1954–1966: Early roles in an April 1957 promotional photograph for an episode of the
ABC television series
Conflict Hopper was reported to have had an uncredited role in
Johnny Guitar in 1954, but he was quoted as saying he was not in Hollywood when the film was made. Hopper made his debut on film in two roles with
James Dean (whom he admired immensely) in
Rebel Without a Cause (1955) and
Giant (1956). Dean's death in a car accident in September 1955 affected the young Hopper deeply and it was shortly afterward that he got into a confrontation with veteran director
Henry Hathaway on the film
From Hell to Texas (1958). Hopper reportedly forced Hathaway to shoot more than 80 takes of a scene over several days before he acquiesced to Hathaway's direction. After filming was finally completed, Hathaway allegedly told Hopper that his career in Hollywood was finished. In his book
Last Train to Memphis, American popular music historian
Peter Guralnick says that in 1956, when
Elvis Presley was making his first film in Hollywood, Hopper was roommates with fellow actor
Nick Adams and the three became friends and socialized together. In 1959, Hopper moved to New York to study
Method acting under
Lee Strasberg at the
Actors Studio. In 1961, Hopper played his first lead role in
Night Tide, an atmospheric supernatural thriller involving a mermaid in an amusement park. In a December 1994 interview on the
Charlie Rose Show, Hopper credited
John Wayne with saving his career, as Hopper acknowledged that because of his insolent behavior, he could not find work in Hollywood for seven years. Hopper stated that, because of his marriage to Brooke Hayward, he was the son-in-law of actress
Margaret Sullavan, a friend of John Wayne, and Wayne hired Hopper for a role in
The Sons of Katie Elder (1965), also directed by Hathaway, which enabled Hopper to restart his film career. Hopper debuted in an episode of the
Richard Boone television series
Medic in 1955, portraying a young
epileptic. He appeared in the first episode of the TV series
The Rifleman (1958–1963) as the troubled orphan protagonist Vernon Tippet who is exploited by his greedy uncle. The series starred
Chuck Connors and the premiere episode "The Sharpshooter" was written by
Sam Peckinpah. Hopper subsequently appeared in over 140 episodes of television shows such as
Gunsmoke,
Bonanza,
Petticoat Junction,
The Twilight Zone,
The Barbara Stanwyck Show,
The Defenders,
The Investigators,
The Legend of Jesse James,
Entourage,
The Big Valley,
The Time Tunnel, and
Combat!.
1967–1986: Breakthrough and acclaim in 1970, during editing of
The Last Movie Hopper had a supporting role as the bet-taker, "Babalugats", in
Cool Hand Luke (1967). In 1968, Hopper teamed with
Peter Fonda,
Terry Southern and
Jack Nicholson to make
Easy Rider, which premiered in July 1969. With the release of
True Grit a month earlier, Hopper had starring roles in two major box-office films that summer. Hopper won wide acclaim as the director for his improvisational methods and innovative editing for
Easy Rider. The production was plagued by creative differences and personal acrimony between Fonda and Hopper, the dissolution of Hopper's marriage to
Brooke Hayward, his unwillingness to leave the editor's desk and his accelerating abuse of drugs and alcohol. Hopper said of
Easy Rider: "The cocaine problem in the United States is really because of me. There was no cocaine before
Easy Rider on the street. After
Easy Rider, it was everywhere". Besides showing drug use on film, it was one of the first films to portray the hippie lifestyle. Hopper became a
role model for some male youths who rejected traditional jobs and traditional American culture, partly exemplified by Fonda's long sideburns and Hopper wearing shoulder-length hair and a long mustache. They were denied rooms in motels and proper service in restaurants as a result of their radical looks. Their long hair became a point of contention in various scenes during the film. Film critic Matthew Hays wrote "no other persona better signifies the lost idealism of the 1960s than that of Dennis Hopper". Hopper was unable to capitalize on his
Easy Rider success for several years. In 1970 he filmed
The Last Movie, cowritten by
Stewart Stern and photographed by
László Kovács in Peru, and completed production in 1971. It won the prestigious CIDALC Award at that year's Venice Film Festival, but Universal Studios leaders expected a blockbuster like
Easy Rider, and did not like the film or give it an enthusiastic release, while American film audiences found it confounding – as convoluted as an abstract painting. On viewing the first release print, fresh from the lab, in his screening room at Universal,
MCA founder
Jules C. Stein rose from his chair and said, "I just don't understand this younger generation." During the tumultuous editing process, Hopper ensconced himself at the
Mabel Dodge Luhan House in Taos, New Mexico, which he had purchased in 1970, for almost an entire year. In between contesting Fonda's rights to the majority of the residual profits from
Easy Rider, he married singer
Michelle Phillips of
The Mamas and the Papas on
Halloween of 1970. The marriage lasted eight days. Hopper acted in another John Wayne film,
True Grit (1969), and during its production, he became well acquainted with Wayne. In both of the films with Wayne, Hopper's character is killed in the presence of Wayne's character, to whom he utters his dying words. On September 30, 1970, Hopper appeared on the second episode of season 2 of
The Johnny Cash Show where he sang a duet with Cash entitled "Goin' Up Goin' Down". Cash said the song was written by
Kris Kristofferson about Hopper. Hopper added that Kristofferson had written some songs for his Peruvian-shot movie
The Last Movie, in which Kristofferson appeared in his debut role with
Julie Adams. Hopper also recited
Rudyard Kipling's famous poem
If— during his appearance. Hopper was able to sustain his lifestyle and a measure of celebrity by acting in numerous
low budget and European films throughout the 1970s as the archetypal "tormented maniac", including
Mad Dog Morgan (1976),
Tracks (1976), and
The American Friend (1977). With
Francis Ford Coppola's blockbuster
Apocalypse Now (1979), Hopper returned to prominence as a hyper-manic Vietnam-era photojournalist. Stepping in for an overwhelmed director, Hopper won praise in 1980 for his directing and acting in
Out of the Blue. Immediately thereafter, Hopper starred as an addled short-order cook "Cracker" in the
Neil Young/
Dean Stockwell low-budget collaboration
Human Highway. Production was reportedly often delayed by his unreliable behavior.
