Clinton
Elias "Clint" Eastwood, Jr. (born May 31, 1930) is an American film
actor, director, producer, and composer. He has received five Academy
Awards, five Golden Globe Awards, a Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement
Award, and five People's Choice Awards — including one for Favorite
All-Time Motion Picture Star.
Eastwood
is known for his anti-hero acting roles in violent action and western
films. Following his role as a cast member of the TV series Rawhide
starting in 1959, he went on to star as the Man With No Name in the
Dollars trilogy of Spaghetti Westerns in the 1960s and as Inspector
Harry Callahan in the Dirty Harry films of the 1970s and 1980s. These
roles have made him an enduring icon of masculinity.[2] Eastwood is also
known for his comedic efforts in Every Which Way but Loose and Any
Which Way You Can, his two highest-grossing films after adjustment for
inflation.
For
his work in the films Unforgiven (1992) and Million Dollar Baby (2004),
Eastwood won Academy Awards for Best Director and for producer of the
Best Picture and received nominations for Best Actor. These films in
particular, as well as others such as Paint Your Wagon (1969), Play
Misty for Me (1971), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), Escape from Alcatraz
(1979), Pale Rider (1985), In the Line of Fire (1993), and Gran Torino
(2008), have all received great critical acclaim and commercial success.
He has directed most of his star vehicles as well as films he has not
acted in, such as Mystic River (2003) and Letters from Iwo Jima (2006),
for which he received Academy Award nominations.
He
also served as the nonpartisan mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California
from 1986–1988, tending to support small business interests on the one
hand and environmental protection on the other.
Early life
Eastwood
was born in San Francisco, California, to Clinton Eastwood Sr.
(1906–1970), a steelworker and migrant worker, and Margaret Ruth Runner
(1909–2006), a factory worker. He was a large baby (12 pounds and 6
ounces; 5.62 kg) and was named "Samson" by the nurses in the hospital.
Eastwood has English, Scottish, Dutch, and Irish ancestry and was raised
in a "middle class Protestant home". His family moved often, as his
father worked at different jobs along the West Coast, including at a
pulp mill. The family settled in Piedmont, California, where Eastwood
attended Piedmont Junior High School and Piedmont Senior High School.
Later he transferred to Oakland Technical High School, where the drama
teachers encouraged him to take part in school plays, but he was not
interested. Eastwood held several jobs as he moved to different areas,
including a paper carrier, grocer clerk, forest firefighter, and caddy.
After
graduating high school in 1949, Eastwood intended to enter Seattle
University and major in music, but in 1950, during the Korean War, he
was drafted into the U.S. Army. He was stationed at Fort Ord where his
certificate as a lifeguard got him appointed as a life-saving and
swimming instructor.Eastwood safeguarded film and television actors who
had joined the Army through the Special Services program, including John
Saxon, David Janssen, and Martin Milner. In 1951, while on leave,
Eastwood rode in a Douglas AD bomber that ran out of gas and crashed in
the ocean near Point Reyes. After escaping the sinking fuselage,
Eastwood and the pilot swam several miles to the shore.
He
later moved to Los Angeles and began a romance with Maggie Johnson, a
college student. During this time, he managed an apartment house in
Beverly Hills by day (into which he then moved) and worked at a Signal
Oil gas station by night. He signed up to study at Los Angeles City
College and quickly became engaged to Maggie; they married shortly
before Christmas 1953 in South Pasadena and honeymooned in Carmel.
Film career
Early work:1950s
Becoming an actor
According
to the CBS press release for Rawhide, Universal (known then as
Universal-International) film company happened to be shooting in Fort
Ord and an enterprising assistant spotted Eastwood and invited him to
meet the director. However, the key figure, according to his official
biography, was a man named Chuck Hill, who was stationed in Fort Ord and
had contacts in Hollywood. While in Los Angeles, Hill had reacquainted
with Eastwood and managed to sneak Eastwood into a Universal studio,
where he showed him to cameraman Irving Glassberg. Glassberg was
impressed with Eastwood's appearance and stature and believed him to be
"the sort of good looking young man that has traditionally done well in
the movies".
Glassberg
arranged for director Arthur Lubin to meet Eastwood at the gas station
where he was working in the evenings in Los Angeles. Lubin, like
Glassberg, was highly impressed and swiftly arranged for Eastwood's
first audition. However, he was a little less enthusiastic about his
first audition, remarking, "He was quite amateurish. He didn't know
which way to turn or which way to go or do anything".Nevertheless, he
told Eastwood not to give up, suggested that he attend drama classes,
and later arranged for an initial contract for Eastwood in April 1954 at
$100 a week. Some people in Hollywood, including his wife Maggie, were
suspicious of Lubin's intentions towards Eastwood; Lubin was homosexual
and maintained a close friendship with Eastwood in the years that
followed. After signing, Eastwood was initially criticised for his
speech and awkward manner; he was soft-spoken and, when performing in
front of people, was cold, stiff, and awkward.Fellow talent school actor
John Saxon described Eastwood as "being like a kind of hayseed. Thin,
rural, with a prominent Adam's Apple, very laconic and slow speechwise."
Eastwood at the Universal talent school in 1954
Universal Studios: Training and development
In
May 1954, Eastwood made his first real audition, trying out for a part
in Six Bridges to Cross, a film about the Brinks robbery that would mark
the debut of actor Sal Mineo. Director Joseph Pevney was not impressed
by his acting and rejected him for any role. Later he tried out for
Brigadoon, The Constant Nymph, Bengal Brigade and The Seven Year Itch in
May 1954, Sign of the Pagan (June), Smoke Signal (August) and Abbott
and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops (September), all without success.
Eastwood was eventually given a minor role by director Jack Arnold in
the film Revenge of the Creature, a film set in the Amazon jungle, which
was the sequel to The Creature from the Black Lagoon which had been
released just months earlier.
In
September 1954, Eastwood worked for three weeks on Arthur Lubin's Lady
Godiva of Coventry in which he donned a medieval costume, and screen
tested for the role with Olive Sturgess, and then in February 1955, won a
role playing "Jonesy", a sailor in Francis in the Navy and his salary
was raised to $300 a week for the four weeks of shooting. He again
appeared in a Jack Arnold film, Tarantula, with a small role as a
squadron pilot, again uncredited. In May 1955, Eastwood put four hours
work into the film Never Say Goodbye, in which he again plays a white
coated technician uttering a single line and again had a minor
uncredited role as a ranch hand (his first western film) in August 1955
with Law Man, also known as Stars in the Dust. He gained experience
behind the set, watching productions and dubbing and editing sessions of
other films at Universal Studios, notably the Montgomery Clift film A
Place in the Sun. Universal presented him with his first TV role with a
small television debut on NBC's Allen in Movieland on July 2, 1955,
starring actors such as Tony Curtis and Benny Goodman. Although his
records at Universal revealed his development, Universal terminated his
contract on October 23, 1955, leaving Eastwood gutted and blaming
casting director Robert Palmer, on whom he would exact revenge years
later, when Palmer came looking for employment at his Malpaso Company.
Eastwood rejected him.
1956–1958
On
the recommendation of Betty Jane Howarth, Eastwood soon joined new
publicity representatives, the Marsh Agency, who had represented actors
such as Adam West and Richard Long. Although Eastwood's contract with
Lubin had ended, he was important in landing Eastwood his biggest role
to date; a featured role in the Ginger Rogers–Carol Channing western
comedy, The First Travelling Saleslady.Eastwood played a recruitment
officer for Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders. He would also play a pilot
in another of Lubin's productions, Escapade in Japan and would make
several TV appearances under Lubin even into the early 1960s. As
Eastwood grew in success, he never spoke to Lubin again until 1992,
shortly after winning his Oscar for Unforgiven, when Eastwood promised a
lunch that never happened.
Without
the Lubin contract in the meantime, however, Eastwood was struggling.
He was financially advised by Irving Leonard and, under Leonard's
influence, changed talent agencies in rapid succession: the
Kumin-Olenick Agency in 1956 and Mitchell Gertz in 1957. He landed a
small role as a temperamental army officer for a segment of ABC's
Reader's Digest series, broadcast in January 1956, and later that year, a
motorcycle gang member on a Highway Patrol episode. In 1957, Eastwood
played a cadet who becomes involved in a skiing search and rescue in the
'White Fury' installment of the West Point series. He also appeared in
an episode of the prime time series Wagon Train and played a suicidal
gold prospector in Death Valley Days. In 1958, he played a Navy
lieutenant in a segment of Navy Log and in early 1959 made a notable
guest appearance as a cowardly villain, intent on marrying a rich girl
for money, in Maverick.
Eastwood
was credited for his roles in several more films. He auditioned for the
film The Spirit of St. Louis, a Billy Wilder biopic about aviator
Charles Lindbergh. He was rejected and the role went to Jimmy Stewart,
who put on makeup to make him look younger. He did, however, have a
small part as an aviator in the French picture Lafayette Escadrille, and
played an ex-renegade in the Confederacy in Ambush at Cimarron Pass,
his biggest screen role to date opposite Scott Brady. His part was shot
in nine days for Regal Films Inc. Out of frustration, he said after
watching it at the premiere, "It was sooo bad. I just kept sinking lower
and lower in my seat and just wanted to quit". Around the time the film
was released, Eastwood described himself as feeling "really depressed"
and regards it as the lowest point in his career and a point when he
seriously considered quitting the acting profession.
Rawhide (1959–1965)
Eastwood as Rowdy Yates in Rawhide
Eastwood
learned from Bill Shiffrin that CBS were casting an hour-long Western
series and arranged for a screen test. With screenwriter Charles Marquis
Warren overlooking, Eastwood had to recite one of Henry Fonda's
monologues from the William Wellman western, The Ox-Bow Incident in his
audition A week later, Shiffrin rang Eastwood and informed him he had
won the part of Rowdy Yates in Rawhide. He had successfully beaten
competition such as Bing Russell and had got the break he had been
looking for.
Filming
began in Arizona in the summer of 1958. Although Eastwood was finally
pleased with the direction of his career, he was not especially happy
with the nature of his Rowdy Yates character. At this time, Eastwood was
30, and Rowdy was too young and too cloddish for Clint to feel
comfortable with the part, privately describing Yates as "the idiot of
the plains"
It
took just three weeks for Rawhide to reach the top 20 in the TV ratings
and soon rescheduled the timeslot half an hour earlier from 7.30 -8.30
pm every Friday, guaranteeing more of a family audience. For several
years it was a major success, and reached its peak as number 6 in the
ratings between October 1960 and April 1961. However, success was not
without its price. The Rawhide years were undoubtedly the most gruelling
of his life, and at first, from July until April, they filmed six days a
week for an average of twelve hours a day. Although it never won Emmy
stature, Rawhide earned critical acclaim and won the American Heritage
Award as the best Western series on TV and it was nominated several
times for best episode by the Writer's and Director's Guilds. Eastwood
received some criticism during this period and was considered too laid
back and lazy by some directors who believed he relied on his looks and
just didn't work hard enough.
