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During the last few years of the 1970s, John Travolta reigned as one of the most towering stars in Hollywood, second, perhaps, only to Burt Reynolds and Robert Redford as a top male box office draw. After a string of hits in films, on television, and on the radio, Travolta emerged as a seemingly unstoppable cultural phenomenon, defining tastes in music and fashion while dominating innumerable columns of newspapers and tabloids. Like so many other celebrities, Travolta's initial fame proved short-lived, however, and by the mid-1980s the media and the public alike began to regard him as an outmoded relic of his era.
But in 1994, Travolta pulled off an astonishing feat: after years languishing in dull Hollywood by-product, he resurfaced, rising like a Phoenix from the ashes of has-been obscurity, reestablishing his claims to film superstardom and staking out new territory as one of the most acclaimed actors in contemporary film.
Born February 18, 1954, in Englewood, NJ, to Salvatore Travolta, a former semi-pro...
During the last few years of the 1970s, John Travolta reigned as one of the most towering stars in Hollywood, second, perhaps, only to Burt Reynolds and Robert Redford as a top male box office draw. After a string of hits in films, on television, and on the radio, Travolta emerged as a seemingly unstoppable cultural phenomenon, defining tastes in music and fashion while dominating innumerable columns of newspapers and tabloids. Like so many other celebrities, Travolta's initial fame proved short-lived, however, and by the mid-1980s the media and the public alike began to regard him as an outmoded relic of his era.
But in 1994, Travolta pulled off an astonishing feat: after years languishing in dull Hollywood by-product, he resurfaced, rising like a Phoenix from the ashes of has-been obscurity, reestablishing his claims to film superstardom and staking out new territory as one of the most acclaimed actors in contemporary film.
Born February 18, 1954, in Englewood, NJ, to Salvatore Travolta, a former semi-pro football player, and Helen Travolta, an alumna of a radio vocal group called the Sunshine Sisters and high-school drama teacher -- Travolta was the youngest of six children in a family of entertainers; all but one of his siblings pursued showbusiness careers as well. By the age of 12 Travolta himself had already joined an area actors' group, and soon began appearing in local musicals and dinner-theater performances. He also took tap-dancing lessons from Gene Kelly's brother Fred. By age 16, he dropped out of high school to take up acting full-time, relocating to Manhattan to make his off-Broadway debut in 1972 in Rain. A minor role in the touring company of the hit musical Grease followed, and in 1973 Travolta appeared opposite The Andrews Sisters in the Broadway musical Over Here! In 1975, he took his film bow with a bit role in the best-forgotten horror picture The Devil's Rain, alongside Ernest Borgnine, William Shatner and Anton La Vey.
In 1975, Travolta was cast in an ABC sitcom entitled Welcome Back, Kotter. As Vinnie Barbarino, a dim-witted high school Lothario, he shot to overnight superstardom, and his face instantly adorned T-shirts and lunch boxes. Before the first episode of the series even aired, he also won a small role in Brian De Palma's wickedly funny 1976 horror picture Carrie, giving him inroads to the movie industry, and at the early peak of his Kotter success he even recorded a series of pop music LPs -- Can't Let Go, John Travolta, and Travolta Fever -- scoring a major hit with the single "Let Her In." Approached with a role in Terrence Malick's Days of Heaven, he was forced to reject the project in the face of a busy Kotter schedule, but in 1976 he was able to shoot a TV feature, director Randal Kleiser's The Boy in the Plastic Bubble, which won considerable critical acclaim. Diana Hyland, the actress who played Travolta's mother in the picture, also became his offscreen lover until her death from cancer in 1977.
In the wake of Hyland's death, Travolta's first major feature film, John Badham's Saturday Night Fever (1977), emerged in the fall of that year. A latter-day Rebel Without a Cause set against the backdrop of the New York City disco nightlife, it positioned Travolta as the most talked-about young star in Hollywood. In addition to earning his first Academy Award nomination for Best Actor, he also became an icon of the era, his white-suited visage and cocky, rhythmic strut enduring as defining images of late-'70s American culture. In 1978, he starred in Kleiser's film adaptation of Grease, this time essaying the lead role of 1950s greaser Danny Zuko. Its box-office success was even greater than Saturday Night Fever's, becoming a perennial fan favorite and, like its predecessor, spawning a massively popular soundtrack LP. In the light of his back-to-back successes, as well as the continued popularity of Welcome Back, Kotter -- on which he still occasionally appeared -- it seemed Travolta could do no wrong. And then, the bottom dropped out.
