Eddie Murphy Headed To The Altar Before Year's EndLOS ANGELES, Calif. (October 18,
2007) -
Eddie Murphy may be married by the end of the year according to a new report.
Tracey Edmonds, fiance of the "Dreamgirls" star told People, the couple is moving toward their nuptials.
"We're coming close", Edmonds said. "It'll be before the end of the year.... And some place far away and fun".
Though
Murphy's reportedly made some hefty paychecks thanks to movies like "Norbit", don't expect a gigantic affair.
"It's just going to be very close friends and family, but very romantic",
Edmonds said. We'll have a good time".
Edmonds and
Murphy got together not long after the actor split with
Spice Girl Melanie Brown, in 2006.
Both were previously married and both have children.
"There will be some adjusting",
Edmonds said of bringing their families together, "but I think it's going to be a lot of fun.
Eddie's got some fantastic, beautiful, fun kids and I've got two wonderful boys, so it'll be nice to get everybody together".
source: -
here -
Eddie Murphy marries Tracey Edmonds
LOS ANGELES (January 02,
2008) -
Eddie Murphy celebrated New Year's Day by tying the knot with film producer
Tracey Edmonds.
The pair exchanged vows Tuesday on a private island off Bora Bora in French Polynesia in front of a small group of family and friends, their representatives told
People magazine.
A call to
Murphy's publicist,
Arnold Robinson, wasn't immediately returned early Wednesday.
Murphy and
Edmonds began dating last fall and were engaged in July.
Murphy, 46, has five children from his marriage to
Nicole Mitchell Murphy, who filed for divorce in 2005. He also has a daughter with
Spice Girls singer
Melanie Brown
.
Edmonds, 40, has two sons from her 13-year marriage to singer
Kenneth "Babyface"
Edmonds. As head of
Edmonds Entertainment Group Inc., she has produced the film and television series "Soul Food".
Murphy's film credits include "Dreamgirls", and the "Beverly Hills Cop", "The Nutty Professor", "Shrek" and "Dr. Doolittle" movies.
source: -
here -
EDDIE MURPHY BIOGRAPHYBorn: 3 April 1961
Where: New York, New York, USA
Awards: 1
Oscar, 1
BAFTA, 5
Golden Globe nominations
Height: 5' 10"
Funny, they say, is hard. Funny floats in the ether and only the chosen can snatch it down. So, to be the funniest of them all is a challenge few can rise to.
Steve Martin did it,
Robin Williams too. On a more underground tip, there were the late greats
Sam Kinison and
Bill Hicks. And, of course, there was
Eddie Murphy. His breakthrough on
Saturday Night Live and a series of killer stand-up videos would make him the king of early-Eighties comedy.
48 Hours,
Beverly Hills Cop,
Dr Dolittle, The Nutty Professor and their sequels would make him a cinematic star. Then
Bowfinger and, more importantly, Dreamgirls, would have him seen as a serious thespian contender. Along the way, there were many hiccups, even a few out-and-out disasters. But, amazingly, a quarter of a century in, he's still a major contender today.
Edward Regan Murphy was born in the Bushwick projects of Brooklyn, New York, on the 3rd of April, 1961. His father was a policeman. His mother,
Lillian, was a telephone operator. Sadly, they divorced when Eddie was 3 and, even more sadly, his father was killed by a new girlfriend when the boy was just 8. Living with
Lillian and his brother
Charles Q Murphy (now an actor and screenwriter), Eddie stayed in Brooklyn till he was ten. Then
Lillian, along with her new husband
Vernon Lynch (a former boxer then employed as a foreman at
Breyers Ice Cream plant) took the boys, plus
Lynch's son (also named
Vernon), to
Roosevelt, Long Island. This was a predominantly white, middle-class area thats black population increased sharply throughout the Sixties and Seventies. It also spawned
Howard Stern,
Julius Erving and Public Enemy rapper
Chuck D.
So Eddie, a natural mimic schooled in the streets and now the suburbs, expanded his repertoire of characters. Starting with
Bullwinkle and Sylvester The Cat, he began to impersonate the stars of the day, as well as invent new characters of his own. At Roosevelt High School he'd carry a briefcase full of joke-books with him, and was often voted Most Popular Student, even winning over the teachers, who'd laugh as they sent him to the Principal's office for his hilarious insubordination. As well as singing in a local R&B band (they'd steal supermarket trollies to transport their equipment), Eddie was damn funny, and he knew it. Heavily influenced by his hero,
Richard Pryor, he worked on his monologues and impersonations - quickly mastering
Lionel Richie,
Bill Cosby,
Al Green and
Elvis Presley - and made his stage debut at the Roosevelt Youth Centre on the 9th of July, 1976.
