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Celebrities / Actors / Viggo Mortensen / Biography
Viggo Mortensen

Viggo Mortensen

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Biography

This page uses content from the Viggo Mortensen biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.


Viggo Peter Mortensen, Jr. (born October 20, 1958) is a theater and movie actor, poet, musician, photographer and painter. He is best known for his role as Aragorn in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings film trilogy.

Acting career

After several years of experience in live theater, he made his first movie appearance playing an Amish farmer in Peter Weir's Witness. (Mortensen had actually been cast in two prior films — Swing Shift and The Purple Rose of Cairo — but his scenes in both of these films were deleted from the final cuts.) Prior to his casting in The Lord of the Rings, Mortensen appeared in Jane Campion's The Portrait of a Lady, Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III, Sean Penn's The Indian Runner, Brian DePalma's Carlito's Way, Tony Scott's Crimson Tide, Ridley Scott's G.I. Jane, Rob Cohen's Daylight, Tony Goldwyn's A Walk on the Moon, Philip Ridley's two filmsThe Reflecting Skin and The Passion Of Darkly Noon, Andrew Davis's A Perfect Murder, Betty Thomas's 28 Days and The Prophecy with Christopher Walken. Before Mortensen took the role of Aragorn, he was probably best known for playing Master Chief John Urgayle in G.I. Jane.

Mortensen's 1987 performance in Bent at the Coast Playhouse, Los Angeles, won him a Dramalogue Critics' Award. Coincidentally, the play, about homosexual concentration camp prisoners, was originally brought to prominence by Sir Ian McKellen, with whom Mortensen later co-starred in The Lord of the Rings.

According to the Special Extended Edition DVD of Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, Mortensen was a last-minute replacement in the role of Aragorn for Stuart Townsend, and wouldn't have taken the part if it hadn't been for his son's enthusiasm for J. R. R. Tolkien's trilogy.

In 2004, he starred as Frank Hopkins in Hidalgo, the story of a Pony Express courier who travels to Arabia to compete with his horse, Hidalgo, in a dangerous race for a massive contest prize. In 2005, Mortensen starred in David Cronenberg's A History of Violence. He was nominated for a Satellite Award for Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture for this role.

In 2006, he starred as Captain Diego Alatriste in Alatriste, a Spanish film based in the series of novels The Adventures of Captain Alatriste written by the Spanish writer Arturo Perez-Reverte. This is the most expensive Spanish-language film ever made.

Bibliography

Includes but is not limited to:

  • Ten Last Night (1993), his first collection of poetry;
  • Recent Forgeries (1998), ISBN 1-889195-32-4, 5th Edition, documents Viggo's first solo exhibition and includes a CD with music and spoken-word poetry. Introduction by Dennis Hopper;
  • Errant Vine (2000), limited edition booklet of an exhibit at the Robert Mann Gallery. Only about 300 were published at the time of the exhibition so it is a very rare book;
  • Hole in the Sun (2002, ISBN 0-9721436-1-0), color and black and white photographs of a back yard swimming pool;
  • SignLanguage (2002 ISBN 1-889195-49-9), a catalog from an exhibition of his works, combining photographs, paintings, and poetry into a multimedia diary of his time in New Zealand while filming The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring;
  • Coincidence of Memory (2002, ISBN 0-9721436-0-2 Third Edition, in this book, the artist combines photographs, paintings, and poems that cover his artistic output from 1978 to 2002;
  • Mo Te Upoko-o-te-ika/For Wellington (2003), ISBN 0-9721436-8-8, a book to accompany the joint exhibitions at Massey University and the Wellington City Gallery during the premiere of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King;
  • 45301 (2003), ISBN 0-9721436-3-7, Abstract images, fragments and phrases from poems create this photography book. Many of the photographs were shot during travels to Morocco, Cuba, and the northern plains of the United States;
  • Un hueco en el sol (2003), a small booklet was published to accompany the exhibition "Un hueco en el sol" at the Fototeca de Cuba in Havana. In Spanish;
  • Miyelo (2003), ISBN 0-9721436-7-X), a series of panoramic photographs of a Lakota Ghost Dance. It also tells about the events leading up to the massacre at Wounded Knee;
  • The Horse is Good (2004), ISBN 0-9747078-1-3, a photography book partly shot during his work on the film Hidalgo about horses as partners, teachers, and fellow travelers. Images from Morocco, South Dakota, Montana, California, Iceland, New Zealand, Denmark, Brazil, Argentina.

