Cory Monteith

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Cory Monteith
Cory Monteith (6592146693).jpg
Monteith at Westfield Sydney in 2011
Born
Cory Allan Michael Monteith

(1982-05-11)May 11, 1982
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
DiedJuly 13, 2013(2013-07-13) (aged 31)
Cause of deathAlcohol and heroin overdose
Body discoveredFairmont Pacific Rim
Resting placeVancouver, British Columbia, Canada (cremated)
Occupation
  • Actor
  • musician
Years active2004–2013

Cory Allan Michael Monteith (/mɒnˈtθ/; May 11, 1982 – July 13, 2013) was a Canadian actor and musician best known for his role as Finn Hudson on the Fox television series Glee. As an actor based in British Columbia, Monteith had minor roles on television series before being cast on Glee. During his success on the show, he also acted in films. His film work included Monte Carlo and a starring role in Sisters & Brothers (both 2011).

Monteith had a troubled adolescence involving substance abuse from age 13, and left school at age 16. After an intervention by family and friends, he entered drug rehabilitation at age 19. In a 2011 interview with Parade magazine, he discussed his history of substance abuse as a teen, and in March 2013, he again sought treatment for addiction. On July 13, 2013, he died of a toxic combination of heroin and alcohol in a Vancouver hotel room.

Early life[]

Monteith was born in Calgary, Alberta on May 11, 1982,[1] the younger son of Ann McGregor, an interior decorator, and Joe Monteith, a soldier who served in the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry.[2][3] He had an older brother named Shaun. Monteith's parents divorced when he was seven years old,[4] and he and his older brother were raised by their mother in Victoria, British Columbia.[5] After the divorce, he saw little of his father due to military service, and he had social difficulties at school. From age 13, he used alcohol and marijuana and started being truant from school.[6]

After attending 16 schools,[7] including alternative programs for troubled teens, Monteith dropped out altogether at age 16. By that time, his drug and alcohol dependency had increased and Monteith turned to petty crimes, such as stealing money from friends and family, to fund his addictions.[5] His mother and a group of friends staged an intervention when he was 19, and he began attending a rehabilitation program.[5] Monteith stated, "I'm lucky on so many counts. I'm lucky to be alive."[8] He eventually received his high school diploma in 2011 from an alternative school he attended in his youth in Victoria.[6]

Before breaking into show business, Monteith worked various jobs including Walmart people greeter, taxicab driver, mechanic, school bus driver, roofer, and a drummer for a few bands.[6][9][10][11][12]

Career[]

2004–2008: Career beginnings[]

Monteith began his acting career in Vancouver, British Columbia. He had minor roles in Final Destination 3, Whisper, and Deck the Halls. He had a recurring role in Kyle XY.[7] He also made guest appearances in television serials such as Smallville, Supernatural, Flash Gordon, Stargate Atlantis, and Stargate SG-1.[10] In 2005, he appeared in Killer Bash, about a tormented geek's soul that was taking revenge on his murderer's children by taking over a girl's twin body. The following year, he made a brief appearance in Bloody Mary, cast as Paul. After Maureen Webb suggested Cory take acting classes; Monteith started acting classes with Anthony Meindl.[13] In 2007, he starred in the MTV series Kaya as Gunnar.[14]

2009–2013: Glee and film roles[]

Cory Monteith at the 2010 GLAAD Media Awards

In 2009, Monteith was cast in the Fox series Glee as Finn Hudson. When Glee was being cast, Monteith's agent, Elena Kirschner, submitted a video of him drumming with some pencils and Tupperware containers. Series creator Ryan Murphy took notice of the video, but pointed out that he had to be singing, as auditioning actors for Glee with no theatrical experience were required to prove they could sing and dance as well as act.[15][16] Monteith submitted a second, musical tape, in which he sang, in his own words, "a cheesy '80s music video-style version" of REO Speedwagon's "Can't Fight This Feeling".[16] He then attended a mass audition in Los Angeles; his vocal skills were considered weak, but he later performed very well with one of Glee's casting directors, who said that his audition captured Finn's most elusive quality: his "naive, but not stupid, sweetness."[15] Monteith said of his casting process, "I was like a lot of kids, looking for something to be interested in. Something to be passionate about. All you need is permission. Not only for Glee, but for anything in life."[15]