Travolta's first misstep was 1978's Moment By Moment, a laughable May-December romance with Lily Tomlin. Savaged by critics, the picture was a box-office disaster, the first major failure of his career. Travolta then turned down the lead in Paul Schrader's hit American Gigolo (a role which, like the one offered in Days of Heaven, was then awarded to Richard Gere) to star in 1980's Urban Cowboy, which restored much of his financial lustre. Starring Travolta as a Texas oil worker, the film and its accompanying smash soundtrack did for country music and ten-gallon hats what Saturday Night Fever did for disco and leisure suits, and resulted in such an influx of new country fans that Nashville's entire early-'80s period was later dubbed the "Urban Cowboy" era by music historians. The following year he starred in De Palma's under-recognized Blow Out, resulting in some of the best critical notices of his career but falling well short of box-office expectations.
Travolta then rejected the lead in An Officer and a Gentleman (yet another role eagerly accepted by Gere) to reprise the role of Tony Manero in the Saturday Night Fever sequel Staying Alive. Directed by Sylvester Stallone as a kind of Rocky retread, the film was released in August 1983 to embarrassing returns and horrendous reviews; critic after critic quite rightly ripped it to pieces. Pauline Kael tagged it "ludicrous," and suggested, on the basis of this film, that the studios give their stars to director Stallone whenever they needed to be punished.
Two of a Kind, released a few months later, reunited Travolta with his Grease co-star Olivia Newton-John, but lightning again failed to strike twice and the movie soon disappeared from theaters. By now Travolta's career was on shaky ground, and after a two-year absence from the screen he returned in 1985's Perfect, a reunion with director James Bridges that cast Travolta as a journalist modeled on Aaron Latham who investigates the aerobics scene. When it too failed to live up to expectations, he was roundly dismissed as a flash in the pan and a has-been, and several years of poor career choices, bad advice, and missed opportunities were to follow. By 1988 Travolta had been missing from theaters for three years, and when the oft-delayed comedy The Experts finally surfaced in theaters in 1989, its disastrous showing seemed the final nail in his coffin.
Later that same year, the unheralded, low-budget comedy Look Who's Talking was released and marked a comeback - albeit an admittedly temporary one. Co-starring Travolta and Kirstie Alley, it was produced for some eight million dollars but went on to gross close to 150 million dollars over the course of the following 12 months, later spawning a pair of sequels, 1990's Look Who's Talking Too and 1993's Look Who's Talking Now. However, both of Travolta's 1991 pictures, the long-shelved Eyes of an Angel and Shout, fared poorly, and as the Look Who's Talking series sputtered to a halt he was again written off by the press.
Then, in 1994, Travolta made one of the most stunning comebacks in entertainment history by starring in Pulp Fiction, a lavishly acclaimed crime film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino, a longtime Travolta fan who wrote the role of Vincent Vega specifically with the actor in mind; Travolta reportedly waived his salary to play the role. A critical as well as commercial smash, Pulp Fiction introduced Travolta to a new generation of moviegoers, and suddenly he was again a major star who could command a massive salary, with a second Academy Award nomination to prove it.
In the wake of Pulp Fiction, the resurrected Travolta became one of the hardest-working actors in Hollywood, and on Tarantino's advice he accepted the starring role in director Barry Sonnenfeld's 1995 Elmore Leonard adaptation Get Shorty. Acclaimed by many critics as his finest performance to date, it was another major hit, and he followed it by appearing in the 1996 John Woo action tale Broken Arrow. Phenomenon was another smash that same summer, and by Christmas Travolta was back in theaters as a disreputable angel in Michael. The following year he reunited with Woo in the highly successful thriller Face/Off, which he trailed with a supporting turn in Nick Cassavetes' She's So Lovely. After 1997's Mad City, Travolta began work on Primary Colors, Mike Nichols' political satire, portraying a charismatic, Bill Clinton-like U.S. President. An adaptation of the acclaimed book A Civil Action followed, as did the 1999 thriller The General's Daughter, in which Travolta co-starred with Madeline Stowe.
In 2000, the actor starred as an alien invader in the sci-fi thriller Battlefield Earth, based on the novel by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard (whose teachings Travolta publicly admires and advocates). That same year he returned to human form to portray a financially strapped TV weatherman in Lucky Numbers, a comedy directed by Nora Ephron. Though Travolta had high hopes for Battlefield Earth, often citing it as the next Star Wars (and even going so far as to plan a sequel before the first was released), the film was seen as little more than an overblown, over-budgeted orgy of excess, and Lucky Numbers fell flat at the box office as well. Facing yet another comeback, Travolta shed some pounds and jumped back into action in the summer of 2001 with Swordfish. A complex tale of mixed loyalties, computer hacking, and espionage, Swordfish teamed Travolta with X-Men star Hugh Jackman in hopes of dominating the summer box office.
