Everything about Mel Gibson totally explained
:
Mel Columcille Gerard Gibson,
AO (born
January 3 1956) is a two-time
Academy Award-winning
American-
Australian actor,
director,
producer and
screenwriter. Born in the
United States, Gibson moved to
Australia when he was 12 years old and he later studied acting at the
National Institute of Dramatic Art in
Sydney. After establishing himself as a household name with the
Mad Max and
Lethal Weapon series, Gibson went on to direct and star in the
Academy Award-winning
Braveheart. Gibson's direction of
Braveheart made him the sixth actor-turned-filmmaker to receive an
Oscar for
Best Director. In 2004, he directed and produced
The Passion of the Christ, a
blockbuster movie that portrayed the last hours of the life of
Jesus. Gibson is an honorary
Officer of the Order of Australia and was ranked the world's most powerful celebrity in the annual list by
Forbes magazine in 2004.
Early life
Gibson was born in
Peekskill,
New York, the sixth of eleven children. He is the 15th son of
Hutton Gibson and
Irish-born Anne Reilly Gibson. His paternal grandmother was the
Australian opera soprano,
Eva Mylott (1875–1920). One of Gibson's younger brothers,
Donal, is also an actor. Gibson's first name comes from a 5th century Irish Saint,
Mel, founder of the
diocese of Ardagh which contains most of his mother's native County, while his second name,
Columcille, is also linked to an Irish saint. Columcille is also the name of the parish in County
Longford where Anne Reilly was born and raised. Because of his mother, Mel Gibson holds dual citizenship in America and the
Republic of Ireland.
Hutton Gibson relocated his family to
Sydney, Australia in 1968, after winning $145,000 in a work related injury lawsuit against New York Central on
February 14,
1968. The family moved when Gibson was twelve. The move to Hutton's mother's native Australia was for economic reasons and because he thought the Australian military would reject his oldest son for the
Vietnam War draft.
Gibson was educated by
Christian Brothers at
St. Leo's Catholic College in
Wahroonga,
New South Wales during his High School years.
Film career
Gibson graduated from the
National Institute of Dramatic Art in
Sydney in 1977. His acting career began in Australia with appearances in television series, including
The Sullivans,
Cop Shop and
Punishment. He made his film debut in the 1977 Australian film
Summer City.
Gibson's physical appearance made him a natural for leading male roles in action projects such as the "Mad Max" series of films,
Peter Weir's
Gallipoli, and the "Lethal Weapon" series of films. Later, Gibson expanded into a variety of acting projects including human dramas such as
Hamlet, and comedic roles such as those in
Maverick and
What Women Want. His most artistic and financial success came with films where he expanded beyond acting into directing and producing, such as 1993's
The Man Without a Face, 1995's
Braveheart, 2000's
The Patriot, 2004's
Passion of the Christ and 2006's
Apocalypto. Gibson was considered for roles in
Batman, GoldenEye, Amadeus, Gladiator, The Golden Child, X-Men,, Runaway Bride and
Primary Colors. Actor
Sean Connery once suggested Gibson should play the next
James Bond to Connery's
M. Gibson turned down the role, reportedly because he feared being
typecast.
Honors
On
July 25,
1997, Gibson was named an honorary
Officer of the Order of Australia (AO), in recognition of his "service to the Australian film industry". The award was honorary because substantive awards are made only to Australian citizens. In 1985, Gibson was named "
The Sexiest Man Alive" by
People, the first person to be named so. Gibson quietly declined the
Chevalier des Arts et Lettres from the French government in 1995 as a protest against France's resumption of nuclear testing in the Southwest Pacific.
Time magazine chose Mel Gibson and Michael Moore as
Men of the Year in 2004, but Gibson turned down the photo session and interview, and the cover went instead to
George W. Bush.
Landmark films
Mad Max
Gibson got his breakthrough role as the leather-clad post-apocalyptic survivor in
George Miller's
Mad Max. The film was independently financed and had a reported budget of $300,000 AUD — of which $15,000 was paid to Mel Gibson for his performance. The film achieved incredible success, earning $100 million world wide. It held a record in
Guinness Book of Records as the highest profit-to-cost ratio of a motion picture, and only lost the record in 2000 to
The Blair Witch Project. The film was awarded four
Australian Film Institute Awards in 1979.
