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Quaid's Paradise Print E-mail
Homme on the Range

More than once critics have claimed Dennis Quaid's career was over. But with a new family, four new films in 2008, including the soon to be released, Smart People, the actor has never been higher.



quad1.jpg Dennis Quaid is grumpy as hell. When he steps from his BMW 7 Series near the stables at Will Rogers State Historic Park, outside Los Angeles, where he has agreed to do a photo shoot, the absence of his famous grin makes it feel as if someone has closed the blinds on a sunny afternoon. Judging by one of his first announcements—“I hate this shit”— his pearly whites won’t be lighting up anybody’s life on this California winter’s day.

The 53-year-old’s testiness is perplexing considering his recent late career revival—one more in a series of impressive comebacks. Quaid’s been in the business for more than 30 years, and for every success it seems like he’s been counted out of the game at least twice. He was a rising star after Breaking Away and The Right Stuff and then…not much. His first career resurrection began in the late eighties with the release of The Big Easy, followed by D.O.A., Great Balls of Fire!, and Postcards from the Edge. Then came the cocaine crash and burn, rehab, and two years of involuntary retirement. His first couple of films on the way back were nearly straight to video, but when he appeared in Flesh and Bone and Wyatt Earp, it seemed Quaid was back in the saddle of success. Still, the nineties were tough, with the ascendancy of his wife, Meg Ryan, followed by the couple’s all-too-public divorce.

Now, at a time when most aging A-list actors are lucky to get a guest-lecturer’s gig at San Diego Mesa College, Quaid has racked up an impressive string of big parts in the last six years in solid films such as The Rookie, The Alamo, The Day After Tomorrow,and Flight of the Phoenix. He’s fast becoming the American Jude Law, as far as productivity goes: In 2008 alone, he'll star in four films—The Horsemen, Vantage Point, the soon to be released, Smart People, and The Express in the fall. Not bad for, what, his fifth act?

Still, on the set of the shoot in Los Angeles, Quaid is a bit prickly. He lightens up somewhat when his friend Brad shows up with the horses from the stables near Quaid’s house a few blocks away. Brad’s horse, a young, sleek chestnut mare, is right out of central casting, while Quaid’s own little gelding looks like he trotted through a car wash and stood too long under the blower.

“Yeah, he’s all furred up,” Quaid says. “I brought him down from my place in Montana, and he furred up for the winter. Except this winter has been 60 degrees in Pacific Palisades.”

With all the acting jobs of late, Quaid’s been on an enforced absence from his ranch in Montana’s Paradise Valley, possibly another explanation for the grumpiness. Though he jokes that “Montana is nine months of winter and three months of guests,” it’s clear that the ranch is one of the closest things to Quaid’s heart.

“I had done Breaking Away, and I was driving back from Indiana. I went through Montana and as soon as I came out the north side of Yellowstone National Park into that valley, I decided I was going to live there,” he recalls of his 1978 trip. “I was 24. Back then you could buy acreage on the Yellowstone River for, like, $500 an acre. If you could get it now, it would be like $40,000. I bought a place, and then I sold it because I wanted a bigger one. When [actor] Warren Oates, who was a good friend of mine, died, his widow wanted to sell his place, so I bought it.”

 
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