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Sylvester Stallone Workout Look at the different strategies
Stallone has taken in his workout and fitness goals.
Sylvester Aaron "Sly" Stallone (born July 6, 1946)
is an Academy Award-nominated American actor, director, producer and
screenwriter. One of the biggest box office draws in the world from the
1970s to the 1990s, Sylvester Stallone is an icon of machismo and
Hollywood action heroism. He has played two characters who have become a
part of the American cultural lexicon: Rocky Balboa, the boxer who
overcame all odds to fight for love and glory, and John Rambo, a
courageous soldier who specialized in violent rescue and revenge missions.
During the 1980s, he enjoyed phenomenal popularity and was one of the
biggest movie stars in the world with the Rocky and Rambo franchises.
Stallone's culturally influential films changed pop culture history and he
has largely enjoyed a career on the Hollywood A list for over 30 years.
Stallone's use of the front entrance to the Philadelphia Museum of Art in
the Rocky series led the area to be nicknamed the Rocky Steps. His
popularity in Philadelphia has led to a statue of his Rocky character
being placed permanently near the museum as a cultural landmark. In August
2007, a statue of Rocky was also erected in the Serbian village of Žitište.
Stallone's film Rocky has also been inducted into the National Film
Registry as well as having its film props placed in the Smithsonian Museum
as a national treasure.
Early life
Stallone was born in New York City,[ the son of Frank Stallone, Sr., a
hairdresser, and Jackie Stallone, an astrologer, former dancer and
promoter of women's wrestling. Doctors used forceps during his birth that
severed a nerve and caused paralysis in parts of Stallone's face,
resulting in his signature slurred speech and drooping lower lip.
Stallone's grandfather was an immigrant from Gioia del Colle (in Bari,
Apulia, Italy).[4] Stallone's mother was born in Washington, D.C., the
daughter of a Parisian socialite.
Between the ages of two and five Stallone was boarded in Queens, seeing
his parents only on weekends. In 1951 he returned to live with his parents
in Maryland where they operated a chain of beauty salons. After being
expelled from 233 schools, in 1961 he was enrolled in Devereaux Manor, a
private school for problem children located in Berwyn, Pennsylvania and
following graduation enrolled in a beauty school.
In the 1960s, Stallone dropped out of the beauty school after winning a
scholarship for the American College of Switzerland in Leysin where he
studied drama and was well received in school productions. Returning to
America he enrolled in the Theater Arts Department at University of Miami
for three years. He came within a few credit hours of graduation before he
decided to drop out and pursue a career writing screenplays under the
pseudonyms Q. Moonblood and J.J. Deadlock while at the same time taking
bit parts in movies.
After Stallone's request that his acting and life experiences be accepted
in exchange for his remaining credits, he was granted a Bachelors of Fine
Arts (BFA) degree by the President of the University of Miami in 1999
Early film roles, 1971-1975
Stallone's other first few film roles were minor, and included brief
uncredited appearances in Woody Allen's Bananas (1971) as a subway thug,
in the psychological thriller Klute (1971) as an extra dancing in a club,
and in the Jack Lemmon vehicle The Prisoner of Second Avenue (1975) as a
youth. In the Lemmon film, Jack Lemmon chases, tackles and mugs Stallone,
thinking that Stallone's character is a pickpocket. He had his second
starring role in the cult hit The Lords of Flatbush (1974). In 1975, he
played supporting roles in Farewell, My Lovely, Capone and, another cult
hit, Death Race 2000. He also made guest appearances on the TV series
Police Story and Kojak. Rocky, 1976
Stallone did not gain world-wide fame until his starring role in the smash
hit Rocky (1976). On March 24, 1975, Stallone saw the
Muhammed Ali–Chuck
Wepner fight which inspired the foundation idea of Rocky. That night
Stallone went home, and in three days he had written the script for Rocky.
After that, he tried to sell the script with the intention of playing the
lead role. Robert Chartoff and Irwin Winkler in particular liked the
script (which Stallone submitted to them after a casting), and planned on
courting a star like Burt Reynolds or James Caan for the lead role. Rocky
was nominated for ten Academy Awards in all, including Best Actor and Best
Original Screenplay nominations for Stallone.Rocky, Rambo and new film
roles, 1978-1989

Sylvester Stallone and Ronald Reagan
The sequel Rocky II which Stallone had also written and directed was
released in 1979 and also became a major success, grossing US$200 million.
Apart from the Rocky films, Stallone did many other films in the late
1970s and early 1980s which were critically acclaimed but were not
successful at the box office. He received critical praise for films such
as F.I.S.T. (1978), a social, epic styled drama in which he plays a
warehouse worker who becomes involved in the labor union leadership and
Paradise Alley (1978), a family drama in which he plays one of three
brothers who is a con artist and who helps his other brother who is
involved in wrestling.
