
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
People have the wrong idea about Jack Black. They see him as a comedian struggling to make it in a serious thespian world, a fledgling Jim Carrey or Robin Williams. But look a little closer. Both Carrey and Williams, like any number of comics-turned-actors, first brought their practised comic personalities to the screen (take The Mask or Good Morning Vietnam) and then attempted to expand into "proper" acting. Or rather they've attempted to DEFLATE into proper acting as they've tried to rid themselves of those huge, hyper-active funny-man personas.
Jack Black, on the other hand, is an actor first and foremost. Though ostensibly he made it in the world of comedy with his semi-parodic heavy metal duo Tenacious D, then carried that character into his first headlining hit, School Of Rock, he actually began as a member of Tim Robbins' Actors' Gang, and served his apprenticeship in myriad cameos. Tenacious D was just a sideline, raised to huge popularity by Black's onscreen success. His character in the band is simply that - another character - just like his bolshy, elitist music shop worker in High Fidelity, his uber-stoner in Orange County and even his metal-obsessed imposter-teacher in School Of Rock. He's funny, that's for sure, but he's never been merely a comedian. And the proof of that lies in the fact that, as he rose towards cinematic success, his main competitor - well, it was hardly a competition as the guy took nearly every part Black desired - was Philip Seymour Hoffman.
Black was born on the 28th of August, 1969, and spent his early life at Hermosa Beach, in Torrance, south-west Los Angeles. His father and mother Judy were both satellite engineers (that is, rocket scientists) and Jack would be their only child together. They did, though, bring other kids to the party, his mum having three from a previous marriage and his dad a further one (he'd have another once he and Judy were divorced). This didn't make it easy for Jack who found himself forever battling for attention against these already cemented loyalties. He was an interloper in his own home. And there were other complications. This being the Seventies in Los Angeles, the parents believed that one should not say No to one's children, making life ever more volatile. Beyond this, there was what Black later described as weird family stuff, not wife-swapping exactly, but swinging. "It was funny", he said "and not funny ha-ha".
Young Jack was always imaginative and keen to entertain, desperately so. At Hebrew school he was the class clown, but for a long time wasn't funny, just a smartarsed annoyance. "I'd just be a total anus", he later admitted. He took to hiding wires in his clothes, then letting them slip out in the hope people would think he was a robot. He competed with a neighbour called Carrie who pretended she had a magic potion to make people taller or shorter. In turn, he claimed to posess a time machine. He was a warlock, he's said, to her witch.
His parents divorced, in an ugly fashion, when he was 10 and he moved with his mother to an 8-bedroom place in Culver City, just north of Torrance and near the famous MGM studios. His mother would rent out rooms, one tenant being a music-loving journalist who got Jack into Fleetwood Mac and Simon & Garfunkel. There'd be other musical influences, too, one being his older brother Howard Siegel, an engineer who'd just worked on Devo's hit album Freedom Of Choice. He'd take little Jack along to see the band play in Santa Monica, an apt choice for a former wannabe robot-boy.
Like many lost boys, Jack would find solace in music, as well as an identity and an escape. He was a troubled student, uninterested in academic studies, and showing enthusiasm only for art and theatre work. Perhaps he liked being someone else, but from the moment, at age 8, that he played the wizard in a summer camp production of The Wizard Of Oz, he muscled his way into every show he could.
Understandably, his first choice of music was heavy rock, its grand sounds and apocalyptic themes making a perfect soundtrack for his pained adolescence. His first bought album would be Styx's The Grand Illusion, Journey would be another favourite. Then, when he was 13 (in a pre-echoing of his High Fidelity character) a record shop assistant suggested that he stop being such a pussy and go for something heavier - Ozzy Osbourne's first solo opus. It was a life-changing moment, sowing seeds that would bear copious fruit some 20 years later. He recorded many songs a capella on a 4-track (many were funny and sexually based, the roots of Tenacious D) and tried joining a band. Sadly, they were so bad that, while playing Black Sabbath's Iron Man during a High School party, they noticed that no one was listening. Not one person. So they petulantly broke some stuff and walked off, the humiliation ending Black's musical career for several years.
Also at 13, Jack got his first job. This being Culver City, this wasn't a Saturday shift in Woolworth's but an acting part in an advert for the Activision game Pitfall. But this wasn't a sign that Jack was moving towards a serious and planned career. Instead, as his musical tastes veered towards Bad Brains, Meat Puppets and the West Coast hardcore sound, he became more and more troubled.




























