Keanu Reeves: Difference between revisions
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* Howell, Peter. "Reeves Reloaded." Toronto Star. (5/4/2003) |
* Howell, Peter. "Reeves Reloaded." Toronto Star. (5/4/2003) |
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TIBET AND THE OLYMPICS? |
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==References== |
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By Adrienne Papp |
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{{commons|Keanu Reeves}} |
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Tibet has recently been all over the headlines, and it’s a story that isn’t going away anytime soon. As China attempts to deal with upheaval and protesters in Tibet, it also is preparing for the Olympic games and the route of the torch of the Olympic flame has been an avenue of dissent for those protesting China’s handling of the crisis. |
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Tibetan Buddhism has had supporters for years, including Hollywood star Richard Gere, who opposes the Chinese government’s oppressive policies. Gere met its religious leader, the Dalai Lama, in the early 1980s, and has attended many of the annual teachings in Dharamsala. "It's not often that you meet a truly great man," Gere has said. "He's the real thing. It's rare to be in the presence of someone who wants nothing more than your happiness." |
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Other stars, including Orlando Bloom, Kate Bosworth, and Keanu Reeves, have also helped bring an appreciation of the Eastern religion to the West. |
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Buddhist monks in Tibet recently began to demonstrate against the lack of religious freedom in the country and for the return of the Dalai Lama, who has been exiled for many years. The Chinese crackdown has caused a worldwide outcry against the oppressive and sometimes-brutal methods the government uses to control protestors. |
|||
Now, with the Olympic Games on the horizon, the Chinese government faces a problem: How does it handle the protests that will continue to occur in Tibet, while hosting a sporting spectacle that is supposed to embody global goodwill and the sportsmanship inherent in international competition. |
|||
As the Olympic flame continues on its path to its eventual destination in Beijing, China seems to have seriously underestimated worldwide response to its treatment of Tibet. In a world where anyone with a cellphone camera can capture a news image and have it beamed instantaneously around the globe, a tide of unfavorable public opinion to events like this can be generated within hours. |
|||
It remains to be seen how this incident will affect the Olympic games, but there is already a talk of boycott from several nations. In the United States politicians have begun to voice support for action against China, but it’s difficult to penalize a country we are so economically dependent upon. |
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It’s a complex issue that won’t be resolved soon, and, if the crackdown continues, China risks a threat to the overall unity of the Olympic Games this summer. |
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Posted on Chic Today.com under Spotlight and Top News on April 16, 2008 |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* {{imdb|0000206}} |
* {{imdb|0000206}} |
Revision as of 03:52, 17 April 2008
Keanu Reeves | |
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Born | Keanu Charles Reeves |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1985 - present |
Keanu Charles Reeves (Template:PronEng; born September 2 1964) is a Canadian actor. He is well known for playing Neo in the action film trilogy The Matrix and Ted Logan in Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure and Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey. Other notable roles include Scott Favor in the drama My Own Private Idaho opposite River Phoenix; As Johnny Mnemonic in the sci-fi film Johnny Mnemonic opposite Dolph Lundgren. Kevin Lomax in the supernatural thriller The Devil's Advocate opposite Al Pacino; and starring roles in Speed and Constantine. He played bass guitar in the grunge band Dogstar during the 1990s, and more recently in the band Becky. In an ETonline survey in 2006, he was included in the "Top Ten of America's Favorite Stars". On January 31, 2005, Reeves received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Biography
Early life
Reeves was born in Beirut, Lebanon, the son of Patricia Taylor, a costume designer/performer, and Samuel Nowlin Reeves, Jr., a geologist.[1] Reeves' mother is English, and his father is an American of Portuguese, Irish, Hawaiian and Chinese descent.[2][3] Reeves's mother was working in Beirut when she met his father. Reeves' father worked as an unskilled laborer and earned his GED while imprisoned in Hawaii for selling cocaine at the Hilo airport. He abandoned his wife and family when Reeves was 13, and Reeves does not currently have any relationship with him.[4] Reeves is named after his uncle, Henry Keanu Reeves. When Reeves first arrived in Hollywood, his agent thought his first name was too exotic, so during the early days of his film career he was sometimes credited as K.C. Reeves. Reeves later returned to his Alma Mater and was honored as one of only a handful of non-band members to "dot the i" during the traditional pre-game performance.
Reeves has one full sister named Kim (born 1966 in Australia) who was diagnosed with leukemia in the early 1990s. Additionally, through his mother he has a half-sister named Karina Miller (born 1976 in Toronto) and through his father another half-sister named Emma Reeves (born 1980 in Hawaii).
