Norman Reedus: True Tales of The Walking Dead’s Zombie Hunter - An Unauthorized Biography
By Marc Shapiro
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About this ebook
Where does reality stop and fantasy begin? In the case of The Walking Dead superstar Norman Reedus, the question is still very much up in the air.
His Daryl Dixon is a very flawed, psychologically scarred character in a zombie-infested world. And there is much in his portrayal that is informed by a real life that is equally flawed and equally scarred. In Norman Reedus: An Unauthorized Biography: True Tales of the Walking Dead’s Zombie Hunter, the first detailed look at Norman Reedus’ life and times, you will get it all. The good, the bad and the ugly.
This book chronicles his days as a defiant young man in a fractured but ultimately liberating family life, allegations of physical abuse from Reedus himself, to his struggles in the Los Angeles art underground, alcohol problems that saw him in AA and, for a time, homeless, his breakthrough in acting, modeling and the slow, steady and never boring journey through love, fatherhood and his often truly odd professional choices. You’ll discover why Reedus said thanks but no thanks to an offer to play opposite a reigning superstar, how he became Daryl Dixon and how The Walking Dead changed his life.
Oh yes, there is that penchant for roadkill.
New York Times Bestselling author Marc Shapiro has dug deep, tracking down people who knew him way back when as well as in the here and now for original interviews. They were willing to talk and they revealed stories about Reedus that even the most fanatic fans won’t know. The author’s research was relentless, digging into deep, dark and obscure corners. Norman Reedus’ world is about real life wrapped around a world of fantasy. Norman Reedus: The Unauthorized Biography: True Tales of the Walking Dead’s Zombie Hunter pulls no punches, tells only the truth and leaves the rest up to the reader.
Which ultimately is the way Norman Reedus would want it.
Marc Shapiro
Marc Shapiro is the New York Times bestselling author of J.K. Rowling: The Wizard behind Harry Potter, Justin Bieber: The Fever! and many other bestselling celebrity biographies. He has been a freelance entertainment journalist for more than twenty-five years, covering film, television and music for a number of national and international newspapers and magazines.
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Norman Reedus - Marc Shapiro
THIRD IS THE NEW FIRST
Okay here’s the quick and dirty of it. Norman Reedus was a last minute addition to the cast of the always daring AMC’s latest television series The Walking Dead in 2010 just as the gut-munching show was about to launch its inaugural season. He had been auditioning for an existing character but, when that did not pan out, the producers of the show had been so hypnotized by his sullen, introverted and powerful anti-hero ways that they created the role of crossbow master/uber zombie fighter Daryl Dixon literally out of whole cloth and a group of screenwriters fell all over themselves to write for him.
The gods and/or the Hollywood tastemakers (aren’t they one and the same?) take a shine to his ability to kick zombie ass, wax loner in the classic Garbo/Easy Rider sense and project a sexual question mark leaning precariously close to gay while basically seeing the world through a jaundiced, albeit ruggedly individual squint that even the most supportive observers of Reedus have often described as the look of a junkie long past his last fix.
But enough of the preliminaries. The bottom line was that Norman Reedus had, on the strength of playing a hard-bitten survivor in a zombie-infested land, risen from the ashes of a resume that was never less than interesting nor more than obscure to become the next hot commodity in aisle seven of the Hollywood Meat Market. And it was not only the horror and geek mags who took notice. The slick monthlies and all branches of mainstream media had also bought in to this sullen but magnetic actor. All the pop culture dots were being connected.
It was time to unleash the literary hounds.
The first of the paperback originals out of the box were slim affairs, ravaging Wikipedia and the first wave of magazine articles for cut and paste quickies that barely squeaked into double page count length. At this point let me make it plain that I am not above cut and paste (or as we refer to it in the business ‘research and good journalism’) but only as a last resort when nobody is talking on the record or is asking for money to jog their memory. And I have no problem with somebody getting it out there first, even if it’s not me.
The reality is that the first book out on a currently hot celebrity does, with rare exception, end up selling the most copies. Second or even third out of the gate? I’ve been an also ran in a couple of those races and I can honestly say that it was not pretty.
And so my publisher at Riverdale Avenue Books and I were cautiously optimistic one day when we were tossing around ideas and Norman Reedus came up. I had read up on the actor to the point where I could spot nuggets of life experience that had just plain down and out either been ignored completely or glossed over in a sentence. And it went without saying that I was a fan of the show. I sensed that if people could be found who were willing to talk about Reedus, being third out of the box, figuratively speaking, might be the new first. My publisher agreed to the point where she said she would greenlight the book if I could guarantee enough original voices to fill out what had, to that point, become a fairly familiar tale.
Thus was born Norman Reedus: True Tales of The Walking Dead’s Zombie Hunter, a very unauthorized but very real
look at the cool cat with the crossbow who dispatches the undead so we can get our television kicks. This is not a spoiler alert but I can tell you this: I did find people. They did talk. And, considering that, in a couple of cases, I literally surprised them with unexpected phone calls from the other side of the country, they were quite cooperative and candid in clueing me to Norman Reedus’ life. There was also a lot of ‘research and good journalism’ thrown in for good measure. Norman Reedus had taken to sudden stardom like a pro and had made himself available to the press seemingly at every turn. Some interviewers went for the lazy and obvious softballs which Norman deftly handled. Those who dug a bit deeper were also rewarded in kind.
But Norman Reedus was nothing if not a difficult fish to land. Especially when it came to pivotal moments in his life. You see Norman has this habit of changing up history to serve his memory of what happened or to just change things up for the sake of drama. Consequently, there are often maddening moments when Norman, or perhaps the journalist chronicling his life, just can’t seem to come to a consensus of opinion. This necessitated endless days of cross matching stories, with Norman’s quotes usually carrying the day. But there were those moments where consensus went out the window. One pivotal moment ended up having three different versions, two of which were from Norman’s lips while the third came from a reliable source who was on the scene when it all came down. The result was that I ran all three versions in an attempt to get the whole, if convoluted, picture.
