Dennis Hopper
Dennis Hopper (born
May 17,
1936) is an
American actor and
film-maker.
Born in
Dodge City,
Kansas, Hopper was voted most likely to succeed by his high school class (
Helix High School,
La Mesa, California) and it was there he developed an interest in acting. He was especially fond of the plays of
William Shakespeare. Hopper made his acting debut on an episode of the Richard Boone television show
Medic in 1955 playing a young epileptic. Hopper was then cast in two roles with
James Dean (whom he admired immensely)
Rebel Without a Cause (1955) and
Giant (1956).
Dean's death in a 1955 car accident affected the young Hopper deeply and it was shortly afterwards that he got into a confrontation with veteran director
Henry Hathaway on the film
From Hell To Texas. Hopper refused directions for 80 takes over several days. This infamous incident resulted in his being blacklisted from films for several years.
In his book
Last Train to Memphis, American popular music
historian Peter Guralnick says that in 1956 when
Elvis Presley was making his first film in Hollywood, Dennis Hopper was roommates with fellow actor
Nick Adams and the three became friends and hung out together.
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Mugshot of Dennis Hopper after his arrest on minor traffic charges |
Hopper moved to New York and studied at the famous
Lee Strasberg acting school. He appeared in over 140 episodes of television shows such as
Bonanza,
The Twilight Zone,
The Defenders,
The Big Valley,
The Time Tunnel and
Combat. Hopper also became an accomplished professional
photographer (he has had many exhibitions of his work). He also was very talented as a
painter and a
poet.
Hopper had a supporting role as "Babalugats," the bet-taker in
Cool Hand Luke (1967).
Although Hopper was able to resume acting in mainstream films including
The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) and
True Grit (1969), in both of these films he had death scenes with
John Wayne. It was not until he teamed with
Peter Fonda and Jack Nicholson and made
Easy Rider that he really shook up the Hollywood establishment. This film became an anthem of sorts to the lost generation of the
Vietnam war and to this day is one of the most successful independent films ever made. Hopper won wide acclaim as the director of the film for his improvisational methods and
stop action photography.
Hopper wrote and directed another film that was released in 1971 called
The Last Movie that was a box office failure and derailed his career for years. Hopper had long been an
alcoholic and drug abuser and it was at this point his addiction began to dominate his life. However, Hopper did act in several films during this period such as
Mad Dog Morgan (1976),
Tracks (1976),
The American Friend (1977) and
Apocalypse Now (1979), and he won acclaim for directing and acting in
Out of the Blue (1980).
Immediately thereafter, Hopper also starred as an aging
freebase-addled rock star in the low-budget
Neil Young-
Dean Stockwell collaboration
Human Highway with the new wave group
Devo. Production was often delayed by his unreliable behavior. Interestingly, Hopper's character clearly parallels the then-concurrent problems of
David Crosby, who served as the basis for Billy in
Easy Rider. Peter Biskind states in the
New Hollywood history
Easy Riders, Raging Bulls that Hopper's cocaine intake had reached three grams a day by this time period, complemented by an additional thirty beers and numerous
cuba libres.
In 1983 Hopper entered a
drug rehabilitation program, spent time in a state institution, and cured himself of his addictions. He gave powerful performances in
Rumble Fish (1983) and
The Osterman Weekend (1983). However, it was not until he portrayed the
alkyl nitrites-huffing, obscenity-screaming
Frank Booth in
David Lynch's film
Blue Velvet (1986) that his career truly revived. After reading the script, Hopper called Lynch and told him "You have to let me play Frank Booth. Because I am Frank Booth!" Hopper won critical acclaim and a slew of awards for this role and the same year won an
Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor for
Hoosiers.
In 1988, Hopper directed a critically acclaimed film about
Los Angeles gangs called
Colors. He has continued to be an important actor, photographer and director. He was nominated for an
Emmy award for the 1991
HBO films
Paris Trout and
Doublecrossed (in which he played real life drug smuggler and
DEA informant Barry Seal). He also co-starred in the 1994 blockbuster
Speed with
Keanu Reeves and
Sandra Bullock. He recently contributed to the film
1 Giant Leap with provocative anecdotes on spirituality, unity and culture.
Hopper teamed with Nike in the early 1990s to make a series of successful television commercials. He appeared as a "crazed referee" in those ads.
He starred as villain
Victor Drazen in the first season of the popular
24 drama on the
Fox television network. In an attempt to put on a Serbian accent to better portray his role, he ended up sounding like a German/Russian guy. Hopper is most recently starring in the
NBC 2006 television series
E-Ring, a drama set at
The Pentagon.
On the 2005
Gorillaz album
Demon Days, Hopper performs the
spoken word track "Fire Coming Out of the Monkey's Head." In July 2006, Hopper appeared in the music video for "Smiley Faces" by
Gnarls Barkley, portraying faux music historian Milton Pawley.
Dennis Hopper is a supporter of the
Republican Party and donated money to the party for the
2004 election. [
1] Ironically, his character in the 2005 movie
Land of the Dead was based rather unflatteringly on a couple of members of the Bush administration, most notably
Donald Rumsfeld. It is also a bit ironic that Hopper has played a handful of roles as a liberal radical (
Easy Rider,
Apocalypse Now).
In 1996 Hopper was married to Victoria Duffy (his fifth, her first) in Boston. She had earlier attended the Univ. of VT, where she and her horses had also been in training for the Equestrienne Three-Day Event at the Pan-Am Games, possibly following her father, now a Boston neurologist, at the subsequent Olympic Games. Duffy's birth-mother has a Doctorate in Psychology (Counseling), and her stepmother is also a Boston physician. Again interestingly, Duffy is an active Democratic Party supporter in California.
Despite being famous as an actor and director, Hopper sees himself primarily as an artist, and is an accomplished and much-respected painter, art collector and photographer:
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Classic Movies (1939 - 1969): Dennis Hopper*
Watch Dennis Hopper in the 1954 TV Show, Public Defender
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Washington Post Article*
Dennis Hopper Unveils Paintings{{Persondata
NAME=Hopper, Dennis | ALTERNATIVE NAMES= | SHORT DESCRIPTION=American actor | DATE OF BIRTH=May 17, 1936 | PLACE OF BIRTH=Dodge City, Kansas | DATE OF DEATH= | PLACE OF DEATH=
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