Michael Keaton

With devilishly arched eyebrows used for both comic and sinister effect, Keaton did guest shots on a number of sitcoms before his hilarious turn in Night Shift as a morgue-attendant-turned-pimp put hi...
read more...

BirthDate
BirthPlace
09/08/1951
Coraopolis, PA
Summary
With devilishly arched eyebrows used for both comic and sinister effect, Keaton did guest shots on a number of sitcoms before his hilarious turn in Night Shift as a morgue-attendant-turned-pimp put him on Hollywood's up-and-coming list. Although subsequent projects failed properly to showcase his quirkiness and manic energy, he broke through in 1988 with a pair of powerful if antithetical performances: a struggling addict in the drama Clean and Sober and a ghoulish con artist from beyond in Tim Burton's Beetlejuice, which marked his first collaboration with the director. The next year, Burton cast Keaton in the unlikely title role of Batman, but Keaton was surprisingly convincing as the brooding caped crusader and reprised the role in the sequel, Batman Returns. But in the '90s he seemed to lose his way. Perhaps attempting to prove his versatility, Keaton went from fearsome (Pacific Heights) to father with a fatal disease (My Life) to frenetic family man (Multiplicity), but the films were B-grade at best. He also stumbled personally, when his long-term relationship with Courteney Cox ended on less-than-friendly terms. By the '00s, his career had significantly slowed, but the veteran actor proved he was still a formidable presence with his Golden Globe-nominated portrayal of CNN producer Robert Wiener in the HBO Gulf War telepic Live from Baghdad. But on the big screen, the former superhero was relegated to playing dad in fluffy fare, such as First Daughter and Herby: Fully Loaded.