As
Murphy himself says, once he started, he couldn't stop. He began performing regularly in youth centres and bars, taking $25-$50 a time, money he used to finance his enrolment at Nassau Community College, Garden City, New York. Very quickly, he made his name, soon staging a showcase at New York's Comic Strip, where co-owners
Robert Wachs and
Richard Tienkin were so impressed they agreed to manage him.
Yet it was
Murphy's own persistence that would win him his first major break.
Neil Levy, talent co-ordinator on
Saturday Night Live would later recall how, in 1980, he received a call from
Murphy, sounding like he was on a pay phone, asking for an audition.
Levy turned him down, saying that the show was no longer auditioning for their next season. But
Murphy called back the next day, this time claiming he had 18 brothers and sisters and was desperate for the job. Every day he called, until
Levy agreed to give him a try. So,
Murphy arrived at
SNL HQ at 30, Rockefeller Centre and delivered a 4-minute sketch where he played three different guys from Harlem, one of them trying to start a fight between the others.
Levy was so impressed he demanded that
Murphy be hired, but new producer
Jean Doumanian was not so sure as she was already planning to have
Robert Townsend replace
Garrett Morris as the show's lone black performer. Eventually, she would relent, bringing
Murphy in as a featured performer rather than a regular.
This was a very difficult period for
SNL. Now five seasons old, it had hit vertiginous heights of popularity due to the contributions of such comic heavyweights as
Chevy Chase,
Dan Aykroyd,
John Belushi and
Bill Murray. Now producer
Lorne Michaels, burned out by his efforts, had left and the remaining stars -
Murray,
Jane Curtin,
Laraine Newman and
Gilda Radner - were gone, too, as well as most of the writing staff.
Doumanian, a close collaborator with
Woody Allen throughout his career, was brought in and had just two and a half months to replace everyone on a budget that had been slashed. She was not popular and the knives were out.
As the new season started in late 1980 it quickly became apparent that the show's quality had plummeted.
Charles Rocket,
Denny Dillon,
Ann Risley and
Gail Matthews, unfairly expected to immediately match the exploits of the outgoing stars, were hammered in the press. The show was fast losing viewers, and consequently the good will of the corporation.
Doumanian had help on hand, having hired both
Murphy and
Joe Piscopo, but didn't realise it, both of the show's future stars being limited to supporting roles, when they appeared at all. Then, one night, when
Doumanian had not gathered enough material to fill the show's 90 minutes and faced a terrifying final five minutes of absolutely nothing, it was decided in desperation to fill the time with
Murphy's audition routine. Keen and ready, he went down a storm.
Yet even this was not enough to give
Murphy centre stage. What he needed was a big shake-up, and he got it when, in February, 1981,
Charles Rocket did the unthinkable and said "Fuck" on live TV. The producers used this as an excuse to fire the unpopular
Doumanian and brought in
Dick Ebersol, who'd helped create the show back in 1974.
Ebersol took
SNL off the air for some six weeks, instead showing classic episodes to remind audiences what the show was all about. Then, in April, they were ready to go live again.
Throughout the ten months of
Doumanian's reign, the under-utilized
Murphy had shown an impressive attitude. He kept working with the writers, kept coming up with new characters, kept entertaining the troops on the 17th floor. Everyone believed him to be the funniest guy there, he just wasn't getting the chance to shine on air. Now, with
Ebersol in charge, a stroke of luck came his way. Writer
David Sheffield's father would often phone his son with ideas for sketches, ideas that were uniformly poor. But now he mentioned a news story he'd read about a Cleveland high school basketball team forced by law to include white players in the side.
Sheffield and his writing partner
Barry Blaustein cooked something up for
Murphy and he enthusiastically worked with them, improvising wildly. And the sketch made it into the next show, at last launching
Murphy on his way. "You could tell", said
Sheffield "the first minute he was on the air that whatever 'it' is, he had it. He completely connected with the audience. He just jumped off the screen". Quickly,
Murphy became
SNL's undisputed star, with
Sheffield and
Blaustein providing many of his best moments.