Finn is the star quarterback of his high school football team, and risks alienation from his friends by joining the school's glee club. He is a popular jock at the top of the school's social hierarchy, but when forced to join the glee club, he finds he loves it. His storylines have seen him struggle with his decision to stay in the club, which is at the bottom of the social ladder, while he maintains his popular reputation and the respect of the other jocks. The character must deal with his attraction to both head cheerleader Quinn Fabray (Dianna Agron) and glee club star singer Rachel Berry (Lea Michele), and his storylines increasingly focus on his relationship with them both.

Monteith felt that Finn had to "grow up a lot" during his time on the show. He said, "Finn started off as the stereotypical dumb jock but as the show has gone on, Finn's not dumb anymore, really, he's just a little naïve".[17] Early reviews of Finn from television critics were mixed; Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club said that he and Michele were "both agreeable and a little desperate for an outlet" in the pilot episode.[18] Commenting on the fifth episode of the first season, Eric Goldman of IGN wrote, "We got to see a bit of a darker side to Finn [...] it's good to see this, because up until now, Finn's been a bit too strait-laced to totally invest in".[19] In the second season's eighth episode, "Furt", Tim Stack of Entertainment Weekly noted "It's been a while since we've gotten some Finn focus, and I think I just missed Cory Monteith. But I also forgot what a good, natural actor he can be".[20] Monteith as Finn won the 2011 Teen Choice Award for Choice TV: Actor Comedy, the same category he had been nominated for in 2010.[21] Although he was not a singer before being cast as Finn, Monteith sang lead or joint lead on a large number of songs on the show.

In November 2009, Monteith signed with Hip-O Records and Universal Republic for his debut album and the soundtrack to the Lifetime movie The Prince is the Popstar (which was released in early 2010).[22] In the movie (which has a manly spin on Cinderella and a reference to Matchbox Twenty’s Mad Season music video), Monteith plays Jake Synder a spoiled prince who wants to be a top 40 pop-star.[23][24]

In April 2010, Monteith was cast in the romantic comedy movie Monte Carlo.[25] In December 2010, it was announced that Monteith would be starring in and co-producing a new untitled workplace-caper comedy for Fox 2000.[26] On August 8, 2010, he co-hosted the Teen Choice Awards.[27] Monteith hosted the Gemini Awards in Toronto on November 13, 2010.[28]

In January 2011, Monteith shot the film Sisters & Brothers with Dustin Milligan, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 11.[29][30] Canadian director Gia Milani's film All The Wrong Reasons stars Monteith as "a big box department store manager whose wife is struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder." Milani suggests he was excited to play his own age in a "heavy role." He filmed his part on weekdays, flying to Los Angeles on weekends to do promotional work for Glee.[31] In 2011, Monteith filmed a PSA for Straight But Not Narrow, an online PSA organization aimed at changing the minds of young straight people in their attitude and viewpoint towards the LGBT community.[32] In 2012, he hosted the 23rd GLAAD Media Awards in New York City with co-star Naya Rivera.[33]

On July 20, 2013, Ryan Murphy stated in various media outlets that Monteith was set to have a tribute in the third episode of season five, which also dealt with the death of his character Finn Hudson.[34] Monteith's final two films, All the Wrong Reasons and McCanick, premiered posthumously at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.[35][36]

Personal life[]

Relationships[]

Monteith began working with American actress Lea Michele in 2008 when they were cast as love interests on Glee.[37] In early 2012, the media reported that they had begun dating.[38][39][40] They remained together until his death a year and a half later.[41][42] In December 2013, a few months after Monteith's death, Lea Michele stated that he was a very private person.[43] Michele has released a number of songs about Monteith since his death. These include "If You Say So", which Michele began writing a week after his death and references the last words he said to her,[44] and "Hey You", a follow-up to "If You Say So", released in April 2017.[45]

