UK Play Magazine -
January 2002
Strange
Attraction
Despite playing more weirdos than the rest of Hollywood put together, Christopher Walken
has become one of the most respected actors in the business.
Victoria Segal reports
If you are a director looking for a
romantic lead, you probably won't call Christopher Walken. If you are looking
for an undead philosopher with a thirst for human blood, however, you will know exactly
whose phone number to dig out of your Rolodex. Vampires, psychopaths, alien
abductees: Walken's underground pallor and ethereal stare have equipped him perfectly
for a life on the dark side. He has played a suicidal soldier (The Deer Hunter, 1978), a damaged psychic (The Dead Zone, 1983), a Bond villain (A View to a Kill, 1985) and Batman's nemesis (Batman Returns, 1992).
His latest film, The Affair of the Necklace,
sees him take on the role of Count Cagliostro, the sinister mesmerist who enchanted
pre-Revolutionary France. By rights, the 58-year-old actor should be considered a
victim of typecasting, little more than a lazy film-maker's shorthand for the
strange. Yet while there might be an element of self-parody in Walken's work,
it has never been destructive, nor has it stopped him being held in high esteem. It
is rare for an actor to appear in a film such as the children's caper MouseHunt (1997) and still be hailed as a cult figure. There is little doubt that
Walken's charisma and acting ability are such that he could transform a Pizza Hut
commercial into a work of Abel Ferrera-like darkness. The highbrow cultural web site
Salon described him as "the Peter Lorre of the pre-Millennium", a character
actor who transcends the limitations of a particular role to make any film his own.
Driven by a fierce work ethic, Walken has no problem with the threat of typecasting.
"I work," he once said, with a cheering lack of pretension, "a lot of
actors don't."
Even when playing the slightest of roles, Walken
always brings more than plain weirdness to a part. He can suggest a complex array of
thought processes, even managing to seek out a profundity in the role of the Headless
Horseman in Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow (1999) - a role that required him
to do little more than growl.
By examining Walken's personal life it is
possible to understand what allows him to transcend the potential pitfalls and
restrictions of his career path. His Scottish mother, Rosalie, belonged to an
organisation called the Stage Mothers' Society and enrolled the young Walken and his
two brothers in tapdancing classes, often driving them to auditions. By the early
Fifties, the boys were regulars on shows such as Philco TV Playhouse and The
Colgate Comedy Hour while also attending the Professional Children's
School. At the age of 15, Walken added a splash of vaudeville colour to his career
when he worked as a lion tamer's assistant. It is easy to attribute his
unabashed work ethic to his old-fashioned stage childhood, the professional training and
commitment that is a world away from the film star flightiness that is endemic in
Hollywood today.
Return to Walken Home Page |
Profile: Christopher Walken

After learning how to dance
in his youth, Walken always tries to inveigle a dance routine into his films - his
appearances in Spike Jonze's video for Fatboy Slim's Weapon of Choice last year was a delight, a riot of stylish syncopation through a hotel lobby that was
utterly devoid of menace. He might be considered by some to be one of the most
sinister actors in the world, but he also dances, and it is this unpredictability that
deepens his appeal. After all, he has been married for 32 years, owns cats and is a
keen cook. Clearly, he leads a life that has little to do with the supernatural or
the criminally insane.
No matter how much people think they know what to
expect from Walken, after a lifetime in showbusiness he still has the ability to surprise,
startle and shock. He may have once described himself as "the malevolent
WASP" but, somehow, he has managed to make everyone love him.
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CW
Christopher Walken |
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Real name Ronald Walken. His parents named
him after the actor Ronald Coleman, but when he was 22 an acting colleague nicknamed him
Christopher and it stayed with him
Born March 31, 1943, in Astoria, Queens, New
York
Family His parents, Paul and Rosalie, ran a bakery
Marital status Married to Georgianne, whom he met in a touring production of West
Side Story, in 1969
Early Influences Jerry Lewis encouraged him to make showbusiness his career
after meeting him on The Colgate Comedy Hour
Career high He won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Michael
Cimino's The Deer Hunter (1978)
Career low Appearing in Heaven's Gate (1980), Cimino's notorious flop
In his own words "I don't need to be made to look evil. I can do
that all on my own"
Other interests He won an MTV Music Award for choreographing his own moves in
the video for Fatboy Slim's Weapon of Choice |
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