Another challenge facing this chronicler of all things Reedus is his filmography. Norman has easily done more films than any three flavors of the moment put together. Most of them are obscure in the extreme, went straight to video or some left field European theatrical/festival runs and, if you’re counting all the shorts, there is a core list of approximately 50 films, which does not include television and theater appearances. The chances are good that by the time it’s time to turn in this manuscript, he will have added another half dozen credits to his list. To say the least, Norman is prolific, or a workaholic or, most likely, both.
And in line with that, compiling Norman’s work habits has often resulted in the scratching of head or, quite simply, a ‘what the fuck?’ moment. A lot of what Norman has done is not all that surprising. When you’re first starting out…well you do what is offered. But if you pick any five Norman Reedus obscurities at random, the chances are real good that his on-screen appearance time in all those films will clock in at less than five minutes. Figuring out why he did The Boondock Saints and Pandorum are no brainers. But, to be perfectly honest, why he chose to play Sex Toy Delivery Boy for less than two minutes and ends up getting a blowjob in the largely gay opus Luster is beyond me. But I’m sure Norman had a reason. The location made for a good vacation? He was indebted to a loyal friend? He saw the artifice in every part he did? Only Norman knows for sure, so I’ll just keep scratching my head.
The occasional vagary of Norman even extended to, at one point, just how old Norman actually was. When chronicling Norman’s first acting role in the play Maps for Drowners, two people connected to the scene were pretty sure that Norman was no more than 17 or 18. Norman did not help matters when, in a website interview, he said he was in his early 20’s at the time but that even he could not be certain. I finally ended the logjam by taking his birthdate and subtracting it from the year Maps for Drowners opened. Game, set and age match to Norman.
And then there was the challenge of chronicling Norman’s prodigious work habits. The cat really liked to work, so much so that even the most diligent filmographers to this point were having a tough time catching all the bit parts, often very odd cameos and the solid work in things seemingly nobody ever heard of and that few, if any, would ever see. As stated a couple of paragraphs ago, he is a conundrum with a mystery within a mental Rubik’s Cube.
But even as I set out to write the book, I knew I could well be on a deadline of sorts and that would ultimately influence how I told the tale. The Walking Dead has made its bones largely on the wings of unpredictability. Yes there’s the expected zombie gore. There’s also a boatload of character. But built into the show is the notion that nice guys don’t always make it to FADE OUT and that long-running characters have suddenly and unexpectedly perished. Bottom line, nobody is assured of making it to the grand finale. Not even Daryl.
Consequently a manuscript largely loaded with Walking Dead anecdotes and a cursory look at Norman Reedus’ backstory would run the risk of being nothing more than a quaint history if it were to come out after Daryl’s demise. Which meant heavy on everything leading up to The Walking Dead and then sprinkle in as needed. After all, this is a book about Norman Reedus and not a lot of ‘minute’ on just one role, albeit the role that got him here.
Norman has obviously had a long and diverse career before The Walking Dead and will, no doubt, in years to come, ride off into the sunset to bigger and better things. So why not get pop culture, whose members are notorious for being of the moment, caught up?
Finally I can guarantee even those who think they know Norman Reedus like a book will come away from Norman Reedus: True Tales of The Walking Dead’s Zombie Hunter with stuff that will make you shudder at what some people go through to make it to the top. You’ve been warned. The truth can be a bitter pill. You won’t find a lot of warm and fuzzy here. Shameless star fucking is not where this book is at. Norman Reedus may well be the last of the angry young men.
Because Norman Reedus is definitely his own man.
Marc Shapiro 2015
INTRODUCTION
IS THE HEAD DEAD YET?
In 2005 Norman Reedus was leaving an REM concert in Berlin, Germany. It had been one of those mellow and triumphant nights. Norman had served in the acting shadows for seemingly decades and now, close to entering middle age, had done little that had actually been seen, let alone appreciated. His talents had finally caught up with the filmmakers and tastemakers, beginning with an intellectually stimulating and esoteric stay at The Berlin Film Festival, in which Norman, long known for his awkwardness in big crowds and social situations, mixed easily with filmmakers, artsy intellectuals and musicians. As well as a few friends.
Among the latter, he reconnected with the members of REM with whom he had developed close ties during an appearance in the band’s 1995 music video for the single Strange Currencies and had ended the night with lead singer Michael Stipe giving Norman a shout out from the stage. It was the perfect ending to a night of good music, good companionship and all the vibes and recognition that went along with being a modern day bohemian, living for the moment and the possibilities that moment might bring.
At the conclusion of the concert, Norman was about to go outside and hail a cab back to his hotel for a meeting with a director. Ever the generous host, Stipe stepped forward and offered Norman the use of his personal driver. Norman got in and the car drove away from the concert hall…
…And pulled out right in front of an oncoming 18 wheel truck.
The impact was immediate, the sound of metal crushing metal and the shattering of glass a noisy, sonic prelude to destruction. In seconds the car was reduced to rubble. A crowd of horrified onlookers gathered, looking at the mangled and bloody Norman splayed out in the roadway. To this day Norman still gets the emotional shakes when he talks about that night, as could be witnessed in a recent conversation with Q Magazine. I remember looking down at my Blackberry just as I went through the car window and out into the street.
He would further reconstruct the moment when he recalled in an Entertainment Weekly story that he came to on the street to discover a woman picking glass shards off his face.
Norman was transported to nearby Berlin Hospital, his face literally a mass