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Anthony Edwards

Anthony Edwards

Anthony Charles Edwards was born in Santa Barbara, CA and was raised in an upscale neighborhood known as the Riviera. His parents, an architect father and an artist mother, persuaded Edwards to act when he was 16, which led him to enroll in a theater workshop in London, England before graduating from San Marcos High School in his hometown in 1980. As a teenager, he studied ballet with childhood friend and actor Eric Stoltz - reportedly so the two could meet girls. The future star then attended the University of Southern California, where he received a bachelor of arts in drama. Edwards made his feature film acting debut in no less than the cult film "Fast Times at Ridgemont High, with a minor part as one of two friends of the perpetually stoned surfer Jeff Spicoli (Sean Penn). Considered one of the best films in the teen sex comedy genre, the movie centered on a group of high school students obsessed with sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll, and also jumpstarted the careers of Phoebe Cates, Jennifer Jason Leigh, his ballet buddy Stoltz, and Nicolas Cage. He then went on to star as the son of a top female drag racer in "Heart Like a Wheel" (1983), and had a regular role on the sitcom "It Takes Two" (ABC, 1982-83) opposite Patty Duke Astin and Helen Hunt.Edwards landed his first starring film role in yet-another classic teen comedy, "Revenge of the Nerds" (1984) as a one of the computer science geeks at a college campus trying desperately to stop a jock fraternity from harassing them. And the hits just kept coming. Edwards' next projects included playing John Cusack's horny best friend in "The Sure Thing" (1985) and as a college nerd who unknowingly becomes involved in international espionage in the lackluster comedy "Gotcha!" (1985). After being typecast as a college nerd in most of his previous work, Edwards' career soared in a whole different direction when he landed a major supporting role in the mega-hit action flick "Top Gun" (1986), starring as Tom Cruise's laid-back and extremely likeable navigator, Nick "Goose" Bradshaw. His "loose as a goose" role perfectly complemented Cruise's character, Maverick, a defiant U.S. naval aviator who often flew dangerously as a way to deal with the guilt he carried regarding his father's death. Though it was also the film that made Cruise a superstar, Edwards often stole the show with his natural comic flair which came in handy during many of the film's more intense moments, and helped elevate the film's predictable plot. His death at film's end became one of the more preeminent onscreen demises always referenced by film fans and critics as one of the most regrettable and gut-wrenching. On a brighter note, not only did Anthony Edwards as Goose become iconic, off-screen he fell for his then unknown onscreen girlfriend, perky Meg Ryan. The two dated for almost a year.Following the monster success of the Tony Scott-directed "Top Gun," Edwards left his college geek image behind and took on more serious roles in small films like "Hawks" (1988) as a terminally ill patient, and in the independent drama "Miracle Mile" (1988) about an impending nuclear holocaust in Los Angeles. He also played Susan Sarandon's trusty associate in the film version of John Grisham's 1993 novel of the same name, "The Client" (1994), a riveting story about a young boy (Brad Renfro) who witnessed the suicide of a lawyer involved in the murder of a Louisiana senator. Edwards also found steady work on television, including a recurring role as a lawyer and staunch environmental activist on the popular drama series "Northern Exposure" (CBS, 1990-95), which followed a newly graduated doctor (Rob Morrow) from Manhattan as he sets up practice in a remote Alaskan town.Although Goose made him a star, Edwards' landed his most successful role almost 10 years later portraying the charismatic and sensitive Dr. Mark Greene in the Emmy Award-winning medical drama series "ER" (NBC, 1994-2009). Created by acclaimed novelist Michael Crichton, the popular series detailed the trials and tribulations of emergency room doctors and nurses who worked in the fictional County General Hospital in Chicago, IL. Apart from breathing new life into Edwards' career, the program also made household names of George Clooney, Noah Wyle, Julianna Margulies and Maura Tierney, among many others. As one of the show's major characters, Edwards as Greene embodied the dedicated yet overworked physician who also struggled with his personal life, particularly raising a teenage daughter as a single father - enough that he won the Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 1998. Edwards' onscreen character played such a crucial role in the show's success that when his storyline took a turn and he died of brain cancer at the end of the 2002 season, millions of viewers were devastated over losing such a beloved character.During the final season of "ER," the long-departed Edwards reprised his role as Dr. Greene in flashback scenes where he treated another physician's (Angela Bassett) son of leukemia, and consequently, inspired that same doctor to work full-time at County. With "ER" in the rearview mirror, Edwards took on fewer and lesser profile roles on both television and in films, including co-starring in the psychological thriller "The Forgotten" (2004) opposite Julianne Moore. In 2007, he starred in David Fincher's crime thriller "Zodiac" about the infamous serial killer who terrorized Northern California during the 1960s and 1970s. Edwards played the partner of the case's lead investigator who suffers a nervous breakdown due to the assignment. In a role far removed from the loveable Goose and steadfast Dr. Greene, he starred in the feature drama "Flipped" (2010) as a snobby, obnoxious father in the story of young love set in the swinging '60s. By Candy Cuenco
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