Los Angeles Times

The last fun movie star:

The actor never took himself too seriously. Today’s stars could learn a few things.

- By Chris Erskine chris.erskine@latimes.com

Chris Erskine pays tribute to Burt Reynolds.

His laugh is what I remember most. Burt Reynolds laughed like your kid sister — a full-bore, coyote throated cackle.

I can still hear him on those old “Tonight Show” appearance­s, pounding the desk and clucking at some double-take from Johnny Carson or Dom DeLuise. That great laugh seems to echo across the landscape, in these days after Reynolds’ death Thursday at age 82.

Early in his career, Reynolds wore skinny jeans, cowboy boots and a twinkling schoolboy smirk. That highpitche­d laugh was his trick pitch, not fitting that beefcake visage, which was fortunate for all involved. How could America come to love a cocky, monkey-haired hunk who took himself too seriously?

It never would, not in that era of anti-heroes and fervid feminism, and Reynolds seemed to inherently understand that.

So he laughed at himself as much as he laughed at anything. Despite being an actor with significan­t dramatic chops, that laugh and his sense of mischief were his greatest gifts.

Wry and playful, he was funny in ways that were new to us, especially on those old episodes of “The Tonight Show.” Deadpan at times, cartoonish at others, he and DeLuise establishe­d a high bar for improv.

Hey, kids, want to “own” your upcoming talk show appearance? Study those clips of Reynolds, whose career was a masterclas­s in storytelli­ng, physical humor and slivered wit.

Friends say he was difficult and complicate­d.

“Lots of problems, lots of laughs,” one fellow actor remembered Thursday. Journalist­s who profiled him in later years say he worried over how he’d be remembered.

Well, his legacy is everywhere. Ellen DeGeneres does some of his same selfdeprec­ating shtick, and you see signs of Reynolds in nearly everything Dwayne Johnson does. In the manner of Richard Pryor and Steve Martin, Reynolds carved a kind of comedy niche.

There are trace elements of him in the careers of George Clooney and Matthew McConaughe­y as well. Reynolds didn’t invent that sort of easygoing outlaw, he just perfected it.

And his sweeping career — in action movies, drama and comedies — has us thinking of Peter O’Toole’s great line from “My Favorite Year”: “I’m not an actor. I’m a movie star.”

In my humble estima- tion, most big stars don’t seem to have much fun anymore. What they mostly have are entourages and the grim expression­s of hostages held at gunpoint.

What a rough life it must be.

Not in Reynolds’ case. He was a hellbent Florida kid with a cop for a father who never seemed to forget where he came from, even as he married actresses and lost — then regained — his fortune.

Mind you, his re-definition of the smoldering leading man came amid sweeping cultural changes in sexu- ality male-female relationsh­ips and traditiona­l notions of manhood.

Men-on-the-run was a theme of “Smokey and the Bandit” and “Deliveranc­e,” after all, but never was there pushback. His go-with-it style was a big part of the appeal to many of the roles, including as convict/quarterbac­k Paul “Wrecking ” Crewe in “The Longest Yard.”

Odd-couple pairings would come to define him. Just look at the contrasts: DeLuise as his longtime comic sidekick on the movie screen and all those spots with Carson; his romance with Dinah Shore, 20 years his senior and out of a different Hollywood era. Even apple-cheeked Sally Field seemed too goody-goody for the rogue stock car driver.

Those pairings helped to soften the swagger. Trust me, that 1972 Cosmo centerfold could’ve been his ruin if not for his smirky, self-mocking tone. It was as if he said: “Feminism has come to this? Sign me up.”

Love and sex didn’t seem to be such pejorative­s back then. Ironically, attempts to post the famous centerfold photo on Facebook on Thursday reportedly ran into the site’s standards-and-practices police.

How far we haven’t come. Reynolds certainly would’ve gotten a good talk show story out of that one.

Indeed, there was a sly comic sensibilit­y to everything he did. He once recorded a song called, “Let’s Do Something Cheap and Superficia­l,” which seemed to mock the mores of the day and the heartthrob he was supposed to be. “Though your hair is all in tangles, And your makeup is a mess, Most of what you're drinking, Is spilling down your dress…” It makes you wonder: Is Hollywood success a product of talent or a keen and winning sensibilit­y? Is it being bigger than life or in touch with real life?

Or maybe it’s all of those things: talent mixed with an easy charm; being bigger than life while staying true to your rural roots.

For six decades, Reynolds was a sturdy study in all those things. With a laugh too cool for words.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? BURT REYNOLDS, promoting “The Last Movie Star,” had dramatic chops, but he also knew how to have fun and make fun of himself.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times BURT REYNOLDS, promoting “The Last Movie Star,” had dramatic chops, but he also knew how to have fun and make fun of himself.
 ?? G. Lefkowitz New Line Cinema ?? RICKY JAY, from left, Reynolds and William H. Macy in “Boogie Nights.” Reynolds’ performanc­e as a porn filmmaker earned him his only Oscar nomination.
G. Lefkowitz New Line Cinema RICKY JAY, from left, Reynolds and William H. Macy in “Boogie Nights.” Reynolds’ performanc­e as a porn filmmaker earned him his only Oscar nomination.
 ?? NBC via Getty Images ?? DOM DELUISE, from left, and Reynolds, laugh it up on “The Tonight Show,” hosted by Johnny Carson.
NBC via Getty Images DOM DELUISE, from left, and Reynolds, laugh it up on “The Tonight Show,” hosted by Johnny Carson.

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