Eastwood
appeared in a western comedy series Maverick, in which he fought James
Garner in the "Duel at Sundown" episode. Although Rawhide continued to
attract notable actors such as Lon Chaney, Jr., Mary Astor , Ralph
Bellamy, Burgess Meredith, Dean Martin and Barbara Stanwyck, by late
1963 Rawhide was beginning to decline in popularity and lacked freshness
in the script and would be scrapped by early 1966.
1960s
A model of Eastwood as the man with no name
In
late 1963, an offer was made to Eastwood's co-star Eric Fleming on
Rawhide to star in an Italian made western (A Fistful of Dollars),
originally named The Magnificent Stranger, to be directed in a remote
region of Spain by a relative unknown at the time, Sergio Leone.
However, the money was not much, and Fleming always set his sights high
on Hollywood stardom, and rejected the offer immediately. A variety of
actors, including Charles Bronson, Steve Reeves, Richard Harrison, Frank
Wolfe, Henry Fonda, James Coburn and Ty Hardin were considered for the
main part in the film. Harrison had suggested Clint Eastwood, whom he
knew could play a cowboy convincingly.
Through
Irving Leonard, the offer was made to Eastwood, who saw it as an
opportunity to escape Rawhide and the states and saw it as a paid
vacation. He signed the contract for $15,000 in wages for eleven weeks
work and which also threw in a bonus of a Mercedes automobile upon
completion, and arrived in Rome in May 1964. Eastwood was instrumental
in creating the Man With No Name character's distinctive visual style
that would appear throughout the Dollars trilogy. He had brought with
him the black jeans he had purchased from a shop on Hollywood Boulevard
which he had bleached out and roughened up, the hat from a Santa Monica
wardrobe firm, a leather bracelet and two Indian leather cases with dual
serpents,and the trademark black cigars came from a Beverly Hills shop,
though Eastwood himself is a non-smoker and hated the smell of cigar
smoke. Leone decided to use them in the film and heavily emphasised the
"look" of the mysterious stranger to appear in the film. Leone
commented, "The truth is that I needed a mask more than an actor, and
Eastwood at the time only had two facial expressions: one with the hat,
and one without it."
"I
wanted to play it with an economy of words and create this whole
feeling through attitude and movement. It was just the kind of character
I had envisioned for a long time, keep to the mystery and allude to
what happened in the past. It came about after the frustration of doing
Rawhide for so long. I felt the less he said the stronger he became and
the more he grew in the imagination of the audience.
Clint Eastwood on playing the Man With No Name character
The
first interiors for the film were shot at the Cinecittà studio on the
outskirts of Rome, before quickly moving to a small village in
Andalusia, Spain in an area which had also been used for filming
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) just a few years earlier. A Fistful of Dollars
would become a benchmark in the development of the spaghetti westerns,
and Leone would successfully create a new icon of a western hero,
depicting a more lawless and desolate world than in traditional
westerns. The film made Eastwood into a major film star in Italy. The
trilogy would also redefine the stereotypical American image of a
western hero and cowboy, creating a character gunslinger and bounty
hunter which was more of an anti hero than a hero and with a distinct
moral ambiguity, unlike traditional heroes of western cinema in the
United States such as John Wayne.
Leone
hired Eastwood to star in his second film of what would become a
trilogy, For a Few Dollars More (1965). Screenwriter Luciano Vincenzoni
was brought in to write the script which he wrote in nine days; two
bounty hunters (Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef) pursuing a drug-addicted
criminal (Volontè), planning to rob an impregnable bank.[55] For a Few
Dollars More was shot in the spring and summer of 1965 and again
interiors of the film were shot at the Cinecittà studio in Rome before
they moved to Spain again. Screenwriter Vincenzoni was very important in
bringing the films to the states, given that he was fluent in English
and accompanied Leone to a cinema in Rome to show the new film after
completion to United Artist executives Arthur Krim and Arnold Picker. He
sold the rights to the film and the third film (which was yet to be
written let alone made) in advance in the states for $900,000, advancing
$500,000 up front and the right to half of the profits.
In
January 1966, Eastwood met with producer Dino De Laurentiis in New York
City and agreed to star in a non-Western five-part anthology production
named Le streghe or The Witches opposite his wife, actress Silvana
Mangano. Eastwood's nineteen minute installment only took a few days to
shoot and was not met well with critics, who described it as "no other
performance of his is quite so 'un-Clintlike' ", with the New York Times
disparaging it as a "throwaway De Sica".
Two
months after his De Sica shoot, Eastwood began working on the third
Dollars film, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, in which he again played
the mysterious Man With No Name character. Lee Van Cleef was brought in
again to play a ruthless fortune seeker, while Eli Wallach, a character
actor noted for his appearance in The Magnificent Seven (1960), was
hired to play the cunning Mexican bandit "Tuco", although the role was
originally written for Volontè, who passed on working with Leone again.
The three become involved in a search for a buried cache of confederate
gold buried in a cemetery by a man named Jackson, in hiding as Bill
Carson. Eastwood was not initially pleased with the script and was
concerned he might be upstaged by Wallach, and said to Leone, "In the
first film I was alone. In the second, we were two. Here we are three.
If it goes on this way, in the next one I will be starring with the
American cavalry".
Eastwood wearing the poncho and hat in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)
Filming
began at the Cinecittà studio in Rome again in mid-May 1966, including
the opening scene between Clint and Wallach when The Man With No Name
captures Tuco for the first time and sends him to jail.The production
then moved on to Spain's plateau region near Burgos in the north, which
would double for the extreme deep south of the United States, and again
shot the western scenes in Almeria in the south. This time the
production required more elaborate sets, including a town under cannon
fire, an extensive prison camp and an American Civil War battlefield;
and for the climax, several hundred Spanish soldiers were employed to
build a cemetery with several thousand grave stones to resemble an
ancient Roman circus.
"Westerns.
A period gone by, the pioneer, the loner operating by himself, without
benefit of society. It usually has something to do with some sort of
vengeance; he takes care of the vengeance himself, doesn't call the
police. Like Robin Hood. It's the last masculine frontier. Romantic
myth. I guess, though it's hard to think about anything romantic today.
In a Western you can think, Jesus, there was a time when man was alone,
on horseback, out there where man hasn't spoiled the land yet"
The
Dollars trilogy was not shown in the United States until 1967. A
Fistful of Dollars opened in January, For a Few Dollars More in May and
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly in December 1967. The trilogy was
publicised as James Bond -type entertainment and all films were
successful in American cinemas and turned Eastwood into a major film
star in 1967, particularly the The Good, the Bad and the Ugly which
eventually collected $8 million in rental earnings. However, upon
release, all three were generally given bad reviews by critics (despite
the select few American critics who had seen the films in Italy
previously having a positive outlook) and marked the beginning of
Eastwood's battle to win the respect of American film critics. Judith
Crist described A Fistful of Dollars as "cheapjack" and believed that
"it had nothing on its mind but sadism". Newsweek described For a Few
Dollars More as "excruciatingly dopey" and Renata Adler of The New York
Times remarked that it was "the most expensive, pious and repellent
movie in the history of its peculiar genre". However while Time
highlighted the wooden acting, especially Eastwood's, critics such as
Vincent Canby and Bosley Crowther of the New York Times were praising of
Eastwood's coolness playing the tall, lone stranger; and Leone's unique
style of cinematography was widely acclaimed, even by some critics who
disliked the acting.
Eastwood
spent much of late 1966 and 1967 dubbing for the English-language
version of the films and being interviewed, something which left him
feeling angry and frustrated. Stardom brought more roles in the "tough
guy" mold and Irving Leornard (who would later pass away at Christmas
1969) gave him a script to a new film, the American revisionist western
Hang 'Em High, a cross between Rawhide and Leone's westerns, written by
Mel Goldberg and produced by Leonard Freeman. Eastwood signed for the
film with a salary of $400,000 and 25% of the net earnings to the film,
playing the character of Cooper, a man accused by vigilantes of a cow
baron's murder and lynched and left for dead and later seeks revenge.
With the wealth generated by the Dollars trilogy, Leonard helped set up a
new production company for Eastwood, Malpaso Productions, something he
had long yearned for and was named after a river on Eastwood's property
in Monterey County. Leonard became the company's president and arranged
for Hang 'Em High to be a joint production with United Artists. Inger
Stevens of The Farmer's Daughter fame was cast to play the role of
Rachel Warren with a supporting cast which included Pat Hingle, Dennis
Hopper, Ed Begley, Bruce Dern and James MacArthur. Filming began in June
1967 in the Las Cruces area of New Mexico, and additional scenes were
shot at White Sands and in the interiors were shot in MGM studios. The
film became a major success after release in July 1968 and with an
opening day revenue of $5,241 in Baltimore alone, it became the biggest
United Artists opening in history, exceeding all of the James Bond films
at that time. It debuted at number five on Variety's weekly survey of
top films and had made its money back within two weeks of screening. It
was widely praised by critics including Arthur Winsten of the New York
Post who described Hang 'Em High as "A Western of quality, courage,
danger and excitement"
Meanwhile,
before Hang 'Em High had been released, Eastwood had set to work on
Coogan's Bluff, a project which saw him reunite with Universal Studios
after an offer of $1 million, more than doubling his previous salary.
Jennings Lang was responsible for the deal, a former agent of a director
called Don Siegel, a Universal contract director who was invited to
direct Eastwood's second major American film. Eastwood was not familiar
with Siegel's work but Lang arranged for them to meet at Clint's
residence in Carmel. Eastwood had now seen three of Siegel's earlier
films and was impressed with his directing and the two became natural
friends, forming a close partnership in the years that followed. The
idea for Coogan's Bluff originated in early 1967 as a TV series and the
first draft was drawn up by Herman Miller and Jack Laird, screenwriters
for Rawhide. It is about a character called Sheriff Walt Coogan, a
lonely deputy sheriff working in New York City. After Siegel and
Eastwood had agreed to work together, Howard Rodman and three other
writers were hired to devise a new script as the new team scouted for
locations including New York and the Mojave Desert. However, Eastwood
surprised the team one day by calling an abrupt meeting and professed
that he strongly disliked the script, which by now had gone through
seven drafts, preferring Herman Miller's original concept. This
experience would also shape Eastwood's distaste for redrafting scripts
in his later career. Eastwood and Siegel decided to hire a new writer,
Dean Riesner, who had written for Siegel in the Henry Fonda TV film
Stranger on the Run some years previously. Don Stroud was cast as the
psychopathic criminal Coogan is chasing, Lee J. Cobb as the disagreeable
New York City Police Department lieutenant, Susan Clark as a probation
officer who falls for Coogan and Tisha Sterling playing the drug
addicted lover of Don Stroud's character. Filming began in November 1967
even before the full script had been finalized. The film was
controversial for its portrayal of violence, but it had launched a
collaboration between Eastwood and Siegel that lasted more than ten
years, and set the prototype for the macho hero that Eastwood would play
in the Dirty Harry films.
