Richard Tiffany Gere was
born August 31, 1949 in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania to Homer and Doris. The second
of five children, Richard and his siblings, three
sisters and a brother, lived the average life on
a farm near Syracuse, New York where his father
worked as a farmer/insurance salesman. Richard
was also a member of the local Boy Scouts.
In
high school Richard was part of the school
gymnastics team and was a member of his senior
classes student council. In his spare time
Richard learned to play the piano, guitar,
trumpet and banjo in addition to composing
musical scores for his schools theatrical
productions. Richard also played the trumpet at
local weddings and bar mitzvahs.
After
graduating in 1967 Richard went on to attend the
University of Massachusetts as a philosophy
major, but decidedly dropped out after his
sophomore year to pursue a career as an actor.
Luckily
it did long take long to reach his goal; he
quickly landed a job in summer stock at the
Province town Playhouse on Cape Cod where he
played the leads in repertory productions of The
Great God Brown, Camino Real, The Collection and
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead among
many other plays. When the season ended he moved
on to Seattle, Washington where he performed and
composed music for the Seattle Repertory
Theater's production of Volpone. Having grown
tired of the theater lifestyle, in 1970 Richard
returned to the east coast and joined a commune
of rock musicians in rural Vermont playing
the keyboard and guitar, but left a few months
later having found his fellow musicians "harder
to get along with then actors."
Richard moved down
to New York City and decided to audition for the
lead in the rock opera Soon which he got,
but the show closed after a single performance in
January 1971. He spent the next two years in
London where he made memorable performances in
many plays and musicals such as Shakespearean
comedy The Taming Of The Shrew and as
Danny Zucko in the musical Grease which he
continued to call his own when he moved back to
NYC in the mid seventies and took over the roll
of Danny in the Broadway production.
Richard
stayed in New York and continued to act on stage
in such plays as Killers Head, Habeas Corpus, and
Awake and Sing for the Princeton, New Jerseys
McCarter Theater Company.
In 1975 Richard
became disillusioned with the theater deciding to
move onto motion pictures instead taking a small
part as a small time pimp in the film Commissioner.
The film received mixed reviews at best, but
Richard was so memorable that he was cast as a
shell-shocked psychopathic Marine raider in the W.W.II
drama Baby Blue Marine in 1976. Richard
then took the role of a doped-up hustler in the
movie Looking For Mr. Goodbar, with Diane
Keaton, based on the Judith Rossnar novel mostly
due to the fact that he wanted to work with the
films director, Richard Brooks.
Trying to
drop the "punk" image, Richard turned
down many offers to play the same kind of role
choosing instead to play the part of a sensitive
inarticulate teenager in the film Bloodbrothers.
One of
Richard's most memorable films came in 1978 when
he played the part of mill worker on the run from
the law in the Academy Award Winning Film Days
Of Heaven.
Once again feeling
typecast as a social misfit, Richard went on to
play a mess sergeant in the film Yanks in
1979. Also that year Richard played the part of a
high priced hustler who rents himself out to
wealthy women in the notorious film American
Gigolo. After many unsavoring reviews
Richard returned to the stage in December 1979 in
Bent, playing the part of a homosexual in
a Nazi concentration camp. The critics took note
with rave reviews and one who noted that Gere was
"enormously gifted."
A great and long
career was now beginning. In 1982 Richard starred
in the romantic film that made many men believe
that a man in uniform would come whisk them off
like in a fairy tale in An Officer and a
Gentleman. With the 1983 remake of Jean Luc
Goddards film Breathless, and Francis Ford
Coppalas The Cotton Club in 1984 Richard
was now a certified movie star and a very
reluctant sex symbol for the '80's.

In 1986 Richard stared
along with newcomer Kim Basinger, best known for
her stunning performance in the Robert Redford
film The Natural, as a cop in the New
Orleans crime drama No Mercy. In 1987 he
played a farmer in danger of losing his farm in
the movie with Helen Hunt in the film Miles
From Home. Neither films were very successful.
Richard continued to make
movies that were more unmemorable such as Crack
Down, Strike Force, King David and Power.
People were starting to wonder "What
happened to that guy from An Officer and a
Gentleman?"
But
Richard did not seem to mind basing his energy on
helping to found Tibet House, the New York
cultural institution devoted to the preservation
of Tibetan culture. Many feel that his devotion
to Buddhism and the Dalai Lama has helped soften
Richard from the hard narcissistic bad boy he
once was.
After taking a brief
absence from film Richard returned in 1989 with
his gray locks as a psychotic cop in the thriller
Internal Affairs. The film started the
comeback of a great career.
On March 30, 1990
the movie that gave Richard back his sex symbol
status and made a superstar out of his co-star
opened. Pretty Woman was the third
successful film of 1990 and even gonared Richard
a Golden Globe Nomination along with many other
awards.
On
December 12th, 1991 at 11:30pm in a little chapel
on the strip of Las Vegas Richard married his
girlfriend of four years Cindy Crawford.
In 1992 Richard
once again stared along with Kim Basinger in the
film Final Analysis which did not fare
well at the box office. Richards next film Sommersby
with Jodie Foster was moderately successful
and his next films Mr. Jones and Intersection
failed miserably. (on a personal note
Intersection is the movie I wish Richard never
made)
Also that year
Richard stared as a musician stricken with
AIDS in the HBO film And The Band Played On
which he and the large ensemble cast received
glowing reviews and the film itself recieved many
Emmy nomination.
Unfortunately everything
was not going well for Richard, in 1994 he and
Cindy separated and eventually divorced not even
a year after People Magazine proclaimed the two
as "The Sexiest Couple Alive."
Richard was not lonely for
long, in 1995 Richard started dating Carey
Lowell, an ex-bond girl who had currently taken
over Jill Hennesseys part in Law & Order
as Assistant District Attorney.
With First Knight in
1995 Richard played the role of Lancelot a role
that was a romantic lead and was the role he
needed to get his career back on track. The hits
followed with Primal Fear in 1996 as a
lawyer defending a man accused of killing
of the priest who molested him and Red
Corner in 1997 in which he played a man
wrongfully imprisoned for a crime he did
not commit. In 1998 he starred with Bruce Willis
in The Jackel which was very successful.

On
July 30, 1999 the movie so many fans had been
waiting for, myself included, opened....Runaway
Bride the first movie to reunite Richard and
Julia Roberts. The film did extremely well at the
box office and was just the first of good things
to come Richards way.
At his 50th birthday party
Carey announced to Richard that she was pregnant
with his first child, her second. Nine months
later Homer Gere was born.
In August 2000 a
romantic drama titled Autumn In New York opened
in which Richard starred along side Winona Ryder
as a playboy who finally finds true love with a
dying woman.
On
October 13th, 2000 Richards latest movie Dr.T and
The Women opened.
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