Eddie Murphy has achieved his dream: “I couldn’t wait
to get famous”. Starting out as a stand-up comedian he moved
into acting and became one of Hollywood’s top box office leading
men. Almost every movie Eddie stars in becomes an instant hit.
You might say that comedy was in Eddie’s blood. Born on
April 3, 1961 in Brooklyn, New York, his dad, New York City policeman
Charles Murphy, was an amateur comedian. His mother Lillian, was
a telephone operator. It wasn’t long before Eddie’s
life began changing for the worse. His mom and dad weren’t
getting along and they divorced when Eddie was 3 years old. Five
years later, they heard the news that Eddie’s father had
died. After that the little family, Eddie, his mom and older brother,
Charles, had a really hard time. They struggled financially and
it was during this time that his mother was hospitalized for a
long period of time.
Eddie Murphy’s experience in foster care was a short, but
very important part of his life. He was just eight years old when
he and his brother were sent to a foster home because of his mother’s
illness. Although he stayed in foster care for just about one year,
he credits the experience with helping him develop a sense of humor
and making him realize how important it is to find something to
laugh about in every situation. Murphy and his older brother Charles
were put in the care of a woman whom Eddie calls “a kind
of black Nazi”. “Those were baaaaaad days. Staying
with her was probably the reason I became a comedian.”
When Eddie was nine, his mother remarried and the family was reunited
and moved to Long Island, New York. Eddie spent a lot of time watching
TV and soon began imitating what he was watching. He did imitations
of cartoon characters, such as Bugs Bunny and Tom and Jerry. “My
mother says I never talked in my own voice—always cartoon
characters. Dudley DoRight, Bullwinkle. I used to do Sylvester
the Cat (‘thufferin’thuccotash’) all the time.”
Eddie didn’t care much about school. He was studying, but
not what his teachers had in mind. Developing his comedy skills
was what Eddie wanted to do and he used school to try out his jokes.
He worked on his routines after classes, and in high school became
an expert at “ranking”(a form of witty insults). Eddie
Murphy was the class clown and was voted “most popular” in
his high school. When a teacher showed disapproval about his joking
around, Eddie answered back, “I’m going to be bigger
than Bob Hope”.
At age 15, Eddie hosted a youth center talent show, and was a
big hit with the audience. “Looking out to the audience,
I knew that it was show biz for the rest of my life.”4 Soon
Eddie was doing comedy in some clubs around town. He was earning
between $25 and $50 a night at nightclubs (where he was too young
to use alcohol). It’s no wonder that his schoolwork was suffering.
Instead of doing homework after school, he would be trying out
his routines on his classmates. “My focus was my comedy”.
Eventually it caught up with Eddie and he flunked 10th
grade. “As vain as I was, I don’t have to tell
you what that did to me. Well, I went to summer school,
to night school, I doubled up non classes, and I graduated
only a couple of months late.” In his yearbook, Murphy
declared his career plans: comedian. Here is the quote
he put in the yearbook: “In reality, all men are
sculptors, constantly shipping away the unwanted parts
of their lives, trying to create a masterpiece.”
After high school, Eddie enrolled at community college mostly
to please his mother, but he continued appearing at local clubs.
Eventually he began appearing on the Manhattan comedy circuit where
he learned that NBC-TV’s Saturday Night Live was looking
for a black cast member. After six tries, he earned a spot as an “extra” and
went on to a regular position. He emerged as one of the most popular
members of the SNL cast ever with his popular impersonations of
boxer Muhammad Ali, actor and comedian Bill Cosby, musician Stevie
Wonder, Jerry Lewis and more. Eddie’s stand-up routines were
street-smart with plenty of youthful arrogance, irreverent and
ingenious, full of impish good cheer and peppered with four-letter
words. Unlike others entertainers of that period, however, Eddie
Murphy has always believed in clean living. He avoids alcohol,
tobacco and drugs. He told Barbara Walters: “I’m funny
without narcotics. I don’t have to sniff cocaine to be funny.”
In 1982, Murphy’s album of his stand-up routines received
a Grammy nomination and eventually went gold. The same year, he
got his first motion picture role in the comedy hit 48HRS which
was an instant hit, then followed up with a starring role in Trading
Places. Both popular movies ended up among the top ten grossing
films of 1983. These early successes were followed up by films
which some fans found disappointing, but Eddie’s talent and
drive have served to help him weather the ups and downs of his
career. A recent role as a manic donkey in the animated fairy-tale
spoof Shrek has delighted young and old audiences alike and the
family comedy Daddy Day Care features Eddie as an overwhelmed father.
In 1993 Murphy married model Nicole Mitchell. The couple has four
children together.
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