Danny DeVito
About Danny DeVito
Perhaps no Hollywood actor continually stirs up more of a gleeful admixture of feelings in his viewers than Danny DeVito. Singlehandedly portraying characters with mile-long, obnoxious jerk streaks that are nonetheless somehow loveable, DeVito -- with his diminutive stature, balding head, and broad Jersey accent -- recalls a line that he himself used (about a character) in his big-screen directorial debut, Throw Momma From the Train: "Maybe [he] would be someone you'd like to kill." No question about it: DeVito has made an art form out of playing endearingly loathsome little men.
Born November 17, 1944, in Neptune, NJ, Daniel Michael DeVito Jr. survived a Catholic school upbringing and started his career from the ground up, laboring as a cosmetician in his sister's beauty parlor. Working under the name "Mr. Danny," DeVito decided to enter New York's American Academy of Dramatic Arts for the purpose of acquiring additional makeup expertise. However, he soon discovered his true theatrical calling and made his screen debut with a small part in the 1968 drama Dreams of Glass. After a few discouraging experiences within the film industry, DeVito decided to concentrate on stage work. During this time, he met actress Rhea Perlman, whom he later married in 1982. In 1972, the actor made his way back into films with a role in Lady Liberty, a comedy starring Sophia Loren. His first notable film part came three years later, when he reprised his stage role of Martini, a sweet-natured mental patient, in Milos Forman's screen version of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Produced by DeVito's old friend Michael Douglas (the two roomed together when DeVito was starting out) and co-scripted by Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman, the film won wide acclaim and nine Oscar nominations, eventually gleaning five statuettes (including Best Picture). Despite the adulation surrounding the film, DeVito's screen career remained lackluster, but he skyrocketed to fame three years later with his role as the obnoxious dispatcher Louie on the long-running television sitcom Taxi. According to legend, the actor walked into the audition, script in hand, and yelled, "Who wrote this sh*t?!" Jim Brooks hired him on the spot. From there, DeVito's career swung upward and he spent the next decade playing similarly repugnant characters with enormous success. He reunited with Douglas for Romancing the Stone (1984) and its 1985 sequel, Jewel of the Nile, teamed up with co-star Joe Piscopo and director Brian De Palma (as a scam artist on the run) in Wise Guys (1986), and signed with Disney's R-rated offshoot, Touchstone, for two comedies, the 1986 Ruthless People (as a wealthy husband overjoyed to discover that his obnoxious wife has been kidnapped) and the 1987 Barry Levinson-directed Tin Men (in which he plays one of two conniving Cadillac salesmen, opposite Richard Dreyfuss). As mentioned, Throw Momma from the Train (1987) marked DeVito's premier directorial outing. (His premier cinematic outing: he had previously helmed numerous episodes of Taxi and the 1984 cable telemovie The Ratings Game.) A madcap farce directed from a script by Benson and Soap scribe Stu Silver, Momma cast DeVito as Owen, a dim-bulb student living under the castrating thumb of his loudmouthed mother, who is enrolled in a writing course taught by failing novelist Larry Donner (Billy Crystal). Stumbling into a repertory screening of Strangers on a Train one night, Owen has the not-so-bright idea of emulating the film, by bumping off Larry's conniving ex-wife in exchange for having Larry rub out his momma -- without asking Larry first.DeVito immediately established his own signature authorial stamp on the film, with what became a trademark use of bizarre, almost absurdly expressionistic camera angles. Throw Momma from the Train opened during the Christmas season of December 1987 and received mixed reviews. (Roger Ebert complained, "[Momma] is a series of missed opportunities and unexploited situations, a movie that wants to have genuine nastiness at its heart, but never quite works up the energy or the nerve to be truly heartless.") The picture nonetheless became a massive hit -- a real crowd-pleaser -- grossing upwards of 57 million dollars, and thus paving the way for future DeVito-directed efforts. The War of the Roses (1989) -- marked by the same stylistic approach -- recast DeVito with his Romancing the Stone and Jewel of the Nile co-stars, Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner, but