Reeves experienced an unstable childhood moving around the world frequently and living with numerous stepfathers. His parents divorced in 1966. His mother became a costume designer and moved the family to Australia and then to New York City. There she met and married Paul Aaron, a Broadway and Hollywood director. The couple moved to Toronto but divorced in 1971. Reeves' mother then married Robert Miller, a rock promoter, in 1976, but the couple divorced in 1980. Her fourth husband, Jack Bond, was a hairdresser. That marriage broke up in 1994. Grandparents and nannies babysat Reeves and his sisters.
Reeves grew up primarily in Toronto. Within a span of five years, he attended four different high schools, including the Etobicoke School of the Arts, from which he was later expelled. Half-jokingly, Reeves says that he was expelled "because I was greasy and running around a lot. I was just a little too rambunctious and shot my mouth off once too often. I was not generally the most well-oiled machine in the school. I was just getting in their way, I guess."
Reeves excelled more in hockey than in academics, as his educational development was challenged by dyslexia. He was a successful goalie at one of his high schools (De La Salle College "Oaklands"). His team nicknamed him "The Wall," and voted him MVP. Reeves says that he would dream of becoming an Olympic hockey player for Canada. After leaving De La Salle College, he attended a free school (Avondale Alternative), which allowed him to obtain an education while working as an actor; he later dropped out, never obtaining his high school diploma. In 1983, Reeves attended Ohio State University and emjoyed a successful career as an Ohio State Quarterback. He admits that his time in Columbus had a big influence on his acting career. In two films Reeves has played a ex-Ohio State Quarterback (Point Break, The Replacements) paying homage to his time spent at the University.[5]
Career
Reeves began his acting career at the age of nine. He appeared on stage at a production of Damn Yankees. At 15, he played Mercutio in a stage production of Romeo and Juliet at the Leah Posluns Theatre. Reeves made his screen acting debut in a CBC Television comedy series, Hangin' In. Throughout the early 1980s, he appeared in commercials (including one for Coca-Cola), short films including the NFB drama One Step Away[6] and stage work such as Brad Fraser's cult hit Wolf Boy in Toronto.
Reeves' first studio movie appearance was in the Rob Lowe ice hockey film Youngblood, which was filmed in Canada. In it, he played an ice hockey goalie. Shortly after the movie's release, Reeves drove to Los Angeles in his 1969 Volvo. His ex-stepfather Paul Aaron, a stage and television director, had convinced Erwin Stoff to be Reeves' manager and agent before he even arrived in Los Angeles. Stoff has remained Reeves' manager, and has coproduced many of his films.
After a few minor roles, Reeves received a more sizable role in 1986's River's Edge. Following the film's success, he spent the late 1980s appearing in a number of movies aimed at teenage audiences, including Permanent Record, and the unexpectedly successful 1989 comedy, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, which, along with its 1991 sequel, Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, typecast Reeves as a sweet-natured buffoon. Much of his subsequent portrayal in the press and much of the response to his acting has been influenced by his portrayal of the airheaded Ted. Reeves has said that "I used to have nightmares that they would put 'He played Ted' on my tombstone".
During the early 1990s, Reeves started to break out of his teen-film period. He appeared in high-budget action films like Point Break, for which he won MTV's "Most Desirable Male" award in 1992. He was also involved in various lower-budget independent films, including the well-received 1991 film, My Own Private Idaho with his close friend, River Phoenix.
In 1994, Reeves' career reached a new high as a result of his starring role in the action film Speed. His casting in the film was controversial since, except for Point Break, he was primarily known for comedies and indie dramas. He had never been the sole headliner on a film. The summer action film had a fairly large budget and was helmed by novice cinematographer-turned-director Jan de Bont. The unexpected international success of the film made Reeves and co-star Sandra Bullock into A-List stars.
Reeves' career choices after Speed were eclectic: despite his successes, Reeves has never stopped accepting supporting roles, and he has always been willing to support experimental efforts. He scored a hit with a romantic lead role in A Walk in the Clouds. He made news by refusing to take part in Speed 2: Cruise Control and choosing to play the title role in a Manitoba Theatre Centre production of Hamlet in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Reeves got surprisingly good reviews for his interpretation of one of Shakespeare's most famous characters. Roger Lewis, the Sunday Times critic, wrote that "He quite embodied the innocence, the splendid fury, the animal grace of the leaps and bounds, the emotional violence, that form the Prince of Denmark...He is one of the top three Hamlets I have seen, for a simple reason: he * is* Hamlet."
Reeves' other choices after A Walk in the Clouds, however, failed with critics and audiences. Big-budget films such as Johnny Mnemonic and Chain Reaction were critically panned and failed at the box office, while indie films like Feeling Minnesota were also critical failures.
