The Birmingham native plays Boyd Crowder, a golden-tongued
bad boy on the show, which is set in the Kentucky hills where dead-end lives
are fertile fields for crime. As played by Goggins, Crowder grew up ambitious
and clever, later leveraging his experiences as a combat vet to put some
education behind that intelligence (not to mention caps on bad teeth).
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Walton Goggins as 'Boyd Crowder' |
"Nicky Augustine: I got to ask. Where'd you get all those teeth?
Boyd Crowder: Courtesy of the American taxpayer while serving our great nation in Desert Storm.
Augustine: Man, I love the way you talk... using 40 words where four will do. I'm curious. What would you say if I was about to put 40 bullets through that beautiful vest of yours?
Crowder: "What're you waiting for?"
Augustine: Oh, you're cool, huh?
Crowder: I tried to keep it to four words. You'll allow the contraction as one.”
Goggins’ genius as an actor is to bring complexity to characters that might otherwise be dismissed as simple. Crowder is cool, calm, collected – every bit the equal of the Big City gangster or anyone else he confronts. In that same story arc, he effectively summarized the character he created when he told the Detroit boys: “You figured you'd drive south anyway, rip off the simple people? Well, we ain't that simple."
Goggins best showed his acting chops on a cameo for another FX drama, “Sons of Anarchy,” about a biker gang that plays a central role – for good and ill – in a small California community. Goggins played Venus Van Dam, a transgender escort who periodically crosses paths with the Sons of Anarchy gang.
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'Venus Van Dam' |
Venus
described her prostitute mother as a “street performer” who was unable to “raise
a boy of questionable orientation” whose “inclinations” at an early age set a “gender
direction” that Mama tried to cure through making her participate in child
pornography. Another time she described her mother as similarly built as Venus “but
gravity has not been her friend.”
Kurt
Sutter – the genius behind “Sons of Anarchy” and a participant in what I
consider to be some of the best television dramas ever made (including “The Shield”)
– outlined the character and her role in the story. But he turned Goggins loose
to flesh out Venus, and much of her dialogue was improvised.
In
an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Goggins said being a transgender
character was his idea. His goal was to be respectful to transgender people by making
her “a three-dimensional person with feelings. Sassy, sweet, smart, and beautiful. Try to make her as
beautiful as I can be — it takes a lot of work for me as a straight man much
less as a woman to be anything close to beautiful. … If you spend enough time
thinking about it, and you’re coming from a real pure place in your heart and
you give yourself over to making believe, then all of those specific kinds of
moments just become second nature and they just happen.”
“They just happen.” Only for great actors like Goggins.
The character’s name, longtime Goggins and FX fans will
know, was a nod to Goggins’ character on “The Shield,” Shane Vendrell, a loyal
but ambitious crooked cop. Vendrell occasionally used Cletus Van Damme as a fake
name (such as renting a storage unit to hide stolen money). Apparently Goggins –
and Vendrell – are big fans of action-movie hero Jean Claude Van Damme.
Walton Sanders Goggins Jr. was born in Birmingham on Nov.
10, 1971, but grew up in Georgia, west of Atlanta. He has lived in Los Angeles since
1990, when he made his film debut in the movie “Murder in Mississippi.” He also
has worked on the both sides of the camera for more than a decade as a producer,
and has played role in recent blockbusters “Django Unchained” and “Lincoln.”
An avid traveler and photographer, Goggins also has been
involved in political, educational and environmental cause, according to
various online biographies.
As it turns out, Boyd Crowder’s character was supposed to
die at the end of the Season 1 of “Justified,” according to another interview Goggins
gave Entertainment Weekly. But the producers realized that Crowder – as played
by Goggins – was essential to the ongoing success of the fledgling show.
They were right. Elmore Leonard created the characters of
lawman Raylan Givens and Boyd Crowder, but killed Crowder off at the end of his
novel “Fire in the Hole,” which inspired the show “Justified.” Leonard liked
Goggins’ portrayal so much, the novelist resurrected Boyd Crowder as a
character in a follow-up novel, “Raylan,” released three years before Leonard’s
death last fall.
Only one more season of “Justified” remains before the show ends
production. But I know I’m not done enjoying Walton Goggins. I can’t wait to
see who he comes up with next.