could not have been any more different in terms of theme, content, tone, or intended audience. Co-adapted by Warren Adler and Michael Leeson (from Adler's novel), this acerbic, black-as-coal comedy tells the story of Oliver and Barbara Rose, a seemingly happy and well-adjusted married couple whose nuptials descend into a violent hell when Barbara announces that she wants a divorce -- and Oliver refuses to give her one. DeVito plays the cherubic lawyer who relays their story to another client, and famously reflects, "If love is blind, then marriage must be like having a stroke." The picture instantly grossed dollar one, garnered legions of fans, and delighted critics across the board.Ida Random produced Momma, and DeVito's Taxi collaborator, James L. Brooks, produced War, but by the early '90s, DeVito gained additional autonomy by branching out into production duties himself, with the establishment of his own Jersey Films. Some of Jersey's more successful endeavors were 1994's Pulp Fiction (on which DeVito served as executive producer), Reality Bites (1994), Get Shorty (1995), Gattaca (1997), Out of Sight (1998), and Living Out Loud (1998). In the meantime, DeVito continued to act in a number of movies throughout the late '80s and '90s, his most notable being Twins (1988, in which he played the "twin" of Arnold Schwarzenegger), the disappointing Jack the Bear (1993, playing a goofy father attempting to raise his sons in a dark and disturbing world, in the early '70s), the delightful Other People's Money (1991, for which he took on the role of corporate monster Larry the Liquidator), Barry Sonnenfeld's Get Shorty, the screen adaptation of Roald Dahl's Matilda (1996, which he also directed and produced), L.A. Confidential (1997), and Living Out Loud. For the last of these DeVito won particular acclaim, impressing critics with his touching, sympathetic portrayal of a lonely elevator operator. In 1999, he added to his already impressive resumé with a role in Milos Forman's biopic of Taxi co-star Andy Kaufman, Man on the Moon, and a supporting turn in Sofia Coppola's The Virgin Suicides.Despite solid performances in a series of recent high-profile hits and decades of big-screen success, the millennial turnover found DeVito's star somewhat clouded as such efforts as Screwed (2000), What's the Worst That Could Happen? (2001), Death to Smoochy (2002), and Duplex (2003) failed to live up to box-office potential. Smoochy dealt a particularly crushing blow. That film stars funnyman Robin Williams as Rainbow Randolph, the sicko host of a kiddie show, who plots to wipe out his Barney-like competitor (Ed Norton). It appeared and disappeared instantly; Maitland McDonough provided one of the kinder reactions, in TV Guide, calling it "a misfire of spectacular proportions." DeVito fared only slightly better as producer of the critically acclaimed 2003 television series Karen Sisco and the ugly Get Shorty sequel, Be Cool. He also acted as executive producer for the acclaimed Zach Braff dramedy Garden State and could be spotted in director Tim Burton's imaginative fable Big Fish. As 2005 rolled around, audiences could spot DeVito in films such as The OH in Ohio, as well as on television as the actor found himself accepting a role in the quirky, Arrested Development-esque series It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.During 2006, DeVito balanced a full plate of work, temporarily retiring from the director's chair, but juggling small roles in no less than three A-list features. These include Brad Silberling's 10 Items or Less, a drama about the unlikely friendship that evolves between a has-been Hollywood star (Morgan Freeman) and a supermarket checkout clerk (Paz Vega); Jake Paltrow's directorial debut, The Good Night, a slice-of-life dramedy starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Penélope Cruz; and the holiday comedy Deck the Halls. The latter stars DeVito and Matthew Broderick as neighbors who go to "war" with competing decorations at Christmastime to see who can be the first to make his house visible from space. The film co-stars Kristin Davis and Kristin Chenoweth. Meanwhile, Jersey Films geared up to produce the 2007 Freedom Writers, directed by Richard LaGravenese -- a kind of retread of Stand and Deliver and Dangerous Minds, with Hilary Swank as a teacher determined to break through to her difficult students. DeVito and wife Rhea Perlman have three children. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Rhea Perlman | wife | married January 8, 1982; met in 1970 in New York and began living together after two weeks; have worked together on various projects since the 1970s |