In the early 1980s, he starred alongside British veteran Michael Caine in
Escape to Victory (1981), a sports drama in which he plays a prisoner of
war involved in a Nazi propaganda fußball (soccer) tournament. Stallone
then made the action thriller film Nighthawks (1981), in which he plays a
New York city cop who plays a cat and mouse game with a foreign terrorist,
played by Rutger Hauer.
Stallone had another major franchise success as Vietnam veteran John Rambo
in the action adventure film First Blood (1982). The first installment of
Rambo was both a critical and box office success. The critics praised
Stallone's performance, saying he made Rambo seem human as opposed to the
way he is portrayed in the book of the same name, First Blood and in the
other films. Two Rambo sequels Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985) and Rambo
III (1988) followed (and another, Rambo, in 2008). Although box office
hits, they met with much less critical praise than the original. He also
continued his box office success with the Rocky franchise and wrote,
directed and starred in two more sequels to the series: Rocky III (1982)
and Rocky IV (1985).
It was during this time period that Stallone's work cultivated a strong
overseas following. He also attempted, albeit unsuccessfully, roles in
different genres when he wrote and starred in the comedy film Rhinestone
(1984) where he played a wannabe country music singer and the drama film
Over the Top (1987) where he played a truck driver who enters an arm
wrestling competition to impress his estranged son. These films did not do
well at the box office and were poorly received by critics. It was around
1985 that Stallone was signed to a remake of the 1939 James Cagney classic
Angels With Dirty Faces. The film would form part of his multi-picture
deal with Cannon Pictures and was to co-star Christopher Reeve and be
directed by Menahem Golan. The re-making of such a beloved classic was met
with disapproval by Variety Magazine and horror by top critic Roger Ebert
and so Cannon opted to make Cobra instead. Cobra (1986) and Tango and Cash
(1989) did solid business domestically but overseas they did blockbuster
business grossing over $100 million in foreign markets and over $160
million worldwide. The Rocky and Rambo franchises at the end of the decade
were billion dollar franchises internationally.
1990-2002 With the then recent success
of Lock Up and Tango and Cash, at the start of the 1990s Stallone starred
in the fifth installment of the Rocky franchise Rocky V which was
considered a box office disappointment and was also disliked by fans as an
unworthy entry in the series. It was intended to have been the last
installment in the franchise at the time.
After starring in the critical and commercial disasters Oscar (1991) and
Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot (1992) during the early 90s, he made a major
comeback in 1993 with the blockbuster hit Cliffhanger which became an
enormously successful film grossing over US$255 million worldwide. Later
that year he enjoyed another hit with the futuristic action film
Demolition Man which grossed in excess of $158 million worldwide. His
string of hits continued with 1994's The Specialist (over $170 million
worldwide gross).
In 1995, he played the comic book based title character Judge Dredd who
was taken from the popular British comic book 2000 AD in the film of the
same name. His overseas box office appeal saved the domestic box office
disappointment of Judge Dredd with a worldwide tally of $113 million. He
also appeared in the thriller Assassins (1995) with co stars Julianne
Moore and Antonio Banderas. In 1996, he starred in the disaster film
Daylight which made only $33 million in the U.S but was a major hit
overseas taking in over $126 million, totalling $159,212,469 worldwide.
Following his breakthrough performance in Rocky, critic Roger Ebert had
once said Stallone could become the next
Marlon
Brando, though he never quite recaptured the critical acclaim achieved
with Rocky. Stallone did, however, go on to receive much acclaim for his
role in the crime drama Cop Land (1997) in which he starred alongside
Robert De Niro and Ray Liotta, but the film was only a minor success at
the box office. His performance led him to win the Stockholm International
Film Festival Best Actor Award. In 1998 he did voice-over work for the
computer-animated film Antz, which grossed over 90 million domestically.
As the new millennium began, Stallone starred in the thriller Get Carter —
a remake of the 1971 British Michael Caine film of the same name—but the
film was poorly received by both critics and audiences. Stallone's career
declined considerably after his subsequent films Driven (2001), Avenging
Angelo (2002) and D-Tox (2002) also underachieved expectations to do well
at the box office and were poorly received by critics.
In 2000, Stallone received a special "Worst Actor of the Century" Razzie
award, citing "95% of Everything He's Ever Done" rather than an individual
movie. By 2000, Stallone had been awarded four Worst Actor Razzie awards
for individual movies, a "Worst Screen Couple" Razzie, and a "Worst Actor
of the Decade" Razzie for the 1980s. He had been nominated for the Worst
Actor award for nine consecutive years from 1984 to 1992.
