Crispin Glover

This son of actor Bruce Glover and former dancer Betty Glover first impressed movie audiences as the nerdy George McFly (a role that he played as both a teenager and at age 45) in the hit "Back to the Future" (1985). Crispin Glover, however, already amassed an impressive resume by that time. The tall, gangly brown-haired player had started in showbiz as a teenager when he was cast in an L.A.-area production of "The Sound of Music" starring Florence Henderson. He quickly graduated to the small screen, appearing alongside the likes of Jill Schoelen and Nicolas Cage (then Nicholas Coppola) in the 1981 ABC variety special "The Best of Times" about the trials and tribulations of being caught between childhood and adulthood. Glover went on to co-star in two pilots for a proposed series called "High School U.S.A." for NBC but neither was picked up by the network.

In 1985, Glover was cast in the fact-based short "The Orkly Kid", about a querulous clown. (The film was later combined with two of director Trent Harris' other shorts and released under the title "The Beaver Trilogy" in 1998). That same year, the actor impressed as Michael J Fox's dad in the first installment of "Back to the Future", although he did not reprise the role in the subsequent sequels. By that time, Glover was cultivating an eccentric persona with the press off-screen while his onscreen roles (in such less-than-mainstream projects as "Wild at Heart" 1990) fueled the rumor mill. Possessing an iconoclastic streak and unusual "look", he was more of a character player than leading man and he used his oddball physicality well in a variety of independent features including "River's Edge" (1987), in which his performance as the speedy, whacked-out Layne divided critics and audiences. Glover offered a memorable cameo as Andy Warhol in Oliver Stone's "The Doors" (1991) and proved effective as the title character's undertaker pal in "What's Eating Gilbert Grape" (1993).

In 1995, Glover further courted controversy when he undertook legal action against Paramount Pictures for identifying him in the credits of the animated series "Duckman". (Glover contract reportedly called for the use of a pseudonym.) Despite concerns that there might have been retaliation against him, he continued to find employment, landing featured roles in Jim Jarmusch's revisionist Western "Dead Man" and the quasi-biopic "The People vs. Larry Flynt" (both 1996). At home with unusual and disconcerting characters, Glover wrote and directed the short "What Is It?" (shot in 1998; first screened in 1999) which focused on a group of Down's syndrome adolescents portrayed by real-life Down's syndrome actors. With its strange, often difficult imagery, the short is both surreal and shocking. As with his own performances, audience reactions have been divided, with most registering negative feelings.

Although he has stated a preference for remaining behind the scenes as a writer and director, Glover has not entirely abandoned acting. He offered a fine supporting turn as a nosy reporter in the black comedy "Nurse Betty" and played a part in the big screen version of the seminal 1970s TV series "Charlie's Angels" (both 2000). Additionally, he undertook the lead in "Bartleby" (2001), a film version of Herman Melville's short story "Bartleby the Scrivener", about a legal copyist who creates havoc.

In 2003, Glover was seen as an eerie office clerk, who finds friendship and loyalty in a pack of basement rats, in the thriller feature "Willard." He then rejoined the cast of "Charlie's Angels" (2000) for the sequel "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle" as the increasingly bizarre Thin Man.

  • Also Credited As:
    Crispin Hellion Glover
  • Born:
    September 20, 1964 in New York City, New York, United States
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Director, Screenwriter, Voice actor, Author, Singer
Family
  • Father: Bruce Glover. Born May 2, 1932; a character actor remembered for playing Mr. Wint in Diamonds Are Forever (1971)
  • Mother: Betty Glover.
Milestones
  • 1978 First professional stage role in The Sound of Music at the Dorothy Chandler Pavillion (with Florence Henderson)
  • 1981 Feature acting debut in Private Lessons
  • 1981 TV acting debut in the ABC variety special The Best of Times, featuring teenagers performing skits, songs and dances relating to what it meant to be caught between childhood and adulthood
  • 1983 Had supporting role in the TV-movie High School U.S.A. (NBC)
  • 1984 Reprised character in the one-hour pilot for a proposed series based on High School U.S.A. (NBC)
  • 1985 Breakthrough screen role as George McFly in Back to the Future ; did not reprise part in subsequent sequels
  • 1985 Had title role in the short The Orkly Kid, produced under the auspices of the American Film Institute; eventually released as part of Beaver Trilogy in 1998
  • 1986 Appeared in At Close Range and River s Edge
  • 1990 Co-starred in David Lynch s Wild at Heart
  • 1991 Portrayed Andy Warhol in Oliver Stone s biopic The Doors
  • 1993 Played Johnny Depp s friend in What s Eating Gilbert Grape
  • 1993 Starred in modern day adaptation of Crime and Punishment
  • 1995 Filed lawsuit against Paramount Pictures for identifying him in credits of animated TV series Duckman ; Glover s contract allegedly required that a pseudonym be used
  • 1996 Had a supporting role in The People vs. Larry Flynt, Milos Forman s profile of the adult magazine publisher
  • 2000 Portrayed an intrepid newspaper reporter in Nurse Betty
  • 2000 Wrote, directed and played featured role in the short What Is It?
  • 2001 Had co-starring role in Fast Sofa
  • 2001 Played lead in Bartleby, an adaptation of Herman Melville s Bartleby the Scrivener (filmed in 1999)
  • 2003 Featured in the action sequel Charlie s Angels: Full Throttle
  • 2003 Undertook the title role in the remake of Willard
  • 2005 Made directorial debut with What is It? a strange and surreal art film
  • 2007 Cast as Willy Wonka in the spoof/parody film Epic Movie
  • 2007 Portrayed Grendel in Robert Zemeckis big-budget film version of Beowulf
  • 2007 Premiered second film, It is Fine. Everything is Fine! at Sundance
  • At age four, moved with family to L.A.

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