Anthony Michael Hall had a very sweet 16. That's how old he was when he
geek-walked to prominence in 1984 as Molly Ringwald's hormone-driven
tormentor
in John Hughes's Sixteen Candles. The next year he joined The Breakfast Club
as that misfit group's techno-nerd. These days, though, it's Hall, 23, who
seems to have trouble fitting in.
"Can you believe Arsenio turned me down for his show?" says Hall, sitting in
his New York City loft. "Carson and Letterman turned me down too. It's
unfair, because I'm a changed person." Hall has changed -- as anyone could
see
when he played a bully in Edward Scissorhands in 1990. After a two-year
absence from the screen, the charmingly gawky string bean had matured into a
180-lb., 6 ft.1 in. demi-thug. But the transformation Hall refers to is
internal. "The reason my career had a lull," he explains, "is that it took
me a while to conquer my demons."
Hall's particular demon was vodka. His problem began when, already a
veteran
performer at 13, he started sneaking drinks. His precocious tippling
continued off and on while he attended Manhattan's Professional Children's
School and made such movie flops as the infelicitously titled Johnny Be Good
(1988). Filming Out of Bounds (1986), he remembers, "I was drinking vodka
by the quart every day. I'd mix it with Sprite."
The New York City kid who shot his first commercial at age 7 had obviously
come a long way -- probably too far too fast. Hall, at 15, had played Chevy
Chase's son in National Lampoon's Vacation, where he caught the eye of
writer
John Hughes, who proceeded to cast him in his teen-oriented hits. Soon,
though, the budding actor was beginning to behave like a celebrity
experiment
gone wrong. "I always wanted to be like Eddie Murphy," says Hall, "cool with
a cool image." Instead, he says, "I found myself walking down the streets of
New York looking to see if people were looking at me." At 17, as one of the
youngest Saturday Night Live regulars ever, he was drinking his way through
a single, largely unfunny season. And his nights, in general, were much too
lively. Frequenting clubs, he says, "I sometimes got in fights and punched
people in the face and got drunk."
His mom is more diplomatic. "We all do different things to cover up the pain,"
says cabaret singer Mercedes Hall, who divorced Hall's father, Larry, an
auto-body-shop owner, when their son was an infant (her second husband, Tom
Chestaro, is part of the actor's management team).
Hall's girlfriend of one year, model Teresa DePriest, 21, has her own theory
about his two-fisted phase. "He felt very angry that his father was not
there all those years," she says. But in November 1990, more than 20 years after
the messy breakup, Hall finally went to visit Larry. "It was incredible,"
says
Hall of the reunion, which was arranged using a godfather as middleman. "Now
I've got two new sisters and a stepmother." For his part, Larry -- who had
phoned his son a few times over the years -- seems bemused by the grown-up
Hall: "When he's here, he's following me around with a video camera. He's
100 percent showbiz."
Make that 110 percent -- and primed for a comeback. "Only in recent months
have I really felt like myself," says Hall, who hasn't quit drinking ("I'll
have a glass of wine or beer") but believes he has grown up enough to
control it. He stresses also that alcohol was the only substance he abused. "I
never had a problem with drugs."
Hall has two films out this year. Into the Sun, an action-comedy, was
released in January, and The Adventures of a Gnome Named Gnorm, another
action-comedy, will be out in the spring. Hall is determined that there'll
be
more films. "I'm not just a good actor, I'm a great actor," he says. "I
haven't proven it yet, but I will. I only wish I hadn't acted
irresponsibly."
And he hopes the newest young star from the John Hughes stable, Home Alone's
Macaulay Culkin, 11, doesn't make the same mistakes. "I'd tell him: Stay
clean and keep your head on straight," Hall says. He pauses. "He's the
reincarnation of me, isn't he?"
PHOTO CAPTION: "Vodka was my poison," says Hall (on the roof of his New York City
apartment building), remembering his wild days. "I was very young then."
PHOTO CAPTION: At age 16, Hall played a nerdy Breakfast Club-er with his
brat-pack pals.
PHOTO CAPTION: "She's not my wife," says Hall (at home with Teresa DePriest), "but
she sure looks like it."
(Unfortunately I don't have the photos that go with this article.)