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A mid-range star of big-budget action films and the occasional comedy, Kurt
Russell is among the few to make the successful transition from child star to
successful adult actor. As a youth, Russell aspired to follow the footsteps of
his father,
Bing Russell, who, in addition to being a big league baseball player, was
also an actor (he was perhaps best known for his role as the sheriff on the TV
Western
Bonanza). That his heroes
Mickey
Mantle and
Roger Maris
did the same thing only strengthened Russell's resolve to have both a baseball
and acting career.
He first broke into acting on television, starring in the series The Travels of
Jamie McPheeters, and made his film debut playing the boy who kicks Elvis in the
1963 Elvis
Presley vehicle It Happened at the World's Fair. After signing a ten-year
contract with Disney, Russell got his big break as a juvenile actor in 1966,
starring opposite Fred MacMurray in Disney's live-action feature
Follow Me
Boys! His association with the studio lasted through 1975, and produced such
comedic family movies as The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit (1968),
The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969),
The
Barefoot Executive (1971), and The Strongest Man in the World (1975). The
last film marked Russell's final collaboration with Disney, aside from his
voicing the character of Copper in the studio's The Fox and the Hound (1981).
Still an avid baseball enthusiast during those years, Russell nurtured his
dreams of becoming a professional ball player until a shoulder injury
permanently changed his plans.
After ending his association with Disney, Russell disappeared from features --
he did, however, appear in a few television movies -- until playing the title
role in Elvis,
John
Carpenter's made-for-television biopic. His next role as a sleazy used car
salesman in Robert Zemeckis' hilariously caustic
Used Cars
(1980) allowed him to counter his wholesome, all-American nice guy image, and
proved that he was an actor of untapped range. Director Carpenter recognized
this and cast Russell as mercenary Snake Plissken in his brooding sci-fi/action
film
Escape From New York (1981), and then as a scientist in the Antarctic in his
chilling 1982 remake of The Thing. Realizing that his characters were larger
than life, Russell typically played them with his tongue ever so slightly in his
cheek.
In 1983, however, he moved to serious drama, playing opposite
Cher and
Meryl Streep
in Silkwood. The
success of that film helped him break into a more mainstream arena, and he was
later able to win praise for his dramatic work in such films as
Swing Shift
(1984),
Tequila Sunrise (1988), and
Winter People
(1989). However, it is with his performances in action films that Russell
remains most widely associated. He has appeared in a number of such films, all
of disparate quality. Some of Russell's more memorable projects include Big
Trouble in Little China (1986), Tango and Cash (1989),
Backdraft
(1991), Tombstone
(1993), and
Executive
Decision (1996). In 1996, he reprised his Snake Plissken character for
Carpenter's Escape From L.A. The following year, he starred opposite
Kathleen
Quinlan in the revenge thriller
Breakdown
before returning to the sci-fi/action realm with
Soldier in 1998.
It would be two years before movie-going audiences would again catch a glimpse
of Russell, though with his roles in 2000 Miles to Graceland (again carrying on
the Elvis associations that have haunted his career) and Cameron Crowe's Vanilla
Sky, the versatile actor proved that he was still very much on the scene. Is
some of Russell's later day roles had stressed the /action angle a bit more than
the more /dramatic aspects of the stories, the release of Dark Blue in 2003
combined both with Russell cast as a volitile police officer tracking a killer
against the backdrop of the 1992 L.A. riots. Some of Russell's fame comes from
his status as half of one of Hollywood's most famous couples. The long-time
partner of
Goldie Hawn and father of one of her children, he has appeared with Hawn in
Swing Shift
and Overboard
(1987).
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