2003-2005
In 2003, he played a villainous role in the third installment of the Spy
Kids trilogy Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over which was a huge box office success
(almost $200 million worldwide). Stallone also had a cameo appearance in
the 2003 French film Taxi 3 as a passenger.
Following several poorly reviewed box office flops, Stallone started to
regain prominence for his supporting role in the neo-noir crime drama
Shade (2003) which was a box office failure but was praised by critics. He
was also attached to star and direct a film about the murder of rappers
Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls, entitled Notorious, but the film was
shelved due to legal issues presented by the 2009 film of the same name.
In 2005, he was the co-presenter alongside Sugar Ray Leonard of the NBC
Reality television boxing series The Contender. That same year he also
made a guest appearance in two episodes of the television series Las
Vegas. In 2005, Stallone also inducted wrestling icon Hulk Hogan, who
appeared in Rocky III as a
wrestler named Thunderlips, into the WWE Hall of Fame; Stallone was
also the person who offered Hogan the cameo in Rocky III.
Revisiting Rocky and Rambo, 2006-2008
After a few years hiatus from films, Stallone made a comeback in 2006 with
the sixth and final installment of his successful Rocky series; Rocky
Balboa, which was both a critical and commercial hit. After the critical
and box office failure of the previous and presumed last installment Rocky
V, Stallone had decided to end the series with a sixth installment which
would be a more appropriate climax to the series. The total domestic box
office came to $70.3 million (and $155.3 million worldwide). The budget of
the movie was only $24 million. His performance in Rocky Balboa has been
praised and garnered mostly positive reviews.
Stallone's newest release is the fourth installment of his other
successful movie franchise, Rambo, with the sequel being titled simply
Rambo. The film opened in 2,751 theaters on January 25, 2008, grossing
$6,490,000 on its opening day and $18,200,000 over its opening weekend.
Its current box office stands at $42,653,401 in the US and $112,481,829
worldwide.
Asked in February 2008 which of the icons he would rather be remembered
for, Stallone said "it's a tough one, but Rocky is my first baby, so
Rocky." Upcoming films
Currently, Stallone is working a film titled The Expendables, for which he
will star, write and direct. Joining him in the film will be
Jason
Statham, Jet
Li,
Dolph Lundgren, Mickey Rourke, Ben Kingsley and Forest Whitaker.
Stallone has also mentioned that he'd like to adapt a Nelson DeMille
novel, The Lions Game. In addition, Stallone has continued to express his
passion in directing a film on Edgar Allan Poe's life, a script he has
been preparing for years. It has also recently been confirmed that
Stallone will be making a fifth Rambo film after the success of the fourth
one in 2008. Other Work
Stallone's debut as a director came in 1978 with
Paradise Alley, which he also wrote and starred in. In addition, he
directed Staying Alive (the sequel to Saturday Night Fever), along with
Rocky II, Rocky III, Rocky IV, Rocky Balboa, and Rambo. In August 2005,
Stallone released his book
Sly Moves which claimed to be a guide to fitness and nutrition as well
as a candid insight into his life and works from his own perspective. The
book also contained many photographs of Stallone throughout the years as
well as pictures of him performing exercises. In addition to writing all
six Rocky films, Stallone also wrote Cobra, Driven and Rambo. He has
co-written several other films, such as F.I.S.T., Rhinestone, Over the Top
and the first three Rambo films. His last major success as a co-writer
came with 1993's Cliffhanger. Competition
with Arnold Schwarzenegger
Stallone has been long considered as a chief competitor to
Arnold Schwarzenegger as an action hero actor. References to this have
been made in both of their films. In Schwarzenegger's Last Action Hero,
Stallone is depicted as playing the Terminator in a video advertisement in
the film's alternate reality. In Stallone's Demolition Man, there is a
futuristic reference to the Arnold Schwarzenegger Presidential Library.
Also in the movie Twins, Arnold Schwarzenegger walks by a giant movie
poster for Rambo III. He glances at the size of Stallone's biceps on the
poster then feels his own and laughs at how much smaller Stallone's are.
According to both Stallone and Schwarzenegger, despite their on camera
"rivalry", the duo are actually very close friends. Stallone revealed on
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (while promoting the films Rocky Balboa and
Rambo) that he and Schwarzenegger looked at each other, in the 1980s, as
"Cain and Abel." Stallone then said that, in the 1990s, he and Arnold
became the friends they are today. They became one time business partners
in Planet Hollywood and they hold similar political beliefs; both men are
supporters of the Republican Party and endorsed John McCain for
President. |