Murphy was easy to work with, said
Sheffield: "Basically, we would sit in a room and Eddie would start talking".
Though such talents as
Julia Louis-Dreyfus and
James Belushi would be added to the cast during
Murphy's four years on
SNL,
Murphy would remain the stand-out performer. He was the street-smart hustler
Velvet Jones, with his book
I Wanna Be A Ho: he was the enraged militant film critic
Raheem Abdul Muhammad: the jailbird poet Ty
rone Green:
Buckwheat from the old Our Gang comedies: and, most famous of all, he was the sour-mouthed showbiz vet cartoon character
Gumby. Beyond this, there was his recording career outside the show. In 1982, there was
Eddie Murphy, an album recorded live at the Comic Strip. The next year there was another,
Eddie Murphy, Comedian, that won a
Grammy as Best Comedy LP. He'd already been nominated for the hit single
Boogie In Your Butt - he was, after all, a musician too. In 1985, he'd release the
How Could It Be album, produced by
Rick James and
Stevie Wonder (
Murphy also did
a spectacular Stevie). This delivered a million-selling single in
Party All The Time, and was followed by 1989's
So Happy, helmed by
Nile Rogers and
Cameo's
Larry Blackmon. 1993 would bring
Love's Alright, featuring collaborations with both
Michael Jackson and
Shabba Ranks.
Already a big name through
SNL and his stand-up shows, in late 1982
Murphy's star went truly into the ascendant. Director
Walter Hill, famed for
The Warriors and
Southern Comfort, had been casting for a partner for tough-guy
Nick Nolte in his latest thriller,
48 Hours.
Murphy was taken on, becoming the first actor to be paid $1 million on debut, and the script was rewritten to suit his sharp and often foul-mouthed patter. But one thing was missing. Having been mellowed by life in Roosevelt and his speedy success, it was thought that
Murphy lacked the rage necessary to play the touchy convict given a two-day release to help bust an escaped killer. Fortunately, he was taught the requisite tricks by acting coach
David Proval (later to star as the extremely angry
Richie Aprile in
The Sopranos).
One sight of
Murphy on the big screen and you knew he'd make it. Wrapped in shades and headphones and shrieking out a wince-making version of
Roxanne, he was immediately in your face. Then, wisecracking like crazy, going head-to-head with
Nolte, and subduing and taunting a bar full of disapproving whites, he proceeded to steal the show, as he and his rough-cut partner proceeded to track down malevolent Hill regular
James Remar. A
Golden Globe nomination was the least he deserved. Now, aside from two brilliant comedy videos -
Delirious and
Raw - he would concentrate heavily on his film career having signed a long-term deal with
Paramount that would make him a millionaire many times over.
SNL staff would be amazed when
Jeffrey Katzenberg himself came to the writers' room on the 9th floor just after the release of
48 Hrs and handed
Murphy his cheque for $1 million.
A second
Golden Globe nomination would come with the smart comedy
Trading Places, directed by
John Landis. Here, for a bet, two swinish millionaires reverse the positions of street hustler
Murphy and snobby stock dealer
Dan Aykroyd (one of the
SNL stars
Murphy had earlier replaced).
Murphy would have a ball, first on the street pretending to be a legless war vet, then quickly adapting to his newfound fortune and power. The movie was a big hit, unlike
Best Defense, where
Dudley Moore was a useless military engineer drawn into industrial espionage and coming up against murderous Russian spies. Meanwhile,
Murphy's out in the Middle East testing
Moore's crazy new super-tank in combat and it's all going haywire. Really, it was something of a mess and made to look even weaker by
Murphy's other filmic efforts.
By now he was finished with
SNL. In fact, he'd been leaving for some time. In order to guarantee their star's participation in the 1983-4 season the producers had contracted
Murphy to appear in ten of the twenty shows scheduled and also taped some fifteen
Murphy spots to insert in the others. This annoyed many staff as it went against the "live" ethos, and many thought no one was bigger than the show. However, at the time
Murphy WAS bigger than the show and the producers rightly recognised it. As far as
Murphy himself was concerned, such petty quibbles were the least of his problems. He wasn't dealing too well with his newfound fame and wealth. He was receiving death threats and no longer knew who his real friends were.