Gibson almost didn't get the role that made him a star. His agent got him an audition for
Mad Max, but the night before, he got into a drunken brawl with three men at a party, resulting in a swollen nose, a broken jawline, and various other bruises. Mel showed up at the audition the next day looking like a "black and blue pumpkin" (his own words). Mel didn't expect to get the role and only went to accompany his friend. However, the casting agent told Mel to come back in two weeks, telling him "we need freaks." When Mel did come back, he wasn't recognized because his wounds had healed almost completely, and received the part. This incident is listed in
Ripley's Believe It or Not!
When the film was first released in America, all the voices, including that of Mel Gibson's character, were dubbed with U.S. accents at the behest of the distributor,
American International Pictures, for fear that audiences wouldn't take warmly to actors speaking entirely with Australian accents.
The original film spawned two sequels: (known in North America as
The Road Warrior), and
Mad Max 3 (known in North America as
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome). A fourth movie,, has been considered but hasn't been produced.
The Bounty
In 1984, starred as
Fletcher Christian in
The Bounty. According to unauthorised biographer
Wensley Clarkson, Gibson and costar
Anthony Hopkins, didn't get along during the shoot. At the time, Anthony Hopkins was a
teetotaler, and Mel Gibson was struggling with
alcoholism. Gibson frequently spent his evenings in local saloons and took to mixing two shots of
Scotch with his
beer. He dubbed the concoction "Liquid Violence". In one incident, Gibson's face was severely cut up in a bar room brawl and the film's shooting schedule had to be rearranged while he was flown to a hospital in
Papeete.
Lethal Weapon
Gibson moved into more mainstream commercial filmmaking with the popular
buddy cop Lethal Weapon series, which began with the 1987 original. In the films he played
LAPD Detective
Martin Riggs, a recently widowed
Vietnam veteran with a death wish and a penchant for violence and gunplay. In the films, he's partnered with a reserved family man named
Roger Murtaugh (
Danny Glover). This series would come to exemplify the action genre's so-called
buddy film.
The two actors were trained in two different schools of acting. Gibson is classically trained and Glover is a
method actor. Four films were produced in 1987, 1989, 1992 and 1998.
Hamlet
Gibson made the unusual transition from the action to classical genres, playing the melancholic Danish prince in
Franco Zeffirelli's
Hamlet. Gibson was cast alongside such experienced
Shakespearean actors as
Ian Holm,
Alan Bates, and
Paul Scofield. He described working with his fellow cast members as similar to being "thrown into the ring with
Mike Tyson".
The film met with critical and marketing success and remains steady in DVD sales. It also marked the transformation of Mel Gibson from action hero to serious actor and filmmaker.
Braveheart
Gibson stated that when the
Braveheart script arrived and was recommended by his agents, he rejected it outright because he thought he was too old to play the part. After careful thought, he decided that he wanted to direct the picture, and direct only. He finally agreed to act due to pressure from the film's producers.
Gibson received five
Academy Awards,
Best Director and
Best Picture, for his 1995 direction of
Braveheart. In the movie, Gibson starred as Sir
William Wallace, a 13th century martyr of
Scottish nationalism.
In one of his interviews, he attempted to make a film similar to the big screen epics he'd loved as a child, such as
Stanley Kubrick's
Spartacus and
William Wyler's
The Big Country. The filming began in the
Scottish Highlands. After learning that the intended filming locations were among the rainiest spots in Europe, the shooting was moved to the
Republic of Ireland, where members of the
Irish Army Reserve worked as extras in the film's many battles. The
Battle of Stirling sequence in
Braveheart is considered one of the best directed battle scenes in all of
film history.
The Passion of the Christ
In 2004 Gibson directed
The Passion of the Christ which was based on the last twelve hours of the life of
Jesus Christ according to the
Four Evangelists and Roman Catholic
Sacred Tradition. It was rendered multilingually in
Aramaic,
Hebrew, and
Latin.
Gibson co-wrote the
screenplay with writer
Benedict Fitzgerald and financed the film himself. The filming took place on location in
Matera, Italy and
Cinecittà Studios in
Rome. Prior to making the film, Gibson constructed a
traditionalist Catholic chapel on his California estate.
Reviews were mixed, with critics ranging from praising the film for its realistic depiction of Jesus' final hours from a Catholic point of view and criticism of violence, manipulation and charges of anti-Semitism.
Asked if his movie would "upset Jews", Gibson responded, "It's not meant to. I think it's meant to just tell the truth. I want to be as truthful as possible." Accusations of anti-Semitism were fueled by news reports that Mel Gibson's father,
Hutton Gibson, is a vocal
Sedevacantist who has alleged that much of the
Holocaust is "fiction".
After
Frank Rich of the
New York Times wrote against the unreleased film and called Gibson's publicist a “
Holocaust denier defender,” Gibson was overheard by
The New Yorker telling his publicist, "I want to kill him. I want his intestines on a stick. I want to kill his dog."
On his decision to cut the scene in which
Caiaphas says "his blood be on us and on our children" soon after
Pontius Pilate washes his hands of Jesus, Gibson said in mid-2003:
» "I wanted it in. My brother said I was wimping out if I didn't include it. But, man, if I included that in there, they'd be coming after me at my house. They'd come to kill me."
In 2004, he further commented:
» "It's one little passage, and I believe it, but I don't and never have believed it refers to Jews, and implicates them in any sort of curse. It's directed at all of us, all men who were there, and all that came after. His blood is on us, and that's what Jesus wanted. But I finally had to admit that one of the reasons I felt strongly about keeping it, aside from the fact it's true, is that I didn't want to let someone else dictate what could or couldn't be said."
The movie grossed
US$611,899,420 worldwide and $370,782,930 in the US alone, a figure, at that time, surpassed any motion picture starring Gibson. It became the eighth highest-grossing film in history and the highest-grossing
rated R film of all time. The film was nominated for an
Academy Award for Original Music Score,
Best Cinematography, and
Best Makeup at the
77th Academy Awards and won the
People's Choice Award for Best Drama.
Apocalypto
Gibson's next historical epic,
Apocalypto, was released to theaters on
December 8,
2006. The film is set in
Mesoamerica, during the fifteenth century. It focuses on the
decline of the Maya civilization which reached its zenith around 600 AD, collapsed around 900 AD, and fell into a period of competing city states until the
Conquistadors invaded. Dialogue is spoken in the
Yucatec Maya language. It features a cast of actors from
Mexico City, the
Yucatán, and some
Native Americans from the
United States.
While Gibson financed the film himself,
Disney released it in specific markets.
The film is set against the turbulent
end times of the once great
Maya civilization.
The title is a
Greek term which means "an unveiling" or "new beginning", but the movie isn't religiously themed or connected to the
biblical Apocalypse.
Gibson pre-screened
Apocalypto to two predominantly
Native American audiences in Oklahoma, at the Riverwind Casino in
Goldsby, owned by the
Chickasaw Nation, and at
Cameron University in
Lawton.
Future films
In March 2007, Gibson told a screening audience that he was preparing another script with
Farhad Safinia about the writing of the
Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Gibson's company has long owned the rights to
The Professor and the Madman, which tells the story of the creation of the
OED.
Gibson has dismissed the rumors that he's considering directing a film about Spanish explorer
Vasco Núñez de Balboa. Asked in September 2007 if he planned to return to acting and specifically to action roles, Gibson said:
» "I think I’m too old for that, but you never know. I just like telling stories. Entertainment is valid and I guess I’ll probably do it again before it's over. You know, do something that people won’t get mad with me for."
Variety has reported that Gibson is set to star in a film adaptation of the
BBC miniseries,
Edge of Darkness. He's a big fan of the serial and was very enthusiastic about playing the part of the lead character, Ronald Craven, when producer
Graham King and director
Martin Campbell approached him for the role. This will be his first starring role since
Signs and
We Were Soldiers back in 2002.
(External Link
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Family and personal life
Gibson met his wife Robyn Moore in the late 1970s soon after filming
Mad Max when they were both tenants at the same house in
Adelaide. At the time, Robyn was a dental nurse and Mel was an unknown actor working for the South Australian Theatre Company. On
June 7 1980, they married in a Catholic Church in
Forestville, New South Wales. Gibson has referred to his wife as "my
Rock of Gibraltar, only much prettier" and said, "life is about love and commitment and screw anyone who thinks that's a cliché." They have one daughter, six sons, and one grandchild. Their seven children are Hannah (born 1980), twins Edward and Christian (born 1982), William (born 1985), Louis (born 1988), Milo (born 1990), and Thomas (born 1999).
Daughter Hannah Gibson married
Blues musician
Kenny Wayne Shepherd on
September 16,
2006. Mel Gibson's spokesman had previously denied the rumor that Hannah was planning to become a nun.
Gibson has an avid interest in real estate investments, with multiple properties in
Malibu, California, several locations in
Costa Rica, a private island in
Fiji and properties in
Australia. In December 2004, Gibson sold his Australian ranch in the
Kiewa Valley for $6 million. Also in December 2004, Gibson purchased
Mago Island in Fiji from
Tokyu Corporation of
Japan for $15 million. Descendants of the original native inhabitants of Mago (who were displaced in the 1860s) have protested the purchase. Gibson stated it was his intention to retain the pristine environment of the undeveloped island. In early 2005, he sold his
Montana ranch to a neighbor for an undisclosed multimillion dollar sum. In April 2007 he purchased a ranch in
Costa Rica for $26 million, and in July 2007 he sold his 76 acre Tudor estate in
Connecticut (which he purchased in 1994 for $9 million) for $40 million to an unnamed buyer. Also that month, he sold a
Malibu property for $30 million that he'd purchased for $24 million two years before.
In keeping with his interest in organic foods, Gibson has used his ranch properties to produce all-organic beef.
Mel Gibson has eclectic tastes in music and is particularly fond of
Italian opera. He is a lover of
Italian Renaissance artwork and is a great admirer of the 17th century
artist Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio. Much of the
cinematography in
The Passion of the Christ was modeled after the style of this painter.
Gibson's height is disputed. Varied sources place him from 5'6" (170 cm) to 5'11" (180 cm). In 2002 Gibson stood next to interviewer
Michael Parkinson (5 ft 10 in) and demonstrated that they were about the same height. It should be noted however that at the time of the interview Parkinson was 67 years old and probably not at his peak height.
Religious and political views
Faith
Based on many of his positions, Gibson may be considered a
Traditionalist Catholic. Despite the rumors on whether Gibson shares his father's adherence to
Sedevacantism, Gibson hasn't spoken publicly on the matter, and some of his public interviews give the opposite impression. As part of his response to a question on whether
Pope John Paul II saw
The Passion of the Christ, Gibson said, "I’d like to hear what he's to say. I’d like to hear what anyone has to say. This film isn’t made for the elite. Anyone could see this film, even the occupier of the
chair of Peter can see this film."Gibson also referred to him as “Pope John Paul II” in a 2004
Reader's Digest interview, and acquaintance Father
William Fulco has said that Gibson denies neither the
Pope nor
Vatican II.
When asked about the Catholic doctrine of "
Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus", Gibson replied, "There is no salvation for those outside the Church … I believe it. Put it this way. My wife is a saint. She's a much better person than I am. Honestly. She's, like, Episcopalian, Church of England. She prays, she believes in God, she knows Jesus, she believes in that stuff. And it's just not fair if she doesn't make it, she's better than I am. But that's a pronouncement from the
chair. I go with it.” Gibson doesn't understand this
dogma to mean that non-Catholics will go to hell. When Gibson was asked at
Willow Creek church whether John 14:6 is an intolerant position, he said that “through the
merits of Jesus' sacrifice… even people who don't know Jesus are able to be saved, but
through him.” Gibson also told Diane Sawyer that he believes non-Catholics and non-Christians can go to heaven.
In May 2007, Mel Gibson flew to
Hermosillo,
Mexico, where he attended a
Tridentine Mass during which grandchildren of his friends and two of his children received the
sacrament of Confirmation, administered by
Archbishop emeritus Carlos Quintero Arce. The same Archbishop Arce
consecrated Gibson's own, private,
traditional Roman Catholic church of the Holy Family in Malibu in February, 2007.
Gibson's
Traditionalist Catholic beliefs have also been the target of attacks, especially during the controversy over his film
The Passion of the Christ. When the film premiered in
France, the newspaper
Libération, considered the voice of French
liberalism, dubbed Gibson's religious beliefs "the
Shiite version of
Christianity." Gibson has recently stated in an interview with
Diane Sawyer that he feels that his "
human rights were violated", by the often vitriolic attacks on his person, his family, and his religious beliefs which were sparked by
The Passion.
Politics
Gibson has been called everything from “ultraconservative” to “politically very liberal” by acquaintance
William Fulco. Although he's denied that he's a
Republican, Gibson is often referred to as one in the press, and
WorldNetDaily once reported that there was grassroots support among Republicans for "a presidential run" in 2008.