Eastwood
was paid $850,000 in 1968 for the war epic Where Eagles Dare opposite
Richard Burton.However, Eastwood initially expressed that the script
drawn up by Alistair Mclean was "terrible" and was "all exposition and
complications". The film was about a World War II squad parachuting into
a Gestapo stronghold in the mountains, reachable only by cable car,
with Burton playing the squad's commander and Eastwood his right-hand
man. He was also cast as Two-Face in the Batman television series, but
the series was cancelled before he played the part.
In
1969, Eastwood branched out by starring in his only musical, Paint Your
Wagon. He and fellow non-singer Lee Marvin played gold miners who share
the same wife (played by Jean Seberg). Production for the film was
plagued with bad weather and delays and the future of the director's
career (Joshua Logan) was in doubt. It was extremely high budget for
this period and eventually exceeded $20 million.Although the film
received mixed reviews, it was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for
Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy.
1970s
In
1970, Eastwood starred in the western, Two Mules for Sister Sara with
Shirley MacLaine. The film, directed by Siegel, is a story about an
American mercenary who gets mixed up with a whore disguised as a nun and
aid a group of Juarista rebels during the puppet reign of Emperor
Maximilian in Mexico. The story was initially written by Budd
Boetticher, who was later sacked and replaced with Albert Maltz to
revise the script. The film saw Eastwood embody the tall mysterious
stranger once more, unshaven, wearing a serape-like vest and smoking a
cigar and the film score was composed by Morricone. However, although
the film also had Leonesque dirty Hispanic villains, the film was
considerably less crude and more sardonic than those of Leone. The film,
which took four months to shoot and cost around $4 million to make,
received moderate reviews, and Roger Greenspun of the New York Times
reported, "I'm not sure it is a great movie, but it is very good and it
stays and grows on the mind the way only movies of exceptional narrative
intelligence do".Stanley Kauffmann described the film as "an attempt to
keep old Hollywood alive- a place where nuns can turn out to be
disguised whores, where heroes can always have a stick of dynamite under
their vests, where every story has not one but two cute finishes. Its
kind of The African Queen gone west". The New York Times in its book,
The New York Times Guide to the Best 1000 Movies Ever Made included Two
Mules for Sister Sara in its top 1000 films of all time.
Later
in 1970, Eastwood appeared in the World War II movie, Kelly's Heroes
with Donald Sutherland and Telly Savalas. The film, which stars Eastwood
as one of a group of Americans who steal a fortune in bullion from the
Nazis, combined tough-guy action with offbeat humor. It was last
non-Malpaso film that Clint agreed to appear in. The filming commenced
in July 1969 and was shot on location in Yugoslavia and London. Directed
by Brian G. Hutton, the film involved hundreds of extras and dangerous
special effects. The climax to the film echoes that of his Dollars films
when he advances in lockstep on a German tiger tank on the street of a
small European town, with a Morricone-esque soundtrack by Lalo Schifrin.
The film received mostly a positive reception and its anti-war
sentiments were recognized. The film has a respectable 83% fresh rating
on Rotten Tomatoes.
"Dustin
Hoffman and Al Pacino play losers very well. But my audience like to be
in there vicariously with a winner. That isn't always popular with
critics. My characters have sensitivity and vulnerabilities, but they're
still winners. I don't pretend to understand losers. When I read a
script about a loser I think of people in life who are losers and they
seem to want it that way. It's a compulsive philosophy with them.
Winners tell themselves, I'm as bright as the next person. I can do it.
Nothing can stop me."
Eastwood on his role in The Beguiled.
In
the winter of 1969–70, Eastwood and Siegel began planning his next
film, The Beguiled. Jennings Lang was inspired by the 1966 novel by
Thomas Cullinan and in passing the book to Eastwood he was engrossed
throughout the night in reading the tale of a wounded Union soldier held
captive by the sexually repressed matron of a southern girls' school.
This was the first of several films where Eastwood has agreed to
storylines where he is the centre of female attention, including minors.
The film, according to Siegel, deals with the themes of sex, violence
and vengeance and was based on "the basic desire of women to castrate
men". The film later received major recognition in France and is
considered one of Eastwood's finest works by the French. However,
although the film reached number two on Variety's chart of top grossing
films, it was poorly marketed and in the end grossed less than $1
million. According to Eastwood and Jennings Lang, the film, aside from
being poorly publicized, flopped due to Clint being "emasculated in the
film".
1971
proved to be a professional turning point in Eastwood's career. Before
Irving Leonard had died, the last film they had discussed at Malpaso was
to give Eastwood the artistic control that he desired and make his
directorial debut in Play Misty for Me. The script was originally
thought of by Jo Heims, about a jazz disc jockey named Dave (Eastwood)
who has a casual affair with Evelyn (Jessica Walter), one of his
listeners who had been calling the radio station repeatedly at night
asking him to play her favourite song, Erroll Garner's Misty. When Dave
ends their relationship the female fan becomes possessive and then
violent, turning into a crazed murderess. Filming commenced in Monterey
in September 1970, with Eastwood obtaining the rights to Misty after
meeting Garner at the Concord Music Festival in 1970 and paying $2,000
for the use of the song The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face by Roberta
Flack. The film was highly acclaimed by critics, with critics such as
Jay Cocks in Time, Andrew Sarris in the Village Voice and Archer Winsten
in the New York Post all praising Eastwood's directorial skills and the
film, including his performance in the scenes with Walter.
Eastwood as Inspector "Dirty" Harry Callahan in Dirty Harry
The
script to Dirty Harry was originally written by Harry Julian and Rita
M. Fink, a story about a hard-edged New York City (later changed to San
Francisco) police inspector Harry Callahan, determined to stop a
psychotic killer by any means at his disposal. Dirty Harry is arguably
Eastwood's most memorable character and the lines that Callahan utters
when addressing a wounded bank robber are often cited amongst the most
memorable in cinematic history (see box). The film has been credited
with inventing the "loose-cannon cop genre" that is imitated to this
day. Eastwood's tough, no-nonsense portrayal of Dirty Harry touched a
cultural nerve with many who were fed up with crime in the streets and
at a time when there were prevalent reports of local and federal police
committing atrocities and overstepping their authority by entrapment and
obstruction of justice. Dirty Harry marked the beginning of Eastwood's
work with legendary film poster designer Bill Gold. Gold designed (and
often photographed) posters for 35 Clint Eastwood films, from Dirty
Harry to Million Dollar Baby (2004). After release in December 1971,
Dirty Harry proved a phenonemal success which would be go on to become
Siegel's highest grossing film and the start of a series of films which
is arguably Eastwood's signature role, with fans demanding more.
Although a number of critics such as Jay Cocks of Time praised his
performance as Dirty Harry, describing him as "giving his best
performance so far, tense, tough, full of implicit identification with
his character", the film was widely criticized and accused of fascism
through Eastwood's portrayal of the ruthless cop. Feminists in
particular were outraged by the film and at the Oscars for 1971
protested outside holding up banners which read messages such as "Dirty
Harry is a Rotten Pig".
"I
know what you're thinking — 'Did he fire six shots or only five?' Well,
to tell you the truth, in all this excitement, I've kinda lost track
myself. But, being as this is a .44 Magnum, the most powerful handgun in
the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask
yourself one question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do ya, punk?"
Dirty Harry
Eastwood
next starred in the loner Western Joe Kidd, released in 1972.
Originally called The Sinola Courthouse Raid, it was about a character
inspired by Reies Lopez Tijerina, an ardent supporter of Robert F.
Kennedy, known for storming a courthouse in Tierra Amarilla, New Mexico
in an incident in June 1967, taking hostages and demanding that the
Hispanic people be granted their ancestral lands back to them. Under the
director's helm of John Sturges, who had directed acclaimed westerns
such as The Magnificent Seven (1960), filming began in Old Tucson in
November 1971, overlapping with another film production, John Huston's
The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, which was just wrapping up
shooting. Outdoor sequences to the film were shot near June Lake, east
of the Yosemite National Park.
"I
think it is a very good performance in context. Like so many Western
heroes, Joe Kidd figures even in his own time as an anachronism—powerful
through his instincts mainly, and through the ability of everybody
else, whether in rage or gratitude, to recognize in him a quality that
must be called virtue. The great value of Clint Eastwood in such a
position is that he guards his virtue very cannily, and in the society
of "Joe Kidd," where the men still manage to tip their hats to the
ladies, but just barely, all the Eastwood effects and mannerisms suggest
a carefully preserved authenticity."
Roger Greenspun, The New York Times, July 20, 1972
Eastwood
was also far from in perfect health during the film and suffered
symptoms that relayed the possibility of a bronchial infection and
suffered several panic attacks, falsely reported in the media as him
having an allergy to horses. Joe Kidd received a mixed reception. For
instance Roger Greenspun of The New York Times thought the film overall
was nothing remarkable and had foolish symbolism and what he suspected
was sloppy editing, but praised Eastwood's performance (see box).
1973
proved another benchmark to Eastwood when he directed his first
western, High Plains Drifter. It involves the story of a tall,
mysterious stranger arriving in a brooding Western town where the people
share a guilty secret. They hire the stranger to defend the town
against three felons soon to be released but fail to recognise that they
once killed this stranger in a brutal whipping and that his
reappearance is supernatural. The ghostly stranger forces the people to
paint the town red and names it "Hell" and seeks revenge. Holes in the
plot were filled in with black humor and allegory, influenced by Sergio
Leone. There was some confusion amongst critics and viewers of the film
as to whether the avenging character was actually the ghost of the
murdered sheriff or a sibling; according to Eastwood he played him as a
brother. John Wayne was offered a role in the film and was sent the
script, but replied to Eastwood some weeks after the film was released,
expressing disapproval, saying that "the townspeople did not represent
the true spirit of the American pioneer, the spirit that made America
great. The revisionist film received a mixed reception from critics but
was a major box office success. A number of critics thought Eastwood's
directing was as a derivative as it was expressive with Arthur Knight in
Saturday Review remarking that Clint had "absorbed the approaches of
Siegel and Leone and fused them with his own paranoid vision of
society". Jon Landau of Rolling Stone concurred, remarking that it is
his thematic shallowness and verbal archness which is where the film
fell apart, yet he expressed approval of the dramatic scenery and
cinematography.
Eastwood
turned his attention towards a script written by Jo Heims about a love
blossoming between a middle-aged man and a teenage girl, Breezy. During
casting for the film, Eastwood met Sondra Locke for the first time, an
actress who would play a major role in many of his films for the next
ten years and an important figure in his life. However, Locke, who was
26 at this time was considered too old for the Breezy part and after
much auditioning, a young dark-haired actress named Kay Lenz, who had
recently appeared in American Graffiti, was cast. Filming for Breezy
began in the November of 1972 in Los Angeles. With Surtees occupied
elsewhere, Frank Stanley was brought in the shoot the picture, the first
of four films he would shoot for Malpaso. The film was shot very
quickly and efficiently and in the end went $1 million under budget and
finished three days before schedule. The film was not a major critical
or commercial success, it barely reached the Top 50 before disappearing
and was only made available on video in 1998.
