Top 10 movie stars who made their bones in TV
06/30/08 13:33
By ED BARK
It's another big, boffo summer for movie stars who first came to prominence on the small screen.
Will Smith's Hancock opens on July 2nd, joining the likes of Adam Sandler's You Don't Mess with the Zohan, Steve Carell's Get Smart, Mike Myers' The Love Guru and The Sex and the City movie. Later in July, Will Ferrell strikes again with Step Brothers.
Guess what, though? Only one of the above makes this very exclusive Hollywood club of top 10 feature film big-timers who first had success in their own TV series. It's a very tough list to pare down, so let's set a few ground rules.
No. 1: Anyone who's won two Oscars is automatically in. That should be good for something, right?
No. 2: You have to be a prominent regular character in a TV series that lasted at least two seasons. So Leonardo DiCaprio's recurring, latter day role on Growing Pains and Brad Pitt's co-star turn in the little-seen 1990 Fox series Glory Days are not nearly enough leverage. Neither is Ben Affleck's portrayal of a high school quarterback in the shortlived 1993 NBC series Against the Grain. None would have made this list anyway. That's how tough it is.
No. 3: It's OK to be a director, too, but you have to mainly make your mark as a big-screen actor. That leaves out Ron "Opie" Howard.
No. 4: Longevity and sustained box office receipts count for a lot, but your hotness of late also figures in. You don't have to be alive, and it helps if you've had a franchise character who's endured through a sequel or two or three.
That said, this is a list that in the end leaves out the likes of John Travolta (Welcome Back, Kotter), Burt Reynolds (Riverboat, Gunsmoke), George Clooney (ER), Jamie Foxx (The Jamie Foxx Show), Johnny Depp (21 Jump Street) and Bill Murray (Saturday Night Live) among others. Sorry about that.
10. SALLY FIELD (main TV claim to fame: Sister Bertrille in The Flying Nun) -- What's she done lately at the box office? Very little, but Field has two best actress Oscars (for Norma Rae and Places in the Heart), an all-time classic acceptance speech and one of filmdom's most famous tag lines -- "Life is like a box of chocolates . . . " -- as the title character's momma in Forrest Gump.
She's lately returned to the small-screen and won an Emmy as the matriarch of ABC's Brothers & Sisters.
9. ROBIN WILLIAMS (main TV claim to fame: Mork from Ork in Mork & Mindy) -- He has a best supporting actor Oscar for Good Will Hunting and one of the signature comedic performances in film history as the title character in the mega-hit Mrs. Doubtfire. Good Morning Vietnam, Dead Poets Society, Moscow on the Hudson and the cringe-worthy but very popular Patch Adams also are among his hits.
Diminishing box office returns and too many ill-considered films have dulled his rep of late. Still, he's got a lot of notches on his belt and maybe a few more still coming.
8. BRUCE WILLIS (main TV claim to fame: detective David Addison in Moonlighting) -- The Die Hard franchise remains strong, as last year's well-received fourth in the series proved. And Willis has two all-time, offbeat classics on his resume in Pulp Fiction and The Sixth Sense, both of which also were highly bankable.
He's also dared to take chances with his image via mondo supporting performances in films such as Death Becomes Her and Twelve Monkeys. Add Sin City, Unbreakable and The Fifth Element to a very eclectic resume.
7. JIM CARREY (main TV claim to fame: variety of roles on In Living Color) -- Don't take him seriously. Yes, take him seriously. Carrey, as has Robin Williams, mixes comedy romps with darker dramatic turns. But he's sobered up to better effect in The Truman Show, Man on the Moon and the vastly underrated Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
Meanwhile, Carrey's laughers continue to rake it in. His initial low-budget Ace Ventura: Pet Detective led to bigger moneymakers such as Dumb and Dumber; The Mask; Liar, Liar; Me, Myself & Irene; Fun with Dick & Jane and Bruce Almighty. Even an early dark comedy flop, The Cable Guy, remains part of the lexicon.
