Michael Cera (Michael Austin Cera) è un attore canadese, regista, produttore, musicista, è nato il 7 giugno 1988 a Brampton (Canada). Michael Cera ha oggi 35 anni ed è del segno zodiacale Gemelli.
Gli esordi
Giovane attore nato in Ontario, Micheal Cera è figlio di un padre siciliano (Luigi Cera) e di madre canadese. Inizia la sua carriera al servizio di spot pubblicitari e serie televisive. Appare in show per bambini e presta spesso la voce per cartoni animati (interpretava Little Gizmo in Rolie Polie Olie su Disney Channel negli Stati Uniti nel 1998). Dopo alcune parti in film americani per la tv, come Ulimate Gs (2000) e Steal this movie (2000), approda sul grande schermo con Frequency - Il futuro è in ascolto (2000), thriller fantascientifico con Dennis Quaid.
Il successo con Ti presento i miei
Nel 2001 Michael riceve la sceneggiatura di Ti presento i miei (2003) e partecipa a Hollywood al provino per interpretare George Michael. Il giovane Michael sarà il primo attore ad essere selezionato per la serie, e nonostante la presenza di talenti comici non indifferenti, riuscirà a ritagliarsi uno spazio rilevante nella puntate, soprattutto per le impedibili sequenze familiari imbarazzanti. Lo show viene acclamato da pubblico e critica e vince sei Emmy Awards. Il volto di Michael è ormai lanciato su scala internazionale. Le seconda stagione della serie viene girata nel 2005, ma nel mentre Michael ha avuto il tempo di esibire un talento da commedia ormai confermato. In particolare nell'esordio alla regia di George Clooney: Confessioni di una mente pericolosa (2002) dove interpreta un teen ager sessualmente precoce. Cera scrive al tempo stesso commedie per il web e la CBS impiegherà poco tempo per accorgersene, al punto da offrirgli un contratto già nel 2007 per sviluppare uno show su un suo canale on-line, Innertube, insieme all'attore Clark Duke. Nello stesso anno Cera è tra i protagonisti di SuxBad - 3 menti sopra il pelo, una commedia adolescenziale sulla scia di American Pie che gli permette, ancora una volta, di esibire il suo talento comico. Ancora nel 2007 appare in Juno di Jason Reitman, dove si tratta con estrema leggerezza e senza pregiudizi il tema della gravidanza di un'adolescente, in una commedia fresca e piacevole.
A MICHAEL CERA joke is not a joke at all. Often the laugh comes at the end of the sentence, when Mr. Cera's words have slowed to a dribble, leaving an emptiness filled only by his blank Pez-dispenser face, which is the real punch line.
In Mr. Cera's roles as a devoted baby daddy in “Juno” and a thwarted party seeker in “Superbad,” his muted comedy was his signature. But in real life the dialed-down persona is a little unnerving.
Jason Reitman, who directed him in “Juno,” acknowledged that a chat with the laconic Mr. Cera could be a wee bit off-putting. “Good luck figuring him out,” he said. “I met him when he was 16 and wondered, ‘Is this some kind of bit?' But he's totally sincere, totally kind and inscrutable. He's the dark matter of the universe.”
During the Toronto International Film Festival this month Mr. Cera, 20, showed up for an interview sporting a bright red backpack, his cords hiked high and belted on his hips like a drawstring bag. He came off much like the type of adorable kid eccentric he often plays, a role he will need to age out of if he wants to sustain his career, though maybe not quite yet.
“This is my mom,” he said, as an attractive blond woman waved from the hotel room door and vanished. He sat rod straight and used the phrase “I don't know” 48 times in one hour. But perhaps the vagueness was intentional, a (polite) statement of self-preservation as his latest feature, “Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist,” nears its Oct. 3 opening.
“I don't really want to be famous, and I'm kind of scared that might be happening,” he said. “I might really have to stop and think before I make decisions now, and see how they're going to affect my life, and see if it's what I want to be doing with my life. I guess I need to make sure that it's worth all that comes with it.”