After
the filming of Breezy had finished, Warner Brothers announced that
Eastwood had agreed to reprise his role as Detective Harry Callahan in a
sequel to Dirty Harry, running under the title, Vigilance but later
changed to Magnum Force given its gun theme. Writer John Milius came up
with a storyline in which a group of rogue young officers in the San
Francisco Police Force systematically exterminate the city's worst
criminals, portraying the idea that there are worse cops than Dirty
Harry. Filming commenced in late April 1973, and during filming Eastwood
encountered numerous disputes with director Ted Post, scarring their
relationship for several years. Although the film was a major success
after release, grossing $58.1 million in the United States alone, a new
record for Eastwood, it was not a critical success. New York Times
critics such as Nora Sayre criticized the often contradictory moral
themes of the film and Frank Rich believed it "was the same old stuff".
In 1974, Eastwood teamed with Jeff Bridges in the buddy action caper
Thunderbolt and Lightfoot. The film is a road movie about an ex Korean
War veteran turned bank robber Thunderbolt (Eastwood) who teams with a
young con man drifter, Lightfoot (Bridges) who try to stay ahead of the
vengeful ex-members of his gang (George Kennedy and Geoffrey Lewis) in
the search for a cash deposit abandoned from an old heist. Shot in Great
Falls area of Montana, filming for Thunderbolt and Lightfoot was shot
between July and September 1973. On release in spring 1974, the film was
praised for its offbeat comedy mixed with high suspense and tragedy and
Eastwood's acting performance was noted by critics but was overshadowed
by Jeff Bridges who stole the show in his performance as Lightfoot.
When Bridges was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting
Actor, Eastwood was reportedly fuming at his own lack of Academy Award
recognition. Despite critical acclaim, however, the film was only a
modest success at the box office, earning $32.4 million. Eastwood was
unhappy with the way that United Artists had produced the film and swore
"he would never work for United Artists again", and the scheduled two
film deal between Malpaso and UA was cancelled.
The
Eiger Sanction was based on a critically acclaimed spy novel by
Trevanian. The rights to the film were bought by Universal as early as
1972, soon after the book was published, and was originally a Richard
Zanuck and David Brown production. Paul Newman was intended to the role
of Jonathan Hemlock (Eastwood), an assassin turned college art professor
who decides to return to his former profession for one last sanction in
return for a rare Picasso painting; he must climb the Eiger face in
Switzerland and perform the deed under perilous conditions. After
reading the script, Newman declined, because he believed the film was
too violent. Mike Hoover, an Academy Award nominated professional
mountaineer from Jackson, Wyoming was hired to serve as a mountaineering
cinematographer and technical adviser during the shoot. He taught
Eastwood how to climb over some weeks of preparation in the summer of
1974 in Yosemite. Filming commenced in Grindelwald, Switzerland on
August 12, 1974 with an extensive team of professional climbing experts
and advisers on board from America, England, Germany, Switzerland and
Canada. Despite prior warnings of the perils of the Eiger, the filming
crew suffered a number of accidents.A 27-year old English climber David
Knowles, who was acting as body double and photographer was tragically
killed during filming, with Hoover narrowly escaping. Eastwood continued
to insist on doing all his own climbing and stunts, despite potentially
being just seconds from instant death. Upon its release in May 1975,
The Eiger Sanction was a commercial failure, receiving only $23.8
million at the box office and was panned by most critics, with Joy Gould
Boyum of the Wall Street Journal remarking that, "the film situates
villainy in homosexuals, and physically disabled men", dismissing it as
"brutal fantasy". Eastwood blamed Universal Studios for the films poor
promotion and turned his back on them, forming a long-lasting agreement
with Warner Brothers through Frank Wells that would transcend over 35
years of cinema and remain intact to this day.
The
story to The Outlaw Josey Wales was inspired by a 1972 novel by an
apparent Native Indian uneducated writer Forrest Carter, originally
titled Gone to Texas and later retitled The Rebel Outlaw:Josey Wales.
Later it would be revealed that Forrest Carter's identity was fake, and
that the real author was Asa Carter, a onetime racist and supporter of
Ku Klux Klan school of politics. It would be a Western, and the lead
character, Josey Wales, is a rebel southerner who refuses to surrender
his arms after the American Civil War and is chased across the old
southwest by a group of enforcers. The characters of Wales, the Cherokee
chief, Navajo squaw and the old settler woman and her daughter all
appeared in the novel.Director Philip Kaufman cast Chief Dan George, who
had been nominated for an Academy Award for Supporting Actor in Little
Big Man as the old Cherokee Lone Watie. Sondra Locke, also a previous
Academy Award nominee was cast by Eastwood against Kaufman's wishes, as
the daughter of the old settler woman, Laura Lee. This marked the
beginning of a close relationship between Eastwood and Locke that would
last six films and the beginning of a raging romance that would last
into the late 1980s. The film also featured his real-life seven-year old
son Kyle Eastwood.
Eastwood's
eventual truce with the Native Indians in the finale was seen as an
iconic one in relation to the nation's heritage and history
Principal
photography for The Outlaw Josey Wales began in mid-October 1975. A
rift between Eastwood and Kaufman developed during the filming and soon
after filming moved to Kanab, Utah on October 24, 1975, Kaufman was
notoriously fired under Eastwood's command by producer Bob Daley. The
sacking caused an outrage amongst the Directors Guild of America and
other important Hollywood executives and resulted in a fine, reported to
be around $60,000 for the violation. It resulted in the Director's
Guild passing new legislation which reserved the right to impose a major
fine on a producer for discharging a director and replacing him with
himself. From then on the film was directed by Eastwood himself with
Daley second in command, but with Kaufman's planning already in place,
the team were able to finish making the film efficiently.
"Eastwood
is such a taciturn and action-oriented performer that it's easy to
overlook the fact that he directs many of his movies – and many of the
best, most intelligent ones. Here, with the moody, gloomily beautiful,
photography of Bruce Surtees, he creates a magnificent Western feeling"
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, January 1, 1976
Upon
release in August 1976, The Outlaw Josey Wales was widely acclaimed by
critics. Many critics and viewers saw Eastwood's role as an iconic one,
relating it with much of America's ancestral past and the destiny of the
nation after the American Civil War. The film was pre-screened at the
Sun Valley Center for the Arts and Humanities in Idaho in a six-day
conference entitled, Western Movies:Myths and Images and attended by
some two hundred esteemed film critics, academics and directors. The
film would later appear in Time magazines Top 10 films of the year.
Roger Ebert compared the nature and vulnerability of Eastwood's
portrayal of Josey Wales with his Man With No Name character in his
Dollars westerns and praised the atmosphere of the film. The film is
seen by many as a Western masterpiece and has been awarded a 97% rating
on the critical website Rotten Tomatoes.
After
The Outlaw Josey Wales, Eastwood was offered the role of Benjamin L.
Willard in Francis Coppola's Apocalypse Now but declined as he did not
want to spend weeks in the Philippines shooting it. He was also offered
the part of a platoon leader in Ted Post's Vietnam War film, Go Tell the
Spartans. Eastwood refused the part and Burt Lancaster played the
character instead. In the end it was decided to make a third Dirty Harry
film, The Enforcer. The script, devised by Stirling Silliphant had
Harry up against a San Francisco Bay area Symbionese Liberation Army
type group, which in real life had terrorized the area in 1974 with
ruthless kidnappings and violence, and the film would end in a shoot out
at the gang's hideout on Alcatraz island. Eastwood met Silliphant in a
restaurant in Tiburon and instantly took a liking to the script,
particularly the shoot out and the idea of Callahan having a woman as a
police partner, his worst nightmare, a relationship which would
gradually blossom during the course of the film and provide a backbone
to the film's structure as they encounter different situations, from
initial hatred to a fondess of each other and Callahan's genuine sorrow
on her being shot in the finale. Kate Moore was originally proposed to
play the part of the female cop, but in the end it went to Tyne Daly,
who was given considerable leeway in the development of her character,
although after seeing the film at the premiere was horrified by the
extent of the violence.
With
James Fargo to direct, filming commenced in the San Francisco bay area
in the summer of 1976. The film ended up considerably shorter than the
previous Dirty Harry films, and was cut to 95 minutes. Upon release in
the fall of 1976, The Enforcer was a major commercial success and
grossed a total of $100 million, $60 million in the United States and
easily became Eastwood's best selling film to date, earning more than
some of his previous films combined. However, critically, Eastwood's
performance was poorly received and was named "Worst Actor of the Year"
by the Harvard Lampoon and the film was criticized for its level of
violence. His performance in the third installment was overshadowed by
positive reviews given to Daly in her convincing role as the
strong-minded female cop.
In
1977, Eastwood directed and starred in The Gauntlet, in which he played
a down-and-out cop who falls in love with a prostitute whom he's
assigned to escort from Las Vegas to Phoenix in order for her to testify
against the mob. Written by Dennis Shryack and Michal Butler, Steve
McQueen and Barbra Streisand were originally cast as the film's stars.
However, fighting between the two forced them to drop out of the
project, with Eastwood and Locke replacing them. References to political
corruption and organized crime were depicted in the film. Although a
moderate hit with the viewing public, critics were mixed about the film,
with many believing it was overly violent. Eastwood's long time nemesis
Pauline Kael called it "a tale varnished with foul language and
garnished with violence". Roger Ebert, on the other hand, gave it three
stars and called it "...classic Clint Eastwood: fast, furious, and
funny." David Ansen of Newsweek wrote, "You don't believe a minute of
it, but at the end of the quest, it's hard not to chuckle and cheer". In
1978, Eastwood starred in Every Which Way but Loose an
uncharacteristic, offbeat comedy role. Eastwood played Philo Beddoe, a
trucker and brawler who roamed the American West, searching for a lost
love, while accompanying his best brother/manager Orville and his pet
orangutan, Clyde.. An orangutan named Manis was brought in to play
Clyde, Geoffrey Lewis as the dimwitted Orville, Beverly D'Angelo as his
girlfriend and Sondra Locke as Lynn Halsey-Taylor, the country and
western barroom singer. Upon its release, the film was a surprising
success and became Eastwood's most commercially successful film at the
time and ranks high amongst those of his career to date, becoming the
second-highest grossing film of the year. However, it was panned by the
critics, with Variety commenting that, "This film is so awful it's
almost as if Eastwood is using it to find out how far he can go—how bad a
film he can associate himself with". David Ansen of Newsweek described
the film as, "plotless junk heap of moronic gags, sour romance and
fatuous fisticuffs.
