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Janeane Junkies

CelebSite's Biography:

If you keep spoon-feeding people shit, that's what they're going to ask you for," concludes actress and comedienne Janeane Garofalo. Clearly, this is one woman who will never be accused of reticence. In fact,her unbridled cynicism and outspoken attitude have invited the media to label her a spokeswoman for Generation X, a title Garofalo doesn't want (and doesn't even qualify for, really: at thirty-two, she's a card-carrying 'tweener). Her penchant for candidly answering every question, be it about religion, sexism, selling out, or her next project, has proved to be both the blessing that drives her career forward and the curse that occasionally sets it back. She is just as blunt about her willingness to shelve her point of view for the sake of career advancement: "I am a sellout, I admit it. I will not pretend. I joined the other side, the wrong team. I am not proud of it. It was a calculated career move."

Born to Carmine and Joan Garofalo, Janeane had an average middle-class upbringing that didn't exactly inspire great ambition. As a child, Garofalo aimed her aspirations at her mom's secretarial position. A move from New Jersey to Houston her senior year of high school provided just the right amount of warping angst that seems necessary for performers: she gained weight (a continuing battle the 5'1" star speaks openly about), became a recluse, found solace in memorizing Cheech & Chong and Steve Martin bits, and watched a lot of Letterman and SCTV. Attending college in Rhode Island was just as unpleasant as her high school experience, until her senior year, when she attended an open-mike night and caught the stand-up bug. Garofalo soon was crowned Funniest Person in Rhode Island, an honor which she insists, in her typical self-deprecating manner, was "a testament to the lack of talent among the other participants." She stuck to her resolve despite her mother's impassioned pleas that she enter Bloomingdale's management-training program, and committed herself to comedy.

Garofalo moved to Boston, where she whiled away several years supporting herself as a shoe salesperson, a bicycle messenger, a movie-theatre usher, and a chat-line moderator (that job didn't last long, because she refused to talk dirty). She spent her evenings at any microphone she could find, developing a brand of humor that she says is "a cross between spoken word and stand-up," but is now commonly referred to as alternative comedy. One evening, manager Jimmy Miller (brother of comedian Dennis Miller and manager of Jim Carrey) handed her his card. Garofalo plucked up the courage to move to Los Angeles in 1989, but failed to impress the masses that flock to established comedy clubs like The Comedy Store and The Laugh Factory. Miller was less than enthused, but luckily Rick Messina, another big-shot agent, caught her act and saw her potential. Under his auspices, Garofalo became a staple on shows like The Dennis Miller Show and MTV's Half-Hour Comedy Hour. Nineteen ninety-two was undoubtedly one of Garofalo's best years. After bumping into actor-writer-director Ben Stiller at a deli in Los Angeles, she was offered a part on his new Fox program, The Ben Stiller Show. While sitting in the makeup chair for the very first Stiller, Garry Shandling, who was making a guest appearance, offered her the role of Paula, the talent booker, on HBO's The Larry Sanders Show. Although Fox dumped The Ben Stiller Show prematurely, it went on to win an Emmy, which raised Garofalo's coolness cachet considerably. The Stiller connection also landed her a feature-film break: Stiller's 1994 Reality Bites gave Garofalo a chance to steal scenes from Winona Ryder and further entwined her, for better or for worse, with the marketing cliché of the moment, "Generation X." Her role in the film also introduced her to one of the more banal realities of Hollywood: "I was contractually forced to lose weight for Reality Bites, against my will," Garofalo says. "I lost twelve pounds; they wanted me to lose twenty-six. I fought every step, because I thought it was important that I make my movie debut as a person with some heft--as a normal-looking person. I'm trying to be one of the few people in my job who don't make teenage girls feel bad about themselves." Her film debut effort was almost overshadowed by her partial season as a cast member of Saturday Night Live. Before jumping aboard, Garofalo had given some interviews in which she criticized the show for not being funny, and characterized Adam Sandler's comedy as "childish." Sandler ripped into her on her first day, and then refused to speak with her for several weeks thereafter. The rest of the cast and crew were similarly put off by her sentiments and the media perception that she was a potential "savior" for the show. Before the season ended, Garofalo left the show in a swirl of publicity: "It turned out disastrously. That was the year the bad karma came to a head. I didn't have the self-esteem to make it through it, so I left." Garofalo believes she would have fared much better if she had debuted during the 1995 season, and wishes to this day that she had the job. Thankfully, Garofalo had Larry Sanders to fall back on, as well as her first starring role, opposite Uma Thurman in The Truth About Cats and Dogs. Garofalo ran away with that movie and made it a certifiable middling hit ($34 million in box-office receipts), but the process was filled with angst. Garofalo says that studio executives, who viewed her as dour and unlikable, "weren't shy about letting me know they weren't happy." She wasn't allowed to improvise, and every scene was shot numerous times. At one point, Uma Thurman had to talk the executives out of firing Garofalo. But Garofalo garnered rave reviews, with many critics questioning only her believability as the "ugly girl" in this distaff version of the Cyrano de Bergerac tale.

