Don Johnson

Possessing a face that, in the words of his former lover and celebrity groupie Pamela Des Barres, "could have prevented World War II," Don Johnson brought his small-town naivete to Hollywood, and amid the anything-goes L.A. party scene of the early 1970s, prospered socially, if not professionally. The fair-haired Midwesterner had toiled largely unrecognized for 15 years on stage, TV and film, and was what NBC executives referred to as a "six-time loser", meaning he'd made six failed pilots, when he landed the role of Sonny Crockett in Michael Mann's post-modern, trendy cop drama "Miami Vice" (NBC, 1984-89), establishing himself as a TV icon for the 80s. Johnson's gravelly voice, 5 o'clock shadow, Armani wardrobe and quietly anguished machismo made him the more charismatic half of the pastel-clad detective duo.

The Missouri native began acting and singing in high school and, after two years at the University of Kansas, joined San Francisco's American Conservatory Theatre where he caught the eye of Sal Mineo, who cast him in his first major role in the 1969 Los Angeles stage production of "Fortune in Men's Eyes". Johnson relished the grueling schedule--two and a half hours onstage eight times a week for eight months--and his performance in the bleak prison drama led to his forgettable first film, "The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart" (1970). His most notable features prior to gaining fame on TV were the groovy college drama "The Harrad Experiment" (1973), with his future mother-in-law Tippi Hedren, and the cult classic "A Boy and His Dog" (1975), a post-apocalyptic tale based on a novella by sci-fi legend Harlan Ellison, in which he and his telepathic (and much smarter) dog eke out their existence above ground, eventually escaping the clutches of a bizarre underground society, and in the very tongue-in-cheek ending bring new meaning to the age-old adage: man's best friend.

Johnson then worked almost exclusively in TV until "Miami Vice", beginning with the ABC movie "Law of the Land" (1976) and including the cancer drama "First, You Cry" (NBC, 1978), the amazingly dull "Ski Lift to Death" (CBS, 1978), the miniseries "Beulah Land" (NBC, 1980) and "Elvis and the Beauty Queen" (NBC, 1981), in which he portrayed Elvis Presley. He was also a regular on the short-lived series "From Here to Eternity" (NBC, 1980) before teaming with Phillip Michael Thomas for their five-year run as tough, glamorous and very well-dressed "Miami Vice" cops. The series became a cultural phenomenon, aided by superb MTV-style cinematography, Jan Hammer's rock score and Johnson's sexy, humorous performance. Celebrities clamored for cameo roles, and hip twentysomethings stayed home on Friday nights to check out the show. During the run, he also put in a very impressive performance as a menacing drifter in the TV remake of "The Long, Hot Summer" (NBC, 1985) and cut two albums, "Heartbeat" (1986) and "Let It Roll" (1988).

Inevitably, the 80s and "Miami Vice" would come to an end, and Johnson's bid for feature stardom would fall far short of the one made by fellow TV icon Bruce Willis. The charming rural romance "Sweet Hearts Dance" (1988) did not do well at the box office, nor did the John Frankenheimer thriller "Dead Bang" (1989), Dennis Hopper's "The Hot Spot" (1990) or the Mickey Rourke co-starrer "Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man" (1991). He made two movies with wife Melanie Griffith, "Paradise" (1991) and the remake of "Born Yesterday" (1993), but neither took off despite good performances. Even a teaming with illustrious director Sidney Lumet disappointed as the courtroom drama "Guilty as Sin" (1993) proved underplotted and ordinary. Johnson finally scored as second banana to Kevin Costner in Ron Shelton's "Tin Cup" (1996), giving notice in his part as a narcissistic golf pro that his future in features just might lie in supporting roles. He also demonstrated on-screen chemistry with future co-star Cheech Marin in their first pairing.

Johnson served as an executive producer for the thriller "In the Company of Darkness" (CBS, 1993) and the short-lived series "The Marshall" (ABC, 1995), for which he directed some episodes, before helping to develop the police drama "Nash Bridges", his highly anticipated return to series TV, which he also executive produced. Perhaps the clothes weren't quite as flashy as on "Miami Vice" (pink was out), but the premise was the same, as was the familiar 10 PM time slot on Friday night. Bridges traded in Crockett's black Ferrari Spider (later upgraded to a Testarossa) for a mustard-yellow 1970 Plymouth Barracuda to tool around the streets of San Francisco and added a vest to go with the blazer over T-shirt look. With Marin as his politically correct sidekick, the charming, unflappably cool Bridges has consistently finished a strong second to ABC's "20/20" in the time slot, rewarding the network's confidence. Though the reception for "Goodbye Lover" (1998) was lukewarm at Cannes, Variety gave him a big boost, calling it "enjoyable as long as Don Johnson is in it."

The best-kept secret about Johnson may be that he is a terrific actor, but then his two high profile series have made minimal demands on his talent. His private life has always kept him in the news. The legendary lothario acquired the nickname Don Juanson along the way, always managing to be in the company of some beautiful woman. After first identifying himself as an alcoholic in 1983, he managed to stay sober for more than 10 years before falling off the wagon with a very loud and public "thud", a relapse which delighted the tabloids and spelled the end of his second marriage to Griffith, whom he had helped with her own substance abuse problems in the late 80s. For a man who seemingly gets better looking with age, feature stardom as a handsome, wry character player may loom in the future.