Malpaso-Paramount production bench used during the filming
In
1979, Eastwood starred in the fact-based movie Escape from Alcatraz,
based on the true story of Frank Lee Morris, who, along with John and
Clarence Anglin escaped from the notorious Alcatraz prison in 1962. The
inmates dug through the walls with their spoons, made papier-mache
dummies as decoys and made a raft out of raincoats and escaped across
San Francisco Bay, never to be seen again. The script to the film was
written by Richard Tuggle, based on the 1963 non-fiction account by J.
Campbell Bruce. Eastwood was drawn to the role as ringleader Frank
Morris and agreed to star, providing Don Siegel directed under the
Malpaso banner. However, Siegel inisted that it be a Don Siegel film and
out-maneouvered Clint by purchasing the rights to the film for
$100,000. This created a rift between the friends, causing Siegel to
depart to Paramount, a rival studio. Although their disagreement was
later patched up and Siegel agreed for it to be a Malpaso-Siegel
production, Siegel would never direct an Eastwood picture again. As
Siegel and Tuggle worked on the script, the producers paid $500,000 to
restore the decaying prison and recreate the cold atmosphere, although
some interiors had to be recreated within the studio. The film was a
major success, earning $34 million in the states alone and was widely
acclaimed by critics, marking the beginning of a newly found critical
praise Eastwood began to receive in the early 1980s. Frank Rich of Time
described the film as "cool, cinematic grace", whilst Stanley Kauffmann
of New Republic called it "crystalline cinema".
1980s
In
1980, Eastwood directed and played the main attraction in a traveling
Wild West Show in the comedy film, Bronco Billy. His children Kyle and
Alison had small roles as orphans. Eastwood starred alongside Locke,
Scatman Crothers, Sam Bottoms, Dan Vadis, Sierra Pecheur and Geoff
Lewis. FIlming commenced on October 1, 1979 in the Boise, Idaho area and
was shot in five and a half weeks on a low budget of $5 million,
two-four weeks before schedule. Eastwood has cited Bronco Billy as being
one of the most affable shoots of his entire career, and biographer
Richard Schickel has argued that the character of Bronco Billy is his
most self-referential work. The film was a commercial failure, was but
appreciated by critics with Kenneth Turan of New West saying, "it shows
enough class to rank as the unexpected joy of the season". Janet Maslin
of The New York Times believed the film was "the best and funniest Clint
Eastwood movie in quite a while", praising Eastwood's directing and the
way he intricately juxtaposes the old West and the new. Later in 1980,
he reprised his role in the sequel to Every Which Way But Loose entitled
Any Which Way You Can. The film received a number of bad reviews from
critics, although Janet Maslin of the New York Times described it as,
"funnier and even better than its predescessor" The film, however,
became another box-office success and was among the top five
highest-grossing films of the year.
In
1982, Eastwood directed and starred in Honkytonk Man, based on the
novel by Clancy Carlile about an aspiring country music singer named Red
Stovall, set during the Great Depression. The script was adapted
slightly from the novel; the scene in the novel of where Red gives a
reefer to his fourteen-year old son (played by real-life son Kyle) was
not approved by Eastwood and altered and the ending was also changed to
the playing on the radio of a song written by Red on his death bed,
shortly before his burial. The film was shot in the summer of 1982
within six weeks. The first part of the movie was filmed in Bird's
Landing, California, although the majority of this feature was filmed in
and around Calaveras County, east of Stockton, California. Exterior
scenes include Main Street, Mountain Ranch; Main Street, Sheepranch; and
the Pioneer Hotel in Sheepranch. Extras were locally hired and many of
the towns residents are seen in the movie. The film received a mixed
reception upon release, although its has a high score of 93% on Rotten
Tomatoes. In 1982, Eastwood also directed, produced and starred in the
Cold War-themed Firefox, based on a 1977 novel with the same name by
British novelist Craig Thomas. Firefox is an espionage thriller, about a
retired Air Force Special Forces Expert, recruited to steal a Soviet
supersonic war plane from Moscow. Russian filming locations were not
possible due to the Cold War, and much footage was shot at the Thule Air
Base in Greenland and in Austria to simulate many of the Eurasian story
locations. The film was actually shot before Honkeytonk Man but was
released after it.
"Go ahead, make my day"
The
fourth Dirty Harry film Sudden Impact (1983), is widely considered to
be the darkest, "dirtiest" and most violent film of the series. This
would be the last time he starred in a film with frequent leading lady
Sondra Locke. The script, written by Joseph Stinson, is about a woman
(Locke) who avenges the rape of herself and her sister (now a vegetable)
by a ruthless gang at a fairground. The woman systematically murders
her rapists one by one, shooting them once in the genitals and once in
the head. Pat Hingle and Bradford Dillman also starred alongside
Eastwood and footage was shot in the spring and early summer of 1983.
The line, "Go ahead, make my day", uttered by Eastwood during an earlier
scene in which his regular morning cafe is threatened by robbers, is
often cited as one of cinema's immortal lines and was famously
referenced by President Ronald Reagan in his campaigns. The film was the
highest earning of all the Dirty Harry films, earning $70 million and
received rave reviews, with many critics praising the feminist aspects
of the film through its explorations of the physical and psychological
consequences of rape.
In
1984, Eastwood starred in the provocative thriller Tightrope, inspired
by newspaper articles about an elusive Bay Area rapist. Set in New
Orleans (to avoid confusion with the Dirty Harry films), Eastwood
starred as a single-father cop in a mid-life crisis, lured by the
promise of kinky sex. The film explored the way his character is drawn
into the killer's tortured psychology and fascination for
sadomasochism.Complicating matters are his struggle to single-handedly
raise two young daughters (one of which was his real daughter Alison), a
growing relationship with a tough rape prevention officer played by
Geneviève Bujold, and the troubling thought that the killer shares his
own sexual preferences (bondage, masochism, etc.).During filming,
Eastwood had an affair with the first murder victim in the film, Jamie
Rose. Pierre Rissient arranged for the film to premiere at the Cannes
Film Festival, but failed to win any awards. It opened in 1535 theatres
in the summer of 1984 and earned record takings in the first ten days,
eventually earnings revenues of $70 million domestically. The film was
also a critical success, with J. Hoberman in the Village Voice
describing Clint as " one of the most masterful under-actors in American
movies" and David Denby commenting that he has become a "very troubled
movie icon". Others such as Jack Kroll of Newsweek noted the sexuality
of the film and vulnerability of Eastwood's character, remarking, "He
gets better as he gets older; he seems to be creating new nuances".
Eastwood
next starred in the period comedy City Heat (1984) with Burt Reynolds.
The film was initially running under the title, Kansas City Jazz under
the directorship of Blake Edwards. The film is about a private eye and
his partner mixed up with gangsters in the prohibition era in the 1930s.
During filming, Eastwood conflicted with Edwards and producer Tony
Adams, stipulating "creative differences" as the reason, leading to
Edward's replacement with Richard Benjamin. Principal photography began
in May 1984 and the film was released in North America in December 1984,
grossing around $50 million domestically.
In
1985, Eastwood made his only foray into TV direction to date with the
Amazing Stories episode Vanessa In The Garden, starring Harvey Keitel
and Sondra Locke; this was his first collaboration with writer/executive
producer Steven Spielberg (Spielberg later produced Flags of Our
Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima). Eastwood revisited the western
genre, directing and starring in Pale Rider. The film is based on the
classic Western Shane (1953); a preachers descends magically from the
mists of the Sierras and takes the side of the placer miners amidst the
California Gold Rush of 1850. The ending is also similar, but the story
is told from the girl's viewpoint (Megan) and explores the psychosexual
and psychospiritual bridge between childhood and womanhood as both
mother and daughter compete for the preacher's affections. The film also
bears similarities to Eastwood's previous Man with No Name character,
and his 1973 western High Plains Drifter in its themes of morality and
justice and exploration of the supernatural. The title is a reference to
the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, as the rider of a pale horse is
Death, cited in Revelations Chapter 6, Verse 8. It was primarily filmed
in the Boulder Mountains and the SNRA in central Idaho, just north of
Sun Valley in late 1984. The opening credits scene featured the jagged
Sawtooth Mountains south of Stanley. Train-station scenes were filmed in
Tuolumne County, California, near Jamestown. Scenes of a more
established Gold Rush town (in which Eastwood's character picks up his
pistol at a Wells Fargo office) were filmed in the real Gold Rush town
of Columbia, also in Tuolumne County, California. The film also featured
Michael Moriarty, Carrie Snodgress, Christopher Penn, Richard Dysart,
Sydney Penny, Richard Kiel, Doug McGrath and John Russell. The film
premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, but was not a success there,
given that international critics believed the film to be too overtly
commercial for the festival. Nevertheless, Pale Rider became one of
Eastwood's most successful films to date in the eyes of critics, earning
him the wide critical acclaim he had sought for so long. Jeffrey Lyons
of Sneak Previews said, "Easily one of the best films of the year, and
one of the best westerns in a long, long time". Gene Siskel of the
Chicago Tribune said, "This year (1985) will go down in film history as
the moment Clint Eastwood finally earned respect as an artist".
In
1986, Eastwood starred in the military drama Heartbreak Ridge, about
the 1983 U.S. invasion of Grenada, West Indies, with a portion of the
movie filmed on the island itself. It co-starred Marsha Mason. However,
the title comes from the Battle of Heartbreak Ridge in the Korean War,
based around Eastwood's charatcer of Tom Highway, an ageing United
States Marine Gunnery Sergeant and Korean War veteran, who was awarded
the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions there. Eastwood incorporated
more scenes of action and comedy into the film than was initially
intended by the original drafter, James Carabatsos, and worked hard with
Megan Rose to revise it Eastwood and producer Fritz Manes meanwhile,
intent on making the film realistic, visited the Pentagon and various
air bases to request assistance and approval. The U.S. army refused to
help, due to Highway being portrayed as a hard drinker, divorced from
his wife, and using unapproved motivational methods to his troops, an
image the army did not want. They informed the production team that the
characterisation lacked credibility and that Eastwood's character was an
outdated stereotype and that he was too old for the role. They instead
approached the United States Marine Corps, and Lieutenant Colonel Fred
Peck was hired as a spokesman for the military during filming and to
guide Eastwood's team to making the characters and scenes more
realistic. The production and filming of Heartbreak Ridge was marred by
internal disagreements, between Eastwood and long term friend Fritz
Manes who was producing it and between Eastwood and the DOD who
expressed contempt at the film.[ During the film, Peck came to head with
Eastwood over a scene involving Eastwood offering a drink in a flask to
the Sergeant Major; Peck stood his ground and insisted this scene was
laughable. Eastwood eventually relented but the relationship between the
producers continued to sour. Within months, Manes was fired and
Eastwood had rid of his best friend and producing partner, replacing him
with David Valdes. The film released in 1470 theatres, grossing a very
respectable $70 million domestically.
Eastwood's
fifth and final Dirty Harry film, The Dead Pool was released in 1988.
It co-starred Liam Neeson, Patricia Clarkson, and a young Jim Carrey.
