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Brad Pitt

Actor. Born December 18, 1963, in Shawnee,
Oklahoma. Pitt grew up in Springfield, Missouri, the eldest of three children in a
devoutly Southern Baptist family. His father, Bill Pitt, owned a trucking company and his
mother, Jane Pitt, was a family counselor. Pitt originally aspired to be an advertising
art director, studying journalism at the University of Missouri. However, the young
college student had other quiet aspirations, the product of a childhood “love of movies,”
which finally seemed tangible his last semester at university when he realized, “I can
leave.” On a whim, Pitt dropped out of college, packed up his Datsun, and headed West to
pursue an acting career in Los Angeles, just two credits shy of a college degree.
Pitt told his parents he intended to enroll in the Art Center College of Design in
Pasadena, but instead spent the next several months driving a limousine—chauffeuring
strippers from one bachelor party to the next, delivering refrigerators, and trying to
break into the L.A. acting scene. He joined an acting class and, shortly after,
accompanied a classmate as her scene partner on an audition with an agent. In a twist of
fate, the agent signed Pitt instead of his classmate. After weathering only seven months
in Los Angeles, Pitt had secured an agent and regular acting work.
Pitt’s first jobs came in television, appearing in episodes of Dallas, the daytime soap
Another World, the sitcom Growing Pains, and in 1990’s short-lived Fox Television
series, Glory Days.
In 1989, Pitt played Billy Canton, the drug-addicted pimp of a teenage runaway, played by
Juliette Lewis, in the NBC made-for-television movie Too Young to Die. Pitt and Lewis (9
years his junior at age 16) started dating and eventually moved in together.
Pitt made his big screen debut in 1989’s horror/slasher film Cutting Class with Donovan
Leitch, and played a teen track star in Sandy Tung’s Across the Tracks, but it was a
well-timed bit part in a controversial Hollywood film that pushed him into the glare of
instant stardom. Pitt’s performance as a renegade, sugar-tongued hitchhiker who gets
picked up by the two title characters in Ridley Scott’s Thelma and Louise (1991) grabbed
universal attention despite only a few minutes worth of screen time. Pitt’s combination
of charming bad boy charisma and sexual playfulness (particularly in a fiery love scene
with Geena Davis) secured him as a genuine sex symbol (and wore out the rewind button on
many a VCR).
Pitt’s next few films failed to boost his acting credibility and establish him as more
than just a pretty face in Hollywood. He appeared in The Favor (1992) with Elizabeth
McGovern, Tom CiCillo’s directorial debut, Johnny Suede (1992), and the unconvincing,
half-animated Cool World (1992).
However, later that year, the Hollywood sunshine set the golden boy alight once more in
Robert Redford’s 1992 film based on Norman McLean’s autobiography, A River Runs
Through It. Pitt played the main character’s charismatic gambling, fly-fishing brother
(looking remarkably like the young Robert Redford).
Redford later admitted that he did not
choose Pitt on the strength of his audition, rather, because “[he] had an inner conflict
that was very interesting to me.” Pitt delivered a sparkling performance, skillfully
depicting the character’s dangerous footing between overwhelming charm and reckless
self-destructiveness.
In 1993, Pitt re-teamed with three-year girlfriend Lewis in Dominic Sela’s Kalifornia.
Pitt played Early Grayce, a man who goes on a cross-country killing spree with his
girlfriend. The film was deemed self-indulgently violent and nihilistic by many reviewers
and did not do well in the box office. Pitt and Lewis broke up soon after filming,
creating a publicity disaster.
Pitt proceeded to lighten his repertoire with a comedic performance as “Floyd,” a
burnt-out hippie in Tony Scott’s True Romance, but his next major role came in the
adaptation of Ann Rice’s Interview with the Vampire, alongside Tom Cruise. Rice
initially expressed outrage at the casting choices, finding the two boyish, all-American
film stars too rough for the subtle, slightly homoerotic overtones of the tale. “It’s
like casting Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer,” she reportedly complained. However, after seeing
the final film, Rice retracted her initial statements and filmed a short spot for the
video version, endorsing the film. Caryn James of The New York Times reported, “the
power of the film depends on Mr. Pitt’s rich and deeply affecting performance. Low-key
and serene, he makes Louis convincing as a bereaved father, lover, even son.
Pitt’s next few efforts secured his
place as a Hollywood staple; still, many critics found his roles lacking in dimension. In
1994’s Legends of the Fall, an epic family melodrama, Pitt played Tristan—a
stereotypical romantic hero with long, golden locks and a penchant for alternately selfish
and self-sacrificing gestures. However, Pitt abruptly took a gritty turn as a detective on
the trail of a serial killer in David Fincher’s disturbing and gory thriller, Seven.
During filming, he met and began dating his then relatively unknown costar, Gwyneth
Paltrow. Both claimed it was “love at first sight.” The two stayed together for two
and a half years and were one of Hollywood’s most admired and celebrated couples. Then,
in 1997, after a seven-month engagement, the couple split for unknown reasons.
In 1995, Pitt starred as a mental patient in Terry Gilliam’s psychological thriller
Twelve Monkeys and won a Golden Globe for best supporting actor. He followed with another
dark thriller, Sleepers (1996), and Alan J. Pakula’s Devil’s Own with Harrison Ford,
before heading to Argentina to film Seven Years in Tibet, an ambitious, seventy million
dollar project, which met disappointingly mixed reviews. Unfortunately, his next film, the
three-hour plus Meet Joe Black, co-starring Anthony Hopkins, in which he played a very
comely version of Death, also inspired little praise.
In 1999, after a brief hiatus from the Hollywood hot list, Pitt re-teamed with Seven
director, David Fincher, to make Fight Club.
The apocalyptic film, also starring Edward
Norton, presents an unglamorous Pitt in a disturbing role as leader and recruiter of Fight
Club—a bloody diversion for young professional males. Next up for Pitt was the British
crime-caper Snatch (2001), costarring Benicio Del Toro and directed by Guy Ritchie. That
same year, Pitt starred with Julia Roberts in the romantic comedy The Mexican, teamed with
Robert Redford in the thriller Spy Game, and joined an A-list ensemble cast including
Roberts, George Clooney, and Matt Damon in Steven Soderbergh's remake of the Rat Pack
heist caper Ocean's Eleven. In 2002, he signed on to play the Greek hero Achilles in
Warner Bros.' epic Troy. He will also be producing The Madman of Alcatraz, based on the
true story of the psychiatrist who treated the infamous Robert "Birdman" Stroud.
A two-time winner of People magazine's "Sexiest Man Alive" title (1995 and
2000), Pitt began dating Jennifer Aniston, star of the TV sitcom Friends, in 1998. Pitt
and Aniston were married July 29, 2000, in Malibu, California. The couple lives in Los
Angeles.
© 2003 A&E Television Networks. All rights reserved.
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