Transcription
pdf
Fantastics REBEL REBEL tom Fol som den nis hop per Fantastics Interview by james nixon photography by jason obrotka dennis hopper an actor for every zeitgeist. Though he played roles that ranged from un-horsey sensitive son in George Steven’s glossy epic Giant to sinister psycho Frank Booth in David Lynch’s cult-y classic Blue Velvet, Dennis Hopper maintained a studied aura of outlaw that subtly shifted from era to era. A malleable rebel stance that was always stylish if not always fashionable. It was perhaps this that allowed him to weather a career that scaled impressive heights (if not quite lofty enough to satisfy his artistic wants) and descended to a few fearsome lows. A career spanning more than 50 years. His ability to adapt to an era – beatnik to boho; druggie to indie – was formidable. He did the 50s with James Dean; Pop’d early with Warhol and was hip enough to document the hippie becoming history as writer, actor and director of Easy Rider. Fantastics Hopper, Natalie Wood & James Dean in 1955’s Rebel Without A Cause Ever burnishing an eccentric, gifted, edgy, charming, lunatic reputation was helpful in reviving a flagging career more than once for Hopper. A small but noteworthy appearance in Apocalypse Now reestablished him in the late 70s after earlier in the decade falling from grace attempting to top Easy Rider with his notorious The Last Movie. Lynch’s Blue Velvet solidified both his return in the 80s and a brand of crazy he was forever afterwards able to apply to any number of roles demanding it. If, after that, it sometimes was difficult to separate manner from mannerism within Hopper’s performances the same might be said for his life. Tom Folsom’s bio Hopper crafts a case both cool and compelling regarding its title subject’s exceptional ability to curate a mythology of his own life. Familiar with the business of badass-ery – Folsom previously authored the New York Times bestseller The Mad Ones: Crazy Joe Gallo and the Revolution at the Edge of the Underworld – his intoxicatingly amped up narrative is as fiery, fun and fierce as Hopper’s self-managed legend. And at times just as spooky. Folsom stops in to talk about Hopper as actor, director, occasional madman and the gift – and burden – of an oversize but awesome vision. FANTASTICS: With all the bad boys in Hollywood’s history to explore what drew you to Hopper as a subject? TOM FOLSOM: Hopper’s life had a particular literary quality, a picaresque rogue on a quixotic journey to find his American Dream. Most actors just aren’t that interesting outside their roles — even the bad boys can get a bit dull and sour after a while, but Hopper lived his life like a crazy movie. That’s the movie I wanted to get down on the page. Cool in the 50s. Bohemian in the early 60s. Hippie non-conformist in the later part of the decade. His ability to find and move through the milieu of the moment was extraordinary. How difficult is it to separate myth from reality? The method took a while for me to crack. There’s two ways to go about it. The responsible, proper, upright crusading journalist method would’ve been to do a sort of CNN “fact check” room on the page, with a yea or nay checkbox on the veracity of Hopper’s tales. Did he really lay Natalie Wood? True or false? That seemed very arrogant and judgmental to me, completely missing the point of Hopper’s life. He was so keenly attuned to his own myth, I felt it important to let the reader get swept up in that myth, while also clueing them to how we’re dealing with narrator who could at times be a fabulist. That’s the Don Quixote aspect that really exited One of his pals asked him about his uncanny ability me about Hopper. to pop up in these various scenes. Hopper’s answer Did that ability to mythologize benefit his career was, “Man, I just followed the drugs.” He wasn’t Zelig, a ultimately? Or affect it negatively? passive witness to the zeitgeist. He wanted to be right in Both. Hopper loved telling the story about how he was there, starring in whatever “movie” was happening at blackballed from Hollywood, forced to live in exile in the the moment. I think it has to do with his being an actor. outer dark beyond the studio. The persona set him up Hopper was a fervent advocate of his own mythology. as a rebel, gave him a larger than life image, and sent Hopper confronts James Dean in 1956’s Giant Fantastics Hopper sits for a Warhol Screentest circa 1965 Fantastics even the bad boys can get a bit dull and sour after a while... Fantastics Tom Folsom some very cool roles his way in left-of-center film projects, foreign and independent. It saved him from ending up like Tab Hunter, a studio creation, but his hellion