Today's episode of Sounds of Cinema featured a look back at the career of Robin Williams, who passed away on August 11, 2014. As an actor, his career was uneven, with very good titles offset by some very bad ones. But unlike a lot of other comics who made the transition to the silver screen, Robin Williams was a terrific actor and he did drama and comedy equally well. In time most of his lesser works will fade away and what we will be left with are some extraordinary films and performances. 
Robin Williams was born in 1951 in Chicago and grew up in  Illinois, Michigan, and later in California. After high school he attended  Claremont McKenna College but left when he was awarded a scholarship to attend  Julliard School in New York City, where his classmates included actors Christopher  Reeve and William Hurt. Williams never finished his studies at Julliard and  dropped out in his junior year to pursue work in standup comedy. 
Williams began performing standup in the mid-1970s.  His appearances attracted the attention of TV producer George Schlatter who  recruited Williams to appear on a reboot of Laugh-In in 1977. Although Laugh-In wasn’t a  big success, his appearance on that show as well as his live stand up work  caught the attention of the producers of the television show Happy Days. They had a special episode  in mind in which Fonzie (Henry Winkler) met an alien named Mork. With Williams  in the guest star role, the interaction between Fonzie and Mork was television  gold and led to the spinoff sitcom series Mork  and Mindy, which premiered in 1982 and aired for four seasons. This show  turned Robin Williams into a star.
After making his big screen debut in Robert Altman's Popeye in 1980, Robin Williams' was cast as the  lead in 1982’s The World According to  Garp. Based on the novel by John Irving, Williams plays an aspiring writer  who has a complicated relationship with his mother and her friends and  acquaintances.  This film is uneven but the  role offered an early indication of Williams’ potential as an actor. Although  he was a comic genius on the stage, most of Williams’ greatest cinematic  performances were primarily in dramatic roles. 
Following his role in The  World According to Garp in 1982, Robin Williams continued to get work as an  actor but he was cast in mostly forgettable movies like Moscow on the Hudson (1984) and Club  Paradise (1986).  Although his film  work at this point wasn’t especially impressive, Williams continued to perform  on stage including several televised standup comedy specials and regular  appearances on television talk shows. This was where Robin Williams really made  his mark. The free form style of standup played to Williams’ strengths as a  performer and allowed him to unleash his associative, fast paced, and anarchic  comic style. This standup work cultivated Robin Williams’ public image as an unpredictable  and subversive comedic force and that set the stage for him to give the  performance in the film that, above all others, defines and encapsulates his talents: Good Morning Vietnam. 
If  Robin Williams’ filmography had to be condensed to a single motion picture,  Good Morning, Vietnam is it. The first half of the movie showcases his comedy and, if it’s not  obvious from the movie itself, much of Williams’ on-air bits were of the  actor’s own making. The comedy  of Robin Williams is most widely recognized for its maniacal energy and free  association but there is another critical aspect to his style and it’s very  important to Good Morning, Vietnam.  Williams’ comedy possessed a dark undercurrent. He regularly made his own  struggles with depression and substance abuse a part of his act and in this  movie he is able to take the war that is going on just out of sight—and is  gradually creeping closer to the radio station—and puts a comic spin on it. Although the first half of Good Morning, Vietnam is quite funny and even though the movie is  frequently categorized as a comedy, it features a stunning reversal in its  second half as Adrian Cronauer faces the devastation of the war. After this  reversal, Robin Williams is called upon to deliver a performance in the second  half of the movie that is as dramatic as the first half was humorous and the  actor does that by conveying a tremendous amount of pathos without resorting to  sentimentality. As Cronauer, Robin Williams plays a moral person in a situation  where moral distinctions are blurred. It’s that juxtaposition and entanglement  of comedy and tragedy that makes Good  Morning, Vietnam the essential Robin Williams feature film.
Following the success of Good Morning, Vietnam, Robin Williams had a series of dramatic  roles during the late 1980s and early 90s that constitute some of his best work  including his performances in 1990’s Awakenings and 1991’s The Fisher King. Among  this run of dramatic roles, most iconic was his portrayal of English professor  John Keating in 1989’s Dead Poets Society.  Williams played a poetry instructor whose passion and unorthodox teaching style  puts him at odds with school administration while inspiring his students. The  movie is more than a little sentimental but it’s also a favorite among Williams’  fans and in news reports of his death it was one of the titles most frequently sampled. The fact that the movie earned nearly $100 million domestically  in 1989 is extraordinary when you remember that it’s a movie about poetry. 
Throughout the 1990s Robin Williams’ career turned  another corner and he became a fixture of family movies. Throughout the decade  he had parts in movies like Hook, Aladdin, Ferngully, Toys, Mrs. Doubtfire, and Jumanji. Critical reactions to these movies were mixed but they  were extremely profitable. At the time it seemed strange that a performer who  had worked on such prestigious films as Good  Morning, Vietnam and Dead Poet’s  Society and whose humor was often very blue would work on what were  disparagingly regarded as kid’s films. But in retrospect Williams’ involvement  makes perfect sense. Even in his later years, Robin Williams had a youthful  vitality and a rebellious comic sense that was perfect for a young audience. In  the wake of Williams’ death, Salon  columnist Daniel D’Addario wrote that Robin Williams was one of the most  important figures in the childhood of the millennial generation. 
Among the many family films that Robin Williams  participated in, one of the most popular was his role as the genie in Disney’s Aladdin. This particular film stands out  not only among Williams’ family pictures but among his filmography as a whole.  There was an inherent conundrum to Robin Williams’ acting career. He was at his  best when he was allowed to improvise but filmmaking generally does not allow  for that and the craft requires actors to hit their marks and stay within the  boundaries of the script. Those restrictions, combined with Williams’ tendency  to overwhelm his fellow performers, sometimes held the actor back. With Aladdin, Williams voiced a character who  was able to bend with the actor’s riffs and many critics have remarked that  animation was the only form that was able to keep up with his talents.   
When Robin Williams wasn’t making family movies he was  generally either doing standup shows or he was in dramas in which he played  sensitive professionals as in Awakenings and Dead Poets Society. However,  Williams also had the capacity to play villainous characters. Supposedly he  lobbied for the role of The Joker in 1989’s Batman,  although that part ultimately went to Jack Nicholson. Williams had just a few  villainous role in his career but they were distinguished and coincidentally all  were in films released in 2002. In the black comedy Death to Smoochy, Robin Williams starred opposite Edward Norton as  competitive hosts of a children’s television program. He was also cast as a murder  suspect in Christopher Nolan’s Insomnia and that same year he played an obsessive film developer in One Hour Photo. Williams’ work on One Hour Photo would be one of the most  praised of his career. Although this foray into villainy was limited, it’s  another indication of Robin Williams’ impressive range as an actor. 
One of Robin Williams last great roles came in his collaboration with Bobcat Goldthwait in 2009's World's Greatest Dad. The film channels several of Williams' previous films including Good Morning, Vietnam, Death to Smoochy, and Dead Poets Society but as disjointed as that combination sounds the film works as an audacious black comedy. The taboo subject matter was indicative of Williams' willingness to take creative risks. 
Comedians are not generally recognized by the Hollywood  awards circuit unless they circumvent their comic image and play a dramatic  role. Robin Williams had been alternately taking roles in comedic and dramatic  films for his entire career so it was not a tremendous surprise when he took on  the role of a psychologist in 1998’s Good  Will Hunting. The role was not altogether different from parts he had  played before in movies like Awakenings and Dead Poets Society but Williams’  fame helped shine a light on a movie that audiences might otherwise have passed on.  The film was one of the most celebrated projects of Robin Williams’ career and  he was given an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. 
In his final years, Robin Williams was involved in work  of all kinds from vocal performances in the Happy  Feet movies to sitcom work on The  Crazy Ones to dramatic roles in The  Butler as well as packing auditoriums with his standup comedy shows. In  life, and now in memory, he remains one of the most iconic and singular talents  in the history of Hollywood. 
Since news of his death went public there has been a  tremendous show of grief from those who knew him and from those who appreciated  his work. Robin Williams was one of the greats and the outpouring of tributes  from such a wide swath of voices is a testament to that greatness. Along with Charlie Chaplin, Williams was  the essential tragic clown and his ability as a comic to make audiences laugh  at the troubles of our lives, including the violence and madness of the world,  as well as his ability as an actor to imbue his characters with such pathos and  empathy, made him a rare talent. His work was a paradoxical combination of caustic  anarchism and emphatic humanism. The connection that audiences had with  Williams was due—at least in part—to his acknowledgement of the pain that is  inherent to being alive. Robin Williams’ death was so devastating to so many  because he was able to take that pain and turn it into laughter. 
Robin Williams is gone and the world feels less  funny without him. But while mourning the loss is appropriate, lives ought to  be judged upon what’s left behind. In Robin Williams’ case he’s left us an  impressive body of work, much of which is destined to last the test of time.  And in that sense, the joy that Robin Williams brought as a comic, an actor,  and a performer is immortal and will outlive our own transitory pain.
 
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