Reeves started to climb out of his career low after starring in the horror/drama The Devil's Advocate alongside Al Pacino and Charlize Theron. Reeves deferred his salary for The Devil's Advocate so that Pacino would be cast, as he would do later for the less successful The Replacements, guaranteeing the casting of Gene Hackman. The Devil's Advocate did well at the box office, received good reviews, and proved that Reeves could play a grown-up with a career.
The 1999 science fiction hit, The Matrix, solidified Reeves's place as an international superstar. In between the first Matrix film and its sequels, Reeves received positive reviews for his portrayal of an abusive husband in The Gift. Aside from The Gift, Reeves appeared in several films that received mostly negative reviews and unimpressive box office grosses, including The Watcher, Sweet November and The Replacements. However, the two Matrix sequels, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions, Something's Gotta Give, and the 2005 horror-action film, Constantine, proved to be box office successes and brought Reeves back into the public spotlight. His 2006 film, A Scanner Darkly, based on the science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick, received favorable reviews, and The Lake House, his romantic outing with Sandra Bullock, did well at the box office.
Reeves appeared in the 2008 film Street Kings, and is currently working on the remake of the 1951 science fiction movie The Day the Earth Stood Still in which he stars as Klaatu.
Hobbies
Reeves is an avid follower of ice hockey, American football, surfing, table tennis and soccer. He enjoys riding his numerous motorcycles and coined the term "demon ride" to describe riding fast with the headlights off, at night. Reeves can wax poetic about such rides: "This girl was just the most rockin' girl in the world you could have on the back of a bike because she was...fearless. One night, it was like 12:30, at the time I was practicing doing wheelies, and she said, 'let's go!' So we went on the freeway and it was just magic. She would grab me - she had these really great breasts and really long hair - and we had no helmets and no goggles and we were going like a hundred and thirty miles an hour on five lanes of freeway, with not a soul in sight. And this incredible cloudless moon just hangin' there...I've had some of the best times of my life on a motorcycle." Not all demon rides were so happy. On one such ride in 1988, Reeves crashed near Topanga Canyon and broke several ribs and ruptured his spleen. He has had an abdominal scar ever since.
Reeves is a hockey player, a prolific reader with an outstanding memory--he showed up for the production of Hamlet having memorized the entire play--and a lover of Shakespeare. He is left-handed, but plays the bass guitar right-handed. He loves punk rock bands such as The Ramones, Sex Pistols, Joy Division, and The Clash. He has a taste for Indie Rock and is a fan of They Might Be Giants and Crooked Fingers, as well as Mary J Blige and R&B legends Stevie Wonder and Otis Redding.
In a 1992 New Year's Eve party show, Reeves filled in on bass for punk rock band The Vandals while bassist Joe Escalante was at a wedding. He began playing the bass with rock band Dogstar, which has now gone "into hibernation." Reeves also had a part in New York thrash metal band Anthrax's "Safe Home" music video. More recently, he played bass in a band called Becky with former Dogstar drummer Rob Mailhouse, guitarist Paulie Kosta and singer Rebecca Lord. In early 2005, he announced that he was leaving the band and his musical career for good.
Personal life
For nearly a decade following his initial rise to stardom, Reeves preferred to live in rented homes and hotels and was a long term resident of the Chateau Marmont. Reeves bought his first house in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles around 2003, and also has an apartment in New York City.
Reeves has never been married. In December 1999, Reeves' girlfriend Jennifer Syme gave birth to a stillborn daughter who was named Ava Archer Reeves. In April 2001, Syme was killed in a car accident.[7]She was buried next to their daughter in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, California. Though these events happened soon after the release of the first Matrix movie, he has only once spoken about them publicly, saying that he doesn't believe that things happen "for a reason."[8]. He has been equally unwilling to speak about his sister Kim's battle with leukemia.
