Shazbot.
"You're only given a little spark of madness. You mustn't lose it."
Although he studied drama at Julliard (where his roommate was the late Christopher "
Superman" Reeve), Robin's preferred stage was to be found in standup comedy clubs. There he was discovered (several times) by TV producers and agents. Technically first appearing on TV in a failed revival of
Rowan and Martins Laugh-In and
The Richard Pryor Show, Robin rose to fame as the zany alien star of
Mork and Mindy. In that series, his
comedic brilliance at improvisation was so irresistible, the writers decided to bank time in the scripts for
Robin to cut loose. During this time he struggled through addictions to cocaine and alcohol, and made his first major movie,
Popeye. The movie failed. (His first film was actually a sketch movie called
Can I Do It Till I Need Glasses. His scenes were cut out after the film's first release but restored for rerelease just before
Popeye came out.)
After
Mork and Mindy was cancelled, Robin still struggled on the big screen, through
The World According To Garp,
Moscow on the Hudson, and the
very poorly received
Club Paradise. It wasn't until
Good Morning Vietnam that people started taking this comic seriously, and he got his first Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. He was nominated again for
Dead Poets Society two years later, and yet again for
The Fisher King two years after that. He didn't win either time. He continued to churn out classic roles, like the Genie in
Aladdin and the title role in
Mrs. Doubtfire. In 1997 he finally won his rightfully-deserved Oscar for
Good Will Hunting. After that, he went through a period of overly-maudlin films such as
What Dreams May Come,
Patch Adams, and
Bicentennial Man.
When these films became critical failures (and even gave him a disturbingly sizable
Hatedom), he went into another period in 2002, one no one would have expected: his dark period.
Death to Smoochy,
Insomnia, and
One Hour Photo established that he wasn't always so cute and cuddly, and all but
Smoochy got rave reviews. Although he returned to the stand-up stage that same year, he continued to make films of all sorts of genres. Dramas like
House of D, comedies like
RV, and animated family films like
Happy Feet prove that this man can somehow still make terrible movies worse and good movies amazing.
His hobbies include bike riding,
Warhammer 40,000,
Getting Crap Past the Radar in television shows and family movies, and
hanging a lampshade on just about everything in
Real Life.
Known to wear suspenders and loud Hawaiian shirts, but rarely both at the same time,
although it has happened.
◊He's also
One of Us. His daughter's name is
Zelda (and guess what:
they made an ad out of it for the remake of Zelda: Ocarina Of Time 3DS
and
Skyward Sword). His favorite TV show of all time is
Neon Genesis Evangelion. He plays
Dungeons & Dragons. He's also gone on record saying that if they ever make a
Live-Action Adaptation of
Pokémon, he wants to play Professor Oak. Has mentioned playing a sniper in the Battlefield series of FPS and was picked to demo Spore.
Often dubbed by
Koichi Yamadera for Japanese releases of his films.
Not to be confused with English singer-songwriter
Robbie Williams
or
that chick who writes the computer books or the animator
Richard Williams.
Other tropes associated with him include:
- Butt Monkey: He seems to play either this or the villain in recent films.
- As of recently, he seems to be this in Real Life. Personal problems aside, the public's reception to the films he's made in the past 10 years have been less than stellar.
- Cloudcuckoolander: For the most part he is one, although he can be serious when he needs to be.
- Cluster F-Bomb: His stand-up routines are very salty.
- One side-splitting Easter Egg on his Live from Broadway DVD was a rapid-fire montage of all the cuss words he used in the routine.*
To find it, scroll all the way down through the menu screen then hit the right arrow button at the last option (or click
here)
; if a Parental Advisory symbol comes up, have fun.]] - In one routine, he notes that the parents in his audience apparently ignored the "18 and up" label on the performance flyers. "Kids, you're going to learn some new words today!"
- Drugs Are Bad: A staple of his later stand-up shows, often drawing from his own experiences (particularly involving cocaine and alcohol). One exception seems to be marijuana: While he brutally mocked stoners in 1986's Live At The Met, in Live On Broadway and Weapons Of Self Destruction he is more favorable towards pot (one routine in Broadway is about how pot is less harmful than alcohol).
- Harpo Does Something Funny: Several of the movies and television shows he gets cast in often have scripts that say stuff like "Robin can go off here" at numerous intervals.
- Hey, It's That Guy!: He guest starred on a particularly memorable episode of Whose Line Is It Anyway?.
- I Call Him "Mister Happy": Trope namer.
- Improv: Billy Crystal said that you can't take him anywhere because he will riff on everything.
- Irony: Known as a motormouth, he also spent time as a mime.
- Large Ham: Does this really need justification? We're talking about Robin Freaking Williams here.
- Perhaps most noticeable when he appeared as the bit character Osric in Kenneth Branagh's HAMlet.
- Never Trust a Trailer: Whenever he stars in a dramady, you can bet the trailers will play up his comedic scenes.
- Promoted Fanboy: Williams is a fan of The Legend of Zelda video games and even named his oldest daughter Zelda. He and his daughter were both later given the opportunity to star in the commercials for Ocarina of Time 3DS and Skyward Sword for Western releases. Nintendo has also told him he would be their only choice to play Professor Oak if a live-action Pokémon movie was ever made.
- Throw It In: Known for fighting with the directors over how far he can vary from the script. Often it comes down to "One good take done straight, then you can have fun."
Like any celebrity, Robin gets parodied or caricatured a lot in popular media.: