Brendan Fraser caps career bounceback with Oscar win

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Popular actor, Brendan Fraser emerged the best actor at the Oscar’s on Sunday, for his powerful performance as a morbidly obese man in “The Whale” caps a remarkable career comeback for the charismatic leading man.

The former star of 1990s hits such as “The Mummy” endured a decade in the Hollywood wilderness before winning over Academy voters with his portrayal of a reclusive teacher who eats compulsively as he is tormented by grief.

“So this is what the multiverse looks like,” an emotional Fraser told the audience at the Dolby Theatre.

“I started in this business 30 years ago, and things — they didn’t come easily to me, but there was a facility that I didn’t appreciate at the time until it stopped,” he said, referring to his long absence from the big screen.

“Thank you for this acknowledgment.”

In Darren Aronofsky’s “The Whale,” Fraser plays Charlie, a 600-pound (250-kilogram) English teacher whose only regular contact with the real world is his nurse and friend Liz (Hong Chau).

Charlie rarely leaves his couch, teaching his students via video calls while gorging on delivery food, and resisting Liz’s pleas to seek medical help for his rapidly deteriorating health.

The drama follows Charlie’s attempts to secretly reconnect with his rebellious and aloof teenage daughter Ellie, while he is also visited by a young missionary who is seemingly determined to save him.

Fraser delivers an intense performance, imbuing his character with depths of regret and agony which are punctuated by bursts of passion and hope sparked by Ellie’s presence.

“Charlie is by far the most heroic man I’ve ever played,” Fraser said at the film’s world premiere in Venice last year.

“His superpower is to see the good in others and bring that out in them.”

The Mummy, Fraser was born in December 1968 to Canadian parents in the US state of Indiana.

Theater sparked his interest in acting at a young age, and after graduating from a Seattle arts college, Fraser moved to Los Angeles in the early 1990s to pursue his dream.

Success came swiftly — he landed his breakthrough role as a frozen caveman discovered by two modern-day California teens in 1992 hit comedy “Encino Man.”

That sparked a run of major roles for the tall, hunky, wide-eyed leading man, ranging from anti-Semitism drama “School Ties” to rock-and-roll comedy “Airheads” to family blockbuster “George of the Jungle.”

In 1998, Fraser married actress Afton Smith, with whom he had three children.

Fraser’s greatest commercial success would be his trilogy of “The Mummy” films.

Loosely based on the 1930s ancient Egypt horror film franchise, the movies starred Fraser as Rick O’Connell, a maverick American adventurer who battles sinister immortals and greedy treasure hunters.

In the run-up to the Oscars, he won a Critics Choice and a Screen Actors Guild award.

Future projects for Fraser include Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

In claiming his first Oscar, Fraser saw off Austin Butler (“Elvis”), Colin Farrell (“The Banshees of Inisherin”), Paul Mescal (“Aftersun”) and Bill Nighy (“Living”).

 

 

 

 

 

AFP/O.O

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