John Travolta

Travolta's Latest Comeback

Portrait of actor John Travolta photographed in Los Angeles, CA.
John Russo / Corbis Outline

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As numerous as the turkeys he hatched are the hits he turned down. He essentially gave Richard Gere a career by saying no to Days of Heaven, American Gigolo, An Officer and a Gentleman and, two decades later, Chicago. By declining Splash, he gave Tom Hanks his big break. Again, Travolta regrets nothing: "I don't want to be the only male star in Hollywood!" Stars sometimes swap roles; Hanks got Travolta's part in The Green Mile, Travolta took over for Hanks in Primary Colors. "And I'm glad I did." As a near-Bill Clinton, in Mike Nichols' film of the Joe Klein novel, he showed how an indiscriminate application of charisma can be toxic to the recipient and the carrier.

Truth is, Travolta loves being a movie star: loves the acting, the recognition, the access it gave him to the legends he grew up venerating (Stanwyck, Cagney, Brando). He's got the houses in Florida and Maine, several planes he pilots, the gorgeous wife and two kids, Jett and Ella. In return, he's gracious to the fans— "If you're out there demanding attention from others, it's silly not to expect a little backflow"—and even the paparazzi. "I've never had trouble with photographers. You stand up there, you give them the 10 minutes they want, and there's no frenzy."

This openness helps explain why, though audiences may have often lost their interest in Travolta's films, they never lost their affection for him. He's so well liked that fans automatically edit out the discordant aspects of his big films—the gritty family animosity in Fever, the fact that he's killed halfway into Pulp Fiction (only to return in the time-warp finale)—and enjoy the villains he plays for their power, allure and brio.

Audiences also accept or indulge or ignore his prominent role in the Church of Scientology, the controversial belief and behavior system devised by science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard. Travolta, a Scientologist for 32 years, shepherded and starred in the 2000 fantasy Battlefield Earth, based on a Hubbard novel; the film was an egregious flop. Yet Travolta doesn't get the flak that wounds another famous Scientologist, Tom Cruise. As an activist and a personality, Travolta is Teflon, Cruise is Velcro.

"I think that'll all smooth out," Travolta says of the bumps in Cruise's rep, "because he's a good boy. Part of it is that his nature is more intense than mine. Our velocities are different. But we're talking about the same issue." Travolta says he doesn't impose Scientology on crew members, but he makes what he sees as his expertise available on the set. "If you feel you can help somebody, you have to try, the way I'd offer a drink to a thirsty man. But I don't force anything on anyone."

Maybe he trusts in his powers of seduction to convince people of the improbable. That's what lured him into Hairspray: the notion that he could make audiences believe he was a woman. Divine, Waters' female-impersonator muse, and Fierstein, with his mincing gestures and gravelly basso, had made Edna a working-class drag queen. Travolta had another idea, which he pitched to producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron and director Adam Shankman.

"I told them, 'I don't want to be a drag queen. I'm better at playing a character than playing a gimmick. I really want to be a woman—to be all the women I grew up watching in the movies.' It took some discussion, but I convinced them."

In every aspect of his character, from the authentic Baltimore accent to the costumes (fake mink stoles, not feather boas), Travolta says, "I was looking for realism within the surrealism. I was a kid in the early '60s, living in a neighborhood like Edna's. I know what people wanted a woman to look like. Not Phyllis Diller in Vegas; they wanted Sophia Loren, Anita Ekberg, Anna Magnani. So Edna needs to be voluptuous. She can't have a refrigerator build. Give her larger breasts, a larger ass, and don't forget the waist. She has to be pleasant looking. Make her Elizabeth Taylor gone to flesh."

He's quite a show, but he's not the whole show. Hairspray is an ensemble piece of many sleek, speedy parts. Nikki Blonsky, 17 when she started filming, is a wide tornado as Tracy Turnblad, would-be dance diva and unlikely civil rights leader. Michelle Pfeiffer, 50 and still an ice goddess, nails the venomous role of a princess past her prime, hating the young because she's no longer one of them. The biggest contributor is Shankman, who sets a high level of style and adrenaline and never lets up. If people can be corralled into seeing Hairspray, they should come out loving it.

It looks as if Travolta made the right choice for this movie. At 53, he's still juiced by a meaty role, still comfortable being a star. Is it something he can do for another three decades? As usual he takes his cue from the audience. "If I ever get the feeling that it's not interesting for them," he says, "I'll change my path somehow. But right now it's going nicely, don't you think?"

What can a commoner say to movie royalty? A reverent "Yes, Miss Stanwyck."

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