The Dead Pool, grossed $37,903,295, relatively low takings for a Dirty
Harry film and was generally panned by critics. Eastwood began working
on smaller, more personal projects, marking a serious lull in his career
between 1988 and 1992. He directed Bird (1988), a biopic starring
Forest Whitaker as jazz musician Charlie "Bird" Parker, a genre of music
that Eastwood has always been personally interested in. Filming
commenced in late 1987 and was shot in the old districts of Los Angeles,
Pasadena and the Sacremento Valley, with additional New York City
scenes shot in Burbank. Bird was screened at Cannes and received a mixed
reception. Spike Lee, a long term critic of Eastwood, the son of jazz
bassist Bill Lee, and alto saxophonist Jackie McLean criticized the
characterisation of Charlie Parker, remarking that it did not capture
his true essence and sense of humor. Critic Pauline Kael published a
scathing review, confessing to loathing the film and describing it as "a
rat's nest of a movie", which looks as if Clint "hadn't paid his Con Ed
Bill". Others, particularly jazz enthusiasts, however, praised the
music of the film and Eastwood received two Golden Globes—the Cecil B.
DeMille Award for his lifelong contribution and the Best Director award
for Bird, which also earned him a Golden Palm nomination at the Cannes
Film Festival. The film was not a major commercial success. earning just
$11 million. Eastwood, who claimed he would have done the film
biography even if the script was no good, was disappointed with the
commercial reception of the film, later saying that, "We just didn't
seem to have enough people in America who wanted to see the story of a
black man who in the end betrays his genius. And we didn't get the
support through black audiences that I'd hoped for. They really aren't
into jazz now, you know. It's all this rap stuff. There aren't enough
whites who are. either...".
Carrey
would later appear with Eastwood in the poorly received comedy Pink
Cadillac (1989) alongside Bernadette Peters. The film is about a bounty
hunter and a group of white supremacists chasing after an innocent woman
who tries to outrun everyone in her husband's prized pink Cadillac.
Pink Cadillac was shot in the fall of 1988 in the Rising River Ranch
area and Sacramento. The film was a disaster, both critically and
commercially, earning just $12,143,484 and marking the lowest point in
Eastwood's career in years, causing concern at Warners that Clint had
peaked and was now faltering at the box office after three unsuccessful
films. Pink Cadillac recevied poor reviews. Caryn James wrote: "When
it's time to look back on the strange sweep of Clint Eastwood's career,
from his ambitious direction of Bird to his coarse, classic Dirty Harry
character, Pink Cadillac will probably settle comfortably near the
bottom of the list. It is the laziest sort of action comedy, with
lumbering chase scenes, a dull-witted script and the charmless pairing
of Mr. Eastwood and Bernadette Peters." (New York Times, May 26, 1989.)
1990s
Clint Eastwood at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival.
In
1990 he starred as a character closely based on the legendary
film-maker John Huston in White Hunter Black Heart, an adaptation of
Peter Viertel's roman à clef about the making of the classic The African
Queen. The film was shot on location in Zimbabwe in the summer of 1989,
although some interiors were shot in and around Pinewood Studios in
England. The small steamboat they used in the whitewater scene is the
same boat Humphrey Bogart's character captained in The African Queen
(1951). The film was closely based on the novel, although the ending was
changed to the killing of an elephant, even though in Huston's memoirs
An Open Book (1980) he had claimed to never have killed an elephant in
his life and believed it was "a sin". It received some critical
attention but only had a limited release, earning just $8.4 million.
Later
in 1990, Eastwood directed and co-starred with Charlie Sheen in The
Rookie, a buddy cop action film. Raúl Juliá and Sônia Braga play German
villains engaged in an illegal luxury car theft operation. The film,
shot in San Jose, California, features an unconventional female-on-male
rape scene. Critics were unconvinced with the macho jiving between
Eastwood and Sheen and improbable scenario, and believed that many of
the actors were miscast. Vincent Canby of The New York Times described
the film as "astonishingly empty" whilst Glenn Lovell of the San Jose
Mercury News strongly criticised what he called "blatant racial
stereotyping", from the Hispanic car thieves, the Puerto Rican with a
comic German accent to his Brazilian sex kitten bodyguard. Released in
December of that year, the film was a commercial success and earned a
reasonable $43 million at the box office in the United States.
Eastwood in Unforgiven which won him his first Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director
Eastwood
rose to prominence yet again in the early 1990s, rising above the lull
in his career he had been experiencing for years, proving another
benchmark in his career. In 1992, he revisited the western genre in the
self-directed film, Unforgiven, taking on the role of an aging
ex-gunfighter long past his prime. The film, also starring such esteemed
actors as Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman, and Richard Harris, laid the
groundwork for such later westerns as Deadwood by re-envisioning
established genre conventions in a more ambiguous and unromantic light. A
great success both in terms of box office and critical acclaim, it was
nominated for nine Academy Awards, including Best Actor for Eastwood and
Best Original Screenplay for David Webb Peoples. It won four, including
Best Picture and Best Director for Eastwood. As of 2009, Unforgiven is
the last western film that Eastwood has made.
In
1993, Eastwood played Frank Horrigan, a guilt-ridden Secret Service
agent in the thriller In the Line of Fire, co-starring John Malkovich
and Rene Russo and directed by Wolfgang Petersen. As of 2009, it is his
last acting role in a film he did not direct himself. This film was a
blockbuster and among the top 10 box-office performers in that year.
Later in 1993, Eastwood directed and co-starred with Kevin Costner in A
Perfect World. It grossed $31 million in box office receipts in the
United States with overseas gross at $101 million, making it a financial
success. The film received largely positive reviews, with an 85% score
on Rotten Tomatoes. In the years since its release, the film has been
acclaimed by critics as one of Eastwood's most underrated directorial
achievements. Cahiers du cinéma selected A Perfect World as the best
film of 1993.
Eastwood
continued to expand his repertoire by playing opposite Meryl Streep in
the love story The Bridges of Madison County (1995). Based on a
best-selling novel, it was also a hit at the box-office and grossed $70
million in the United States. The film surprised film critics and was
warmly received. Janet Maslin of the New York Times wrote that Clint had
managed to create "a moving, elegiac love story at the heart of Mr.
Waller's self-congratulatory overkill", whilst Joe Morgenstern of the
Wall Street Journal described The Bridges of Madison County as "one of
the most pleasurable films in recent memory".
Eastwood
directed and starred in the well-received political thriller Absolute
Power. The film's ensemble cast featured Gene Hackman, Ed Harris, Laura
Linney, Scott Glenn, Dennis Haysbert, Judy Davis, and E. G. Marshall.
Eastwood played a veteran thief who witnesses the Secret Service cover
up a murder the President was responsible for.
Eastwood
directed Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, which starred John
Cusack, Kevin Spacey and Jude Law. In 1999, Eastwood directed True
Crime. Clint Eastwood plays Steve Everett, a journalist recovering from
alcoholism, given the task of covering the execution of murderer Frank
Beechum (played by Isaiah Washington). Everett discovers that Beechum
might be innocent, but has only a few hours to prove his theory and save
Beechum's life. The film was a large box-office bomb domestically. It
had an opening weekend gross of $5,276,109 in the US and grossed
$16,649,768 total in the US, out of a budget of $55 million. It received
mixed reactions from critics, with a score of 51% on Rotten Tomatoes.
2000s
In
2000, Eastwood directed and starred in Space Cowboys, which also
starred Tommy Lee Jones, Donald Sutherland, and James Garner. In the
film, he plays Frank Corvin, a retired NASA engineer called upon to save
a dying Russian satellite. Space Cowboys was one of the year's
commercial hits and was generally well-received and holds a 79% rating
at Rotten Tomatoes. The film received a moderately favorable review from
Roger Ebert who remarked, “it's too secure within its traditional story
structure to make much seem at risk—but with the structure come the
traditional pleasures as well... Eastwood as director is as sure-handed
as his mentors, Don Siegel and Sergio Leone. We leave the theater with
grave doubts that the scene depicted in the final feel-good shot is even
remotely possible, but what the hell; it makes us smile.”
In
2002, Eastwood played an ex-FBI agent on the track of a sadistic killer
(Jeff Daniels) in the thriller Blood Work, which was derived from a
book by Michael Connelly. Blood Work is loosely based on the 1998 novel
by the same name from Edgar Award-winning writer Michael Connelly. The
film was a failure, grossing just $26.2 million on an estimated budget
of $50 million and received mixed reviews, with many reviews believing
it well-made but marred by lethargic pacing. A. O. Scott of The New York
Times believed that the film was unoriginal and was too similar to many
other of Clint Eastwood's films, although commented that, "there is
something comforting in seeing this old warhorse trot gamely out of the
gate for yet another run on familiar turf." Despite the lack lustre
performance at the box office and mixed reception, Eastwood won the
Future Film Festival Digital Award at the Venice Film Festival.
“The
key ingredient in this film (Mystic River) is Clint Eastwood. Clint is a
true artist in every respect. Despite his years of being at the top of
his game and the legendary movies he has made, he always made us feel
comfortable and valued on the set, treating us as collaborators and
equals. We never got the feeling that he believed in his legend or asked
us to honor it, although we did. It was a really great experience.
There was never any kind of pettiness on his set; no screaming or stupid
emotional displays from anybody, a very professional, adult
environment. There is nothing condescending about the man or his crew
and it invigorates you, making you feel like you did when you made your
first movie.”
Tim Robbins on working with Clint Eastwood.
In
2003, Eastwood and Warner Bros. purchased the film rights to James R.
Hansen's First Man: The Life of Neil A. Armstrong, the authorized
biography of astronaut Neil Armstrong. However, no production date was
announced and the film has still not been made. Next, Eastwood directed
the crime drama Mystic River, a film about murder, vigilantism, and
sexual abuse. The film was written by Brian Helgeland, based on the
novel by Dennis Lehane and featured Sean Penn, Kevin Bacon, Tim Robbins
and Laurence Fishburne. It was shot on location in Boston,
Massachusetts. Mystic River was received well by critics as well as
viewers. The film won two Academy Awards, Best Actor for Sean Penn and
Best Supporting Actor for Tim Robbins, as well as nominations for Best
Director and Best Picture. The film has an 88% approval rating based on
190 reviews from critics at the review aggregator website Rotten
Tomatoes, and an even higher rating of 95% from its "Top Critics". The
film grossed $90,135,19 domestically on a budget of $30 million.
In
2005, Eastwood found critical and commercial success when he directed,
produced, scored, and starred in the boxing drama Million Dollar Baby.
Eastwood played a cantankerous trainer who forms a bond with the female
boxer (Hilary Swank) he reluctantly trains after being persuaded by his
lifelong friend (Morgan Freeman). The film ends in assisted suicide. The
film won four Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress
(Swank), and Best Supporting Actor (Freeman). Eastwood, also received a
nomination for Best Actor, and the trio was nominated for the Screen
Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion
Picture. Eastwood also received a Grammy nomination for the score he
composed for the film. Million Dollar Baby was in theaters from late
January to early June 2005, grossed more than $216 million at the box
office and was his highest-grossing film at the time.