Harry Belafonte gave him advice, but to no real avail. And, on top of it all, there was still the "black" problem.
John Landis would recall how, when meeting
Murphy in New York to discuss
Trading Places,
Murphy had asked him to hail a cab for him as no cabbie would stop for a young black man. Indeed, whenever
Murphy wanted a taxi at
SNL he'd have to ask a white staff member to come down to hail one for him. Even when he was famous, even when he was a star.
Following
Best Defense,
Murphy's second release of 1984 proved he was right to leave
SNL. This was
Beverly Hills Cop, originally intended as a gritty vehicle for
Sylvester Stallone but, as with
48 Hours, heavily rewritten to accommodate
Murphy's humour and punchy ad libs. Here
Murphy would star as
Axel Foley, a maverick Detroit cop who takes it upon himself to travel to LA to hunt for the killers of his partner. Once there, he causes chaos for local policemen
John Ashton and
Judge Reinhold, rampaging across their sleepy beat and pulling all manner of inappropriate stunts as he tracks down bug-eyed coke dealer
Steven Berkoff. And, of course, it was a huge hit, the movie becoming one of the Top 10 grossers of all time. As well as many millions of dollars,
Murphy would receive his third
Golden Globe nomination.
For five years,
Murphy would enjoy an extraordinary run of success. The silly but entertaining
The Golden Child would see him as a sleuth specialising in finding missing kids. Called into action when demons from Hell kidnap a sacred sprog from Tibet, he takes on a series of supernatural tests as well as a supremely evil
Charles Dance. This would be followed by the first
Beverly Hills Cop sequel, a predictable Eighties crime thriller where
Murphy came up against a sinister
Jurgen Prochnow and bitch queen
Brigitte Nielsen, occasionally pausing to shout sarcastically at people. It wasn't a patch on the original yet still grossed over $150 million.
Murphy remained red-hot.
Coming To America, a reunion with his
Trading Places director
John Landis, would see
Murphy as a spoilt African prince arriving in New York to find a bride. Deciding that he wants a girl to love him for himself rather than his position, he becomes a janitor and endeavours to win the heart of
Shari Headley.
Murphy himself would be credited as writing the story, and this would become the subject of a long-running law-suit when columnist
Art Buchwald took producers
Paramount to court. As it turned out, several years earlier
Paramount were attempting to turn a
Buchwald script into a movie, with
Murphy to star. That fell apart and, in 1986,
Warners optioned
Buchwald's script, only to dump the project when
Paramount began to make a similar movie, starring
Murphy. Given that
Coming To America pulled in some $350 million worldwide,
Buchwald wanted his share of
Paramount's profits, as stated in his original contract. But, claimed
Paramount, after all expenses were deducted, there was no net profit at all, therefore they owed
Buchwald nothing. That's a lot of expenses, no ? The court agreed with
Buchwald that
Paramount's accounting was "unconscionable" and - after seven years -
Paramount coughed up. The terms, of course, were undisclosed,
Paramount fearing further revelations about their practices, but the case was vital in that it finally cast some light on decades of financial abuse.
Murphy himself would escape without censure. Indeed, the court even went so far as to commend his comic "genius".
Was it bad karma ? Overexposure ? Megalomania ?
Murphy's fortunes would certainly now change and he'd not hit big for another eight years. His first and perhaps most painful failure came with
Harlem Nights. Keen to build his own entertainment empire, here he acted as writer, director and star, putting together a black ensemble piece co-starring his early hero
Richard Pryor. The period movie would see
Prior as the owner of a speakeasy coming under pressure when a major white gangster demands protection money. Aided by his adopted son
Murphy, he attempts to save himself and his fortune by pulling off an outrageous boxing scam. Some found the movie - anarchic, cruel, fast and often sidesplittingly funny - to be
Murphy's best so far. But the critics caned it, citing its violence, misogyny and relentless foul language, and a reasonable box office take could not cover the film's huge expense. Next he'd pop up as
James Brown in a kid's daydreams in the failed pilot
What's Alan Watching ? Another
48 Hours, where
Murphy reteamed with
Nick Nolte and
Walter Hill to chase down drug lord
The Iceman, was a middling hit but could not place
Murphy back at the top. Suddenly, after a decade of glaring success, the golden boy had lost his sheen.
