
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
For a while back there, it wasn't looking too good for Tobey Maguire. Crazily ambitious, having chosen to leave school and forge an acting career at the tender age of 13, he had conspicuously failed to become the new De Niro. Beyond that, his best buddy, Leonardo DiCaprio had hit massively with Titanic and was one of the biggest stars in the world. So Tobey - sensitive, struggling Tobey - was better known as a member of DiCaprio's posse. All feelings of loyalty apart, it must have hurt.
And then it all changed. After a string of classy, award-winning productions - Pleasantville, The Cider House Rules, Ride With The Devil and Wonder Boys - suddenly Maguire was hot. And then came Spider-Man. Taking $114 million in its first weekend, it slaughtered many of cinema's proudest records. Seabiscuit followed, another smash. Maguire was hotter than hot, certainly hotter than DiCaprio. And, his family having been dirt-poor for so many years, he was very rich, taking $17 million for Spider-Man 2. Tobey's certainly enjoyed some major ups and pitiable downs. Here's how he did it.
Tobias Vincent Maguire was born on the 27th of June, 1975, in Santa Monica, California, to very young parents. His father, Vincent, a chef and sometime construction worker, was just 20. His mother, Wendy, a secretary, was even younger, at 18. The couple would marry some two years after, but separate the same year. Later, Tobey would be presented with a half-sister, Sara, and a half-brother, Timothy, to add to half-brother Vincent, born in '72.
It was an extremely tough time for Tobey. Shuttling between his mum and dad, his aunts, uncles and grandparents, he moved up and down the coast of California constantly, and on up to Oregon and Washington. Never settling anywhere, he made no real friends, and was an outsider - if not downright unpopular - wherever he went. One good thing about having no friends, says Tobey, was that he spent his time watching people, wondering what made them tick. This was partly because he had no one to talk to, partly to see if he could trust the watchee. In the future, it would make it easier for him to inhabit a character's skin.
Worse still, with his parents struggling to make ends meet, the family was always poor. His mother worked hard but still they spent time on Welfare, using food stamps and Medi-Cal. Tobey recalls running from a store when his mother paid with stamps (he's sorry now, recognising that his actions added to his mother's own humiliation). For father Vincent, the situation never got any better. In 1993, he robbed a bank in his hometown, Reseda and, caught just one hour later, was jailed for two years. It was taken into account that he was desperate, and this was a first offence.
Intelligent and precocious, hiding his insecurity under a cloak of arrogance, Tobey grew up fast. At an early age, he decided he wanted to be a chef, like his dad. But a neighbour who was an entertainment manager advised him to try showbiz and Wendy, who'd always wanted to be an actress herself, offered to pay him $100 (a mighty sum for the Maguires) if he would take Drama instead of Home Economics. He did, and proved straight away to have some talent. Coupled with this, there was his ambition. Tobey has said that his insecurity made him feel that people were always nay-saying him, doing him down. He says this gave him "an angry ambition that cannot be stopped", jokingly adding that "I look forward to finding a therapist and working on that".
So, talented, arrogant and angrily ambitious, he quit High School at the age of 13 (13!) and, continuing his school work part-time and beginning to study acting, went after child actor work. He was cast in several TV ads, for McDonalds, Atari and Doritos, and made his TV debut in a Rodney Dangerfield special for HBO in 1989, securing his union card.
But it was in 1991, aged 15, that his career really took off. He uttered a single line in an episode of Blossom, a comedy about a girl's life in a houseful of men. There were a few more in Roseanne. Then there was Eerie, Indiana. Not much, but connections were being made. When auditions were announced for a TV series based on Ron Howard's Parenthood, Tobey went along, and met another young actor looking for a part. This was Leonardo DiCaprio. The pair became good friends, and Tobey managed to wangle a small part in Leo's next production, alongside Ellen Barkin and Robert De Niro in This Boy's Life.
Even better, having failed to get a part in The Wonder Years after "like, 10 auditions", Maguire had been cast as the lead in a new Fox series, called Great Scott! This concerned the life and fantasies of teenager Scott Melrod and was a clear forerunner of the likes of Ally McBeal and Malcolm In The Middle. The critics were charmed, but audience figures were not high. Only 13 episodes were shot, and only six were screened, between October and November, 1992. But Tobey did make a new friend, Kevin Connelly, who co-starred as Scott's best friend, Larry O'Donnell.
After This Boy's Life came more work with DiCaprio and Connelly. Actually, whether it was work or not depends on who you ask.
























