9 Milestones in the Evolution of Kevin Spacey

In this weekend's Horrible Bosses, Kevin Spacey plays Jason Bateman's sadistic supervisor, a business director so despicable that he kind of deserves the extreme punishment Batemen, Jason Sudeikis and Charlie Day would like to inflict. How did Spacey transform himself from the guy simply credited as "Subway Thief" in Mike Nichols' Heartburn to a two-time Oscar winner and summer blockbuster draw?

You can always trace a direct line through a few important roles to illustrate what led to an actor's current success. So let's look at nine pivotal performances that track the evolution of Kevin Spacey.

Working Girl (1988)

After studying drama at Julliard, the New Jersey-born actor cut his acting teeth on Broadway in Henrik Ibsen's Ghosts, Molière's The Misanthrope and Anton Chekhov's The Seagull before landing a career-changing role in Mike Nichols' production of David Rabe's Hurlyburly. The legendary director was so pleased with Spacey's performance that he gave him his first film role (as the aforementioned "Subway Thief") in Heartburn before casting him in the (short but) memorable part as a lascivious, coke-sniffing businessman who comes onto Melanie Griffith in the 80's classic Working Girl.

Wiseguy (1988)

How about this for an impressive early career performance? While the actor was making the first of many jumps from stage to screen with the help of Mike Nichols, Spacey also tried his hand at television. After a few forgettable roles, Spacey landed a recurring part on the CBS drama series Wiseguy which allowed the actor to give the public a taste of the criminal/morally corrupt characters he would portray in years to come. Enjoy this reintroduction to a 29-year-old Spacey, who puts other actor's early-career performances to sizable shame as Mel Profitt, an insane multi-billionaire/criminal mastermind.

Glengarry Glen Ross (1992)

After scoring his first leading feature role in that year's Consenting Adults opposite Kevin Kline and Rebecca Miller, Spacey merged his love of theater with his film career in James Foley's adaptation of David Mamet's Tony-winning play. As the "unblinking and cold" office manager John Williamson -- a precursor for his Horrible Bosses character -- Spacey received glowing reviews.

The Usual Suspects (1995)

It wasn't until Bryan Singer's neo-noir Usual Suspects, though, that Spacey broke out as a full-fledged star with his Oscar-winning role as Roger "Verbal" Kint. Critics called his performance "balls-out brilliant" as the small town conman whose twisting, cunning confession is the backbone of the ensemble film. Spacey followed this screen triumph up with David Fincher's Se7en that same year, as creepy, sin-obsessed murderer John Doe.

American Beauty (1999)

And then came the role that Spacey is probably best known for, the midlife crisis-bound Lester Burnham in Sam Mendes's critically celebrated American Beauty. Although DreamWorks reportedly wanted Mendes to search for more bankable actors, the director insisted on Spacey, who would end up taking home one of the film's five Academy Awards the next year for his powerhouse performance, which the actor and director loosely based on Jack Lemmon's character in The Apartment.

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Comments

  • epochd says:

    Nothing like an editorial article completely lacking a point of view.
    'At this point in his career, Kevin Spacey could probably play vindictive characters in his sleep but thirty-odd years after making his big screen debut, each performance is still a moviegoer treat'
    I feel like i just read an article in parade magazine.

  • jillian says:

    'Mixed reviews'!? Pay It Forward was a punchline when it came out.
    I've never been a huge lisa schwarzbaum EW fan, but i'll never forget her evisceration (along w/most major critics) of that movie.

  • Duane says:

    Hopper in "A Bug's Life." One of his best performances, and easily better than nearly every role you mention here. Shame.

  • Anon says:

    I can't believe they only mentioned Se7en in passing! That is one of my favorite roles! That along with Hopper, as Duane mentioned.

  • John says:

    What a horrible article. Julie - Do us a favor, and watch 'Swimming With Sharks'. He played his latest role brilliantly 20 years ago. Great range, but no evolution. He had the talent years ago.

  • Southern Southpaw says:

    Um, L.A. Confidential should have been on this list.

  • Olivia says:

    glad to see that Usual Suspects and American Beauty made the list.. disappointed to see that se7en wasn't included.