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Jeff Bridges: A Unique American Icon

Posted: 02/28/10 12:30 AM ET

From Patrick Goldstein's blog, "The Big Picture":

I used to be somebody, now I'm somebody else" is a self-pitying lament from Bad Blake, the washed-up country singer who struggles to find his heart and soul, exquisitely portrayed by Jeff Bridges in Crazy Heart.


For movie-goers, who have been cinematically blessed watching Jeff Bridges for nearly four decades in 65 movies, "I used to be somebody, now I'm somebody else" is a reminder of how Jeff Bridges has fully inhabited such a wide array of characters and authentically captured their essence with a full palette of shades from light to dark. Bridges has taken us through a mosaic of perspectives of the uniquely American experience.

After four Academy Award nominations, it looks like Jeff Bridges may finally be singing late into the night with his new friend Oscar. Critical acclaim has been unanimous. Awards for his outstanding performance, like the best actor award from his peers in the Screen Actors Guild and the Golden Globe, have been rolling down Bridges' lane faster than bowling balls. Yet there's something about the appeal of Jeff Bridges and the characters he creates that goes deeper than his engaging performances, good looks, charm, humor, heart, brains and acting chops. That was the mystery that I may have stumbled into figuring out with a little help from my friends. Let's flashback.

I vividly remember the first time I encountered Jeff Bridges in his big screen debut in The Last Picture Show, adapted from Larry McMurtry's small Texas town classic American book by director Peter Bogdanovich. Bridges was nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actor for his measured portrayal of Duane Jackson. It was the first time that Jeff didn't come home with an Oscar -- it was awarded to fellow cast member Ben Johnson for playing "Sam the Lion," the mythological local Yoda Texan of his day. Last Picture Show was the first of many movies with Bridges that shed cinematic light on forever-changing America.

A new generation of directors recognized Jeff Bridges could shape-shift into exceptional characters while creating iconic Americans the same way directors Frank Capra, Howard Hawks, John Ford and Preston Sturges did in their time with the likes of Jimmy Stewart, Joel McCrea, Henry Fonda and John Wayne -- fellows who you could have a drink with and come away with something.

On Duane's final night in Anarene, Texas, before he heads off for the Korean War, his buddy Sonny (Timothy Bottoms) takes him to the last picture show at the Royal Theatre, which is going out of business. The next morning, Duane dresses in his Army uniform, hands the car keys to his prized Mercury coupe over to Sonny. "Take care of her until I get back," he says as he is about to get on the Trailways bus and innocently ship out to war. Duane's last line is "See you in a year or two if I don't get shot."

When asked which of the great characters he has played people like most, Bridges exhales a laugh in B flat and exclaims "The Dude, of course!" The curious nature of Lebowski's laid-back Dude becoming so beloved is what gave me a clue to solve the mystery of a deeper connection Jeff was making with people.

Up until 1998 I was moved and entertained by Jeff Bridge's performances like everyone else. Then I got a phone call. Even though Jeff Bridges and I were both born only two weeks apart in California, it was Joel and Ethan Coen who mischievously crossed our stars while mixing up their "Dude ... or His Dudeness ... Duder ... or El Duderino, if, you know, you're not into the whole brevity thing..." creating an unforeseen stellar Dude cocktail which somehow would continue to burn beyond anyone's imagination, fueled by comedy as highly combustible as silver nitrate in film stock.

The Coens were making The Big Lebowski with John Goodman and Jeff Bridges. But I didn't know who was going to play my persona "The Dude." Size-wise I'm on the cusp -- it could go either way. If it was John Goodman I feared that Joel and Ethan would be taking fully-loaded satirical pot shots at some Hollywood wacko. I'm a big and easy target. But I felt reassured when I learned it was Jeff Bridges who was going to play "The Dude," because he always gets to the soul of a character -- so figuring in two heaping spoonfuls of Joel and Ethan Coen's cynicism and two slices of wry humor with Jeff at the wheel I might get lucky and be portrayed sympathetically as a fun, likable fool, not a total fool (I'm on the cusp on that one, too).