In an effort to land more film roles, Garofalo shed thirty-five pounds and granted any number of interviews in which she demeaned herself for selling out. While the strategy helped her get auditions, she has recently said she's gained back all the weight, despite how much "more talented" weighing a trim hundred and five made her in the eyes of Hollywood dealmakers. Her roller-coaster weight and self-deprecation haven't put a hold on her career, judging from her recent appearance opposite Lisa Kudrow and Mira Sorvino in Romy and Michele's High School Reunion. Garofalo next co-stars with Sylvester Stallone and Robert De Niro in Copland, and with Vince Vaughn (Swingers) and Joaquin Phoenix (Inventing the Abbotts) in In Too Deep. She has also established a production company, appropriately titled I Hate Myself Productions. Garofalo recently shared a special moment with one of her idols, David Letterman: "I was on the show and he said, 'Don't be so hard on yourself.' I said, 'If I don't have my self-loathing, what do I have?' He laughed and looked at me, and I knew he hated himself too."


JANEANE'S TV & MOVIE CREDITS

Feature Films

Late for Dinner (1991)

Reality Bites (1994)

Suspicious (1994)

I Shot aMan in Vegas (1995)

Bye Bye, Love (1995)

Coldblooded (1995)

Now and Then (1995)

Brain Candy (1996)

Larger Than Life (1996)

The Cable Guy (1996)

The Truth About Cats and Dogs (1996)

Romy and Michele's High School Reunion (1997)

CopLand (1997)

Touch (1997)

Sweethearts (1997)

Clay Pidgeons (1997)

The Matchmaker (1997)

Permanent Midnight (1998)

Television

Passion TV [pilot] (1991)

Laughing Back: Comedy Takes a Stand (special)(1992)

The 15th Annual Young Comedians Show(special) (1992)

The A-List (appearance) (1992)

The Ben Stiller Show (1992)

The Larry Sanders Show (1992-)

Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City (miniseries) (1994)

Montreal International Comedy Festival '94 (special)

Storytime (1994)

Saturday Night Live (1994)

TV Nation (1994)

Ellen (appearance) (1994)

Comedy Product (1995)

Dr. Katz: Professional Therapist (voice) (1995)

HBO Comedy Half-Hour (1995)

News Radio (appearance) (1995)

Catch a Rising Star 50th Anniversary--Give or Take 26 Years (special) (1996)

Kicking Aspen: Extreme Comedy (special) (1996)

Seinfeld (appearance) (1996)

The 1996 MTV Movie Awards (hostess) (1996)

Law & Order (appearance) 1997


Fans' Pages Dedicated to Janeane

David's Page

Reid's Page

Tim's Page

Vince's Page

Emily & Chris's Page

Dan's Page

Matt's Page

Dave's World

Ubiquitous Page

The JG Node

A Shrine to Janeane

David's Image Gallery

David's Sounds Page

David's Video Page

alt.culture.Janeane-Garofalo


INTERVIEWS & ARTICLES

Patrick Stoner Interview

Playboy's 20 Questions

Mr. Showbiz Bio

Almost Romantic

Listen Up!

Squirt TV

Mogul

Emmy Nomination

Future Plumpers

Entertainment Weekly

BAM article

Mr. Showbiz Interview

J-Pegged

TV Nation

Politically Incorrect (April 1996)


MOVIE PAGES & REVIEWS

Permanent Midnight

Clay Pidgeons

The Matchmaker

Touch

Sweethearts

CopLand

CopLand

Romie & Michele's

Larger Than Life

Bye, Bye Love

The Cable Guy

Brain Candy

The Truth About Cats and Dogs

The Truth About Cats and Dogs

The Truth About Cats and Dogs

Now and Then

Coldblooded

I Shot A Man in Vegas

Suspicious

Reality Bites

Reality Bites

Reality Bites

Late For Dinner


Television Pages

The Ben Stiller Show

The Larry Sanders Show

Saturday Night Live

TV Nation

 


Drop Janeane a line:

JANEANE GAROFALO: 955 South Carrillo, Suite 100, L.A., CA 90048


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Debora1111@worldnet.att.net

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