Gibson complimented filmmaker
Michael Moore and his documentary
Fahrenheit 9/11 when he and Moore were recognized at the 2005
People's Choice Awards. Gibson's
Icon Productions originally agreed to finance Moore's film, but later sold the rights to
Miramax Films. Moore said that his agent
Ari Emanuel claimed that "top Republicans" called Mel Gibson to tell him, "don’t expect to get more invitations to the
White House". Icon's spokesman dismissed this story, saying "We never run from a controversy. You'd have to be out of your mind to think that of the company that just put out
The Passion of the Christ."
In a July 1995 interview with
Playboy magazine, Gibson said President
Bill Clinton was a "low-level opportunist" and someone was "telling him what to do". He said that the
Rhodes Scholarship was established for young men and women who want to strive for a "
new world order" and this was a campaign for
Marxism. Gibson later backed away from such
conspiracy theories saying, "It was like: 'Hey, tell us a conspiracy' . . . so I laid out this thing, and suddenly, it was like I was talking the gospel truth, espousing all this political shit like I believed in it."
In 2004, he publicly spoke out against taxpayer-funded
embryonic stem-cell research that involves the
cloning and destruction of human
embryos.
In March 2005, he issued a statement condemning the ending of
Terri Schiavo's life, referring to her death as "state-sanctioned murder" on
Sean Hannity's radio show.
Gibson joked about
WMDs in a February 2004 interview with
Diane Sawyer and in March 2004 questioned the
Iraq war on
Sean Hannity's radio show. In 2006, Gibson told the
Time magazine that the "fearmongering" depicted in his film
Apocalypto "reminds me a little of
President Bush and his guys." Eventually, however, to make amends with the
gay community and show he wasn't
homophobic, Gibson joined GLAAD in hosting 10
lesbian and gay filmmakers for an on-location
seminar on the set of the movie
Conspiracy Theory in January 1997. In 1999 when asked about the comments to
El País, Gibson said, "I shouldn't have said it, but I was tickling a bit of vodka during that interview, and the quote came back to bite me on the ass." Gibson defended his depiction of Prince Edward as weak and ineffectual, saying,
“'I'm just trying to respond to history. You can cite other examples – Alexander the Great, for example, who conquered the entire world, was also a homosexual. But this story isn't about Alexander the Great. It's about Edward II.”
Gibson asserted that the reason the king killed his son's lover was because the king was a “
psychopath,” and he expressed bewilderment that some audience members would laugh at this murder:
"We cut a scene out, unfortunately . . . where you really got to know that character (Edward II) and to understand his plight and his pain. . . . But it just stopped the film in the first act so much that you thought, 'When's this story going to start?' "
Gibson was also accused of homophobia based on his portrayal of
Herod Antipas in
The Passion of the Christ. In the film, the
Hellenized Antipas is depicted as a luxurious, wig-wearing buffoon who surrounds himself with young male and female drunken revelers. The character of the Jewish
high priest Caiphas is shown to be disgusted by the mascara-wearing
Herod and his debauchery. The effeminate portrayal of Antipas in
The Passion is common to other representations, including
Jesus Christ Superstar. The origin of this tradition may have been Christ's description of Herod as a “fox” in Luke 13:32, using a feminine word meaning “vixen” in the original Greek.
Allegations of Anglophobia
Due to some of his film choices as well as his Irish and
Australian background, accusations of
anglophobia, both sincere and joking, have been made against Gibson.
Criticisms have been leveled at the historical accuracy of the Gibson-directed
Braveheart, including its portrayal of English lords asserting
Droit de seigneur. Gibson has acknowledged the reliance on anachronistic elements and the legends about
William Wallace to make
Braveheart more cinematically compelling. Furthermore, Gibson has dissociated himself from
Scottish nationalists using the film to campaign for separation from
England.
Gibson was called anti-English following the release of
The Patriot in 2000, despite neither directing or writing the script for the film. The American Revolutionary character played by Gibson (loosely inspired by four people) waged a private war against a villainous British officer based on Colonel
Banastre Tarleton.
According to unauthorised biographer and vocal Gibson critic
Wensley Clarkson, Mel Gibson was raised in an openly anti-British atmosphere by his
Irish-American parents. Clarkson cites alleged family stories saying that several of Gibson's maternal relations (possibly including his grandmother) were raped by the
Black and Tans during the
Irish War of Independence. Clarkson further accuses Gibson of deliberately standing up the British Royal Family at the London premiere of
Hamlet. However, Gibson had also missed the New York premiere of
Hamlet to attend the funeral of his mother in Australia.