6. EDDIE MURPHY (main TV claim to fame: variety of roles on Saturday Night Live) -- His big-screen career seemingly has been on the ropes several times since those glory days as detective Axel Foley in the Beverly Hills Cop franchise. But Murphy mounted a major comeback in The Nutty Professor, which he also parlayed into at least one sequel to date.
Lately he's turned in a superb supporting performance in Dreamgirls (for which he deserved more than just an Oscar nomination) and of course is still the indispensable voice of the sidekick donkey in an ongoing string of Shrek movies. Other hits include 48 Hrs., Trading Places and The Golden Child.
5. STEVE MCQUEEN (main TV claim to fame: bounty hunter Josh Randall in Wanted: Dead or Alive) -- One of the big screen's ultimate kings of cool died in 1980 after leaving behind a wealth of indelible films and images. His motorcycle-jump over a barbed wire fence fueled The Great Escape. And his bumpity-bump car chase through San Francisco in Bullitt was a true wonder of 1960s filmmaking.
McQueen's legacy is further ensured in The Sand Pebbles (for which he received a best actor Oscar nomination), The Magnificent Seven, The Cincinnati Kid, Nevada Smith, Papillion and the original Thomas Crown Affair.
4. WILL SMITH (main TV claim to fame: as himself in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air) -- Seldom falling short of anything but box office gold, he's been reliably bankable since cutting his teeth in 1993's Six Degrees of Separation and following it up with the first of two Bad Boys films. Independence Day put him on the megastar map before Men In Black vaulted him into the stratosphere. Ali, which got him an Oscar nomination, preceded The Pursuit of Happyness, which earned him another one. No wins yet, though.
Smith's hit list also includes Hitched, I Am Legend, I, Robot and even a mostly panned remake of The Wild, Wild West, which still made $225 million worldwide. His latest, Hancock, already looks like a surefire blockbuster.
3. DENZEL WASHINGTON (main TV claim to fame: Dr. Phillip Chandler in St. Elsewhere) -- Two acting Oscar wins (for Glory and Training Day) make him the most-honored minority star in big-screen history. Washington mostly stays away from heavy-duty action roles, instead raising the bar in sturdy, ever-watchable films such as Malcolm X, Philadelphia, Courage Under Fire, Crimson Tide, The Hurricane, Remember the Titans, The Great Debaters and a remake of The Manchurian Candidate.
He also can be a badass, though, as proven in both Training Day and last year's acclaimed American Gangster. Washington has three other Oscar nominations besides the two he's won. Consider him the Sidney Poitier of his generation -- and then some.
2. TOM HANKS (main TV claim to fame: crossdressing Kip Wilson in Bosom Buddies) -- Back-to-back best actor Oscars for Philadelphia and Forrest Gump made him the first and only actor since Spencer Tracy to accomplish that feat. He's also been nominated three other times for Big, Castaway and Saving Private Ryan.
Hanks fittingly made his first big-screen splash in Splash and then kept ringing cash registers with the previously cited films plus A League of Their Own, Sleepless In Seattle, Apollo 13, The Green Mile, two Toy Story movies (as the voice of cowboy Woody), Catch Me If You Can, Road to Perdition and The Da Vinci Code. Oft-compared to Jimmy Stewart, he also can be a daredevil actor with a sense of the absurd displayed in 2004's Ladykillers, one of his rare flops.
1. CLINT EASTWOOD (main TV claim to fame: trailhand Rowdy Yates in Rawhide) -- Movie characters don't get much more iconic than "The Man with No Name" in three career-turning "spaghetti" westerns and law enforcer "Dirty Harry" Callahan, whom he's played five times. But Eastwood's Oscars are for his directing of 1992's Unforgiven and 2005's Million Dollar Baby. In between them, he received the Academy's Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award.
During more than 40 years of feature film acting, Eastwood's crowd-pleasing acting credits also include Hang 'Em High, Coogan's Bluff, Pale Rider, The Outlaw Josey Wales, Escape From Alcatraz, Bronco Billy, In the Line of Fire and The Bridges of Madison County. In 2006, he directed both Flags of Our Fathers and its companion film, Letters From Iwo Jima. He remains a formidable force, whether behind the camera or in harm's way.
