
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
With entertainment dominated by fresh-faced puppets, it's extremely heartening to see someone break into the corridors of power when in their forties. Better still when that person's an accomplished writer, director, character actor and musician. Step forward Billy Bob Thornton, a backwoods renaissance man who's squeezed several (mostly unsuccessful) lives into one and come out on top of the Hollywood tree.
It could so easily have been very different. Whereas many of today's stars are the children of the Los Angeles glitterati, Billy Bob began life about as far from Tinseltown as an American can get. He was born on the 4th of August, 1955, at Hot Springs, Arkansas, and spent his first few years living, with up to 15 of his extended family, in his grandfather's shack in the woods around the hamlet of Alpine (population 100). Grandad was a forest ranger, and the family would eat what he shot - deer, possum an' sechlike. There was no running water or electricity, they would read by the light of coal-oil lamps. Billy Bob was a chubby baby. In fact, he later recalled "I was the fattest baby in Clark County. They put me in the paper. I was like a prize turnip". His father was Billy Ray - hot-tempered and of Irish descent - a High School history teacher and basketball coach who'd die from lung cancer when the boy was 18. His mother, Virginia Faulkner Thornton, half-Italian, half-Choctaw Indian, was a psychic and she would be the prime influence on her son. She'd also predict that he'd later work with Burt Reynolds and win an Oscar - he'd base the Cate Blanchett character in The Gift upon her.
After a few years, the family moved to Malvern (population a headspinning 9256), and here Billy Bob had greater access to his first love - music. With his younger brother, Jimmy Don (there'd be another brother, John David, born in 1969 and now a doctor), he'd devour the works of Elvis, Jim Reeves and homeboy Johnny Cash, then flipped over British invaders like The Beatles, The Kinks and The Dave Clark Five. But, though he'd later fall for witty experimentalists Captain Beefheart and Frank Zappa, his big thing was Americana, both Roots and Rock.
Billy Bob was a born rocker. He recalls accidentally burning someone's barn down while sneakily smoking with some friends. His grandfather knew it was him, made him understand the weight of his crime, but never grassed him. And the boy was a player. At 9, he received his first drum-kit. His first public performance was at a PTA meeting, thrashing out an instrumental version of The Ballad Of The Green Berets. He formed a band, The McCoveys, named after Wille McCovey, a black baseball star with the San Francisco Giants who smashed an amazing 521 homers. A later High School band was Stone Cold Fever who bashed out the hits of Creedence Clearwater Revival.
After High School, he kept it up, working tough jobs and playing bars at the weekend. By day, he laboured hard for the Highway Department, hauled hay, drove a bulldozer, toiled at a factory making screen doors. He also, at 19, found work at a nursing home in Malvern. At first he was the maintenance man then, when it was noticed how he'd chat to the patients (not all of them old), he became social director, organising entertainment, like bingo games. One gripe was that the patients were not permitted to discuss their past - this was deemed therapeutically unhelpful. He would tackle this experience later, with his breakthrough hit Sling Blade.
Throughout the Seventies, Billy Bob believed his future to be in music. He joined a local soul group, Blue And The Blue Velvets, singing and drumming, then formed his own band, Hot 'Lanta, named after a track by The Allman Brothers. There'd also be Tres Hombres, named after ZZ Top's hit album of 1973, who'd reach the heights of opening for Hank Williams Jr and would release an LP called Gunslinger. With him in the band was guitarist Michael Shipp. He'd later film part of Sling Blade in Shipp's barn in Benton, Arkansas. While playing, Billy Bob would also roadie for others, notably for Canadian band Lighthouse, on a couple of US tours.
There was also marriage. In 1975, aged 20, he got hitched to Melissa Ross. "I went bowling one night and ended up married", he now says. It lasted two years and produced a daughter, Amanda. Thornton would have no part in her upbringing, and only formed a relationship with the girl when she was in her twenties. Thrown a little, in 1977 he took the unusual step (for a rocker) of enrolling at Henderson State University at Arkadelphia, majoring in psychology ("though I mostly majored in billiards"). He lasted just two semesters, music was still in his blood. Still desperate to make it as a rock star, he took off for New York City with his childhood neighbour Tom Epperson who fancied being a famous novelist. They lasted a barely credible ten hours. "Greenwich Village terrified us", said Epperson later. "Steam coming out of the grates and the subway rattling underneath - that really terrified us. We went back to Arkansas in disgrace".
By 1981, they were ready to try again. While at High School, Thornton had become interested in drama.


