Things weren't any better in his personal life,
Murphy later admitting fame when straight to his head. Having in the early Eighties been briefly engaged to biology student
Lisa Figueroa, he'd since suffered paternity suits from
Nicolle Radar,
Paulette McNeely and
Tamara Hood (with the last of whom he has son,
Christian). Though in 1988 he'd met
Nicole Mitchell and had a daughter,
Bria, with her, followed by four further children -
Miles,
Shayne,
Zola and
Bella - he did not settle down with the family till some years later, in the meantime being linked with such beauties as
Robin Givens,
Halle Berry and
Whitney Houston. Eventually, in 1993, he'd marry
Mitchell and the ever-expanding family would live in a 22-room colonial mansion called
Bubble Hill (
Bubble being slang for
Party) in Englewood, New Jersey.
Murphy has said he never knew whether the many women who pursued him really wanted him, or his money and status.
Mitchell, a rich model from the age of 10, had a social position and jam-packed bank account of her own.
After
Another 48 Hrs would come
Boomerang where
Murphy played an executive at a cosmetics firm who's always chasing, catching and dumping tottie. However, when
Robin Givens becomes his boss and treats him in exactly the same callous manner, he's confused and depressed, his situation worsened when he's pursued by a 70-year-old
Eartha Kitt and then falls for decent co-worker
Halle Berry. Also on the bill would be
Martin Lawrence and a young
Chris Rock, who'd earlier appeared as a valet in
Beverly Hills Cop 2 and had just hit big on
SNL.
Boomerang saw
Murphy in gentler mode and, based on a story by
Murphy himself, was seen by some as an apology for the misogynist excesses of
Harlem Nights. But it was only moderately successful at the box office, not up to
Murphy's earlier blockbusting standards.
Worse was to come with
The Distinguished Gentleman where
Murphy was a Florida con man, running sex lines and blackmailing his clients, a true sleazeball. When congressman
James Garner dies in mid-election campaign,
Murphy, who shares
Garner's name, slips his name onto the ballot papers and, mistaken for a good guy, wins a thoroughly undeserved place in Washington. Once in power, he immediately seeks out money-making opportunities, selling his vote to the highest bidder, then falls for
Victoria Rowell. Will love redeem him ? Not too many cared.
Now seriously needing a hit to reclaim his Hollywood top spot,
Murphy would return to
Beverly Hills Cop, further upping his chances by bringing onboard director
John Landis, with whom he'd hit paydirt in
Trading Places and
Coming to America. This time his boss in Detroit would be killed, a vengeful
Murphy returning to LA to find trouble in an apparently family-friendly theme park. Unfortunately, the formula had outlived its welcome and the film would lose money. With both the
Beverly Hills Cop and
48 Hrs franchises dead,
Murphy was desperate to find something new.
His next release was the low-budget (or rather LOWER-budget)
Vampire In Brooklyn, which he'd written in collaboration with his own brothers
Charles and
Vernon. This was a comedy horror effort directed by
Wes Craven, legendary helmsman of
A Nightmare On Elm Street and
The Hills Have Eyes, and saw
Murphy as the last of a vampire race, seeking a mate and pursuing cop
Angela Bassett. Sadly, it didn't work, being neither good comedy nor good horror. Happily, though, both director and star would refind their form the very next year. 1996 would see
Craven successfully meld comedy and horror in
Scream, while
Murphy would strike back with
The Nutty Professor.
Proven on
SNL,
Murphy's gift for characterisation was well known. On film he'd occasionally played multiple characters, as in
Coming To America and
Vampire In Brooklyn, but
The Nutty Professor, based on the 1963
Jerry Lewis vehicle, used advanced make-up techniques to make the absolute most of his abilities.
Murphy would play the painfully obese Professor
Sherman Klump with aplomb and no little pathos. He also played
Klump's sleazy love-god alter-ego
Buddy Love, and the whole of
Klump's family: his lecherous granny: his longsuffering mum: his crude dad: his thin-skinned brother, all of them. He spent 80 days in heavy make-up, famously not complaining once. The film was genuinely superb and a deserved hit,
Murphy finding himself
Golden Globe-nominated for the fourth time, and the first in twelve years.
The Nutty Professor proved beyond doubt that
Murphy still had "it". But there was also a sneaking suspicion that he only enjoyed big success when he played multiple characters; that is, when he brought
SNL-style shenanigans to the Silver Screen. His next film,
Metro, seemed to bear this out. Here he'd play a hostage negotiator whose friend is murdered by diamond thief
Michael Wincott.