In
2006, Eastwood directed two films about the battle of Iwo Jima in World
War II. The first one, Flags of Our Fathers, focused on the men who
raised the American flag on top of Mount Suribachi. The second one,
Letters from Iwo Jima, dealt with the tactics of the Japanese soldiers
on the island and the letters they wrote to family members. Letters from
Iwo Jima was the first American film to show a war issue completely
from the view of an American enemy. Both films were highly praised by
critics and garnered several Oscar nominations, including Best Director
and Best Picture for Letters from Iwo Jima.
Eastwood with Angelina Jolie at a Changeling screening in 2008
Beginning
in 2007, production began on Eastwood's next film, Changeling, based on
a true story starring Angelina Jolie. After releasing in several film
festivals in 2008, the film grossed over $110 million, the majority of
which came from foreign markets. Later that year, he ended his
"self-imposed acting hiatus" with Gran Torino. Eastwood directed,
starred, held a producer role, and co-wrote the theme song for the film.
Biographer Marc Eliot called Eastwood's role "an amalgam of the Man
with No Name, Dirty Harry, and William Munny, here aged and cynical but
willing and able to fight on whenever the need arose." It grossed close
to $30 million during its wide-release opening weekend in January 2009,
making Eastwood, at age 78, the oldest leading man to reach number one
at the box office. Gran Torino grossed over $268 million worldwide in
theaters and is the highest-grossing film of Eastwood's career so far
without adjustment for inflation. Andrew Sarris of the New York Observer
stated that Eastwood "... caps his career as both a director and an
actor with his portrayal of a heroically redeemed bigot of such humanity
and luminosity as to exhaust my supply of superlatives." Eastwood has
said that the role will most likely be the last time he acts in a film.
In
2009, Eastwood directed Invictus, with Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela
and Matt Damon as rugby team captain François Pienaar. Carlin sold the
film rights to Morgan Freeman.
2010s
Hereafter
is a forthcoming thriller film directed by Eastwood from a screenplay
by Peter Morgan. It stars Matt Damon as "a reluctant psychic", and
co-stars Cécile de France, and Lyndsey Marshal. Filming commenced in
France on October 19, 2009, and in the first week of November,
production moved to London, England for three weeks of filming in
locations including Bermondsey and in Walworth, including the Heygate
Estate. Filming resumed on January 12, 2010; Eastwood filmed scenes with
de France for three days on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Production
next moved to the San Francisco Bay Area. On January 19, scenes
featuring Damon were shot at the California and Hawaiian Sugar Company
refinery in Crockett, California, which represents a flour mill on
screen. Production returns to London on January 29 to shoot the final
scenes with Damon. Variety has described the script as a thriller "in
the vein of The Sixth Sense."Peter Morgan told The Hollywood Reporter,
"It's quite spiritual material, and quite romantic, too. It's the sort
of piece that's not easy to describe and in the hands of different
filmmakers could end up as wildly different films. Quite unlike some of
my other material, which I think there were only certain ways that you
could shoot it."
In
early 2007, Eastwood announced that he will produce a Bruce Ricker
documentary about jazz legend Dave Brubeck. The film is tentatively
titled Dave Brubeck – In His Own Sweet Way. It will trace the
development of Brubeck's latest composition, the Cannery Row Suite. This
work was commissioned by the Monterey Jazz Festival and premiered at
the 2006 festival. Eastwood's film crews captured early rehearsals,
sound checks, and the final performance. Ricker and Eastwood are
currently working on a documentary about Tony Bennett, as well, titled
The Music Never Ends.
Politics
Political views
Eastwood with President Ronald Reagan in the late 1980s.
Eastwood
registered as a Republican in order to vote for Dwight D. Eisenhower in
1952 and he supported Richard Nixon's 1968 and 1972 presidential
campaigns, but later criticized Nixon's handling of the Vietnam War and
morality during Watergate (see the February 1974 edition of Playboy). He
usually describes himself as a libertarian in interviews, fiscally
conservative yet socially liberal. At times, he has supported Democrats
in California, such as the liberal and environmentally-concerned
Representative Sam Farr in 2002. Indeed, Eastwood contributed $1,000 to
Farr's successful re-election campaign that year and on May 23, 2003,
the iconic actor-director hosted a $5,000-per-ticket fundraiser for
California's Democratic governor, Gray Davis. Later that year, Eastwood
offered to film a commercial in support of the embattled governor, while
in 2001, the star visited Davis' office to support an alternative
energy bill written by another Democrat, California State Assemblyman
Fred Keeley.
In
general, Eastwood has favored less governmental interference in both
the private economy and the private lives of individuals. He has
disapproved of a reliance on welfare, instead feeling that government
should help citizens make something of themselves via education and
incentive. He has, however, approved of unemployment insurance,
bail-outs for homeowners saddled with unaffordable mortgages, a
continued American automobile industry, electric and hybrid cars, free
prescription drugs, government-ordained educational standards,
environmental conservation, land preservation, alternative energy, and
moderate gun control measures such as California's Brady Bill. A
longtime liberal on civil rights, Eastwood has stated that he has always
been pro-choice on abortion (see the March 1997 edition of Playboy). He
has also endorsed the notion of allowing gays to marry, just as he had
once contributed to groups supporting the Equal Rights Amendment for
women. Eastwood disapproved of America's wars in Korea (1950–1953),
Vietnam (1964–1973), and Iraq (2003–present), believing that the U.S.
should not be overly militaristic or playing the role of global
policeman. In all, he considers himself too individualistic to be either
right-wing or left-wing, having sometimes described himself as a
"political nothing" and a "moderate" (see the February 1974 edition of
Playboy). Eastwood has also stated that he doesn't see himself as
conservative, but that he isn't "ultra-leftist," either.
During
the 2008 United States Presidential Election, Eastwood endorsed John
McCain for President, citing the fact that he had known McCain since
1973. Although sympathetic towards her bid for the presidency, Eastwood
expressed disappointment with Hillary Clinton for engaging in a
duck-hunting photo op, saying, "I was thinking: 'The poor duck, what the
hell did she do that for?' I don't go for hunting. I just don't like
killing creatures. Unless they're trying to kill me. Then that would be
fine." Upon the election of Barack Obama, Eastwood stated "Obama is my
president now and I am going to be wishing him the very best because it
is what is best for all of us."
Mayor of Carmel
Eastwood
made one successful foray into elected politics, becoming the mayor of
Carmel-by-the-Sea, California (population 4,000), a wealthy small town
and artist community on the Monterey Peninsula, for one term in April
1986. Upon being elected, he was called by President Ronald Reagan
asking "What's an actor who once appeared with a monkey in a movie doing
in politics?", referring to Eastwood's role in Any Which Way But Loose
and Reagan's Bedtime for Bonzo. During Eastwood's tenure, he completed
Heartbreak Ridge and Bird.
California State Park and Recreation Commission
In
2001, he was appointed to the California State Park and Recreation
Commission by Democratic Governor Gray Davis. He was reappointed in 2004
by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, whom he supported in the elections
of 2003 and 2006 (although Eastwood disapproved of the recall of Davis
in 2003). Soon afterwards Governor Schwarzenegger announced a proposal
to close 80 percent of California State Parks.
Eastwood,
the vice chairman of the commission, and commission chairman, Bobby
Shriver, Schwarzenegger's brother-in-law, led a California State Park
and Recreation Commission panel in its unanimous opposition in 2005 to a
six-lane, 16-mile (26 km), toll road that would cut through San Onofre
State Beach, north of San Diego, and one of Southern California's most
cherished surfing beaches. Eastwood and Shriver also supported a 2006
lawsuit to block the toll road and urged the California Coastal
Commission to reject the project, which it did in February 2008.
Take Pride in America Spokesman Eastwood in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California
In
March 2008, Eastwood and Shriver, whose terms had expired, were not
reappointed. The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) asked for a
legislative investigation into the decision to not re-appoint Eastwood
and Shriver, citing their opposition to the toll road extension.
According to the NRDC and The New Republic, Eastwood and Shriver were
not reappointed again in 2008 because both Eastwood and Shriver opposed
the freeway extension of California State Route 241, that would cut
through the San Onofre State Beach. This extension is likewise supported
by Governor Schwarzenegger.Schwarzenegger's press release appointing
Alice Huffman and Lindy DeKoven to replace Eastwood and Shriver makes no
mention of a reason for the commission change.
Governor
Schwarzenegger appointed Eastwood (along with actor and director Danny
DeVito, actor and director Bill Duke, producer Tom Werner and producer
and director Lili Zanuck) to the California Film Commission in April
2004.
Personal life
Relationships
Eastwood
told biographer Richard Schickel that he lost his virginity at age 14.
He has fathered at least seven children by five different women and has
been described as a "serial womanizer". Biographer Patrick McGilligan
claims Eastwood also fathered a child who was given up for adoption in
1953, then tracked him down 40 years later and had an awkward dinner
meeting with him. Eastwood has admitted to fathering two children who
were aborted (with Sondra Locke, who later said it was a "mutual
decision"), and biographer Patrick McGilligan claims that there have
been at least two others, including one by swimming champion Anita
Lhoest that Eastwood was unaware of in the early 1950s, and another by
Jane Brolin, the ex-wife of actor James Brolin, at some point during
Eastwood's marriage to Maggie Johnson.According to McGilligan and
biographer Marc Eliot, Eastwood always had a strong sexual appetite and
had affairs with tens of women through the years. These include one with
French actress Catherine Deneuve, while in Paris in the mid 1960s, as
well as co-stars Inger Stevens (Hang 'Em High), Jean Seberg (Paint Your
Wagon), Jo Ann Harris (The Beguiled), actresses Peggy Lipton, Kay Lenz,
Jamie Rose, and Rebecca Pearle. He also reportedly dated actresses Dani
Crayne and Barbra Streisand, and had an affair with script analyst Megan
Rose that lasted five years. Biographer Patrick McGilligan and friend
Paul Lippman have claimed that Eastwood was particularly sexually active
and promiscuous in the 1970s and that he used his apartment close to
the Hog's Breath Inn which he purchased in Carmel in the early 1970s to
meet young ladies for "nooners" and "five in the afternooners".
According to Lippman, "Eastwood seemed to get a bang out of this kinkier
side to himself and rarely concealed it, often gloated about it".
Maggie Johnson
Eastwood
married swimsuit model Maggie Johnson on December 19, 1953, six months
after they met on a blind date. Eastwood originally did not want to have
children with his wife, then she became ill with hepatitis. After she
recovered, he changed his mind, and Johnson became pregnant after
fourteen years of marriage. They had two children: Kyle Eastwood (born
May 19, 1968) and Alison Eastwood (born May 22, 1972). They separated
around 1975, but Johnson did not take any legal action until 1978, when
she filed for a legal separation. Eastwood was ordered to pay her $25
million ($1 million for each year they were married). Their divorce,
however, was not finalized until May 1984.