Gibson has, however, played British characters several times in his career, playing
Fletcher Christian in
The Bounty, and voicing
John Smith, in Disney's
Pocahontas, and narrating the novel
My Cousin Rachel. He has enjoyed cordial working relations with British people during the making of several films, including
The Bounty,
Lethal Weapon 2,
Conspiracy Theory and
Chicken Run.
While promoting
The Patriot, Gibson told reporters, "I'm actually an Anglophile. I like the Brits, you know?" The fact that he keeps battling the British onscreen is "an unhappy accident, really. I'll have to remedy the situation someday."
Gibson has also publicly supported keeping
Queen Elizabeth II as the Australian
head of state.
Allegations of antisemitism
Gibson has been accused of
antisemitism over two issues:
2004 film
The Passion of the Christ sparked a fierce debate over
alleged anti-Semitic imagery and overtones. Gibson denied that the film was anti-Semitic, but critics remained divided. Some agreed that the film was consistent with the
Gospels and traditional
Catholic teachings, while others argued that it reflected a selective reading of the
Gospels or that it failed to comply with recommendations for dramatization of the
Passion issued by the Committee for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs of the
USCCB in 1988.
According to a leaked report on Gibson's
July 28 2006 arrest for
driving under the influence, Gibson made anti-Semitic remarks to arresting officer James Mee, who is Jewish, saying, "Fucking Jews... Jews are responsible for all the wars in the world. Are you a Jew?" Gibson issued two apologies for the incident through his publicist, and in a later interview with
Diane Sawyer, he affirmed the accuracy of the alleged quotations.
Apocalypto
Gibson engaged in an angry confrontation with Alicia Estrada, an Assistant Professor of Central American Studies, during a Q&A session that followed a screening of his film
Apocalypto to film students at
Cal State University at Northridge, California on
March 22,
2007.
Estrada began by calling Gibson "racist" and "ignorant", and saying, "It's a racist film, and I demand an apology." Gibson replied that he was insulted by this accusation. Estrada handed the microphone to her friend KPFK radio host Felipe Perez, who began reading a lengthy statement in Spanish. The organizers eventually said, "ask a question or leave" and cut off the microphone, but Gibson said he should be allowed to continue. Estrada took back the mic and began to translate the prepared statement. When officials concluded that she wasn't going to ask a question, they called security to escort her out. Estrada then asked Gibson if he was aware of certain scholars, and Gibson replied that he knew them well, and he detailed his research for the film. Although Estrada said that Gibson used profanity in his response,
CSUN spokesman John Chandler disagreed: "He didn't respond with a profanity. He responded by answering the question." After Estrada's microphone was turned off, Gibson said, "No, let her talk. Please." Estrada became angry that she was being "silenced", and Gibson responded, "I'm listening to you! I can still hear you!" As Estrada and Perez were being escorted out, the audience applauded. Later in the Q&A session, Gibson expressed regret at the incident and the evening ended with a standing ovation for the filmmaker.
Soon afterwards, student newspaper photographer Khristian Garay sold his photographs to the paparazzi, resulting in a story at TMZ.Gibson's publicist told journalists, "This was just a reaction to someone being disruptive and rude. He went on and completed the session and said it was successful. It's unfortunate it was tarnished with a momentary confrontation." Estrada defended herself, saying, "In no way was my question aggressive in the way that he responded to it. These are questions that my peers, my colleagues, ask me every time I make a presentation. These are questions I pose to my students in the classroom." Estrada furthermore demanded an apology, "not only to me but to the Central American program at CSUN, to the university and most importantly to the Mayan people and Mayan community." University spokesman John Chandler commented, "The students were very appreciative of Mr. Gibson being there. He spent a lot of time answering questions about moviemaking."
Prankster
Mel Gibson is known for his sense of humor on the set of his movies. He has a reputation for practical jokes, puns,
Stooge-inspired physical comedy, and doing outrageous things to shock people. Gibson is fond of drawing caricatures and hiring high school marching bands to pay tribute to his coworkers. As a director he sometimes breaks the tension on set by having his actors perform serious scenes wearing a red clown nose.