Murphy's off the case but pursues
Wincott anyway, through wild car chases and major action set-pieces. The dialogue was crisp, the performances fine, yet still the public didn't bite. Worse was to come when at 4.45 one morning in May, 1997,
Murphy - who couldn't sleep and was on his way to the newstand - saw a woman in distress on Santa Monica Boulevard and offered her a lift. Or so his story went. The policemen who stopped him said the woman was a transvestite prostitute with a warrant out on her. There were no charges for
Murphy, but the transvestite, Samoan 20-year-old
Atisone Seiuli (known as
Shalomar), told a reporter that
Murphy had placed $200 on her leg and asked her what kind of sex she liked. Worse, other transvestites came out of the woodwork, claiming they'd had sex with
Murphy. He sued both the
Globe and the
National Enquirer for $5 million, for slander, libel and invasion of privacy, then pulled out. The story ended sadly one year later when
Seiuli was found dead on the street, dressed only in bra, panties and towel. Apparently, she was locked out of her apartment, attempted to use the towel to swing from the roof into an open window, and fell.
Murphy's onscreen efforts would now bring him some measure of succour. It would now come to him that his voice might be ideally suited to big-budget cartoon capers.
Disney's
Mulan would be his first, a Chinese folk story where a girl dresses as a boy to fight off evil invaders. On her journey she'd be joined by
Murphy, playing a skinny, street-smart dragon who detests being called a lizard.
Murphy would, of course, be the stand-out performer, his dragon working much as
Robin Williams' genie had in
Aladdin six years earlier.
Mulan was a big hit.
So too was
Dr Dolittle, a loose adaptation of
Hugh Lofting's classic, where
Murphy would play a famous doctor who, suffering a blow to the head, would discover an ability to communicate with animals. In a way,
Murphy was a strange choice for the part in that he was asked to play it relatively straight, the crude gags and crazy voices being provided by his furry friends, but kids worldwide loved it. Along with
The Nutty Professor, it would provide
Murphy with yet more sure-fire sequels.
Murphy's other film of 1998,
Holy Man, would be slightly more sophisticated fare. A satire on the media, this would see
Murphy as a guru discovered by shopping channel executives
Jeff Goldblum and
Kelly Preston. Put on air he becomes a huge star, his angle being that he tells the truth, and love follows wherever he goes. It was weak stuff, and bombed. His next movie,
Life, would also lose money, but was a far more accomplished piece. Set in the 1930s, this would see
Murphy re-team with his
Boomerang co-star
Martin Lawrence, the pair of them getting into trouble with a hard-nosed club owner and being forced to drive down to Mississippi to pick up a cargo of moonshine. Once down there, they're framed and jailed for life, the rest of the movie concerning the growing friendship between the realist
Murphy and hot-headed
Lawrence as they dream forever of escape. It was warm, nostalgic and thoroughly watchable.
After these two relative failures,
Murphy would cross into the new millennium with a real bang. Now came
Bowfinger, written by
Steve Martin and directed by
Frank Oz, where
Martin would play a low-grade producer trying to sign
Murphy's neurotic, race-obsessed film star for his new production.
Murphy, though, is more interested in his weird New Age cult so, in desperation,
Martin employs a cluelessly naive
Murphy lookalike (also played by
Murphy) and, using stolen footage of the real thing, attempts to make his movie without the star
Murphy's knowledge. In terms of comedy, it was mild but effective, mild not being an accurate description of
Murphy's next outing, a manic sequel to
The Nutty Professor that saw him play eight characters as
Buddy Love and the family
Klump become involved in
Sherman's wooing of research assistant J
anet Jackson. Aided by superb make-up work from
Rick Baker, who'd earlier aged
Murphy so brilliantly in
Life, it was another superb
Murphy performance.
While
The Nutty Professor 2 was pulling them in at the box-office,
Murphy was also scoring a hit on TV with
The PJs. Created by
Murphy himself, this was a foamation series, with models brought to life by stop-motion photography courtesy of the
Will Vinton studios.
