19. SAM'S JOURNEY FROM NEW YORK TO HOLLYWOOD

“When Ozzie shoots Gator and he dies there in the house on the floor—realis- tically in the movie, Gator's dead. Cathartically, the ad- dict that was in me died on that floor. And it changed everything for me.’

Samuel L. Jackson

SUBCHAPTERS

e Finding a Nurturing Environment e A Hollywood Disappointment

e Getting Sober

e Playing Gator in Jungle Fever

e Artistic and Box Office Success

MASTERCLASS

CHAPTER REVIEW

Sam didn’t build his career in a day. Before getting plucked to go to Hollywood, he had a robust theater career in New York, where he was a member of the Negro Ensemble Company alongside Denzel Washington and Morgan Freeman. Although he loved per- forming on stage, Sam had higher ambitions. He says it took him getting sober to gain success and longevity as a screen actor.

Ironically, his breakout role that caught the attention of Holly- wood casting agents was his performance as the crack-addicted character Gator in Spike Lee’s Jungle Fever. After winning a spe- cial prize from the Cannes Film Festival jury for his performance, Sam's film career took off. He earned an Oscar nomination for his performance as Jules in Pulp Fiction, cementing his reputation as an artist, and enjoyed worldwide recognition for his performance as Zeus in Die Hard With a Vengeance, proving that he was a box office goldmine.

TAKE IT FURTHER

When it premiered in 1981, audiences praised A Soldier’s Play for its deft portrait of racism. It went on to win a Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Sam played Private Louis Henson, part of an African-American unit of soldiers being investigated for a murder. Read A Soldier’s Play.

Gator was the first role Sam played completely sober, and

he recounts the powerful catharsis he experienced with the character. Watch Jungle Fever and observe how Sam’s personal experience helped him embody Gator. Can you draw from your personal experience as you create your audition piece char- acter? Make a list of some specific things that you’ve experi- enced that you could write into your character’s biography.

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io; NOTES

MASTERCLASS SAMUEL L. JACKSON 46