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nicolas cage
Nicolas Cage is the genuine article. During the course of his
movie career, Cage has had two teeth yanked out sans Novocain
(while filming Birdy, 1984), has trashed his trailer in a fit
of spleen (The Cotton Club, 1984), and has eaten a live cockroach
on camera (Vampire's Kiss, 1989). Now there's a guy who will do
anything for art.
Born Nicholas Coppola in suburban Los Angeles to dancer-choreographer
Joy Vogelsang and comparative literature professor August Coppola,
much of his childhood was marred by his mother's severe depression
an illness that kept her hospitalized for years (she has
since recovered). The future actor and his two older brothers
were, for the most part, raised by their father, who instilled
in his sons an appreciation for great works of art, literature,
and cinema. Summers usually included a lengthy vacation in San
Francisco, where the Coppolas would visit Dad's brother, director
Francis Ford Coppola. At age 15, Nicholas, who had devoted many
childhood hours to staging scenes from comic books and television
shows, devoted one such family holiday to attending a summer-long
acting class at San Francisco's American Conservatory Theater.
Back in L.A., Nicholas led a decidedly more middle-class existence
than either his wealthy Bay Area relatives or his fellow students
at Beverly Hills High School. He hated school and opted to take
the G.E.D. exam in eleventh grade. After getting his certificate,
Nicholas landed a part as a surfer dude on a short-lived TV series
called The Best of Times (1980-81), and made his feature film
debut in a small role in Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982).
Determined not to coast to success on his uncle's coattails, Nicholas
Coppola changed his name to Nicolas Cage, after a comic-book character
named Luke Cage. Still, he was not averse to accepting work in
his uncle's troubled-teen flick Rumble Fish (1983). That same
year, Cage achieved his first glimmerings of stardom for his hangdog
leading-man performance in Valley Girl.
Cage again stepped in front of his uncle's cameras to star opposite
Kathleen Turner in Peggy Sue Got Married (1986). Because he then
made a point of varying his voice and appearance from film to
film, Cage delivered an overly experimental performance that elicited
terrible reviews from co-stars, studio executives, and critics
alike. His lambasted piece of work did, however, benefit his career
in two important ways: it mercifully guaranteed that he would
never again make another teen movie; and it piqued the interest
of both Cher and the moviemaking Coen brothers. Cher lobbied to
have Cage cast as her love interest in 1987's Moonstruck, and
the Coens sought out Cage for his first adult comedy, Raising
Arizona, that same year. Both movies helped cement Cage's reputation
as a quirky yet charming everyman, and those roles yielded similarly
off-kilter assignments in Vampire's Kiss (1990) and Honeymoon
in Vegas (1992).
By 1994, Cage had established a healthy, if not entirely fulfilling,
movie career. He commanded roughly $4 million per picture and
had his pick of a steady flow of decent scripts. When director
Mike Figgis asked him to appear in 1995's Leaving Las Vegas, a
low-budget, independent picture about a suicidal alcoholic, Cage
found something he could throw his heart into. He signed on to
play the doomed protagonist for the relatively paltry sum of $240,000,
but the role paid off in other ways: Cage earned the most laudatory
reviews of his career and a Best Actor Oscar to boot. He next
delved into the action genre, playing an FBI chemical warfare
expert in The Rock; a heroic ex-con in the hijacking-themed Con
Air; and a sadistic criminal mastermind in the John Woo thriller
Face/Off, in which he co-starred with John Travolta. On the mushier
side, Cage played a celestial being who romances Meg Ryan in City
of Angels, a 1998 weepie inspired by the Wim Wenders classic Wings
of Desire. He next returned to the lucrative action-hero arena
for Snake Eyes, which co-starred Gary Sinise. In 1999, he turned
to producing with the indie film Shadow of the Vampire, about
the making of the silent horror film Nosferatu, and joined the
$20 million actor's club for his role in Gone in 60 Seconds, released
in 2000. Later in the year, he co-starred opposite Téa
Leoni in the holiday drama The Family Man, a road-not-taken tale
that positioned him as a single Wall Street type who gets the
chance to see how his life would have turned out had he married
his college sweetheart. Also in a romantic vein was his title
performance in the summer 2001 release Captain Corelli's Mandolin,
director John Madden's restrained adaptation of the Louis de Bernières
novel about the inhabitants of a sleepy Greek island swept up
in World War II.
Off-screen, Cage has always played the role of movie star to the
hilt. He currently divides his time between an ever-growing number
of over-the-top abodes, including two homes in the L.A. area.;
a Victorian mansion in San Francisco; and a faux-German castle
in the Hollywood Hills, decorated in an eclectic style he terms
"hot-rod Gothic." He boasts a swank wardrobe and an
equally swank fleet of European sports cars. A dedicated actor,
Cage spends considerable time preparing for his roles, gleaning
as much information as he can about each character's world. He
also manages to work out twice a day, write poems and stories,
and juggle a busy social schedule. He married actress Patricia
Arquette, whom he had dated briefly eight years earlier, in April
1995 after a lightning-fast courtship. Both Arquette and Cage
come from show-business families and each has a son from a previous
relationship. The couple, who starred together for the first time
in Martin Scorsese's 1999 film Bringing Out the Dead, agreed mutually
and amicably to divorce in November of the following year. Cage,
who has impersonated Elvis Presley in a number of films, is currently
keeping company with the King's little princess, Lisa Marie.
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