It's another big, boffo summer for movie stars who first came to prominence on the small screen.
Will Smith's Hancock opens on July 2nd, joining the likes of Adam Sandler's You Don't Mess with the Zohan, Steve Carell's Get Smart, Mike Myers' The Love Guru and The Sex and the City movie. Later in July, Will Ferrell strikes again with Step Brothers.
Guess what, though? Only one of the above makes this very exclusive Hollywood club of top 10 feature film big-timers who first had success in their own TV series. It's a very tough list to pare down, so let's set a few ground rules.
No. 1: Anyone who's won two Oscars is automatically in. That should be good for something, right?
No. 2: You have to be a prominent regular character in a TV series that lasted at least two seasons. So Leonardo DiCaprio's recurring, latter day role on Growing Pains and Brad Pitt's co-star turn in the little-seen 1990 Fox series Glory Days are not nearly enough leverage. Neither is Ben Affleck's portrayal of a high school quarterback in the shortlived 1993 NBC series Against the Grain. None would have made this list anyway. That's how tough it is.
No. 3: It's OK to be a director, too, but you have to mainly make your mark as a big-screen actor. That leaves out Ron "Opie" Howard.
No. 4: Longevity and sustained box office receipts count for a lot, but your hotness of late also figures in. You don't have to be alive, and it helps if you've had a franchise character who's endured through a sequel or two or three.
That said, this is a list that in the end leaves out the likes of John Travolta (Welcome Back, Kotter), Burt Reynolds (Riverboat, Gunsmoke), George Clooney (ER), Jamie Foxx (The Jamie Foxx Show), Johnny Depp (21 Jump Street) and Bill Murray (Saturday Night Live) among others. Sorry about that.
10. SALLY FIELD (main TV claim to fame: Sister Bertrille in The Flying Nun) -- What's she done lately at the box office? Very little, but Field has two best actress Oscars (for Norma Rae and Places in the Heart), an all-time classic acceptance speech and one of filmdom's most famous tag lines -- "Life is like a box of chocolates . . . " -- as the title character's momma in Forrest Gump.
She's lately returned to the small-screen and won an Emmy as the matriarch of ABC's Brothers & Sisters.
9. ROBIN WILLIAMS (main TV claim to fame: Mork from Ork in Mork & Mindy) -- He has a best supporting actor Oscar for Good Will Hunting and one of the signature comedic performances in film history as the title character in the mega-hit Mrs. Doubtfire. Good Morning Vietnam, Dead Poets Society, Moscow on the Hudson and the cringe-worthy but very popular Patch Adams also are among his hits.
Diminishing box office returns and too many ill-considered films have dulled his rep of late. Still, he's got a lot of notches on his belt and maybe a few more still coming.
8. BRUCE WILLIS (main TV claim to fame: detective David Addison in Moonlighting) -- The Die Hard franchise remains strong, as last year's well-received fourth in the series proved. And Willis has two all-time, offbeat classics on his resume in Pulp Fiction and The Sixth Sense, both of which also were highly bankable.
He's also dared to take chances with his image via mondo supporting performances in films such as Death Becomes Her and Twelve Monkeys. Add Sin City, Unbreakable and The Fifth Element to a very eclectic resume.
7. JIM CARREY (main TV claim to fame: variety of roles on In Living Color) -- Don't take him seriously. Yes, take him seriously. Carrey, as has Robin Williams, mixes comedy romps with darker dramatic turns. But he's sobered up to better effect in The Truman Show, Man on the Moon and the vastly underrated Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
Meanwhile, Carrey's laughers continue to rake it in. His initial low-budget Ace Ventura: Pet Detective led to bigger moneymakers such as Dumb and Dumber; The Mask; Liar, Liar; Me, Myself & Irene; Fun with Dick & Jane and Bruce Almighty. Even an early dark comedy flop, The Cable Guy, remains part of the lexicon.