Having somewhat recovered from yet another career slump, Travolta went on to star in the low-key A Love Song for Bobby Long, which Lionsgate openly touted as a serious Oscar contender. Unfortunately, the film was not well received by audiences or critics, and neither was the comic book adaptation The Punisher, which Travolta appeared in around the same time. While he received more praise for his performance in Ladder 49, a film about the lives of firefighters, his career took another hit in 2004 when he reprised the role of Chili Palmer in Be Cool, a sequel to Get Shorty. The film was panned both in the press and at the box office as a major disappointment.
Unfazed, Travolta joined the cast of Todd Robinson's Lonely Hearts (2007), the second major American studio release to investigate the homicides committed by lovers Raymond Martinez and Martha Beck against octogenarian women in the 1940s. Whereas Leonard Kastle's 1970 black comedy The Honeymoon Killers observed the incidents from the perspective of the murderers, however, the more sober Robinson film follows two homicide detectives (Travolta and James Gandolfini) in their pursuit of the serial killers (here played by Salma Hayek and Jared Leto). Millenium Films slated the picture for stateside release in mid-January, 2007.
Meanwhile, Travolta geared up for two wildly diverse additional roles to carry him through the end of that year. In the March 2007 road comedy Wild Hogs, he stars alongside a dream cast - Tim Allen, Martin Lawrence and William H. Macy - as one of four listless suburbanites who decide to "live on the edge" by grabbing their sawed-off choppers and hitting the open road as would-be Hell's Angels. And in Hairspray, Adam Shankman's screen adaptation of the stage musical (which, in turn, is an adaptation of John Waters's 1988 feature) Travolta reprised the Edna Turnblad role, made famous by female impersonator Divine, by donning a dress and a coiffe. .
Travolta married actress Kelly Preston in 1991, with whom he has two children. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
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WHOOOOOOOA SUMMER!!! So much to catch up on so let's get to it...I have been a very busy gal and I have a few things to warn you guys about..that is if you take my reviews seriously..which I'm not sure any of you do..and that's okay with me. It's easy to aim low and then surprise people when you can do well every once in a while..then everyone cheers because you "out-did" yourself.. but enough about my work/dating ethic...let's get to film action... IN THEATERS- My Sister's Keeper-I had mixed feelings about this film but like rice krispie treats..I just couldn't say no. Much like those very treats, the ending was the same. I felt all confused on why I keep doing things I know I should not do..and trust me..I have that rice krispie battle all the time..afterwards I just kick myself. Hence this movie..I received the book from a dear friend about two birthdays ago...and it was a great book. I'm not gonna geek out and say "the book was better, yadda yadda" BUT...it was. There is some present controversy surrounding the ending of this film which I will not go into detail with because I get yelled at for famously ruining movie endings but COME ON..who doesn't know that the Titanic flippin' sinks in the end!!!??@ I am impressed with Cameron Diaz...I like her. Just decided that on this film. Even if she had some tongue action with John Mayer or dated the annoying Justin Boringlake..I really enjoy watching her. This was a great film for her to decide on..I am happy with her in the role. That's the plus of the film. I would also like to say..it's time we treat Abigail Breslin like the 24 year old woman that she is....her and Dakota Fanning. THE PROPOSAL-Ok look, the title alone makes me yank my collar but I will say that this is actually a decent film. Not what you think, clearly. The reason I say that is for the most part, everyone thinks Sandra Bullock is just about love and crap..and she is...don't get me wrong BUT...this film shows a nice little comedic trip to love. I have always enjoyed her roles in the past..especially the Two Weeks Notice film with Hugh Grant...she's just full on funny. Now, let's not ignore the fact that Ryan Reynold's six pack makes an appearance as well. We all know Ryan Reynold's is hot..and he's got funny teeth but yeah, he makes the one, two punch..cobra kai dojo style..and it's worth it. I have a few friends who were surprised by the fact this was a decent movie...and contrary to popular belief...it's not soley a "chick flick". Settle down, just go see it. I'm sick of having to review these things FOR you..wait..uh, nevermind. PUBLIC ENEMIES-I just recently became a Johnny Depp fan...no, I never watched 21 Jumpstreet, Edward Scissorhands was ok, I don't even wanna discuss Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory..but I like him. Partly because everyone here in Chicago who met him, really enjoyed him and said he was very nice. I love nice guys. Really I do. Makes them appear more accessible. I have never been into bad boys..because I know what I am capable of and two wrongs don't make a right..and by right I mean..trashing that guy's record collection after I found he was cheating..and let's just say that's a mistake you only make once... Have you ever tried to break a record?? It's tough! They are tough and you can't just bust em over your knee like in the movies! THANKYOUVERYMUCH. Anywho, this film was boooooooring. "too much, not enough movie"...