Edward Norton's
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VTAL
STATS:
Occupation: Actor
Date of Birth: August 18, 1969
Place of Birth: Columbia, Md., USA
Sign: Sun in Leo, Moon in Libra
Education: Yale University; majored in history
Relations: Mother: Robin Norton (deceased); father:
Edward Norton Sr.; siblings: James, Molly; companion:
Courtney Love
BIOGRAPHY:
IT'S not often that a completely unknown actor steps
from the wings of obscurity to snag a pivotal
supporting assignment in a major feature, headlined
by a major star, and then has the impertinence to be
the film's saving grace. But such was the case with
Edward Norton, who made his film debut in 1996 in the
Richard Gere starrer Primal Fear. Norton first
rescued the picture from falling apart (Gere was
close to walking because the film's producers took
forever to fill Norton's role), and then from falling
flat (with apologies to Richard, Norton's stunning
performance was the only thing to recommend the
otherwise desolate courtroom drama). Marking one of
the most astounding feature debuts in years, Norton's
critically lauded, Golden Globe- and Oscar-nominated
performance catapulted him into the media spotlight.
On the strength of this one performance, Norton inked
deals for two additional A-list projects (he had to
turn down a role opposite Dustin Hoffman and Dennis
Franz in American Buffalo because of scheduling
constraints)--all this before Primal Fear hit a
theater near you. How to explain this insta-fame? We
can't credit witty talk show appearances, stylish
magazine covers, or the zealous efforts of
high-powered agents. We can't say it's because he's
so damned good-looking à la fellow recent arrival
Matthew McConaughey, or that he's got the right
connections. No, Edward Norton has become a hot
property for one simple, beautiful reason: he can act
like nobody's business.
Who exactly is this electrifying Johnny-come-lately
that has everyone spouting off comparisons to
Graduate-era Hoffman and young De Niro? That's been a
surprisingly tough question to answer. Norton, a Yale
grad who can, and does, speak with almost frightening
eloquence on any issue concerning his work, has
proved scrupulously guarded when anything with the
barest hint of a personal nature is broached. He has
his reasons: in the manner of fellow reticence-prone
actor Daniel Day-Lewis, Norton wishes his work to
speak for itself without issues of celebrity muddying
up the viewer's experience. Norton gives his
characteristic considered explanation: "Every
little thing that people know about you as a person
impedes your ability to achieve that kind of terrific
suspension of disbelief that happens when an audience
goes with an actor and character [he's]
playing." So, the less you know about Ed
Norton's likes, dislikes, lovers, family members, and
quirks, the more you can enjoy his performance--fair
enough. He also abhors the thought of cheapening his
private life by having his emotional experiences
become grist for the Hollywood gossip mill: "I
don't have any desire to be some clam--or Greta
Garbo. Anybody can ask me anything, but I firmly
believe I have the right to answer or not, especially
if I explain why."
What we know is that Norton was born and raised in
Columbia, Maryland, the eldest of his lawyer father
and a teacher mother's three children. We also know
that, as long as he can remember, Norton has felt the
impulse to act, and in fact, started appearing in
plays at the age of five. He attended a school for
theatrical arts in the Baltimore area, and by the age
of eight was already asking precocious questions like
"What is my objective in this scene?" He
appeared in numerous undergraduate plays during his
years at Yale. Following a post-college stopover in
Japan, where he worked for Enterprise Foundation, an
organization founded by his grandfather that develops
low-income housing internationally, Norton headed
back to the States to fulfill a date with destiny on
the stages of Manhattan. He supported himself with
the typical part-time waitering jobs, and his rounds
of auditions and acting classes started paying off
with castings in off-off-Broadway productions. In
1994, the budding young thespian drew the attention
of Edward Albee, whose plays were being staged by New
York's Signature Theatre Company. After an
"extraordinary" audition before Albee and
Signature's artistic director, Norton was cast in the
world premiere production of Albee's Fragments; he
subsequently joined the Signature ranks.
Meanwhile, back in Hollywood . . . casting for the
Richard Gere vehicle Primal Fear wasn't going so
well. Paramount's first choice to play the role of
Aaron Stampler, a seemingly sinless Appalachian
choirboy accused of murdering a Chicago archbishop,
was young actor-on-the-rise Leonardo DiCaprio. Leo
had given the thumbs-down to the project, thereby
throwing the studio into a hectic multi-continent
hunt for a replacement; casting agents auditioned
over 2,100 hopefuls. The search for just the right
look and accent ended with Edward Norton, a slender,
pale unknown with piercing intelligence and lopsided
features, who claimed that he had grown up in eastern
Kentucky, and he had the accent to prove it. Norton
affected a twang-perfect hick dialect, modified it
with a slight stutter, packaged it with a believable
altar-boy innocence, and the part was his. Norton's
two screen tests for Primal Fear were volcanic enough
to spark an instant industry buzz, and before he knew
it, he had landed a role as Drew Barrymore's lawyerly
fiancé in Woody Allen's ensemble musical Everyone
Says I Love You. But the newcomer's working year was
far from over--following production on Everyone Says,
Norton joined the cast of Milos Forman's biopic, The
People vs. Larry Flynt, in which he portrayed Flynt's
attorney and friend Alan Isaacman.
Glowing notices haven't all been confined to Norton's
winning performances. Everyone co-star Drew Barrymore
cooed, "Edward has a beautiful soul and heart.
He is not out there self-destructing. He is Old
Hollywood. He's classy. He's genuine." Larry
Flynt co-star Courtney Love, who is rumored to be
dating Norton, concurs: "Edward is so brilliant,
so chivalrous. In terms of ethics and integrity, he
transcends virtually everybody I've met in the
entertainment world. Both as an actor and a person,
he's pure class."
Fortunately and unfortunately, all this intoxicating
attention transpired during a difficult time for the
Norton family--Edward's grandfather, famed architect
James Rouse (he developed Boston's Faneuil Hall
marketplace and Baltimore's Harborplace), died in
April 1996, and his mother died the following year,
not long after she underwent surgery to remove a
brain tumor. Tipping the fortunate side of the scales
was the fact that Norton could use his newfound
celebrity to organize a screening of Everyone Says I
Love You in Baltimore to benefit the ongoing research
of the Johns Hopkins Hospital oncology team that
operated on his mother. Norton's outlook on his
sudden and overwhelming film success has necessarily
been influenced by both traumas: "It's a nice
position to be in; I'm lucky. At the same time, all
the excitement of that has been put into stark
perspective. . . . In some ways, the highs of it have
been blunted, which in a way, is a gift."
The chameleonlike facility with which the
Oscar-nominated actor switches dramatic gears--you've
got to admit, there is a huge chasm between callous
choirboy killer and warbling, lovestruck lawyer--was
next put to the test in the poker-themed noir film
Rounders and in Tony Kaye's controversial American
History X, in which he plays a tattooed neo-Nazi
skinhead.