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<text id=91TT2818>
<title>
Dec. 16, 1991: Profile:Robin Williams
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PROFILE, Page 70
A Peter Pan for Yuppies
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In his new movie, Hook, as in his life, ROBIN WILLIAMS shows
what happens when the boy who won't grow up turns 40 and is
ready for risks
</p>
<p>By Kurt Andersen
</p>
<p> He's ubiquitous: every month or so lately, there's been
a new Robin Williams movie. First came a bit part in Dead Again,
in which he plays a ruined yuppie wretch who advises the
movie's hero during the latter's supernatural quest for
redemption. Then The Fisher King--as a ruined yuppie wretch
whose wife's murder propels him and the movie's hero on a
supernatural quest for redemption. Now it's Hook, in which he
plays a wretched yuppie whose children's kidnapping propels him
on a supernatural quest for redemption.
</p>
<p> In the highly improbable protagonist's role--Peter Pan
grown up? Peter Pan, a Type A investment banker?--it is hard
to imagine anyone other than Robin Williams. After all, the arc
of Hook's Peter Pan--an impish, Dionysian youngster, after a
painful struggle with worldly temptation, finds his family to
be the source of true happiness--is a pretty fair summary of
Robin Williams' life at 40.
</p>
<p> During most of the time America was falling in love with
Williams--charmed by his TV character Mork, thrilled by his
semi-improvisational comedy on cable-TV specials, charmed again
by his early movie roles (in Moscow on the Hudson, in Garp)--his life was pretty much a mess. "I think I had my mid-life
crisis at around 27," says Williams, who was 26 when Mork &
Mindy went on the air. In addition to too much trivial sex,
there was too much vodka and bourbon and way too much cocaine.
"It was like symbiotic abuse. It was Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Williams. The bloated fish," he calls his early-'80s self. "The
Michelin poster child."
</p>
<p> He quit both booze (gradually, all by himself) and coke
(cold turkey, all by himself), but unlike many of today's
celebrity recoverers, Williams has not succumbed to just-say-no
zealotry. While he knows cocaine is "a totally selfish drug" and
a dead end, he's also unafraid to recall the fun. "It was always
around. `Robin, want to do some blow? Want to do some blow in
a back room with some very famous people?' `Oh, yeah!'"
</p>
<p> But sobriety by no means fixed his life. He and his first
wife separated when their son Zachary was four, and he
eventually took up with Marsha Garces, the woman who had once
been Zachary's baby sitter. A PEOPLE magazine cover story, he
says, badly distorted the facts ("I had been separated from my
wife for a year and a half--my wife was living with another
man") and inaccurately cast Garces as a home-wrecking nanny.
After almost four years (and marriage to Marsha; and two babies,
Zelda, 2, and Cody, two weeks), Williams still gets apoplectic
on the subject.
</p>
<p> The story came at a high-stress moment. In addition to the
marital disarray, his father had just died and his last three
movies had bombed. "It was starting to look like"--the voice
assumed is a prissy superego--"`Uh-oh. Have we made several
wrong choices? Have we just batted out at the bottom of the
third?' It was a pivotal time."
</p>
<p> Because Williams' comic persona is supercharged and
allusive, and because he was a sex-and-drugs wild man, people
assume that he has always been a hellion. In fact, he was a
quiet, dutiful, good son--a not very religious Episcopal
acolyte, a student-body president, and in 1969, in Marin County,
Calif., a quiet, dutiful, unrebellious teenager. The blowout
hedonism of his 20s and 30s was the aberration, because now, at
40, he is quiet, dutiful and good once again.
</p>
<p> Williams' great charm and his great weakness are, in the
words of director Paul Mazursky, a desperate desire to be
wonderful. These days the actor is still effervescent, bubbling
with notions and takes. During two brief spells in one
afternoon, he is, at each moment in context, Nastassja Kinski,
a disco sleaze, a fashion model, Mick Jagger, Ronald Reagan,
James Brown, George Bush, David Duke, Margaret Thatcher and
Harold Pinter's answering machine ("Hi, this is Harold"--a
long pause--"Pinter").
</p>
<p> Although he still scribbles as many as a dozen comedy
premises a week--"Pope from the Deep South," for instance--his only stand-up performances these days are unannounced
late-night appearances at big-city comedy clubs. Aside from the
intrinsic pleasures of stand-up--making people laugh, being
adored by strangers--what Williams misses about it is the
sense it used to give him of middle America's mood. "As you go
outside the major cities and get into other places, you go `Oh'
"--here his voice turns Southern, smirky, menacing--"`maybe
thangs are a little different than they seem, Mister Smart-Ass
Liberal.' You cross the Manson-Nixon Line and `It ain't that
funny, Audi Driver, Mister BMW, Jewish Management.'"