Peter Biskind states in the
New Hollywood history
Easy Riders, Raging Bulls that Hopper's cocaine intake had reached three grams a day by this time, complemented by 30 beers, and some marijuana and
Cuba libres. After staging a "suicide attempt" (really more of a daredevil act) in a coffin using 17 sticks of dynamite during an "art happening" at the Rice University Media Center (filmed by professor and documentary filmmaker Brian Huberman), and later disappearing into the Mexican desert during a particularly extravagant bender, Hopper entered a
drug rehabilitation program in 1983. Though Hopper gave critically acclaimed performances in Coppola's
Rumble Fish (1983) and
Sam Peckinpah's
The Osterman Weekend (1983), it was not until he portrayed the gas-huffing, obscenity-screaming villain
Frank Booth in
David Lynch's
Blue Velvet (1986) that his career truly revived. On reading the script Hopper said to Lynch: "You have to let me play Frank Booth. Because I am Frank Booth!" He won critical acclaim and several awards for this role, and in the same year received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his role as an alcoholic assistant basketball coach in
Hoosiers. Also in 1986, Hopper portrayed Lt. Enright in the
comedy horror The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2.
1987–2010: Later work and final roles in 1990 In 1987 he acted in the
neo-noir thriller
Black Widow alongside
Debra Winger, the action comedy
Straight to Hell, the adventure film
Running Out of Luck starring
Mick Jagger and the romantic comedy
The Pick-up Artist starring
Molly Ringwald and
Robert Downey Jr. In 1988, he directed
Colors, a critically acclaimed
police procedural about gang violence in Los Angeles starring
Sean Penn and
Robert Duvall. Hopper plays an aging hippie prankster in the 1990 comedy
Flashback, fleeing in a
Furthur-like old bus to the tune of Steppenwolf's "
Born to Be Wild". Hopper teamed with Nike in the early 1990s to make a series of television commercials. He appeared as a "crazed referee" in those ads. Hopper appeared on the final two episodes of the cult 1991 television show
Fishing with John with host
John Lurie. He was nominated for the
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie for the 1991 HBO film
Paris Trout. Shortly thereafter, he played drug smuggler and
DEA informant
Barry Seal in the HBO film
Doublecrossed. He starred as
King Koopa in
Super Mario Bros., a 1993 critical and commercial failure loosely based on the video game of the same name, although the film and his role would eventually find a cult following. In 1999, he starred in ''The Prophet's Game
(a dark thriller), directed by David Worth and also starring Stephanie Zimbalist, Robert Yocum, Sondra Locke, Joe Penny and Tracey Birdsall. In 2003, Hopper was in the running for the dual lead in the indie horror drama Firecracker'', but was ousted at the last minute in favor of
Mike Patton. In 2005, Hopper played Paul Kaufman in George A. Romero's
Land of the Dead. He portrayed villain
Victor Drazen in the first season of the action drama
24. Hopper starred as a U.S. Army colonel in the 2005 television series
E-Ring, a drama set at
The Pentagon, but the series was canceled after 14 episodes aired. Hopper appeared in all 22 episodes that were filmed. He also played the part of record producer Ben Cendars in the Starz television series
Crash, which lasted two seasons (26 episodes). In 2008, Hopper starred in
An American Carol. In 2008 he also played The Death in
Wim Wenders'
Palermo Shooting. His last major feature film appearance was in the 2008 film
Elegy with
Ben Kingsley,
Penélope Cruz and
Debbie Harry. For his last performance, he was the voice of Tony, the alpha-male of the Eastern wolf pack in the 2010 animated film
Alpha and Omega. He died before the movie was released. This brought the directors to dedicate the film to his memory at the beginning of the movie credits. Hopper filmed scenes for
The Other Side of the Wind in 1971, appearing as himself; after decades of legal, financial and technical delays, the film was finally released on
Netflix in 2018. ==Photography and art==