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Vince Vaughn

Personal Profile

Vince Vaughn
  • Birth Name:
    Vincent Anthony Vaughn
  • Date of Birth:
    March 28, 1970
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Aries
  • Place of Birth:
    Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
  • Height:
    6'5"
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    American
  • Education:
    Lake Forest High School, Lake Forest, IL

Family

Vince Vaughn
  • Father:
    Vernon Vaughn
  • Mother:
    Sharon Vaughn
  • Sister:
    Victoria, Valerie

Career

Vince Vaughn
  • Profession:
    Actor
  • Claim to Fame:
    Nick Van Owen in Jurassic P

Trivia

Vince Vaughn
  • Was afraid of failing, so he ran for high school class president. He thought they couldn''t fail the class president, and he was right!
  • Met SWINGERS costar Jon Favreau while working on his big-screen debut, RUDY
  • Auditioned but was turned down for supporting parts in SCHOOL TIES, ALIVE and DAZED AND CONFUSED.
  • Had an action figure for his character in THE LOST WORLD.
  • Was banned from Wilmington, N.C. bars, ordered to undergo alcohol assessment, and fined $250 after an April brawl. (31 May 2001)
  • Appeared with Joey Lauren Adams in Dwight Yoakam''s music video for These Arms.
  • Vince''s dad, Vernon Vaughn, can be seen as the man sitting at the $100 minimum bet table in the movie SWINGERS.
  • When Bobby goes to pick up Chloe, she is watching a news story on fires. Ricky started this fire at the beginning of the movie when he threw is matchbook out the window. There is a reference to Ricky (Vince Vaughn) shoving a shiv (knife) into someone''s neck. This is a reference to his part in Psycho (MADE).
  • his dad Vernon Vaughn makes a cameo in MADE (2001) as the Hollywood High School football coach .
  • In one scene, Sean Combs commented on Vaughn''s character getting all 21 JUMP STREET... Vaughn was in an episode of 21 JUMP STREET (1987).

Quotes

Vince Vaughn
  • “I moved out at 18. I always studied classes and trained a lot, you know. I think nowadays is such a different time because there's so many channels promoting the celebrity aspect of things.”
  • “As a kid I had a hard time reading in school. I was the kid who would go one period a day to the class for kids with learning disabilities.”
  • “I think too many people look at the arts with a religious outlook. Arts, music, singing and performing, it's all make-believe.”
  • “I loved Old School. I thought Old School was very different than a lot of the comedies that had come out. And that character I liked. I tried to ground him very much in reality and play him very much finding things important to him that are somewhat ridiculous.”
  • “I was lucky I always got along with girls. It was never like a big deal. I had a lot of girls that I was friends with that I wasn't sexual with. I think having two older sisters made me comfortable like that. I just like people, so I can just go up and say whatever.”
  • “They're all really funny.”
  • “You know, the better scripts I've seen lately have been comedy scripts.”
  • “You would have been Jake. Hopefully in your heart, I always stay Jake.”
  • “I've been there a few times, ... I shot a Western there years ago ... and we would have some time to stop and I would go to Tucson. My dad lives out in Phoenix, so I go down to Tucson every now and then. The landscape in Tucson is just beautiful.”
  • “I never heard of anyone crashing a wedding, but the producer of the movie who developed it, he said that when he was younger, he did crash weddings.”
View all Quotes: Vince Vaughn

Biography

Vince Vaughn
Last Updated: Wednesday, September 23, 2009

An actor whose strong features and sinewy 6'4" physique appear to have been chiseled from a slab of testosterone, Vince Vaughn is Hollywood's closest human approximation of a Chevy pick-up. Rangy, solid, and all-American in a 'dirt, sweat, and beer' sort of way, Vaughn's roles invariably reflect these qualities, and have given him a genial affability among middle Americans. Thanks to Vaughn's skills as a performer, however, he continues to resist typecasting, lending effortless portrayals to characters ranging from slick bachelors to raging psychopaths to morally conflicted limo drivers.

A tried-and-true Midwestern boy, Vaughn was born in Minneapolis on March 28, 1970, and raised in the wealthy Chicago suburb of Lake Forest. The son of a self-made businessman and a stock-and- real estate broker, Vaughn diverged from the upwardly mobile path forged by his parents. A hyperactive teen (and lackluster student), Vaughn spent time in special ed. and ran with a fast crowd (though he later claimed that he never felt the need for all-out rebellion). Despite his poor scholastic performance, Vaughn derived ambition from his interest in acting -- an interest that first blossomed at the age of seven -- and even served as senior class president. Upon graduation, with only his diploma and a role in a Chevy commercial as his credentials, Vaughn headed for Hollywood. Upon arrival, he proceeded to work in almost complete obscurity for the next seven years.

