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Madison museum hosts new Chris Farley exhibit

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The Wisconsin Historical Museum kicked off its seven-month exhibit capturing the life of comedian Chris Farley Tuesday, displaying artifacts his family has kept since the Madison native died in 1997.

Leslie Bellais, curator of costume and textiles, said the museum was going to do an exhibit on famous actors who have their roots in Wisconsin but decided to focus on Chris because it was able to purchase items his family kept in his remembrance.

The museum purchased a jacket Chris wore in the 1996 movie, “Black Sheep” in an auction last year, and the family lent a costume he wore in the Matt Foley skit on Saturday Night Live and items ranging from a jacket and hat from the film “Tommy Boy” to his Edgewood High School football jersey.

Chris was born and raised in Maple Bluff near Madison. He attended Edgewood High School on Monroe Street and graduated from Marquette University in 1986 with a degree in communications and theater. He is best known for his role on Second City, Saturday Night Live and motion pictures like “Wayne’s World” and “Tommy Boy.” He died at the age of 33 from a drug overdose in 1997.

“The main point we are trying to make about Chris is he was a Madison and Wisconsin boy through and though,” Bellais said. “The way (his oldest brother) Tom puts it is he kind of represented Wisconsin’s zeitgeist. He brought Wisconsin to the general public.”

Tom Farley is currently on a book tour promoting a newly released biography he co-wrote on his younger brother Chris, titled “The Chris Farley Show.”

Tom Farley said the book is an oral history of the man who started his career at the Ark Improv Theater in Madison and is compiled of countless stories and recollections from Chris’ good friends from all stages of life.

“You got this picture of who Chris really was … some funny stories and some tough stories about his struggles,” Tom Farley said. “There’s a lot of stuff that reflects on this special culture and place that’s our hometown, Madison.”

From Madison, Farley hit the main stage in Chicago, appearing in Second City, and was then discovered by Saturday Night Live in 1990.

The exhibit distinguishes different periods in Chris’s life, starting with growing up in Madison, his Second City and SNL era and his work with films, concluding with an epilogue with programs from his funeral in Madison.

“We feel like there’s a very strong connection between Chris and Wisconsin, and out of all the celebrities that came out of Wisconsin we picked Chris,” Bellais said. “He continued to love where he came from even after he became famous.”

Bellais said Chris Farley came back for University of Wisconsin football games and “loved to party on Regent Street.”

Tom said he has been speaking for 10 years on behalf of the Chris Farley Foundation, traveling to middle and high schools around the country talking to teenagers about substance abuse. He said to this day people approach him saying what a great guy Chris was.

“A new generation is discovering him, so I don’t think his legacy is going to die very quickly,” Bellais said, referencing the group of 4th graders who went through the exhibit Tuesday enamored with the film clips and artifacts from Chris’s life.

The exhibit, located at 30 N. Carroll St., will run through Nov. 15.


2 Comments | Leave a comment

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“I live in a van DOWN BY THE RIVER!”

What a hilarious guy. Great memories and glad to say he was a Madison, WI native.

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How much does it cost?

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