Roxanne Tunis
During
his marriage to Johnson, Eastwood had an affair with Roxanne Tunis, who
was an extra on Rawhide during the late 1950s and early 1960s. They had
a daughter, Kimber, born on June 17, 1964. Over the years, Eastwood
financially supported Tunis and their daughter, and would secretly visit
them every three to four months, according to Kimber. In 1983 she
changed her name from Kimber Tunis to Kimber Eastwood, married gardener
Anthony Gaddie, and gave birth to Eastwood's grandson, Clinton, on
February 21, 1984. The existence of Eastwood's secret offspring was
unknown to the public and even Eastwood's family until reported by the
National Enquirer in 1989. Since then Kimber has had a small role in her
father's film Absolute Power.
Sondra Locke
Eastwood and Sondra Locke in their 1977 film The Gauntlet
Eastwood
had a fourteen-year relationship with actress Sondra Locke, whom he met
in 1972, and co-starred in six films: The Outlaw Josey Wales, The
Gauntlet, Every Which Way but Loose, Bronco Billy, Any Which Way You
Can, and Sudden Impact. Locke became pregnant by Eastwood twice, and had
two abortions and a tubal ligation. Their relationship ended
acrimoniously in 1989. She filed a palimony suit against Eastwood, and
the litigation continued for a decade, with Locke suing him a second
time for fraud. Locke and Eastwood finally resolved the dispute with a
non-public settlement in 1999. She published a memoir, The Good, the
Bad, and the Very Ugly, which includes a harrowing account of their
years together.
Jacelyn Reeves
During
his cohabitation with Locke, Eastwood also had an affair with flight
attendant Jacklyn Reeves, with whom he had a son, Scott (b. March 21,
1986), and a daughter, Kathryn (b. February 1988). The fact that Scott
and Kathryn Reeves were the actor's children was not publicly known
until a Carmel reporter revealed the information years after the they
were born. Since then, the son (now known as Scott Eastwood) has become
an actor.
Frances Fisher
Upon
breaking up with Locke, Eastwood moved in with Frances Fisher, whom he
met in 1988 while filming Pink Cadillac. They appeared together in
Unforgiven, and had a daughter, Francesca Fisher-Eastwood, born on
August 7, 1993. According to biographers, the relationship soured once
Fisher became aware of Eastwood's multiple previous lovers and
illegitimate children. According to biographers, Fisher confronted
Eastwood about this when she found a birthday card in the mail from
Scott and Kathryn Reeves. Fisher moved out of their shared home in 1995
but remains friendly with Eastwood and later appeared with him and their
daughter Francesca in True Crime.
Dina Ruiz
Eastwood with wife Dina in 2007
After
initially meeting in an interview in 1993, Eastwood married anchorwoman
Dina Ruiz on March 31, 1996, in Las Vegas when Eastwood surprised her
with a private ceremony at a home on the Shadow Creek Golf Course. She
is 35 years his junior. The couple's daughter, Morgan Eastwood, was born
on December 12, 1996. Ruiz commented "The fact that I am only the
second woman he has married really touches me." Eastwood says that she
has brought his family close together, and Ruiz maintains a friendly
relationship with Eastwood's other children and their mothers.
Speaking in 2008 of his fatherhood in his late 70s, Eastwood said:
"I'm
a much better father now than when I was younger because then I was
working all around the world and I was desperate to find the brass ring,
so I worked constantly. Now my daughter takes precedence over
everything and, even though I've done a lot of work in the past year, I
haven't ignored her and have been involved in her school activities. I
go to all the softball games and look ridiculous out there because
almost everybody's got a much younger father than she does. But it's
fun. I think you appreciate everything a lot more when you get to my
age. I never started out thinking I would have a big family. But now,
it's very important to me, and family relationships take precedence over
work."
Music
Eastwood,
an audiophile, has had a strong passion for music since a young age,
particularly a love of jazz, and he also is also a country and western
enthusiast. He dabbled in music early on and in late 1959 had produced
the album Cowboy Favorites which was released on the Cameo label. The
album included some classics such as Bob Wills's San Antonio Rose and
Cole Porter's Don't Fence Me In and despite his attempts to plug the
album by going on a tour, it never reached the Billboard Hot 100. Later
in 1963, Cameo producer Kal Mann would bluntly tell him that "he would
never make it big as a singer".Neverless, during the off season of
filming Rawhide, Eastwood and Brinegar, sometimes joined by Sheb Wooley
would go on touring rodeos, state fairs and festivals and in 1962 their
act entitled Amusement Business Cavalcade of Fairs earned them as much
as $15,000 a performance. Eastwood has his own Warner Bros.
Records-distributed imprint, Malpaso Records, as part of his deal with
Warner Bros. This deal was unchanged when Warner Music Group was sold by
Time Warner to private investors. Malpaso has released all of the
scores of Eastwood's films from The Bridges of Madison County onward. It
also released the album of a 1996 jazz concert he hosted, titled
Eastwood after Hours — Live at Carnegie Hall. Eastwood also owns an
extensive collection of LPs which he plays on a Rockport turntable. His
interest in music was passed on to his son Kyle, now a jazz musician.
Eastwood co-wrote "Why Should I Care" with Linda Thompson and Carole
Bayer Sager which was recorded by Diana Krall.
Leisure
The Hog's Breath Inn in Carmel, once owned for many years by Eastwood
Eastwood,
a life-long non-smoker, has been conscious of his health and fitness
since he was a teenager, and has kept in excellent physical shape and
practiced healthy eating ever since. As he made a name for himself
during the production of Rawhide, Eastwood would frequently feature in
magazines and journals, which often documented his healthy lifestyle. In
the August 1959 edition of TV Guide, for example, Eastwood was
photographed doing push-ups and gave tips on fitness and nutrition,
telling people to eat plenty of fruit, raw vegetables and vitamins and
to avoid sugar-loaded beverages and excess alcohol drinking and
overloading on carbohydrates.
On
July 21, 1970, Eastwood's father died of a heart attack, unexpectedly
at the age of 64. It came as a shock to Eastwood as his grandfather had
lived to 92 and had a profound impact on Eastwood's life, described by
Fritz Manes as "the only bad thing that ever happened to him in his
life". From this moment he became viewed as more productive, working
with a greater sense of urgency, speed and efficiency on set to this
day. Although Eastwood had always been a health and fitness enthusiast,
he became increasingly more so after his father's death, abstaining from
hard liquor, adopting a more rigorous health regime and seeking to stay
fit. However, he still favored cold beer and opened a pub called the
Hog Breath's Inn in Carmel-by-the-Sea in 1971. Eastwood eventually sold
the pub and now owns the Mission Ranch Hotel and Restaurant, also
located in Carmel-by-the-Sea.
In
1975, Eastwood publicly proclaimed his participation in Transcendental
Meditation when he appeared on The Merv Griffin Show with the founder of
Transcendental Meditation, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. He has practiced
meditation daily for years, every morning, to prepare for the day ahead.
Eastwood
owns the exclusive Tehàma Golf Club, located in Carmel-by-the-Sea. The
private club reportedly has around 300 members and a joining price of
$500,000. He is also an investor of the world-famous Pebble Beach Golf
Links. He loves to play golf and donates his time every year to
charitable causes at major tournaments. Eastwood is also an experienced
pilot and sometimes flies his own helicopter to the studio to avoid
traffic.
Awards and honors
Academy Awards
Year Award Film y/n
1992 Best Director Unforgiven Won
Best Picture Unforgiven Won
Best Actor Unforgiven Nominated
1994 Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award Won
2003 Best Director Mystic River Nominated
Best Picture Mystic River Nominated
2004 Best Director Million Dollar Baby Won
Best Picture Million Dollar Baby Won
Best Actor Million Dollar Baby Nominated
2006 Best Director Letters from Iwo Jima Nominated
Best Picture Letters from Iwo Jima Nominated
On
August 22, 1984 he was honored at a ceremony at Grauman's Chinese
theater to record his hand and footprints in cement. Eastwood received
the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1996 and received an honorary degree
from AFI in 2009. Eastwood is one of only two people to have been twice
nominated for Best Actor and Best Director for the same film (Unforgiven
and Million Dollar Baby) the other being Warren Beatty (Heaven Can Wait
and Reds). Along with Beatty, Robert Redford, Richard Attenborough,
Kevin Costner, and Mel Gibson, he is one of the few directors best known
as an actor to win an Academy Award for directing. On February 27,
2005, at age 74, he became one of only three living directors (along
with Miloš Forman and Francis Ford Coppola) to have directed two Best
Picture winners. He is also, at age 74, the oldest recipient of the
Academy Award for Best Director. Eastwood has also directed five actors
in Academy Award–winning performances: Gene Hackman in Unforgiven, Tim
Robbins & Sean Penn in Mystic River, and Morgan Freeman and Hilary
Swank in Million Dollar Baby.
Eastwood
has received numerous other awards, including an America Now TV Award
as well as one of the 2000 Kennedy Center Honors. He received an
honorary degree from University of the Pacific in 2006, and an honorary
degree from University of Southern California in 2007. In 1995 he
received the honorary Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award for lifetime
achievement in film producing. In 2006, he received a nomination for a
Grammy Award in the category of Best Score Soundtrack Album For Motion
Picture, Television or Other Visual Media for Million Dollar Baby. In
2007, Eastwood was the first recipient of the Jack Valenti Humanitarian
Award, an annual award presented by the MPAA to individuals in the
motion picture industry whose work has reached out positively and
respectfully to the world. He received the award for his work on the
2006 films Flags of Our Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima.
On
December 6, 2006, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First
Lady Maria Shriver inducted Eastwood into the California Hall of Fame
located at The California Museum for History, Women, and the Arts. In
early 2007, Eastwood was presented with the highest civilian distinction
in France, Légion d'honneur, at a ceremony in Paris. French President
Jacques Chirac told Eastwood that he embodied "the best of Hollywood".
On
September 22, 2007, Eastwood was awarded an honorary Doctor of Music
degree from the Berklee College of Music at the Monterey Jazz Festival,
on which he serves as an active board member. Upon receiving the award
he gave a speech, claiming, "It's one of the great honors I’ll cherish
in this lifetime." He was also honored with the "Cinema for Peace Award
2007 for Most Valuable Movie of the Year" for "Flags of Our Fathers" and
"Letters from Iwo Jima". Eastwood received the 2008 Best Actor award
from the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures for his performance
in Gran Torino. On April 29, 2009, the Japanese government announced
that Eastwood was to receive the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with
Neck Ribbon, which represents the third highest of eight classes
associated with this award. On November 13, 2009, Clint Eastwood was
made French Legion of Honor Commander, which represents the third
highest of five classes associated with this award. He was previously
made French Legion of Honor Knight in 2007.
No comments:
Post a Comment