series of starring roles in films
including 1989's misbegotten Erik the Viking and 1990s Jacob's Ladder followed,
before Altman's 1992 showbiz satire The Player won Robbins Best Actor honors at
the Cannes Film Festival. That same year, he wrote, directed, starred, and
performed the music in Bob Roberts, a mock-documentary brutally parodying
right-wing politics.
Upon appearing in Altman's 1993 ensemble piece Short Cuts, Robbins enjoyed
starring roles in four major 1994 releases: The Hudsucker Proxy, I.Q., Ready to
Wear (Prêt-à-Porter), and the Oscar-nominated The Shawshank Redemption. However,
his most acclaimed project to date was 1995's Dead Man Walking, a gut-wrenching
examination of the death penalty, which earned him an Oscar nomination for Best
Director; Sean Penn, portraying a death row inmate, garnered a Best Actor
nomination while Sarandon won Best Actress honors. After a three-year hiatus
from acting, Robbins returned to the screen in 1997 with the comedy Nothing to
Lose; he soon announced plans to mount a film adaptation of Cradle Will Rock,
the Marc Blitzstein play first staged by Orson Welles six decades earlier. The
film, which examined the relationship between art and politics in 1930s America,
premiered at the 1999 Cannes Film Festival. That same year, audiences could view
Robbins as a clean-cut suburban terrorist opposite Jeff Bridges in Arlington
Road, as well as see the fruits of his directorial work in Cradle Will Rock.
Robbins opened the year 2000 with a brief but nonetheless fun role as the
maddeningly calm Ian in High Fidelity. The early 2000s presented a series of
misfires for Robbins -- AntiTrust (2001), Mission to Mars (2000), and Human
Nature (2001), writer Charlie Kaufman's eagerly awaited follow-up to Being John
Malkovich, fared rather badly in theaters -- though his versatility and respect
within the industry remained solid. The polarizing presidential elections of
2002 certainly thrust Robbins into the political spotlight, if not major big
screen successes. After multiple appearances on Politically Incorrect and
various awards shows gave Robbins a platform for some of his views concerning
the right-wing agenda, the legitimacy of the Bush administration, and the
controversial pre-emptive action in Iraq, the planned screening of Bull Durham
(and a subsequent appearance from Robbins and Susan Sarandon) for the 15th
anniversary of the Baseball Hall of Fame was surprisingly cancelled in what
Robbins claimed was a retaliatory measure.
By the end of 2003, the controversy was a distant memory with Robbins hitting it
big with audiences and critics alike in the film adaptation of Mystic River. The
performance, which saw Robbins as a tragic adult who couldn't overcome a
devastating childhood, eventually won the actor his second Golden Globe along
with his first ever Oscar.
Robbins followed up his Oscar win by switching gears substantially. In 2004,
audiences could find him as a charicature of a cutthroat PBS news'man in an
extended cameo in Anchorman and starring opposite Samantha Morton in the
futuristic sci-fi thriller Code 46.
Credit: vh1.com
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