Harrison Ford's
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BIRTH: July 13th,
1942; Chicago, IL
EDUCATION: Ripon College (did not complete)
FAMILY: Melissa Mathison; Mary Ford (ex); 4 kids
BEHIND every Great American Movie Star, there seems
to be a Great American Hard-Luck Story. Harrison Ford
wasn't exactly born in a log cabin, but the tale of
his early career is long on rejection and
frustration, and desperately short on money (at one
point, he hastily taught himself carpentry to
survive). Of course, every Great American Hard-Luck
Story must have its happy ending, and Ford's is no
different: these days, he cashes eight-figure
paychecks and relaxes between films at his ranch in
Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
Given the heroic attributes of Ford's best-loved
on-screen characters, there is no small irony in the
events of his childhood, in suburban Des Plaines,
Illinois: as a young runt, he had few friends and was
a natural target for schoolyard bullies. He exuded
hopeless nerdiness during his years at Maine Township
High in nearby Park Ridge, where he earned C and D
grades, hung out mostly with the girls, and served as
one of those audiovisual assistants who push
projectors from room to room. After graduation, Ford
attended tiny, rigidly conservative Ripon College in
Wisconsin, where he majored in English. It wasn't an
easy place for a young beatnik to be, and Ford was
bounced from Ripon's R.O.T.C. program for refusing to
cut his hair; he readily admits that he spent most of
his time at college sleeping. A summer acting in
stock theatre captured his interest, and while he was
informed the following spring that he had failed too
many of his classes to graduate, he headed for Los
Angeles in a beat-up Volkswagen bus with his college
sweetheart-wife, Mary Marquardt, and a dream of
becoming an actor.
It quickly became apparent that finding steady work
in his chosen profession would be no easy feat. A
relentless perfectionist, Ford was ejected from
talent stables at both Columbia and Universal for his
refusal to cooperate with directors and producers who
did not share his standards of excellence. One studio
executive told him he was hopelessly lacking in
"star quality," and at age twenty-four,
Ford took a carpenter's job building a new recording
studio for Brazilian composer Sergio Mendes. Despite
the fact that his only knowledge of carpentry came
from a book he checked out of the Encino Public
Library, Ford discovered he possessed a natural gift
with tools, and before long the novice builder was
earning a respectable living constructing everything
from decks to bookcases. He occasionally supplemented
his income with small television and film roles
whenever he could land them.
Perhaps the most fateful casting of his career was
for a role that Ford very nearly passed up. A
promising young director named George Lucas offered
him a supporting part in his film American Graffiti,
but Ford walked off the set in disgust when he
learned that he would be paid only $485 a week--less
than half what he was earning as a carpenter.
Luckily, he changed his mind when the studio offered
him an extra fifteen dollars a week. The film was a
surprise hit, and, more importantly, it marked the
beginning of a lasting friendship between director
and actor. When Lucas was unable to cast the role of
Star Wars' cynical space adventurer Han Solo, he
asked Ford to read for the part and, at the age of
thirty-four, the actor-turned-artisan was a star in
one of the most phenomenal blockbusters in the
history of cinema.
Although Star Wars made Ford a minor star, he had no
luck replicating its box-office magic until Lucas's
The Empire Strikes Back welcomed Han Solo back to the
silver screen. The following year, as Lucas and
Steven Spielberg were unable to schedule filming
around Tom Selleck's commitment to Magnum P.I. on
their first collaborative effort, Raiders of the Lost
Ark, Ford stumbled onto the role he was born to play.
His performance as roguish archaeologist Indiana
Jones was an unqualified critical and commercial
smash, and made Ford both a household name and an
international sex symbol. Accordingly, his career
flourished; most notably, he strengthened his
reputation as a commanding, intelligent actor in
Ridley Scott's cult classic Blade Runner, and in
Peter Weir's police thriller Witness (his performance
in the latter film garnered a Best Actor Oscar
nomination for 1985). Moviegoers responded favorably
to his gift for portraying ordinary men who grapple
with extraordinary circumstances while never losing
sight of the irony of their situation--a quality
which made huge hits out of Presumed Innocent,
Patriot Games, The Fugitive, and Clear and Present
Danger. The same wry perspective made his corporate
fable Working Girl a hit on par with his
man-on-the-run blockbusters.
Ford has two adult sons from his first marriage to
Marquardt. That marriage ended in divorce in 1979,
and four years later Ford married screenwriter
Melissa Mathison. The couple has since boasted one of
Hollywood's most stable marriages, and they have two
children of their own.
Fans of Ford's action-oriented films thrilled to the
1997 releases of The Devil's Own, in which he played
a tough-on-terrorist (Brad Pitt) New York policeman,
and the hijacking-themed actioner Air Force One, in
which he portrayed a tough-on-terrorism U.S.
President. Ford next co-stars opposite Anne Heche in
the action-tinged romantic comedy 6 Days, 7 Nights,
and he recently signed to star opposite Kristin Scott
Thomas in the Sydney Pollack-directed romantic drama
Random Hearts. It is possible that Ford will reprise
his role as Jack Ryan in the upcoming The Cardinal of
the Kremlin; and yes, there is also another Indiana
Jones adventure in the works, but don't hold your
breath. "There's another script," Ford
admits, but warns, "the last script took five
years until everyone was happy."