‘Tough guy’ Gene Hackman’s comedy chops were underrated

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‘Tough guy’ Gene Hackman’s comedy chops were underrated
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Gene Hackman’s movies: A look back at his greatest roles

at age 95 at home in New Mexico, was famous for playing admirals, generals, multiple presidents, coaches, a reverend, a senator and myriad other upright authority figures over his five-decade career in Hollywood.

But his portrayals, like his life, were full of fascinating contradictions. Popeye Doyle wasn’t just another detective, and Gene Hackman was not just another actor.Gene Hackman was known for playing in tough guys in films such as “The French Connection,” but had a knack for comedy.Hackman was born in San Bernardino, California, in 1930 and eventually settled with his grandmother in Danville, Illinois. From a young age he dreamed of being in show business, even as misfortune and tragedy befell him. His father abandoned the family when he was small, and his mother tragically died in a fire she accidentally set with a cigarette while drunk in 1962.SAG Awards 2025 shake up Oscar race — and ‘Wicked’ is totally shut outHackman joined the Marine Corps at age 16 and served for four years overseas but never lost the bug for performing. He went on to study TV production briefly at the University of Illinois before enrolling at the Pasadena Playhouse in California alongside his friend Dustin Hoffman before they headed east to New York. These days, Hackman was known for being a “tough guy” with a craggy face, Popeye in “The French Connection,” Little Bill in “Unforgiven,” and Agent Rupert Anderson in “Mississippi Burning.”in 1986 of shows such as “Any Wednesday” at the Music Box and “A Rainy Day in Newark” at the Belasco. “They wouldn’t allow them these days. They’d be something you’d see on television.” Hackman never lost sight of his fizzy start. You can see the effect of those formative years on much of his work — even the grittiest. As threatening as his characters could be, Hackman always had the hint of a wry smile, certainly more so than many of his contemporaries who got top billing during the 1970s. He was a sometimes frightening presence onscreen but always an inviting one. And a truly funny guy.His breakout role came when he played gang member Buck Barrow in 1967’s “Bonnie and Clyde,” which got him his first Oscar nomination. Four years later, he landed his defining part — racist, alcoholic, rule-breaking Doyle. Surrounded by the grime of 1970s New York inAccosting a drug dealer while dressed in a Santa suit, his Doyle shouts, “I’m gonna nail you for picking your feet in Poughkeepsie!” It’s a testament to Hackman’s prodigious skills that audiences like an often detestable guy. So did the Academy. He won the Oscar for Best Actor.Then, depending on how you look at it, came a wild turnaround or a return to his roots. In 1974, Hackman played the loony uncredited role of the Blind Man in Mel Brooks’ “Young Frankenstein.” He was hilarious as he howled at Peter Boyle’s Monster, “Wait! Where are you going?! I was going to make espresso!” as the man was left all alone again in his cabin. By design, audiences didn’t even realize it was the hard-edged star wearing the kooky white beard and wig. Throughout the ‘70s, the actor starred in movies covering all genres: The disaster epic “The Poseidon Adventure,” the road comedy “Scarecrow” with Al Pacino, and the problem-plagued “Lucky Lady,” which Roger Ebert called “big, expensive, good-looking flop of a movie,” among others.His knack for a joke paid off in surprising fashion when he appeared in the first of his three “Superman” films in 1978. As arch-villain Lex Luthor, “the world’s greatest criminal mastermind,” Hackman was a scream, behaving like a comic book come to life while barking at his underlings as he did laps in an underground pool. By most estimations, he’s the best to ever play that character. The way Hackman had so deftly balanced dark and light is why he was able to unclench his fist to move and inspire us as anFor a non-traditional movie star, Hackman was everywhere during the ’80s and ’90s. He was nominated for another Oscar and won Best Supporting Actor for Clint Eastwood’s 1992 Western “Unforgiven.” He then teamed up with comedy again in “Get Shorty,” Woody Allen’s adult-oriented animated film “Antz,” and “The Birdcage.” In that last madcap farce, he was the perfect stoic yin to Nathan Lane and Robin Williams’ riotous yang, as a serious politician who hides out from the paparazzi by wearing absurd drag. His final look is seared onto my retinas. A few years later, Wes Anderson gave us one of the biggest reinventions of Hackman’s gruff image — as the cool patriarch of a family of wealthy eccentrics in “The Royal Tenenbaums.” I still laugh at his bone-dry delivery of the line, “This is my adopted daughter, Margo Tenenbaum,” in that perfect film.to paint and write in New Mexico with his wife, Betsy Arakawa, the actor sadly landed in critically derided flops. One was the comedy “Heartbreakers” in 2001, and then his final film, the political satire “Welcome to Mooseport,” in 2004. That the movies themselves were lousy was no fault of Hackman, who was never afraid to be a bit silly, even in his most serious films.When The Post asked Hackman about his feelings on “The Mexican,” the 2001 Julia Roberts-Brad Pitt vehicle he made a cameo in, he responded with his own question. Gene Hackman’s wife found mummified and bloated by workers who hadn’t seen couple for two weeks: copsTravis Kelce makes retirement decision after Super Bowl blowoutJames Carville predicts Trump, GOP are in 'midst of a collapse' -- and gives them 4 to 6 weeks to fully implodeMSNBC host Rachel Maddow rips own network for axing Joy Reid's show and other 'non-white' hosts' programsPrincess Eugenie pays tribute to longtime friend Michelle Trachtenberg after actress’ death: ‘You are so loved’Gene Hackman was known for playing in tough guys in films such as"The French Connection," but had a knack for comedy.©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

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