During this period, Vaughn made the acquaintance of Jon Favreau, another struggling actor who hailed from the East. Their ensuing friendship and real-life adventures provided the inspiration for their ticket to the bigtime, 1996's Swingers. Directed by Doug Liman, the comedy stars Vaughn and Favreau (who also co-wrote the script) as two amiable, Rat Pack-obsessed, "so money" bachelors prowling the streets and bars of L.A. for "beautiful babies" and the occasional job opportunity. This irreverent-but-insightful Miramax release became a bona fide sleeper hit. Vaughn, whose character, Trent, was the film's resident fast-talking ladies' man, emerged as a sex symbol in the making. A supporting role in Steven Spielberg's The Lost World: Jurassic Park heightened the actor's profile and revealed his ability to transition with great fluidity between indie films and box office blockbusters.

Nevertheless, Vaughn subsequently took the small, quiet film route, starring in The Locusts (1997), an overheated but half-baked melodrama in debt to both Tennessee Williams and East of Eden, and A Cool, Dry Place, a family drama that garnered a cool, dry reception from both audiences and critics. In 1998, the actor fared substantially better with his turn as a limo driver who is called upon to make a great sacrifice for a friend in Joe Ruben's Return to Paradise, and he brought a fine admixture of dark humor and sublimated menace to his part as a charismatic sociopath in Clay Pigeons. Vaughn evoked colossal mental dysfunction as Norman Bates in Gus Van Sant's truly ugly and ill-advised remake of Psycho that same year. Critics and viewers regarded his performance - like the film itself - with a tepid blend of indifference and bewilderment.

After that egregious misfire, Vaughn wisely took a couple of years off before re-emerging with a number of projects in 2000. These included The Cell, a surrealistic horror picture co-starring Jennifer Lopez and Vincent D'Onofrio, Prime Gig, with Vaughn as California's best telemarketer, and South of Heaven, West of Hell, an ensemble western that marked the directorial debut of country singer Dwight Yoakam. Following-up with a role in writer Favreau's Made, Vaughn's next big role arrived in the form of a deceptive stepfather harboring a dark secret in the thriller Domestic Disturbance. Unfortunately, the film bombed on a critical front.

Vaughn again ducked out of sight for several years, but Todd Phillips's 2003 comedy Old School brought him back to the top of the heap. Teaming Vaughn with Will Ferrell and Luke Wilson as a trio of over-the-hill party animals who relive their Animal House days by returning to frat house life, Old School became a sleeper hit, and inspired the press to term Vaughn, Wilson, Will Ferrell, Ben Stiller, Jack Black and others as The Frat Pack. The next of the 'Frat Pack' vehicles arrived in 2004, with Todd Phillips's spoofy retread of the 1970s hit Starsky & Hutch, featuring Vaughn as the slimy villain, Reese Feldman. The picture (predictably) became a mega-hit, and actor's newfound momentum continued to build when, only a few months later, he starred in Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story. Apparently channeling Bill Murray circa-1985, Vaughn received positive reviews for playing the good-guy opposite muscle-bound baddie Ben Stiller.

Vaughn next graced the Will Ferrell vehicle Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004) with a small but memorable role, before he made an about-face for the comedy-drama (Thumbsucker. Vaughn impressed critics with his characterization and received praise for his funny and heartfelt performance. He returned to the popcorn humor that initially made him a star, however (and joined the 200-million-gross club in the process) with a leading part in the comedy The Wedding Crashers, a raunchy, R-rated comedy that proved once and for all the actor could open a movie.

Throughout 2006, rumors swarmed about Vaughn's offscreen life, and alleged romantic relationship with newly-divorced Jennifer Aniston - a relationship that blossomed on the set of The Break-Up (ironically, a comedy about an couple ending their two year relationship and trying to divide their possessions, friends and condo without killing each other). Gossip amped up anticipation and heightened curiosity. Meanwhile, Aniston aggressively denied rumors of an engagement. Upon release, The Break-Up bolstered Vaughn's reputation as a strong comic lead, and became another surprise hit.

In the holiday comedy Joe Claus which marks Vaughn's third outing with director David Dobkin he plays the title character, the no-account, loser brother of Santa Claus who teams up with his more famous sibling at the North Pole to defeat villain Kevin Spacey. Vaughn undertook a personal venture for the documentary Vince Vaughn's Wild West Comedy Show, tooling around the country on a tour bus with four aspiring stand-up comics as they travel from gig to gig. And he stayed true to form with another "Frat Pack" comedy, Outsourced.

Filmography

Vince Vaughn

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