With part of his earnings from The Lord of the Rings, he founded the Perceval Press publishing house — named for the knight from the legend of King Arthur — to help other artists by publishing avant-garde works that might not find a home in more traditional publishing venues.

Visual arts

Mortensen is also a painter, and photographer. His paintings are frequently abstract, and often contain fragments of his poetry in them. His paintings have been featured in galleries worldwide, and several appeared in A Perfect Murder.

Discography

Mortensen experiments with his poetry and music by mixing the two art forms. The guitarist Buckethead collaborates on many of his recordings.

His discography includes: Don't Tell Me What to Do, Intelligence Failure, One Less Thing to Worry About, One Man's Meat, Live at Beyond Baroque, The Other Parade, This That and The Other, Live at Beyond Baroque 2, Pandemoniumfromamerica, and Please Tomorrow.

His latest CD/DVD, 3 Fools 4 April, documents the poetry readings given on April Fool's Day 2006 at the Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center in Venice, California.

His voice is featured on The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King soundtrack — he sings "Aragorn's Coronation", the words by Tolkien but the music composed by Mortensen himself. His poems are written in English, Danish, and Spanish.

Background

Mortensen was born in New York City, although spent his childhood years in Venezuela and Argentina, and his father's native Denmark, before returning to high school in Watertown, New York (where he was captain of the swim team). He graduated from St. Lawrence University in 1980. In Argentina he lived between ages 3 and 12, for what he got the habit of drinking mate.

His Danish father and half-Norwegian mother met in Norway. He has a son, Henry Blake (Hank), with his ex-wife Exene Cervenka of the band X. Henry and Viggo have done public father/son poetry reading together as recently as April 2006.

A polyglot, Mortensen is fluent in English, Danish, Spanish and somewhat fluent in Norwegian. He also speaks French, Italian, and Swedish reasonably well; this facility with languages may have influenced his casting in the roles of Aragorn in The Lord of the Rings and Frank Hopkins in Hidalgo, both roles requiring extensive use of a foreign language. Mortensen has dual citizenship in the US and Denmark.

Mortensen is an ice hockey fan, particularly of the Montreal Canadiens. He also loves Football (soccer) being a big fan of all time star Diego Maradona and both the Argentine and Danish national teams, as well as Argentine club San Lorenzo de AlmagroInterview with Clarín . In 1993 Mortensen went to Ireland during a break in shooting, without the consent of the production company, to watch Denmark play in an important match. He is also a fan of the New York Mets.

In the Two Towers DVD extras, the film's swordmaster Bob Anderson described Mortensen as "the best swordsman I've ever trained".

In the DVD extras for A History of Violence, David Cronenberg relates that Mortensen is the only actor he'd come across who would come back from weekends with his family having bought items to use as props on the set.

Mortensen is very fond of horses, and shows such in his book The Horse Is Good. In fact, he bought Uraeus, the horse who played Brego in The Lord of the Rings movies (Roheryn in the books), which is Aragorn's steed; as well as TJ, one of the horses who played Hidalgo. He also purchased the stallion that played Arwen's horse, and gave it to the stunt woman who rode the horse in place of Liv Tyler.

He has spoken out against militarism and U.S. foreign policy. In continuing with his opposition to the Bush administration's foreign policy he is hosting a series of fundraisers for the Northern New York Congressional candidate from the Watertown, New York area, Bob Johnson in September 2006.

Quotations

  • "It is all one thing, there are different ways of expressing yourself."
  • "You don't have to make something that people call art. Living is an artistic activity, there is an art to getting through the day." [1]
  • "I agree with the Native American author Black Elk who said that 'any man who is attached to things of this world is one who lives in ignorance and is being consumed by the snakes of his own passions.'"
  • "There's no excuse to be bored. Sad, yes. Angry, yes. Depressed, yes. Crazy, yes. But there's no excuse for boredom, ever."

References

External links

  • Viggo Forums Viggo Mortensen Forum - Fan Forum network
  • Viggo Forums
  • Mortensen's publishing company Perceval Press
  • Brego.net, Extensive resource on Viggo's films, art, music and political activism, with photos and video clips.
  • [2], Tiscali biography
  • SotBK.net, fansite
  • [3], fansite
  • Viggo-Works Probably the more often updated Viggo website. News, lots of links, pictures, forum.
  • The Eye and the hand (mostly in French) The place to become familiar with Viggo Mortensen the artist. Discussions about Viggo Mortensen's artwork. Glosses and comments about his paintings and photographs, translation of his poems. Personal artwork' gallery.
  • Obsession

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the biographical information on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.



 
 
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