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Full Name: Tobias Vincent Maguire
Birth-Place: Santa Monica, California
Birth-Date: June 27, 1975
Age: 28
Height: 5'8"
Weight: Approx. 140
Eye Color: Blue
Hair Color: Brown
Sign: Cancer *Same as mine*
Hobbies: Tobey's hobbies consist of basketball, yoga, boardgames, and
backgammon.
Siblings: 4 half brothers.
Although boyishly-handsome dark-haired player Tobey Maguire got his big
break with the Fox sitcom "Great Scott!" (1994), the critically acclaimed
series' short run failed to attract a sizable audience, and Maguire would
wait until his 1997 starring turn in Ang Lee's "The Ice Storm" for his
career to really take off. A product of a turbulent background, Maguire
moved house frequently as a child, living with various familial permutations
of his parents, grandparents and aunts. This unsettled childhood may have
contributed to the young actor's drive and unique presence, evincing at once
mature clarity and childlike vulnerability in his performances. After his
mother offered him $100 to take drama instead of home economics as a school
elective, Maguire, encouraged by a neighbor who was an entertainment
manager, studied acting and soon landed TV commercial work. He lensed his
first television acting role in 1988, with a small part in the HBO comedy
special, "On Location: Rodney Dangerfield 'Opening Night at Rodney's Place'"
(aired in 1989). Maguire could next be seen as the title star of the 1990
Nickelodeon special "Tales from the Whoop: Hot Rod Brown, Class Clown" and
that same year took on a guest role in the NBC series "Parenthood", marking
his first collaboration with fellow acting pal Leonardo DiCaprio. More TV
guest work followed, including performances in the series "Roseanne" (ABC),
"Jake and the Fatman" (CBS), "Eerie, Indiana" and "Blossom" (both NBC).
In 1992, Maguire landed the starring role on the Fox series "Great Scott!"
playing Scott Melrod, an adolescent with an active fantasy life played out
in interesting episodic asides. While the show was refreshingly original and
critically lauded, it failed to grasp an audience, and Maguire's engaging
portrayal went virtually unseen with the series' cancellation after only six
episodes. While he took on other television roles, including his impressive
work in the 1994 TV dramas "Spoils of War" (ABC) and "A Child's Cry for Help"
(NBC) and 1996's fact-based "Seduced By Madness: The Diana Borchardt Story"
(also NBC), Maguire would really shine on the big screen.
He made his film debut in "This Boy's Life", the 1993 adaptation of Tobias
Wolff's seminal coming-of-age memoir, in the supporting role of Chuck
Bolger, a schoolboy friend of Leonardo DiCaprio's Toby. His next feature
outing was in the forgettable killer toy horror vehicle "The Adventures of
the Red Baron" (1994), co-starring Mickey Rooney. Neither his small role in
"S.F.W." nor his cameo as a drunken teenager in "Healer" (both 1994) offered
much to make audiences take particular notice. More impressive was the
actor's turn in Griffin Dunne's 1995 Oscar-nominated short "The Duke of
Groove". Maguire deftly played a self-conscious teenage boy attending a pop
icon populated party with his mother (Kate Capshaw) during which the two
learn about themselves and each other. Also in 1995, he lensed the
low-budget "Don's Plum", a film later the subject of a lawsuit brought by
both Maguire and co-star DiCaprio. The outcome of the lawsuit insured that
the film, initially set to be a short and later lengthened and set for 1998
release, seemingly to capitalize on the popularity of the young stars, would
not enjoy showings in the USA or Canada.
Maguire hit a rough patch in 1995, which culminated in the loss of a primary
role in the cult hit "Empire Records" after a botched audition dissuaded
director Allan Moyle, one of his greatest supporters. After a soul-searching
break, he returned triumphantly to acting, now more centered and focused on
his craft and his goals. Maguire starred in the 1997 independent feature
"Joyride", before being drafted by director Ang Lee to play the conflicted
but comparably clear-headed narrator of Lee's remarkable adaptation of the
unsettling 1970s affluent suburb-set drama "The Ice Storm". Maguire more
than held his own in an ensemble that featured excellent performances by the
likes of Joan Allen, Kevin Kline, Sigourney Weaver and Elijah Wood. The
role, superbly handled by the young actor with a affecting mixture of
knowing cynicism and unspoiled innocence, would prove his mettle, and make
him a sought after property. After a small part as a fictional alter ego of
Woody Allen's Harry Block in "Deconstructing Harry" (1997), he landed a
starring role in "Pleasantville" (1998), playing a thoughtful modern-day
teen obsessed with a 50s sitcom world who is transported there along with
his sexually liberated sister (Reese Witherspoon). The subtly moving film
was a perfect match for Maguire, who turned in a characteristically
understated but powerful performance alongside veterans William H Macy, Joan
Allen and Jeff Daniels.
In 1999, the actor reteamed with Ang Lee for the director's epic Civil War
drama "Ride With the Devil". Maguire starred alongside Skeet Ulrich and
Jeffrey Wright as Jake Roedel, a Missouri-bred son of German immigrants who
joined up with the Confederate-sympathizing Bushwackers in the unorganized
neighbor versus neighbor battles that made up much of the war. Again, his
talent for drawing out the vulnerability in a hard character added to the
film, and lent a palpable humanity to those historically considered
villains. A notable year for the actor, 1999 would also mark the release of
"The Cider House Rules", Lasse Hallstrom's film of John Irving's adaptation
of his novel about a young orphan raised by an idealistic abortionist.
Maguire's nuanced turn as the sensitive but upstanding Homer Wells was
applauded by critics and served as the anchor for the feature. The demand
for his talents, despite his stated wishes to only work on one film a year,
kept him busy. He next played a college student to Michael Douglas' blocked
writer who joins the older man on journey to self-awareness in "Wonder Boys"
(2000), directed by Curtis Hanson. With a full slate of work in production,
and a level-headed attitude towards stardom, the talented Maguire emerged as
an actor with a particularly promising career, which he solidified by
landing the lead role in the Sam Raimi-directed "Spider-Man" (2002), based
on the popular Marvel comic. |
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TOBEY MAGUIRE PICTURES |
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