-Lolo '09 "eh, it was kinda slow"..-Kellykaleekymaka '09 "it was a cone!"..-My brother, All the time.. Too much hype...that's the same thing that messed up Desperate Housewives...first season, GOLD. Second season..who effing cares Marc Cherry. Pish Posh. THE HANGOVER-I have officially seen this film three times. I will go again if you ask me..because who hasn't opened the bathroom door to find something they were scared of?? YEAR ONE-I love Michael Cera and if you've read this before, you know damn well I have no experience in rating films...I have absolutely ridiculous taste in movies...I don't care about the lessons you're supposed to take away from em.. I took ONE sememster of German Film in college and even then the only appealing part of that class was how German filmakers have no problem with nudity and inappropriate relations. That was a great class actually. Das Boot was the my favorite one of all..it was about a young boy's father having an affair with the nanny...so this young boy tries to also..and it gets gooooooood...actually, go rent that. Then high five me later. Back to Year One, dude, Jack Black is in it...you know exactly what you are gonna get and those who cry about it..need a reality check. There's a reason why 'circus peanuts' are a dollar at the store. COMING SOON- I LOVE YOU, BETH COOPER-Saw this when it was called FORGETTING SARAH MARSHALL. That Hayden girl needs to chill out. Why do people pick on Miley Cyrus when Hayden Pantera or Pantene is always running around floatin' zit cream, stupid cameras and nailin' old dudes? I don't get it. Am I jealous and speaking out of spite because I will never be her? Duh. That skank. Aside from my blatant bad attitude, I honestly have no desire to see this movie. You review yourself! I didn't mean that. I'm sorry. BRUNO-WWWWWWWWhaaaa? AGAIN?? Here's what I'm thinkin about this...and if you are too...let's grab a drink. I. Am. Scared.....thathemaybegivingallthefunnystuffawayinthepreviews! PPPHEW. I wasn't a super fan of Borat. I can't lie. I know, most are surprise that out of all stupid movies, I didn't like it. Heck, even I am surprised. I just didn't like it. There was nothing funny to me. It was too dry. I saw the scene of the college kids in the RV and had fun pickin out which punk tried to sue because he looked like a complete tool...the one who said "never let a woman define you"..I pegged him..he seems like a cry baby. Other than that, I had zero fun. Like opening a Christmas present that you really don't like...and trying to push a smile out. That's the worst. I hate bad presents..and it shows. One year BOTH of my Aunts on my Mom's side gave me the same gift..a red collared nightgown with the matching white teddy bear. I was Meryl Streep. Anyways, I will see Bruno...why? Because I am into giving second chances..the ones before were mistakes but I really liked that guy. LET'S ALL GO SEE BRUNO. THE UGLY TRUTH-Katherine Heigl, Gerard Butler. NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO. I hated 27 dresses. HATED IT. WHY DOES SHE KEEP DOING THE SAME ROLES? It's like she's trying to hard to be sexy.. Have you ever hung out with a couple that fights all the time..or the brother and sister who argue and punch eachother..or the drunk friend who hits on the guy who clearly is not into her?? WELCOME TO THE UGLY TRUTH. Remember the part in The Strangers when he knifes Liv Tyler? I covered my eyes and tried to watch it through my ring finer and pinky... THAT'S how I feel when she tries to be sexy. It embarasses me... just be IZZY. god. I'm annoyed now. I really do wanna like her and I can't figure out why she puts me in such a crazy mood...what is this? And no, I don't have a crush on her. That's what some of you said when I felt the same way about Mark Cuban. You may have been right about the Cuban one...but noooo on Heigl. No thank you. Leave me alone. HARRY POTTER AND THE HALF BLOOD PRINCE-That kid's a witch? and to round out this review...a confession of sorts... IMAYHAVE SEEN NANCYDREW OVER THE HOLIDAY AND I LIKEIT! OOOhhh that was tough. That was tough. I'm sorry to yell but like a band-aid..just ripped it off. It was killing me that I hiding it. I like that Emma Roberts. I liked that film. That's all I have to say. God, I feel so much better. I am gonna celebrate with some Wii Grey's Anatomy! I always start the game off with 'McDreamy, Mcsteamy...McNugget here"... Good stuff. Till next time! (INSERT WITTY MOVIE CLICHE SAYING HERE)
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