If “it” is celebrity, then “it” is already in motion, and his first official turn as leading man won't halt the acceleration. In this indie variation on a John Hughes movie, his Nick is a newly jilted high school bassist and Kat Dennings's Norah is the infatuated stranger compelled by his mournful homemade CD mixes. One night the pair zigzag through hipster New York (Arlene's Grocery? Check. Devendra Banhart? Check.) seeking a secret rock show and falling for each other.
By the time the shoot began on the streets of New York in November, “Juno” had earned $143 million and “Superbad” $121 million. Mr. Cera was suddenly a star, and fans interrupted filming, shouting, without originality, “Hey, Superbad!” Cut to September 2008: The premiere in Toronto drew a mob, with weeping girls extending cellphone cameras to the sky as Mr. Cera, asparagus thin and smiling nervously, walked the red carpet.
“It's been an intense year for him,” Peter Sollett, the director of “Nick & Norah,” said. “The thing people love about him is he's very open and sensitive, and I think he doesn't want to change, but fame inspires change.”
Mr. Cera is in an continuing struggle with recognition. “It's so strange that people might hate me who have never met me, like people writing on message boards,” he said. “I'm most recognized for ‘Juno.' I don't know if it's good or bad.”
He let loose a long silence. “I think I would have been just as happy if it had just made back what it cost.”
Mr. Cera's celebrity is compounded by the Internet, and small-screen success suits his style: he's a kind of comedic miniaturist. He co-wrote and starred in a Web-only show for CBS called “Clark and Michael,” playing (in a rare jerk role) one of two clueless young actors trying to sell a series in Hollywood. His face is a YouTube mainstay, popping up in dozens of clips like the self-help parody “Impossible Is the Opposite of Possible” (1.5 million views). His fictional firing from “Knocked Up” — he plays himself as an incredibly entitled actor — is one of the most popular downloads on funnyordie.com. But in movies he (like Seth Rogen and Jonah Hill) telegraphs a softer brand of comedy, in which the nerdy guy does the right thing and gets the girl.
“In the '70s and early '80s, comedians reacted to the Sid Caesar era with a down-with-the-system attitude,” Mr. Reitman said. “But in modern comedy there's a return to sweetness. It could even be a reaction to the violence and darkness of Tarantino that the indie has gone vulnerable. It's a great moment for Michael Cera, who's a good Canadian boy.”
Mr. Cera grew up in Brampton, Ontario, a bedroom community outside Toronto. But unlike Nick and Norah, who feel the bright-lights pull of Manhattan from New Jersey, Mr. Cera never hoofed it to Toronto for the urban night life. In his young-curmudgeon way he recoiled at the suggestion: “I can't stand bars. It's too loud, and I get paranoid with a lot of people around. People are very obnoxious in bars. They try and take your picture. There's no discretion.”
Both of Mr. Cera's parents worked for Xerox when he was young. After thriving in a local improv class, he began auditioning for commercials and Canadian television while attending a big public high school. After moving to Los Angeles with his mother, he landed the part of the youngest member of the wealthy Bluth family on the absurdist Fox comedy “Arrested Development.”
“He has a sharp sense of subtlety,” said Jason Bateman, who played his father on that show. “He really trusts that the audience and the camera are watching. The only time I've seen directors giving him notes is when they ask him to do more, and it's usually because that director has a more sophomoric sense of humor than he does.”
Mr. Cera does not employ actor-speak to explain how he works. “Sometimes you just know when something isn't ringing true,” he said. “I like subtlety. I like broad. I just watch people. I've learned a lot on sets.”
He admitted that like many former child actors, he is often more comfortable around adults. While filming “Nick & Norah” he lived in an apartment in the East Village whose windows looked into the home of Mr. Sollett and his girlfriend. Then 19, he had never lived in New York, and he would call the director with questions about where to get toothpaste and if it was safe to walk at night. Mr. Sollett showed him Nick's favorite clubs and bars, though Mr. Cera rarely ventured inside beyond filming. His idea of a good time in Los Angeles, he said, is a restaurant with friends, or a bike ride.
While the man-children of the Judd Apatow clan are in their mid-20s — Mr. Rogen is 26, Mr. Hill 24 — Mr. Cera has always been the child-child in the group. One wonders how that innocence will play out in his adulthood.