Murphy would lend his voice to the lead puppet,
Thurgoode Stubbs, chief superintendant of the building in which he lives with wife
Loretta Devine. Thurgoode would be a big-haired, chicken-fried-steak-loving caricature and the humour was crude, but great animation brought it 22 million viewers, amongst the
Fox network's best-ever ratings. And
Murphy would again score big with animation in 2001 when he starred alongside
Mike Myers and
Cameron Diaz in
Dreamworks'
Shrek. This would see
Myers' ogre sent to rescue
Diaz's princess from a dragon, added comedy being provided by
Murphy's loudmouthed donkey.
Murphy's part, reluctantly accompanying the hero on a dangerous journey, was not unlike the role he'd played in
Mulan, but
Shrek's success far outweighed that of its predecessor, raking in an enormous $267 million at the US box-office alone. Amazingly, the same year would bring another big hit when
Murphy released
Dr Dolittle 2,
Murphy's titular medic now running an animal therapy centre and battling to save a bear's home forest from destruction.
Having enjoyed such a raging comeback,
Murphy could not have expected the crashing failure of 2002. Indeed, few actors have faced such misery in recent times. First would come
Showtime, a spoof of cop buddy movies where
Robert De Niro played a tough policeman forced to partner maverick
Murphy and take part in
Rene Russo's reality TV show. At the same time, the odd couple must search the streets for an enormous new gun that must not fall into the wrong hands. Though
Murphy and
De Niro would play well together, it was really predictable action all the way.
Next would come the big one,
The Adventures Of Pluto Nash. Filmed back in 2000, this one had its sci-fi thunder stolen by
Speilberg's
AI and lost over $100 million. In it,
Murphy played an ex-con running a successful club on a lunar colony whose livelihood and then life are threatened by an evil crime lord. Cue bombings, shootouts and chase sequences, actually all the things we'd seen in
Beverly Hills Cop but this time set in extremely expensive scenarios. Another loser would be
I Spy, directed by
Dr Dolittle helsmwomen
Betty Thomas and based on the hit TV show starring
Robert Culp and
Bill Cosby. Here
Murphy would play a prize fighter recruited by spy
Owen Wilson and helping to steal a spy plane back from a wicked
Malcolm McDowell. As with
Showtime,
Murphy worked well with his co-star but the human interest was lost amidst the pyrotechnic action.
2003 would be a mixed year. First he'd successfully return to dumb comedy with
Daddy Day Care where he and pal
Jeff Garlin, sacked from an ad agency, decide to run a kindergarten - a particularly chaotic kindergarten - thus coming into conflict with a rival carer, a hilariously strict
Anjelica Huston. Directed by
Steve Carr, who'd earlier worked on
Murphy's
Dr Dolittle 2, it was another $100 million hit. This was followed by the far superior
The Haunted Mansion, based on a
Disney theme park ride. Here
Murphy acted the straight man once more, playing a workaholic estate agent who's pulled away from a family holiday by the chance to flog a big country house. His efforts are complicated, though, by a ghost who believes
Murphy's wife to be the reincarnation of his dead lover. With excellent support turns from
Marsha Thomason,
Jennifer Tilly and
Terence Stamp (earlier a co-star in
Bowfinger) and more fine effects work from
Rick Baker, the movie was excellent fun but sadly suffered at the box-office.
After another huge hit with 2004's
Shrek 2,
Murphy would not be seen again for two years. And then he was seen everywhere. First he hit the headlines when his divorce from
Nicole Mitchell was announced and he entered a highly-publicized relationship with former
Spice Girl Melanie Brown. Then the tabloids went barmy as he split from a pregnant
Brown and demanded a DNA test to see if the child was his, at the same time dating one
Tracey Edmonds.
However, just as he appeared to have become mere tabloid fodder,
Murphy came up with his first "serious" artistic success. This was in
Dreamgirls, based on the hit Broadway musical and more or less telling the story of Sixties girl group
The Supremes. Joining
Jamie Foxx,
Danny Glover,
Beyonce Knowles and
Jennifer Hudson in a stellar black cast, Murphy would star as James "Thunder" Early, a self-destructive soul sensation mixing scorching musical performances with cutting wit to brilliant effect. With the film tackling racism, social unrest and familial betrayal, it was a critical smash and a financial winner, too. And at last
Murphy received the respect of his peers, being
Oscar-nominated alongside
Hudson.