Although in the past, he has expressed some interest in Buddhism, Reeves has said that: "I wasn't raised in any special denominations and I haven't taken on any so far."[9]
Filmography
Television
- Night Heat - episode Crossfire (1985) as Mugge
- Night Heat - episode Necessary Force (1985) as Thug #1
- Letting Go (1985) as Stereo Teen #1
- Brotherhood of Justice (1986) as Derek
- Act of Vengeance (1986) as Buddy Martin
- Young Again (1986) as Michael Riley, Age 17 (credited as K.C. Reeves)
- Under the Influence (1986) as Eddie Talbot
- Babes in Toyland (1986) as Jack-Be-Nimble
- Trying Times - episode Moving Day (1987) as Joey
- Life Under Water (1989) - Kip
- The Tracey Ullman Show - episode Two Lost Souls (1989) as Jesse Walker
- Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventures (1990-93) as Ted (voice only) (season one,1990-91)
- Action 1999 - Pilot (1999) "Keanu Reeves"
- Statler and Waldorf: From the Balcony episode 3 (2005) as himself
- Latin Lover Season 1 & 2 (2001) as Ben Dover
Further reading
- Fleming, Michael. Playboy Interview: Keanu Reeves, Playboy Magazine. pp. 49-52, 140-141. (April 2006)
- "Pondering the mysterious Keanu Reeves", CNN / Associated Press. (November 5 2003)
- Makela, Bob. "Keanu Reeves: All the right moves", USA Weekend. (August 5 2000)
- Seven magazine interview with Keanu Reeves
- Chin, Ong song. "A Man of Many Faces," The Straits Times, Singapore. (5/15/2003)
- http://www.funmunch.com/celebrities/actors/keanu_reeves/keanu_reeves_biography.shtml
- Koffler, Kevin J. Karen Hardy, ed. The New Breed: Actors Coming of Age. 1988
- Shnayerson, Michael. "The Wild One." Vanity Fair (8/1995)
- Roman, Shari. "Keanu Reeves - Hawaiian Punk." Details (USA). (2/1/1988)
- Howell, Peter. "Reeves Reloaded." Toronto Star. (5/4/2003)
TIBET AND THE OLYMPICS?
By Adrienne Papp
Tibet has recently been all over the headlines, and it’s a story that isn’t going away anytime soon. As China attempts to deal with upheaval and protesters in Tibet, it also is preparing for the Olympic games and the route of the torch of the Olympic flame has been an avenue of dissent for those protesting China’s handling of the crisis. Tibetan Buddhism has had supporters for years, including Hollywood star Richard Gere, who opposes the Chinese government’s oppressive policies. Gere met its religious leader, the Dalai Lama, in the early 1980s, and has attended many of the annual teachings in Dharamsala. "It's not often that you meet a truly great man," Gere has said. "He's the real thing. It's rare to be in the presence of someone who wants nothing more than your happiness." Other stars, including Orlando Bloom, Kate Bosworth, and Keanu Reeves, have also helped bring an appreciation of the Eastern religion to the West. Buddhist monks in Tibet recently began to demonstrate against the lack of religious freedom in the country and for the return of the Dalai Lama, who has been exiled for many years. The Chinese crackdown has caused a worldwide outcry against the oppressive and sometimes-brutal methods the government uses to control protestors. Now, with the Olympic Games on the horizon, the Chinese government faces a problem: How does it handle the protests that will continue to occur in Tibet, while hosting a sporting spectacle that is supposed to embody global goodwill and the sportsmanship inherent in international competition. As the Olympic flame continues on its path to its eventual destination in Beijing, China seems to have seriously underestimated worldwide response to its treatment of Tibet. In a world where anyone with a cellphone camera can capture a news image and have it beamed instantaneously around the globe, a tide of unfavorable public opinion to events like this can be generated within hours. It remains to be seen how this incident will affect the Olympic games, but there is already a talk of boycott from several nations. In the United States politicians have begun to voice support for action against China, but it’s difficult to penalize a country we are so economically dependent upon.
It’s a complex issue that won’t be resolved soon, and, if the crackdown continues, China risks a threat to the overall unity of the Olympic Games this summer.
Posted on Chic Today.com under Spotlight and Top News on April 16, 2008
External links
- Please use a more specific IMDb template. See the documentation for available templates.
- Template:Tvtome person
- Keanu Reeves at People.com
- KeanuA-Z.com
- whoa is (not) me: Defending Keanu Reeves
- ^ Keanu Reeves Biography (1964-)
- ^ "Go Lisbon: Familiar Faces with a Portuguese Background in American Arts and Entertainment". Retrieved 2008-01-10.
- ^ An in-depth look at your favourite celebrity personalities - hellomagazine.com, HELLO!
- ^ Honolulu Star-Bulletin Features: Memories of Keanu - Samuel Reeves has not seen or heard from his famous son in decades
- ^ Michael Fleming (April 2006). "Interview: Keanu Reeves, the enigma speaks". Playboy. p. 140.
- ^ NFB - Collection - One Step Away
- ^ Marylin Manson Accused of Contributing to Friends's Death. VH1.com
- ^ Neo Romantic
- ^ Keanu 'less sceptical' about demons
- 1964 births
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- Canadian Buddhists
- Canadian expatriate actors in the United States
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- Canadian television actors
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- Canadians of Chinese descent
- Canadians of Irish descent
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- Dropouts
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