Helena Bonham Carter, who appeared alongside him in
Hamlet, said of him, "He has a very basic sense of humor. It's a bit lavatorial and not very sophisticated." On the set of
Maverick Gibson played a joke on costar
Jodie Foster's birthday by secretly rewriting the script to give her character all corny dialogue. Foster returned the favor by hiring a
bagpiper in full Scottish regalia to follow Mel around at the
Vanity Fair Oscar party after he won for
Braveheart. On the set of
Ransom, Gibson presented
Ron Howard and
Brian Grazer with a mock
Braveheart For Your Consideration ad when both
Braveheart and
Apollo 13 were nominated for
Best Picture. The ad was for “Best Moon Shot,” and featured a picture of
Braveheart's Scottish army
mooning the English. While filming
Conspiracy Theory, he and co-star
Julia Roberts played a series of pranks on each other, beginning with Gibson welcoming Roberts to the set with a gift-wrapped freeze-dried rat.. In addition to inserting several homages to the
Three Stooges in his
Lethal Weapon movies, Gibson produced a television movie on the comedy group in 2000. As a gag, Gibson inserted a single
subliminal frame of himself smoking a cigarette into the 2005 teaser trailer of
Apocalypto
Alcohol abuse
Mel Gibson has said that he started drinking at the age of thirteen. In a 2002 interview about his time at
NIDA, Gibson said,
"I had really good highs but some very low lows. I found out recently I'm manic depressive."
Gibson hasn't made any other public mention of having
bipolar disorder.
In 1984, Gibson was arrested in
Toronto for driving with a blood alcohol level between 0.12%-0.13% after he rear-ended a car. According to Clarkson, when the other driver exited his vehicle and began shouting profanity at him, Mel Gibson laughed and offered him a
drink. Gibson plead guilty and was fined $300 and banned from driving in
Ontario for 3 months. In court he apologized to the Toronto community and thanked the police.
In 1985, Gibson retreated to his Australian farm for over a year to recover, but he continued to struggle with drinking. In a 2004
Primetime interview with
Diane Sawyer, Gibson admitted at one point to drinking five pints of beer before work. In 1992, Gibson provided financial support to Hollywood's Recovery Center, saying, "
Alcoholism is something that runs in my family. It's something that's close to me. People do come back from it, and it's a miracle."
On
July 28,
2006, Gibson was arrested for
DUI while speeding in his vehicle with an open container of alcohol. He admitted to making anti-Semitic remarks during his arrest and apologized for his "despicable" behavior, saying the comments were "blurted out in a moment of insanity" and asked to meet with Jewish leaders to help him "discern the appropriate path for healing." When pressed for what his thoughts were at the time in a later interview with Diane Sawyer, he cited the vitriolic attacks on his film
The Passion of the Christ and Israel-Lebanon
conflict. After Gibson's arrest, his publicist said he'd entered a recovery program to battle alcoholism. On
August 17,
2006, Gibson pleaded
no contest to a misdemeanor drunken-driving charge and was sentenced to three years on probation. Superior Court Judge Lawrence Mira ordered him to attend self-help meetings five times a week for four and a half months and three times a week for the remainder of the first year of his probation. He was also ordered to attend a First Offenders Program, was fined $1,300, and his license was restricted for 90 days. He also volunteered to record a public service announcement.
In a
October 12,
2006 interview with
Diane Sawyer, Gibson spoke on his struggle to remain sober.
"The risk of everything - life, limb, family - isn't enough to keep you from it… You can't do it of yourself. And people can help, yeah. But it's God. You've got to go there. You've got to do it. Or you won't survive…This whole experience in a way, for me, I'm sort of viewing it now as a kind of a blessing because, firstly, I got stopped before I did any real damage to anyone else. Thank God for that. I didn't hurt myself, you know. I didn't leave my kids fatherless…The other thing is sometimes you need a cold bucket of water in the face to sort of snap to because you're dealing with a sort of a malady of the soul, an obsession of the mind and a physical allergy. And some people need a big tap on the shoulder. In my case, public humiliation on a global scale seems to be what was required."
At a May 2007 progress hearing, Judge Mira praised Gibson for complying with the terms of his probation, saying,
"I know his extensive participation in a self-help program - and I should note he's done extensive work, beyond which was required."
Philanthropy
Although the Gibsons have avoided publicity over their
philanthropy, they're believed to spend much money on various charities. One known charity is
Healing the Children. According to
Cris Embleton, one of the founders, the Gibsons have given millions to provide lifesaving medical treatment to needy children worldwide. The Gibsons have also supported the arts, funding the restoration of
Renaissance artwork and giving millions of dollars to
NIDA.
