Wednesday, September 11, 2013

ETHAN HAWKE ARTICLE IN REVERE MAGAZINE

Unfortunately Revere Magazine has been having trouble with their website so the only way to view my "official" articles is to download the Revere Magazine app through the iTunes store, Google Play for Android, or the Kindle store. Please download the app! It looks so much better! But for those of you who don't I've simply copied and pasted the text for your enjoyment.


It has already been a busy summer so far for Ethan Hawke. The guy the everyday movie-goer may simply know as Officer Hoyt, that dude who played opposite of Denzel in 2001’s Training Day, has put out two films: Before Midnight, Richard Linklater’s “Before” trilogy capping entry, and The Purge, a look into what a government sanctioned annual 12 hour no laws/anything-goes period would entail, in May and June respectively. Although Hawke consistently puts out a couple films a year on average the box office may tell the tale why Hawke isn’t a bigger name in Hollywood.

The usually vulnerable but strong playing Hawke has been in the biz going on 25 years now and currently has never had a film gross $100 million domestically and has only had two films hit that mark worldwide, the aforementioned Training Day and Dead Poets Society, considered Hawke’s breakout performance, with Robin Williams in 1989. Other than sitting shotgun with Alonzo, Hawke’s career has spanned a large spectrum of roles and different hats, including; directing, screenwriting, stage acting, and being a published novelist.

Raised solely by his mother after his parents were separated four years following his birth, Hawke grew up primarily in New York. He attended the Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn Heights, where he grew an affinity for the arts and had hopes of becoming a writer. During this time Hawke also developed an interest for acting and made his stage debut in a school production of Saint Joan at the age of 13. It was in 1985, at 14 years old, Hawke scored his first major film role in Explorers with River Phoenix. Although the film was successful critically it flopped at the box office and the disappointment was enough to cause Hawke to take a break from acting.

Hawke transferred another prep school, the Hun School of Princeton, to finish his pre-college education. While at Hun Hawke took acting classes on the Princeton campus before ultimately studying acting at Carnegie Mellon University. Only a year into college Hawke was cast in Dead Poets Society. Due to the film’s success and the acting opportunities he was presented with afterwards, Hawke decided to drop out of school to pursue acting full time.

Over the next half dozen years or so Hawke was given the opportunity to display his talents in an array of pictures. There was 1991’s White Fang, 1992’s Midnight Clear, Alive in 1993, and ultimately 1994’s Reality Bites opposite Winona Ryder, which gave Hawke widespread critical acclaim from the likes of Roger Ebert. The acting prowess Hawke displayed in his earlier pictures caught the eye of director Richard Linklater who decided to cast him in the 1995 drama Before Sunrise (the first of Linklater’s “Before” trilogy). Hawke again received critical acclaim for his portrayal of a young American’s chance meeting with a French woman on a train, and a night getting to know each other in Vienna.

Although the praise continued to pour in for his many touted roles in the first half of the 90s, Hawke decided to take a short hiatus from acting to publish his first novel The Hottest State in 1996. The story was that of a love affair between a young actor and a singer, and saw Hawke draw from his personal experiences to pen the effort. The novel received mixed reviews and shortly after its release Hawke returned to acting.
1997 brought Hawke back to the big screen with Andrew Niccol’s (Lord of War, In Time) Gattaca. Another film considered a box office failure, making less in sales than its budget, the sci-fi thriller received favorable reviews and has since garnered somewhat of a cult following and high levels of syndication viewing on cable television. The film also introduced Hawke to his onetime wife Uma Thurman (1998-2004) with whom he has two children. Snow Falling on Cedars was released in 1999 and provided Hawke with one of his few less than stellar acting reviews in his career.

In 2001 Hawke reunited with Before Sunrise director Linklater to release Waking Life and Tape, both huge critical successes that again brought in small box offices. Later that year came Training Day, the role that, for most critics and fans alike, is the career defining role for Hawke. Hawke used the vehicle to show more tenacity and proved he could stand with the likes of a Denzel, turning in a brutally honest and believable performance. One that even Hawke has said is his most rewarding of his time in Hollywood.

After the success of Training Day, Hawke again took a “mini-break” from screen acting to make his directorial debut with Chelsea Walls in 2002 and also published his second novel Ash Wednesday that same year. Much like his first novel Hawke’s first directing effort was a mixed bag critically and financially unsuccessful. Ash Wednesday however was met with better reviews and even landed on the New York Times’ best seller list for hardcover fiction.

Hawke has since been cast in a multitude of fairly critically successful films albeit ones that haven’t fared well at the box office; Assault on Precinct 13 (2005), Lord of War (2005), Fast Food Nation (2006), Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead (2007), What Doesn’t Kill You (2008), Daybreakers (2010), The Woman in the Fifth (2012), and Sinister (2012). Hawke has stated on multiple occasions he prefers to do smaller films with more creative integrity if possible. Giving him the freedom to play characters the way the he and the creative teams see best fit.

Throughout his career Hawke hasn’t forgotten what originally got him into acting, the stage. Paralleling his film career Hawke has made time to appear in plenty of theatre plays; The Seagull (1992, his Broadway debut), Buried Child (1995), Camino Real (1999), Hurlyburly (2005), Coast of Utopia (2006, earned him a Tony Award nomination), The Cherry Orchard (2009), Winter’s Tale (2009), Ivanov (2012) are just a handful of productions Hawke has been a part of.

Next on the docket for Hawke is The Getaway with Selena Gomez slated to be released late summer or early fall of this year. Although there’s no telling if or when Hawke will have another Training Day in his career we can count on seeing solid performances from him in an array of films for years to come.

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