| Grace Fan DeVito | daughter | born March 1985 |
| Lucy Chet DeVito | daughter | born March 1983 |
| Jacob Daniel Sebastian DeVito | son | born October 1987 |
| Daniel DeVito Sr | father | at various times owned a dry cleaning store (Dan-Dee Cleaners), a dairy outlet (From Our Farm to You), a luncheonette and a pool hall |
| Angela DeVito | sister | older |
| After graduating from the AADA, tried to find acting work in New York and later Los Angeles, but eventually moved back to the New York area | |
| Co-founded production company, Jersey Films, with wife Rhea Perlman | |
| Grew up in Asbury Park, NJ | |
| TV directing debut with three episodes of "Taxi" | |
| Voiced the part of Herb Powell, Homer Simpson's long-lost half-brother, on several episodes of the popular animated Fox sitcom, "The Simpsons", beginning in 1991 | |
| 1963 | Worked as hairdresser for one year at his sister's shop in New Jersey at age 18 (date approximate) |
| 1966 | Met Michael Douglas while studying at the AADA and working at the Eugene O'Neill Foundation when the two were at the National Playwrights Conference in Waterford, CT |
| 1968 | Feature film acting debut in "Dreams of Glass" |
| 1969 | Off-Broadway debut in the leading role of one of three one-act plays jointly entitled "The Man With the Flower in His Mouth" |
| 1970 | Began living with Perlman in an apartment they subletted from Douglas; Douglas had shared apartment with De Vito prior to moving to L.A. and continued to pay half the $150 rent even after Perlman moved in |
| 1971 | Appeared in the Off-Off-Broadway productions, "The Shrinking Bride" and "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" |
| 1972 | Began making regular feature film appearances with his supporting role in the Italian-French co-production, "La mortadella/Lady Liberty", starring Sophia Loren |
| 1973 | Co-wrote and produced (with Rhea Perlman) first short film, "The Sound Sleeper", in black and white |
| 1975 | Breakthrough acting role, when director Milos Forman and Michael Douglas, serving as producer, asked DeVito to recreate the part of Martini for the screen version of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" |
| 1975 | DeVito and Perlman received grant from American Film Institute to write and produce a second short film, "Minestrone", which was shown at the Cannes Film Festival and eventually translated into five languages for screenings abroad; was his first film in 35mm and color |
| 1978 - 1983 | TV debut as Louis De Palma on the ABC (NBC for its last season) sitcom, "Taxi" |
| 1979 | TV-movie debut, "Valentine" (ABC) |
| 1984 | Made TV-movie directing debut, "The Ratings Game", which aired on The Movie Channel; also starred in film |
| 1985 | Directed the premiere episode of the CBS sitcom, "Mary", starring Mary Tyler Moore |
| 1986 | First received top billing in a feature in Brian De Palma's "Wise Guys", a comedy co-starring Joe Piscopo |
| 1986 | Starred opposite wife Rhea Perlman in the second season premiere of the NBC anthology series, "Amazing Stories"; also directed the episode, entitled "The Wedding Ring" |
| 1987 | Feature directing debut, "Throw Momma from the Train"; also starred |
| 1992 | First feature producing credit, "Hoffa"; also directed |
| 1992 | Played the Penguin in Tim Burton's "Batman Returns" |
| 1993 | Supplied the voice of Whiskers for the feature film, "The Last Action Hero" and the voice of Rocks for the feature, "Look Who's Talking Now" |
| 1994 | First executive producing credit on a feature, "8 Seconds" |
| 1994 | First producing credit on a film which he did not also direct, "Reality Bites" |
| 1994 | Served as executive producer on Quentin Tarantino's smash hit "Pulp Fiction" |
| 1996 | Produced, directed and acted in film adaptation of Roald Dahl's novel "Matilda"; also co-starred with Perlman |
| 1997 | Portrayed smarmy tabloid columnist in Curtis Hanson's "L.A. Confidential" |
| 1997 | Reunited with producer Michael Douglas, acting in "John Grisham's The Rainmaker", directed by Francis Ford Coppola |
| 1998 | Had rare romantic role opposite Holly Hunter in the comedy-drama "Living Out Loud" |
| 1999 | Cast alongside Kevin Spacey and Peter Facinelli in the drama "The Big Kahuna" |
| 2000 | Reteamed with Bette Midler in the feature "Drowning Mona"; also served as one of the executive producers |
| 2000 | Served as a producer on the box-office hit "Erin Brockovich", starring Julia Roberts; earned Oscar nomination for Best Picture |