While filming the movie
Apocalypto in the jungles of Mexico's
Veracruz state, Mel Gibson donated one million dollars to the
Rotary Club to build houses for poor people in the region after some severe flooding wiped out many homes, stating:
"[T]hey had a lot of floods down there. It was like Louisiana down there in the southern regions. They had severe flooding and something like a million people were displaced and washed out. I've always been of the opinion that if you go into someone else's country to make a film you don't just go in there and stomp all over the place. You bring a gift. It's like going to somebody's house. You bring them a bottle of wine or a bunch of flowers or a box of chocolates and it's the same sort of thing on a big scale when you're going in to somebody's country and they're going to help you make your film. You help them first somehow or you give them a gift or you help in what way you can. So we sort of assisted with the flood relief stuff down there."
Gibson has a reputation for discreetly assisting members of the entertainment community with substance abuse problems. He worked behind the scenes to get
Robert Downey, Jr. some help at
Corcoran State Prison. Hole rocker
Courtney Love praised Mel Gibson for saving her from a drug relapse after the Hollywood actor helped force her into rehab. Gibson sought to help the musician at a hotel in Los Angeles when he heard she was using drugs again. Love later recalled,
"I kept slamming the door in (Gibson's) face. There were two drug people with me who wouldn't leave, so they couldn't get me to rehab. But because of Mel, two drug people ran off to have a cheeseburger with him because he's Mel, and then Warren [Boyd] (her drug minder) could get me into rehab."
Gibson has donated $500,000 to the
El Mirador Basin Project to protect the last tract of virgin rain forest in Central America and to fund archeological excavations in the "cradle of Mayan civilization." In July 2007, Gibson again visited
Central America to make arrangements for donations to the indigenous population. Gibson met with
Costa Rican President
Oscar Arias to discuss how to "channel the funds." During the same month, Gibson pledged to give financial assistance to a Malaysian company named Green Rubber Global for a tire recycling factory located in
Gallup, New Mexico. While on a business trip to Singapore in September 2007, Gibson donated to a local charity for children with chronic and terminal illnesses.
Quotations
- "I've been goofing off all my life. I thought might as well get paid for that." — explanation for why he wanted to be an actor at his 1975 NIDA audition.
"[InHollywood] you've to realize you're working in a factory and you're part of the mechanism. If you break down, you'll be replaced, and there should never be any offense taken at people's attitudes." — Los Angeles Times, May 6 1990
"I am politically incorrect, that's true. Political correctness to me is just intellectual terrorism. I find that really scary, and I won't be intimidated into changing my mind. Everyone isn't going to love you all the time." — 1996 interview with Roald Rynning
Filmography
Awards and accomplishments
Australian Film Institute: Best Actor in a Lead Role, Tim (1979)
Australian Film Institute: Best Actor in a Lead Role, Gallipoli (1981)
People's Choice Awards: Favorite Motion Picture Actor (1991)
MTV Movie Awards: Best Action Sequence, Lethal Weapon 3 (1993)
MTV Movie Awards: Best On-Screen Duo, Lethal Weapon 3 (1993) - shared with Danny Glover
ShoWest Award: Male Star of the Year (1993)
National Board of Review: Special Achievement in Filmmaking, Braveheart (1995)
American Cinematheque Gala Tribute: American Cinematheque Award (1995)
ShoWest Award: Director of the Year (1996)
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards: Best Director, Braveheart (1996)
Golden Globe Awards: Best Director, Braveheart (1996)
Academy Awards: Best Director, Braveheart (1996)
Academy Awards: Best Picture, Braveheart (1996)
People's Choice Awards: Favorite Motion Picture Actor (1997)
Hasty Pudding Theatricals: Man of the Year (1997)
Blockbuster Entertainment Awards: Favorite Actor - Suspense, Ransom (1997)
Blockbuster Entertainment Awards: Favorite Actor - Suspense, Conspiracy Theory (1998)
People's Choice Awards: Favorite Motion Picture Star in a Drama (2001)
People's Choice Awards: Favorite Motion Picture Actor (2001)
Blockbuster Entertainment Awards: Favorite Actor - Drama, The Patriot (2001)
Australian Film Institute: Global Achievement Award (2002)
People's Choice Awards: Favorite Motion Picture Actor (2003)
Honorary Doctorate Recipient and Undergraduate Commencement Speaker, Loyola Marymount University (2003)
People's Choice Awards: Favorite Motion Picture Actor (2004)
Named as the world's most powerful celebrity by US business magazine Forbes (2004)
Outstanding Contribution to World Cinema Award at the Irish Film and Television Awards (2008)
Further Information
Get more info on 'Mel Gibson'.
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