Born Nicholas Coppola on January 7, 1964, in Long Beach,
California, to choreographer Joy Vogelsang and literature
professor August Coppola. Cage has two older brothers, Marc and
Christopher. He is the nephew of film director Francis Ford
Coppola and, as a youth, visited his uncle often at his San
Francisco home. At age 15, Cage fell in love with acting during
a summer class at the American Conservatory Theatre in San
Francisco. He dropped out of Beverly Hills High School to pursue
an acting career, making his debut on television in 1981. He
changed his name to Nicolas Cage as a way to separate his
identity from that of his famous uncle. He chose the name “Cage”
as a tribute to comic-book superhero Luke Cage.
Cage is known for his edgy, intense personality both on and off
the screen, as well as for his passion for method acting. He is
said to have had two teeth pulled for his role in Birdy (1984),
slashed his arm for Racing With the Moon (1984) and swallowed a
live cockroach for Vampire’s Kiss (1992). He is also alleged to
have destroyed a street vendor’s remote-controlled car in a fit
of rage while preparing for his role as a mobster in The Cotton
Club (1984).
Cage got his start in teenage comedies, with his debut in Fast
Times at Ridgemont High (1982; also featuring Sean Penn),
followed by a leading role as a punk rocker in Valley Girl
(1983). Francis Ford Coppola gave him a small role in his
critically acclaimed Rumble Fish (1983). His first serious
dramatic role was opposite Matthew Modine in Birdy (1984).
This was followed by Coppola’s Peggy Sue Got Married (1986), the
Coen Brothers’ comedy Raising Arizona (1987), Moonstruck (1987,
starring Cher), David Lynch’s bizarre Wild at Heart (1990),
Vampire’s Kiss (1992) and the comedy Honeymoon in Vegas (1992).
By 1994, Cage was valued at about $4 million per picture, but
agreed to star in Mike Figgis’ Leaving Las Vegas (1995) for only
$240,000 because of the strength of the role. It paid off; his
portrayal of the alcoholic screenwriter earned him a Academy
Award and a Golden Globe for Best Actor.
Since 1995, Cage has made a series of action thrillers,
including The Rock (1996), Con Air (1997), John Woo’s Face/Off
(1997, opposite John Travolta), and Brian De Palma’s Snake Eyes
(1998). In 1998, he starred in the romantic City of Angels with
Meg Ryan. After returning to the action genre with the
poorly-rated 8MM and headlining Martin Scorsese’s dark Bringing
Out the Dead in 1999, Cage reportedly received a $20 million
paycheck for the action extravaganza Gone in 60 Seconds,
costarring Angelina Jolie.
Cage played a more traditional romantic lead in his next two
movies, the Christmas 2000 release The Family Man and the World
War II-era epic Captain Corelli's Mandolin, starring the
much-in-demand actress and Spanish import Penelope Cruz. In
December 2002, Cage launched his directorial debut, the $5
million independent film Sonny, about a male gigolo who
struggles to free himself from his madam mother. Cage also
starred in Adaptation, playing both ill-tempered screenwriter
Charlie Kaufman and twin brother Donald.
Upcoming projects include costarring with Chow Yun-Fat in
director John Woo's action Western Land of Destiny and starring
and coproducing Dead to Rights, a movie version of the hugely
popular video game. The busy actor will also star in director
Jon Turteltaub's National Treasure, playing an
archaelogist-historian who believes a treasure map is hidden on
the back of the Declaration of Independence.
Cage's relationship with Kristina Fulton, a model, lasted
several years, producing a son, Weston Coppola Cage, born in
1992. Cage married the actress Patricia Arquette in 1995. The
couple separated in the fall of 2000 after five years of
marriage, and eventually divorced. In August 2002, Cage married
Lisa Marie Presley, the only daughter of the late King of Rock
and Roll. He filed for divorce just three-and-a-half months
later.
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