The Dude in The Big Lebowski is not my story. It is Joel and Ethan taking a lot of of liberty with Raymond Chandler and James M. Cain's Los Angeles crime dramas, which they fashioned into a buddy movie where most everything goes wrong while pumping the film full of laughing gas and an occasional acid trip. What remains of me that even my friends were impressed and amused by was how Jeff Bridges' Dude captured my body language, camaraderie, rebellious spirit, hang-loose style, mumbled ironic opinions and even my recurring flying dream. Joel and Ethan, who enjoy stacking the deck against their characters, chose to pan past my active real life and have more fun making the Dude an ill-prepared burnt-out slacker: "Quite possibly the laziest [man] in Los Angeles County, which would place him high in the runnin' for laziest worldwide." How and why did this laid-back Dude become so admired and respected?

Even though Bridges had been doing it on screen for decades, when spending time on the set of The Big Lebowski, I saw how Jeff was always as much of a supporting actor as a supported actor. Bridges' down-home professionalism and desire and ability to connect with other great character actors like John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, John Turturro, Julianne Moore and Philip Seymour Hoffman are what make so many scenes in The Big Lebowski enjoyable to watch again and again even if you don't watch the whole movie -- you can watch a scene or sequence and get all the laughs you need for the day. That's one reason it has become the default pop-in-and-out movie of choice on many team and band buses and planes, and a fun and familiar rest stop for weary channel surfers.

While doing shows, speaking and hanging out I have met a very diverse group of people who have shared with me a multitude of reasons why they like The Big Lebowski. But what I couldn't figure out for a long time is all the folks who say to me, "Dude. You are an inspiration. You changed my life." Of course by "you," they mean Jeff Bridges' doppelganger Dude in the movie. But I wondered what it was in the Dude, a former activist who has become a pot-smoking, bowling slacker -- not exactly an inspiring role model -- that appeals to not only college students, but professionals of all ages, soldiers and families.

Much of that can be attributed to Bridges' performance. Yet when I inquire, the answer goes beyond that and to why they lionize the Dude: "The Dude isn't afraid to tell it like it is. He's his own man." In a world where so many of us are muzzled at home, school or work, we appreciate the Dude "looking out for all us sinners," as Sam Elliott's cowboy says in the film.

It probably all starts with the mystery of Jeff Bridges and his deeper appeal. He has often played an everyman up against all odds "helping us see through the illusions of our world" -- holy fools, who enlighten us frequently while tickling our funny bones. For decades, Bridges has been an ever-changing mythological all-American Holy Fool fulfilling the role for us that every culture in history has created because we need those folks around to make sense of our world and our brief time upon it.

If we give the body of Jeff Bridges' work the old Martian or E.T. test -- what would a space alien's impression be of America and its people be if they only watched Jeff Bridges movies? -- I think it would be a helluva a portrait: emotionally deep, textured, complex and ironic, often burning a mythological flame beneath. The body of Jeff Bridges' America is broad and diverse as well as wonderfully specific in the characters he has played and the world they live in. We may not be at all like most of the characters, but what they need, how they discover and attain it has universal appeal.

Bridges captured the transitional spirit of the '70s in films like John Huston's Fat City, the whimsical Rancho Deluxe and Hearts of the West, Stay Hungry and the conspiratorial Winter Kills, with John Huston playing Bridges' big business father in a cautionary tale about the danger of health care conglomerates made three decades ago. In 1980s, Bridges broad range went from dark in Cutter's Way to light in his lovable Starman. Jeff, his brother Beau and Michelle Pfeiffer were intimate, delightful and delicious in The Fabulous Baker Boys.

In the last decade of the 20th century, Bridges contends with Robin Williams' Holy Fool in Terry Gilliam's wild and extraordinary The Fisher King, does some of the best acting of his career in Peter Weir's Fearless and gets a lot of laughs in The Big Lebowski while telling it like it is. In the new millennium he has played a president in The Contender, Kevin Spacey's shrink in K-Pax and Seabiscuit's dedicated owner, who helps the equine hero restore hope to America during the Great Depression. Crazy Heart ties the room together with Jeff's nuanced and powerful performance, which Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan calls "the capstone role of his career." Even if you are turned off by hard-drinking country musicians, don't miss Jeff Bridges in Crazy Heart, which will fire up your heart and soul.

I believe that what goes around comes around, and after supporting so many others, I think Oscar may be coming back around your way, Dude! I can't help but wonder how much Jeff's stable relations, starting with his parents and brother and continuing with his wife Susan, have to do with his friendly nature, success and, dare I say, happiness. I can reflect on Bob Dylan's lyrics from "The Man in Me" that the extraordinary songwriter, singer, producer and music supervisor T Bone Burnett chose to put in The Big Lebowski:

"Take a woman like you, to find the man in me. But, oh, what a wonderful feeling."