</p>
<p> For all his heartfelt leftism--he performs at a dozen
benefits a year, including the annual Comic Relief telethon for
the homeless--Williams is not blind to the particular
self-satisfactions of Beverly Hills limousine liberals. "There
can be an ain't-we-swell smugness about it that can be
oppressive." Although he didn't attend the recent Hollywood
benefit for Oxfam America, at which 15% of the beautiful people
had a posh dinner, 25% ate only rice and beans, and 60% had rice
and water, the very thought of it made him giddy: "And then 20%
actually get electrodes attached to their testicles and
interrogated. And then at the very end, 7% draw straws and get
shot. What effect will it have? For two weeks they'll go, `Hola,
Margarita? No hablos se tacos. Thank you.'"
</p>
<p> Williams is equally clear-eyed about his own work in films
and his earlier tendency toward shtick. His director on Garp,
George Roy Hill, "basically would say, `Don't improvise. Try
something much simpler.' And that was a good thing." After the
great success of Good Morning, Vietnam (1987) and Dead Poets
Society (1989), Williams' Hollywood ascendancy seems inevitable.
But before those breakthroughs, Williams was just another
mortified, covetous, B-list actor. He auditioned for the Charles
Grodin role in Midnight Run. And he talked to the producers of
Batman about playing the Joker: "I think I was used for bait to
get Nicholson."
</p>
<p> But Good Morning, Vietnam's success gave him the
confidence and clout to star in the riskier Dead Poets Society,
and without that film, he says, he wouldn't have been cast in
Awakenings: bankability and a reputation for range in three easy
steps. But it was serendipity, not five-year-plan calculation.
"I haven't orchestrated it. It doesn't seem like I have to do
one serious, one comedy, one serious, one comedy. I'm more like
a child--`That'd be neat!'"
</p>
<p> And now Hook, a very high-stakes, special-effects-laden
megapicture. For Williams, who is in nearly every scene, making
the movie was a grueling six months on the set. He was obliged
to shave his arms and upper body every other day. And the acting
wasn't easy, either: in a 40-year-old man, Mary Martin feyness--"Come on, Lost Boys!"--could be awful. Williams says Bob
Hoskins, who plays Hook's first mate, Smee, gave him a key piece
of advice: make Pan ever so slightly insane.
</p>
<p> At the end of Hook, the Williams character, swearing off
both youthful recklessness and play-it-safe overmaturity,
declares himself ready for adult adventures. And so does the
actor seem to be plunging headlong toward intriguing,
invigorating professional risk. Williams reads several scripts
a week, and of the half a dozen he is considering, only one,
Mazursky's proposed sequel to Moscow on the Hudson, seems
surefire commercially. Williams' next movie, Toys, a surreal
comedy about a general who takes over a toy company, is to be
directed by Barry Levinson, who directed Good Morning, Vietnam.
Williams is also talking with director Bill Forsyth about
starring in Becoming Human, a series of sketches about
evolution; and with Oliver Stone about playing assassinated gay
politician Harvey Milk in Mayor of Castro Street. Some comedies,
some full-bore dramas, some possible box-office hits, some
certainly not. But Williams doesn't think of himself as a
latter-day Woody Allen. He has no auteurist ambitions. "It takes
a lot of discipline and vision, and I am too lazy for that. I
have never been able to really write." The only thing of which
he's professionally certain is his feeling about network TV:
never again. "This one [ABC executive] came up one day and
said, `I used to think Jack Carter was funny. Now it's you.'"
</p>
<p> So he doesn't obsess about bigger paychecks. He feels he
has enough power to get the movie roles he wants. He's no
ascetic (there's a 500-acre ranch in Napa and a glorious new
house overlooking San Francisco Bay), but the movie-star
pampering is minimal: he drives himself everywhere and schlepps
his own wardrobe--actually, a bunch of old shirts--to a
photo session. He's happy with the way things have worked out
but not, he wants you to know, complacent.
</p>
<p> "It isn't a question of doing more work," he says of his
goals. "It's more of your own internal critic that goes, `You
could do better than that. Take the higher road, and not the
easy route.'" Having thrown off his desperate need to be
wonderful, Robin Williams can now start being wonderful.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>