| 2001 | Played leading role in the screen comedy, "What's the Worst That Could Happen?" |
| 2001 | Served as an executive producer on the CBS drama series "Kate Brasher"; Rhea Perlman had co-starring role |
| 2001 | Was one of the producers of "Caveman's Valentine", the opening night film at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival |
| 2002 | Directed "Death to Smoochy" |
| 2003 | Appeared in Tim Burton's "Big Fish" |
| 2003 | Cast in the Woody Allen comedy "Anything Else" |
| 2003 | Helmed the romantic comedy "The Duplex", featuring Ben Stiller and Drew Barrymore |
| 2004 | Guest starred on an episode of "Friends" as Roy, the Stripper; received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy series |
| 2005 | Reunited with John Travolta to play Martin Weir in "Be Cool" the sequal to "Get Shorty" |
| 2006 | Joined the cast of the FX comedy "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" in it's second season |
| 2006 | Partnered with Morgan Freeman's company ClickStar, to host a documentary channel called "Jersey Docs" |
| 2007 | Cast in Jake Paltrow's directorial debut, "The Good Night" |
| 2007 | Co-starred in Mark Rydell's "Even Money," a series of intertwining stories on how gambling and drugs destroy people's lives |
Notes
"He also has an uncanny ability to simultaneously repulse, amuse and move an audience--thanks, in part, to his not-so-secret weapon: shortness.
Indeed, that he stands only five feet tall is a key to De Vito's comedy. His height, combined with his stocky frame, unusually large head and thinning hair, gives him the appearance of a child-man, which exonerates him from responsibility for his actions. With his nastiness construed--and understood--as a natural lashing out against his physical 'handicap', he can get away with being mean. Also, there's something inherently funny about a child-man who's nasty. On first glance, you'd expect him to be more, say, adorable, but when he turns out to be a monster, you still don't believe he's bad and laugh at the apparent contradiction." --From "Funny as Hell" by Robert Seidenberg, AMERICAN FILM, September 1989
"I got this 150-some-odd-page script that said 'Pulp Fiction, by Quentin Tarantino, final draft', and I knew that there was something going on. And I read it and loved it, and I said to Rhea while I was reading it, 'Either I'm the sickest individual alive or I think this is hysterically funny.' I never thought it would take off as big as it did." --Danny DeVito in US, August 1996
"The joy of working with Danny DeVito? Well, for starters, I can see the top of his head. Also, the man is one of the most insightful directors I've ever had. His passion for his work is infectious, he's enormously gifted, and he's absolutely wild and wonderful. Remember the Tasmanian devil in Bugs Bunny? Well, this guy is like the Tasmanian devil with a good heart." --Billy Crystal on DeVito
Besides his connection with Michael Douglas, DeVito acted in father Kirk's feature directing debut, "Scalawag" (1973)
In 2007, DeVito teamed with world renowned restaurateur David Manero and Michael Brauser to open his first restaurant, named DeVito South Beach, an Italian chop house on trendy Ocean Drive in Miami Beach, Florida.
On the tabloids: "First of all, you want to be in the newspapers, you know people want to see [you], but there's no need for people to hunt you down like an animal. I usually just smile, [let them] take the picture and go on my merry way, and the people who are chasing me, I don't look at them.
[But] if it's so belligerent, so in-your-face, and you have no defense against it, you probably act like a frightened animal and run away. Anything can happen when you're in that situation and unfortunately sometimes the consequences are very grave. In this very tragic thing, I was moved and saddened by Princess Diana and Dodi [Fayed]. . . that's uncalled for." --DeVito to CHICAGO TRIBUNE, October 16, 1997
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Quick Facts
Also known as
Birth Name : Daniel Michael DeVito Jr.
Born
1944-11-17 00:00:00.0 in Neptune, New Jersey
Education
- American Academy of Dramatic Arts, New York, New York originally wanted to enroll to study make-up but the school had no major in that area
- Oratory Prep School, Summit, New Jersey had the lead roles in "St Francis of Assisi" and "Billion Dollar Saint"
- Our Lady of Mount Carmel Grammar School, New Jersey
- Wilfred Academy of Hair and Beauty Culture, New York, New York
Professions
actor, director, producer, car parker, hairdresser