10- The Michigan Daily Summer Weeky- Wednesday, August 4,1993 Natural born movie-star H':Tom Sizemore makes the big jump from minor roles to stardom By DARCY LOCKMAN Tom Sizemore walks intotheroom rumpled and charming. The rumpled look carries no permanence (it is, after all, only 9 a.m., on a Sunday), but the charm that emanates from Sizemore's long-lashed blue eyes and scruffy vis- age suggests a certain staying power. Conversation with this soon-to-be movie star does not shatter the sugges- tion. Nervously pulling out a cigarette, Sizemoreasks,"IsitallrightifIsmoke? Willitbotheryou?"andwhatdirector- after-director apparently sees in his deceptively "tough guy" appearance immediately becomesapparent.Class. Personality.Didwementionhischarm? At 31 (note: He will turn 32 in November), this born-and-raised De- troit boy is at the point in his career Tom Sizemore as a soft-hearted tough guy in "Heart and Souls." DEPARTMENT OF RECREATIONAL SPORTS INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM when many actors seem to lose their charm and adopt the jaded ego of Hollywood. But Sizemore has man- aged to sidestep this tradition. With a multitude of small partsin big movies already behind him (minor roles in "Born on the Fourth of July," "Flight of the Intruder" and "Guilty By Sus- picion"),hehasearnedtheright tothe meatier roles in major motion pic- tures that are now coming his way. Coming his way is putting it lightly. They're seeping in. SizemoreplayedoppositeWesley Snipes in "Passenger 57" and cur- rently stars in the recently-released feel-goodcomedy"HeartandSouls," in the emotionally-charged thriller "StrikingDistance"withBruceWillis and in Tony Scott's "True Romance" with Christian Slater. Not bad for the Wayne State grad who got his start in a Grosse Pointe Theater production of "Bye, Bye Birdie." "It's an exciting time in my ca- reer," Sizemore admits hesitantly, "But Idon'tthinkaboutthattoomuch. I just try to do the role. I'm not much in the business thing. Just working with great directors - Tony Scott, Ron Underwood ("Hea and Souls"), Oliver (Stone) - it's been great. Working with great directors makes the movie-mnakingprocess really cre- ayive. It's a different kind of feeling. Plus, I have a lot of responsibility with these larger roles. You're much more integral to the whole thing." Sizemore is currently at work on what will undoubtedly prove to be his most controversial movie to date, Oliver Stone's "Natural Born Kill- ers" (penned by Quentin Tarantino), co-starring Woody Harrelson and Robert Downey Jr., in which he plays a Chicago cop with a penchant for catching serial killers. "We're shooting at Joliet,"he says, shaking hisheadas hespeaks. "A lotof prisoners there. Twenty-threehundred of them. One thousand of them are doing life without parole for murder. Twohundred ofthemhavebeen picked by Oliver through a screening process (to work asextras). It's hard to shoot in a prison with all these guys. They're nice guys, but they're killers. It's hard, butOliverlikesit that way,"helaughs, shaking his head again, "With Oliver, youdon'thave toact, youjustgo to the set.Helikestakingactorstodeepplaces, the jungles." The "jungles" that Stone explores in this project are those that Sizemore sees as entrenched in American soci- ety. "America is obsessed with vio- lence, celebrities, murder, sex, power. The media. We always have some se- rial killer poster boy. Always someone new. It's an obscene business, serial murders. And it'skindofsymptomatic of America." Sizemore would eventually like to retu to the stage (he performed at Wayne State's Hillberry Theaterin the early '80s, as well as in a number of regional and off-Broadway produc- tions), but for the time being, making movies is what he's "gotta do." Be- tween "Killers" and his next project (Sizemore will play Bat Masterson to Kevin Costner's Wyatt Earpunder the direction of Lawrence Kasdan) the opportunity to do what he's got to do should not be a problem. Except for that fame thing. "If you become a movie star, you have to deal with it, I guess. You have to find a way to deal with it. I don't know how I will, if, in fact, it happens. I'd like to hope that I'll deal with it well, that it won't change me." We hopesotoo, Tom, 'cause,boy, that charm.. A 4d For Additional Information Contact: IMSB 763-3562 , 1 IT DE )A\Ii7?1 HUNDREDS OF TOUR TIE-DYE T-SHIRTS IN STOCK " Sudget airares " Student fares " Railpasses " IntematI dentity cards " Travel gear and guide books " Expert travel advice Cound 1 WaWe 1220 S. Unmety AveU#2M tAArbor, MI 48104 313-998-0200 Call for a FREE Student Taes Mane ROOMMATE MIATCIHNG SERVICE AT UNIVERSITY TOWERS APARTMENTS 536 S. FOREST AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 (313) 761-2680 EFFICIENCY, 1, 2, & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS 8 & 12 MONTH LEASES " HEAT AND WATER INCLUDED STUDY LOUNGE " GAME ROOM " WEIGHT ROOM POOL * TV ROOM " 24 HOUR ATITENDED LOBBY MTS COMPUTERS t4 I1&iNd of * STORE~ odo 1'- Pli PAmtAt i