“At some point the audience may want something different,” Mr. Bateman said. “But I think there's a misconception that he's not acting.” Maybe, he suggested, Mr. Cera needs to play a tough pimp “to show that he's not just talented by accident.”
Yet Mr. Cera seemed less like a hot new Hollywood property than a young boho guy exploring his options. He recently got his own apartment in Los Angeles after years in hotels (though his base is still his parents' house in Brampton), and he has a short story coming out in McSweeney's, Dave Eggers's literary journal. He talks with something resembling excitement about the band Bishop Allen and the cult comedy series “Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!” (though unlike most fans he has appeared on it). He is finishing the music for “Paper Hearts,” a partly fictional, partly documentary film about the meaning of love that was written by, and stars, Mr. Cera's girlfriend, Charlyne Yi, a comedian who has been compared to Andy Kaufman but is best known as the stoner chick on the couch in “Knocked Up.”
This fact is of interest to the female fans who have turned Mr. Cera into an unlikely sex symbol, the ultimate pinup for Lisa Simpson's imaginary Non-Threatening Boys magazine. “I don't — I can't — that's ridiculous,” he said when the subject came up, reddening a little.
With his highly tuned emotional receptors, it seems fitting that Mr. Cera named Garry Shandling and Woody Allen as two performers whose careers he admires, men who operate a little outside the fold. Insiders who feel like outsiders, they have also made a living off their discomfort, collapsing the distance between who they play and who they are.
But he's not worried about being typecast. “I have no plans,” he said. “I might just try to lay low, or recede. I don't want something not to happen in particular. I'm just taking it slow.”
Da The New York Times, 28 Settembre 2008
È diventato uno degli attori più richiesti nell’industria del cinema. Dopo aver ottenuto grandi consensi per il suo ritratto di George-Michael Bluth nella serie della Fox, vincitrice dell’Emmy Award, Ti presento i miei (Arrested Development), Cera si è ritrovato rapidamente a far parte dell’elite di giovani comici quando Judd Apatow lo ha scelto come protagonista del fortunatissimo film Suxbad
– tre menti sopra il pelo (Superbad). La pellicola, scritta da Seth Rogen & Evan Goldberg, è rimasta in testa al botteghino americano per due settimane di seguito ed è rapidamente diventata uno dei titoli più chiacchierati del 2007. Sulla scia di Suxbad, Cera ha partecipato alla pellicola candidata agli Oscar Juno assieme a Ellen Page e al suo ex collega di Ti presento i miei Jason Bateman.
Ha recentemente terminato le riprese di Youth in Revolt, un film basato sul suo libro preferito, per il regista Miguel Arteta e la Weinstein Company. Inoltre, affiancherà Jack Black nelle pellicola prodotta da Apatow The Year One, per la regia di Harold Ramis. Di recente, ha ottenuto il ruolo del protagonista nell’attesissimo Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, un film tratto dalla graphic novel della Oni Press Scott Pilgrim Volume 1: Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life. Le riprese incominceranno nel 2009, con Edgar Wright come regista.
Cera ha interpretato Chuck Barris da giovane nella pellicola di George Clooney Confessioni di una mente pericolosa (Confessions of a Dangerous Mind) e ha partecipato a Frequency - Il futuro è in ascolto (Frequency) con Dennis Quaid.
In televisione, ha lavorato in Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job, Tom Goes to the Mayor, oltre ad alcune puntate nella serie per famiglie della ABC I Was a Sixth Grade Alien e in The Grubbs della Fox. E’ anche apparso nel popolare telefilm del canale CW Veronica Mars, così come nei film per la televisione Custody of the Heart, Familiar Stranger, Walter and Harry e il premiatissimo My Louisiana Sky. Lo scorso anno, Cera ha lanciato una serie sul sito www.clarkandmichael.com, intitolata Clark and Michael, che ha codiretto, prodotto e interpretato assieme a Clark Duke. La serie ha destato molto interesse ed è stata candidata a diversi Webby Award.
Cera si divide tra Los Angeles e Toronto.