  • Also Credited As:
    Don Wayne Johnson, Donnie Wayne Johnson
  • Born:
    Donnie Wayne Johnson on December 15, 1949 in Flatt Creek, Missouri, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Producer, Singer, Director, Songwriter
Family
  • Daughter: Atherton Grace Johnson. Born Dec. 28, 1999; mother, Kelley Phleger
  • Daughter: Dakota Mayi Johnson. Born Oct. 4, 1989; mother, Melanie Griffith
  • Sister: Jamie Skylar. Younger
  • Son: Deacon Johnson. Born April 29, 2006; mother, Kelley Phleger
  • Son: Jasper Breckinridge Johnson. Born June 6, 2002, mother, Kelley Phleger
  • Son: Jesse Johnson. Born Dec. 7, 1982; mother, Patti D Arbanville; Johnson successfully sued to gain custody in the late 1980s
  • Step-son: Alexander Bauer. Born in 1985; son of actor Steven Bauer and Melanie Griffith; Johnson raised him while married to Griffith and considers him his son
Significant Others
  • Wife: . had a second youthful marriage; annulled
  • Wife: . married in 1968; marriage annulled
  • Companion: Barbra Streisand. no longer together; recorded a duet entitled Till I Loved You for her 1988 album of the same name
  • Companion: Jeanne Anderson. reportedly were engaged briefly in 1996
  • Companion: Jodi Lyn O Keefe. co-starred on Johnson s TV series Nash Bridges ; born on October 10, 1978; no longer together
  • Companion: Kari Whitman.
  • Companion: Pamela Des Barres. celebrity rock groupie; recalled him--and his sexual prowess--fondly in her 1988 tell-all bestseller I m With the Band ; together in the late 1960s
  • Companion: Patti D Arbanville. together from 1981 to 1985; first met at Andy Warhol s Factory 13 years before she would mother Johnson s son Jesse
  • Companion: Tanya Tucker. dating at the time relationship with Patti D Arbanville began
Education
  • Wichita South High School, Wichita, KS, 1967
  • University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
  • American Conservatory Theatre, San Francisco, CA
Milestones
  • 1969 First major stage role in Sal Mineo s Los Angeles production of Fortune and Men s Eyes playing the lead role of Smitty
  • 1970 First leading role in a feature film, The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart
  • 1973 Co-starred with Tippi Hedren in Ted Post s Harrad Experiment ; began relationship with Hedren s then-14 year old daughter, Melanie Griffith (who was an extra on film)
  • 1975 Acted in the sci-fi cult classic A Boy and His Dog
  • 1976 TV-movie acting debut, Law of the Land (NBC)
  • 1980 Co-starred in the TV-movie Revenge of the Stepford Wives
  • 1980 Played Jeff Pruitt in the NBC drama series From Here to Eternity ; cancelled after 13 episodes
  • 1981 Portrayed Elvis Presley in the NBC TV-movie Elvis and the Beauty Queen
  • 1984 Breakthrough role as the pastel-wearing Florida detective Sonny Crockett in NBC s Miami Vice ; also directed several episodes
  • 1985 Cast as a Vietnam veteran haunted by his experience in Cease Fire
  • 1985 Played the Paul Newman role in the TV remake of The Long Hot Summer
  • 1986 Released debut album, Heartbeat
  • 1988 Headlined an ensemble cast in Sweet Hearts Dance
  • 1989 Portrayed an LA homicide detective in John Frankenheimer s disappointing Dead Bang
  • 1991 Co-starred with Mickey Rourke in Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man
  • 1991 Co-starred with then wife, Melanie Griffith in Paradise
  • 1993 Acted opposite Griffith and John Goodman in a remake of Born Yesterday ; fourth and last film (to date) with Griffith
  • 1993 Executive produced the CBS TV-movie In the Company of Darkness
  • 1996 Returned to series TV playing the title role of a San Francisco detective in Nash Bridges (CBS); again paired with Cheech Marin; also executive produced
  • 1996 Played a professional golfer in Ron Shelton s Tin Cup ; first on-screen pairing with Cheech Marin
  • 1996 Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
  • 1998 Appeared in Roland Joffe s Goodbye Lover with Patricia Arquette
  • 2006 Cast in the short-lived WB drama Just Legal as a jaded lawyer
  • 2007 Made West End debut as Nathan Detroit in Guys and Dolls
  • After reform school, went to live with his father in East Wichita, Kansas
  • Continued theater training at San Francisco s prestigious American Conservatory Theatre (ACT)
  • Landed first professional stage role in the ACT production of the musical Your Own Thing two weeks after arriving in San Francisco
  • Moved from Missouri to Wichita when he was six years old
  • Performed in plays at the University of Kansas for two years

Yahoo! Movies: In Theaters - Times & Tickets - Trailers - DVD - News & Gossip - Box Office - Browse Movies - more...
Yahoo! Entertainment: Movies - Music - TV - Games - Astrology - more...

Copyright © 2009 AEC One Stop Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Portions of this page Copyright © 2009 Baseline. All rights reserved.