image also kept him from getting steady work or setting himself to be a bonafide leading man. But I’m not sure that was ever in the cards anyway. Hopper was never cut out to be Paul Newman. He just wasn’t bland enough, and was too freaky to hit that sweet spot of Jack Nicholson, a charming rogue, or Johnny Depp, intense and beautiful. Once you’ve revealed your true self playing Frank Booth, the psychopath in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet and Hopper’s most personal role, you can’t really go back into the closet. In the long run, Hopper knew how to make his far-out persona work for him—take Speed and Waterworld. He was acting until the end of his life. It’s amazing that he pulled it off. Was Hopper cool? Or dangerous? A genius or just bizarre? All of the above. He liked to instigate strong reactions out of people. Was that driven by his own needs do you think or rather his understanding of his public’s desire to see him that way? He was a provocateur. He liked getting in your face and testing you, seeing if he could create some live theater. We’re dealing with a guy who traversed that line between fantasy and reality, getting lost in his own roles, so that even those close to him told me that in his craziest moments—like when he tried to kill someone with a ketchup bottle, you couldn’t tell whether he was putting on an act. Was it the Dennis Hopper one-man show? Or was he just nuts? I’m not sure Hopper could’ve told you. Coming to Hollywood in the 50s he could well have stuck to a Tab Hunter-ish good-looking kid style career. What drove him to want to be edgier than the norm? He wanted to be James Dean. Dennis’s first two Hollywood films were Rebel Without a Cause and Giant, and I can only imagine what it must’ve been like for wide eyed eighteen-year-old Hopper, fresh from the San Diego suburbs, to watch Dean do explosive acting pyrotechnics that just weren’t being done in Hollywood studio films. Once Dean died, and Hopper was poised to be the next James Dean, I think living up to his legacy drove him a little nuts. Fantastics Left: Hopper with veteran director John Huston in a late 60s advertisement Fantastics Was it the Dennis Hopper one-man show? Or was he just nuts? I’m not sure Hopper could’ve told you... Fantastics Hopper and Peter Fonda see America first in 1969s Easy Rider Fantastics Did the ghost of James Dean’s legend haunt him as much as it seemed to or was this affectation? Peter Fonda; it wasn’t Hopper’s career that soared after the movie, but Jack Nicholson’s. It’s like a drug. Affectation becomes addiction, and Hopper nearly ODed on Dean. Is it just a great period piece now? What does it say to contemporary audiences? I think it’s what got Elvis in the end, who was obsessed with James Dean’s rebel When you consider the utter chaos of his post-Easy Rider life how did this guy survive let alone continue a career? He was willful. He’s from Kansas stock. He grew up on an image. Dean was a powerful drug. I wouldn’t reduce it to a period piece. It shows a life egg farm at the tail end of the Dust Bowl. The guy knew Despite his outsider persona he eventually connected with establishment figures like director Henry Hathaway and John Wayne. How did he straddle those opposing worlds? lived to contemporary audiences, a grit you can’t get how to survive; it was in his blood. with film grain aftereffects in post. There’s a madness in He loved and hated authority. He was also extremely charming. Guys like Wayne wish we saw more of in movies today. Perhaps his most memorable role is Frank Booth in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet. Why did it so perfectly fit his abilities? couldn’t help but love Hopper, even if it was to have a token hippie to kick around Because he really was Frank Why do you think he wanted to? His follow up to the huge success of Easy Rider was The Last Movie – notorious bomb or misunderstood masterpiece? As much as he loved playing the counterculture icon, Hopper loved to play I think the intent of The Last Mov- per had recently gotten sober, cowboy, too. He’s from Dodge City, Kansas. ie, to make The Great American and was able to draw on his His relationships with women were trouble prone. Art Film, was more significant Method training from Strasberg, than the result. Actually I’ve because drug use just wasn’t grown to love the movie. Then taking him to those acting again, I’ve been in Hopper’s heights anymore. He sum- head for the past three years. mons up some very personal In a somewhat frantic life was there a point where madness seemed to really take control of him? mommy issues, and is finally and tell to lay off the loco weed. He ingratiated himself with these