6. EDDIE MURPHY (main TV claim to fame: variety of roles on Saturday Night Live) -- His big-screen career seemingly has been on the ropes several times since those glory days as detective Axel Foley in the Beverly Hills Cop franchise. But Murphy mounted a major comeback in The Nutty Professor, which he also parlayed into at least one sequel to date.
Lately he's turned in a superb supporting performance in Dreamgirls (for which he deserved more than just an Oscar nomination) and of course is still the indispensable voice of the sidekick donkey in an ongoing string of Shrek movies. Other hits include 48 Hrs., Trading Places and The Golden Child.
5. STEVE MCQUEEN (main TV claim to fame: bounty hunter Josh Randall in Wanted: Dead or Alive) -- One of the big screen's ultimate kings of cool died in 1980 after leaving behind a wealth of indelible films and images. His motorcycle-jump over a barbed wire fence fueled The Great Escape. And his bumpity-bump car chase through San Francisco in Bullitt was a true wonder of 1960s filmmaking.
McQueen's legacy is further ensured in The Sand Pebbles (for which he received a best actor Oscar nomination), The Magnificent Seven, The Cincinnati Kid, Nevada Smith, Papillion and the original Thomas Crown Affair.
4. WILL SMITH (main TV claim to fame: as himself in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air) -- Seldom falling short of anything but box office gold, he's been reliably bankable since cutting his teeth in 1993's Six Degrees of Separation and following it up with the first of two Bad Boys films. Independence Day put him on the megastar map before Men In Black vaulted him into the stratosphere. Ali, which got him an Oscar nomination, preceded The Pursuit of Happyness, which earned him another one. No wins yet, though.
Smith's hit list also includes Hitched, I Am Legend, I, Robot and even a mostly panned remake of The Wild, Wild West, which still made $225 million worldwide. His latest, Hancock, already looks like a surefire blockbuster.
3. DENZEL WASHINGTON (main TV claim to fame: Dr. Phillip Chandler in St. Elsewhere) -- Two acting Oscar wins (for Glory and Training Day) make him the most-honored minority star in big-screen history. Washington mostly stays away from heavy-duty action roles, instead raising the bar in sturdy, ever-watchable films such as Malcolm X, Philadelphia, Courage Under Fire, Crimson Tide, The Hurricane, Remember the Titans, The Great Debaters and a remake of The Manchurian Candidate.
He also can be a badass, though, as proven in both Training Day and last year's acclaimed American Gangster. Washington has three other Oscar nominations besides the two he's won. Consider him the Sidney Poitier of his generation -- and then some.
2. TOM HANKS (main TV claim to fame: crossdressing Kip Wilson in Bosom Buddies) -- Back-to-back best actor Oscars for Philadelphia and Forrest Gump made him the first and only actor since Spencer Tracy to accomplish that feat. He's also been nominated three other times for Big, Castaway and Saving Private Ryan.
Hanks fittingly made his first big-screen splash in Splash and then kept ringing cash registers with the previously cited films plus A League of Their Own, Sleepless In Seattle, Apollo 13, The Green Mile, two Toy Story movies (as the voice of cowboy Woody), Catch Me If You Can, Road to Perdition and The Da Vinci Code. Oft-compared to Jimmy Stewart, he also can be a daredevil actor with a sense of the absurd displayed in 2004's Ladykillers, one of his rare flops.
1. CLINT EASTWOOD (main TV claim to fame: trailhand Rowdy Yates in Rawhide) -- Movie characters don't get much more iconic than "The Man with No Name" in three career-turning "spaghetti" westerns and law enforcer "Dirty Harry" Callahan, whom he's played five times. But Eastwood's Oscars are for his directing of 1992's Unforgiven and 2005's Million Dollar Baby. In between them, he received the Academy's Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award.
During more than 40 years of feature film acting, Eastwood's crowd-pleasing acting credits also include Hang 'Em High, Coogan's Bluff, Pale Rider, The Outlaw Josey Wales, Escape From Alcatraz, Bronco Billy, In the Line of Fire and The Bridges of Madison County. In 2006, he directed both Flags of Our Fathers and its companion film, Letters From Iwo Jima. He remains a formidable force, whether behind the camera or in harm's way.