Murphy wouldn't win the
Oscar and it was often suggested that he lost because of his next production,
Norbit. Here
Murphy would play the titular hero, a weakling abused by his huge, mad wife (also played by
Murphy). Teaming up with first love
Thandie Newton, he must try to save
Mr Wong's orphanage (
Wong being
Murphy again) from being turned into a titty bar by rapacious C
uba Gooding Jr, who'd made an early appearance as a kid getting his hair cut in
Coming To America. Written by
Murphy and his brother
Charles, it was packed with fat-jokes and crude caricatures that many found offensive - perhaps the reason for the
Oscar defeat - but the public lapped it up, and it was yet another mighty smash. The third installment of
Shrek would then continue his run.
Having received $20 million each for
Pluto Nash and the sequels to
The Nutty Professor and
Dr Dolittle,
Murphy can perhaps try again for the empire he threatened to build when younger. He does give money away - to the
AIDS Foundation, the
Martin Luther King Jr Centre, various cancer charities, he donated $100,000 to the
Screen Actors' Guild's strike relief fund - but he reinvests heavily in his own organisations. Having been burned so badly in his earlier career, he likes to surround himself with people he can trust too. His cousin
Ray looks after him, his childhood friend
Clint Smith is VP of his TV company, while
Lillian and
Vernon help out with
Panda Merchandising, which controls the rights to Eddie's products. What he needs most, though, is a screenwriter he can trust and a director to control his excesses. After all, despite the billions of dollars he's generated for Hollywood, the only major film prize he has ever won is a
Golden Raspberry for
Harlem Nights. This situation needs to be addressed, and soon.
EDDIE MURPHY FILMOGRAPHYThere's not many comedians who transform themselves into film stars, then maintain their position at the top. But
Eddie Murphy has somehow managed it, despite slipping for years into relative obscurity. Having broken through on
Saturday Night Live, he then stormed the box-office with
48 Hrs and
Beverly Hills Cop, lost it all, then charged back again with the barnstorming
The Nutty Professor. Below we track his path from fame, to failure, to fame once more.
Shrek the Third (Voice) (2007)
Norbit (2007)
Dreamgirls (2006)
Far Far Away Idol (video, voice) (2004)
Father Of The Pride (TV, voice) (2004)
Shrek 2 (voice) (2004)
The Haunted Mansion (2003)
Shrek 4-D (short, voice) (2003)
Daddy Day Care (2003)
I Spy (2002)
The Adventures of Pluto Nash (2002)
Showtime (2002)
Dr Dolittle 2 (2001)
Shrek (voice) (2001)
Nutty Professor 2: The Klumps (2000)
Bowfinger (1999)
Life (1999)
The PJs (voice, TV) (1999)
Dr Dolittle (1998)
Holy Man (1998)
Mulan (voice) (1998)
Saturday Night Live: The Best Of Eddie Murphy (video) (1998)
Metro (1996)
The Nutty Professor (1996)
Vampire In Brooklyn (1995)
Beverly Hills Cop 3 (1994)
Dangerous: The Short Films (video) (1993)
Boomerang (1992)
The Distinguished Gentleman (1992)
Another 48 Hrs (1990)
What's Alan Watching ? (TV) (1989)
Harlem Nights (1989)
Coming To America (1988)
Beverly Hills Cop 2 (1987)
Eddie Murphy Raw (video) (1987)
The Golden Child (1986)
The Joe Piscopo Video (1985)
Best Defence (1984)
Beverly Hills Cop (1984
Trading Places (1983)
Eddie Murphy Delirious (video) (1983)
48 Hrs (1982)
Saturday Night Live (TV series) (1980-84)
source: -
here -

Tere is a weird world where inappropriateness is ok oh it is called Hollywood. Everyone wonders why their star children are all wacked out on designer drugs & are delinquents. If stupidity is their bliss then have at it idiots. Didn't that education do anything for you
Tracey ? Your new loves alternative lifestyle will be your own wakeup reality check and then you'll think OMG… What was I think'n...
Eddie Murphy is a creep. He's refusing to have anything to do with his new daughter. But it's okay because she'll probably be the child that will be there for his ass when he's old and need somebody. The child is innocent. He should have but a hat on his stick. Dummy who wouldn’t have got pregnant by his ass for some more million $$$ ?
Anyway, I continue like
Murphy as
actor,
screenplayer,
producer and
director, the worse side of his private life counting less for me.


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