Jeff Bridges has become an American icon who has played unique characters in film after film that probe deep into the American psyche and condition. He fulfills the sacred function of the artist, saint, jester and the Holy Fool: helping us see through the illusions of the world. Jeff Bridges has helped us remember and realize that all the great things about life and its cast of characters and his films empower us with enough emotional fuel to take on yet another challenging day.

 
 
 
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01:22 PM on 03/02/2010
jeff bridges has done something besides being himself?
Clevelandinwi
Progressive is good; regressive, not so much.
07:36 AM on 03/02/2010
People do have difficulty recognizing good films and good acting.
Gasparilla
buy your local newspaper
10:46 PM on 03/01/2010
Another fan of Rancho Deluxe. One of the best undiscovered movies ot the 70s. A great cast.
09:03 PM on 03/01/2010
Starman! They should release this on video. Excellent movie and Jeff was fantastic in it.
07:30 AM on 03/02/2010
It's available on DVD and Blue-Ray, and has been for some time.
08:59 PM on 03/01/2010
TRON - Way ahead of its time and Jeff did a great job there as well
08:58 PM on 03/01/2010
Jeff Bridges is long, long, long overdue for a Best Actor statue. This is his year and he is going to win.
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doitright
08:15 PM on 03/01/2010
Jeff Bridges was good, as he always is, in Crazy Heart. But if right be done, Colin Firth should win for her remarkable performance in A Single Man.
06:55 PM on 03/01/2010
Dude,

Thanks for a great article. Like you, I first saw Jeff in the Last Picture Show, the year I graduated high school in Dallas.

McMurtry's stories are VERY INGRAINED in the minds of many many Texans and the Texans who have taken up residence in New Mexico. Archer City. Texas. "Far West Texas".

Thank you, Jeff, for all the memories......you've done your job very well.
06:51 PM on 03/01/2010
I have loved Jeff Bridges movies for as long as I can remember. He was so good in "The Jagged Edge". I have watched the movie several times. And even though I know how it will end, I always wish and even believe it will end differently. This is because of great acting on Jeff's part. I have often said that Jeff was one of the most under appreciated actors of our time. He does indeed deserve that Oscar.
06:47 PM on 03/01/2010
Dude,
I am a sincerely dedicated fan of Jeff Bridges, and of course, 'Big Lebowski,' and now too of "Crazy Heart." And not to take anything away from Jeff's Dude but I've seen the real thing. it was a night two years ago at Sundance when I hung out with some friends and you, the real Dude, after the CSNY movie debut. Everywhere we went the door opened, "Dude!" a door man would yell, and in we'd all walk in your friendly back slappin' high fivin' wake. Great to see your post here.
cheers -
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
06:28 PM on 03/01/2010
Since when is HuffPo a place for free Oscar campaigning? I don't disagree with anything in the article but this is the second fawning Jeff Bridges piece here in less than a week. Let's see how many actor/actress tributes appear between Sunday and next Oscar season....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:23 PM on 03/01/2010
I remember him in an old movie called "Starman". Wish someone would air it again. Most people have never heard of it when I mention it.
If you haven't seen it, try to find it somewhere. He's an alien from another planet in a human body.
05:54 PM on 03/01/2010
Jeff Bridges is a great actor I remember him and Richard Pryor in Greased Lightening based on a true story of Stock Car racing back in the day.
07:33 AM on 03/02/2010
That was Beau Bridges, his brother.
gypsygal
My micro-bio is empty.
05:38 PM on 03/01/2010
Also fantastic in The Door in the Floor.
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Jeronimo Dan
04:23 PM on 03/01/2010
He's Brando, Marvin, Wayne, Cagney, Stewart, Mitchum, Tracy and Bogart all rolled into one!
06:59 PM on 03/01/2010
jeronl,

Fanned. I like that analogy.

Jeff is Everyman.
Clevelandinwi
Progressive is good; regressive, not so much.
07:32 AM on 03/02/2010
That's what is commonly called EXAGGERATING !! The only two there that he could be even slightly compared to are Marvin and Wayne. The others are so far out of his league, it's silly !