tough-as-nails Western cats. I think women were his accessories, his props. He knew the right one to match each era, be it Michelle Phillips, the dream girl of the 1960s, or Daria Halprin, earth goddess of Zabriskie Point. Is Easy Rider his only great film? Is it a great film? Yes, it’s the only one of his films that reaches greatness, and I think it is great. Watch the part where Billy and Captain America are riding out of New Orleans to their doom to the tune of “It’s Alright Ma, I’m Only Bleeding.” It’s apocalyptic. It’ll only get better with age. His treatment of Terry Southern after Easy Rider seemed harsh – not to mention his issues with Peter Fonda. It was one of the worst parts of Hopper’s character, his actively trying to underplay Terry Southern’s role in writing Easy Rider, claiming that the only thing Terry contributed was the title. This just isn’t true. I think it stems from Hopper’s attempt to turn Easy Rider into his Citizen Kane — directed by, starring, and written by Dennis Hopper. It probably drove him nuts how people equate Easy Rider with the movie, especially in the Mardi Gras scenes, that I Booth, which is what he told David Lynch over the phone when he wanted to get the part. At this point in his life, Hop- given a vehicle that lets him be Hopper, just like he gave Jack Nicholson the chance to be I think he was going off the rails in the mid-1970s, which isn’t saying that he wasn’t doing good work. Check out Mad Dog Morgan, in which he plays the Aussie bushranger. He’s pretty incredible. It’s a warm-up to what we see him doing in Apocalypse Now, which to me is extraordinary, my favorite Hopper moment. He’s really dangerous up there onscreen. Jack in Easy Rider. He’s reveling in his Hopper-ness, delivering lines that seem really funny when you remember them but upon rewatching, are terrifying. What are his 3 best performances? The classics. Apocalypse Now, Blue Velvet, Easy Rider. Hopper on set of 1971s The Last Movie Fantastics He had a dangerous reputation. Why did Hollywood keep him around for so long? Somehow I feel I have sat at a bar with Hopper, even Hollywood needs its rebels. Even in a role like the What was your biggest misconception regarding crazy villain in Speed, Dennis brought something Hopper before the book? extra that was invaluable to making that film work, ridiculous as it was. He’s really great in it! I’m sure he loved doing it. Hollywood also loves a reformed bad boy. So does America. Was his career a success? That his directing Easy Rider was somehow a fluke, that it was the collaboration of a bunch of guys who threw this thing together spontaneously and it just happened. That’s a simplification. Somebody was at the helm of that film, and all signs point to Hopper. On Easy Rider alone, yes. It’s a titanic film. I’m still Was there a point in your research where you figuring out whether success means a lifetime of hits thought, “wow this guy is just an asshole”? or a single great one. What in the end did he feel about it? Sure. Especially in the Terry Southern situation. I didn’t feel the need to defend his bad behavior. That’s a He told Charlie Rose he felt his career was a failure, trap too many biographers get into, which makes for and while he may have felt that at the moment, I a worthless book. think there’s a woe-is-me element that Hopper liked to play up, the grandiose Wellesian failure. I don’t think he would’ve done things differently. I think he dug being Hopper. Previous to this your subjects have included drug kingpin Nicky Barnes and big-time mobster Crazy Joe Gallo. What commonalities did you find between them and Hopper? Sociopathic tendencies. Fantastics though I never met him. Is Hopper a failed genius or someone who simply never reached a potential that at first seemed substantial? I think Hopper was lucky to have gotten as much out of life as he did. He really lived. He’s the only actor who I thought had a life that matched his roles. Where does Hopper ultimately fit into film? Magnificent outsider? Cult hero? Which of the 3 would you most like to sit in a bar and chat with and why? He’s the guy who decided to live his whole life like Well, I have sat in a bar, or rather a restaurant, a few cautionary tale of living in two dimensions. actually, and chatted with Nicky Barnes. He’s good He inspired loathing and love in people. What company. I’d liked to have hung out with Crazy Joe, were the best parts of Hopper? so long as he didn’t break my knees, just to hear He had conviction in his visions, and he was extraor- the lines of a gangster who loved playing gangster. dinarily charismatic. He’s a movie star after all. n a movie. That’s his contribution to moviedom. A