Substance use[]

On March 31, 2013, Monteith's publicist announced that Monteith had admitted himself into a treatment facility for substance addiction.[46] He had previously received substance abuse treatment, when he was 19, following a history of drug use that began around the age of 13.[47] According to Glee co-creator Ryan Murphy, Monteith's admission to rehab in March resulted from an emergency intervention on the Paramount lot, in which Murphy and other members of the Glee cast and crew urged Monteith to accompany doctors to the rehab facility, which had been arranged by the show. Monteith agreed, and was consequently written out of the final two episodes of Glee's fourth season after being assured that he would still have his job upon his return.[48] On April 26, 2013, it was reported that Monteith had completed his treatment.[49] At the time of his death, Monteith was living in Los Angeles, where Glee was filmed.[50][51]

Death[]

On July 13, 2013, Monteith was found dead in his room at the Fairmont Pacific Rim hotel in Vancouver. He was 31 years old. Monteith was scheduled to check out that day following a seven-night stay, but when he failed to do so, hotel staff entered his room and discovered his body around noon. The Vancouver Police Department stated that the cause of death was not immediately apparent, but ruled out foul play.[52] An autopsy was completed by the British Columbia Coroners Service on July 15.[53] The preliminary autopsy report stated that Monteith died from "a mixed drug toxicity" consisting of heroin and alcohol,[54][55] and that his death appeared to have been accidental.[56] The final report, released by the British Columbia Coroners Service on October 2, 2013, confirmed these findings. It noted that Monteith also had codeine and morphine in his system at the time of his death, and that he was found with drug paraphernalia that included a spoon with drug residue and a used hypodermic needle, as well as two empty bottles of champagne. The coroner wrote that Monteith had experienced intermittent periods of drug abuse and abstinence throughout his life, and that "after a period of cessation from opioid drug use, a previously tolerated drug concentration level may become toxic and fatal."[57] His stay in rehab only months before his death, and his attempt to stay off drugs resulted in his lowered tolerance to the drug.[58]

Monteith's body was cremated in Vancouver on July 17, following a private viewing by his immediate family and girlfriend Lea Michele.[59] On July 25, Michele and Glee creator Ryan Murphy held a celebration of life for Monteith in Los Angeles, attended by cast, crew, and creators of the show, as well as colleagues from the show's network and studio.[60] After consultation with Michele, who also plays Monteith's love interest on Glee, showrunners postponed production of Glee's fifth season to August rather than late July. Consequently, the season premiered a week later than planned.[48] The season's third episode, "The Quarterback", aired on October 10, 2013, and served as a tribute to Monteith, focusing on the death of his character Finn Hudson.[61] The show then began a brief hiatus,[48] which lasted until November 7, 2013,[61] due to the extra time that was needed to decide how to proceed with the show following the death.[48] After "The Quarterback" aired, Murphy noted that he had decided to "keep mentioning Finn...We don't just say this is done and we're never going to go back to it, so that resonates throughout the year."[61]

The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards, held on September 22, 2013, featured an extended tribute to Monteith by his Glee co-star Jane Lynch, along with four other actors who died in 2013.[62] He was also featured in the "In Memoriam" segment of the 56th Grammy Awards.

Shortly after his death, Glee fans raised money to "name a star" for Monteith after being inspired by a scene featuring his character on Glee.[63] On July 8, 2020, Naya Rivera, Monteith's Glee co-star and close friend, accidentally drowned, and her body was recovered on the seventh anniversary of his death.[64]

Filmography[]

Film[]

Year Title Roles Notes
2005 Killer Bash Douglas Waylan Hart[65]
2006 Bloody Mary Paul Zuckerman
Kraken: Tentacles of the Deep Michael
Deck the Halls Madison's date
Final Destination 3 Kahill
2007 Hybrid Aaron Scates[66]
White Noise: The Light Scooter guy
Gone Davis Calder Short film
The Invisible Jimmy[67]
Whisper Teenage boy[68]
2008 The Boy Next Door Jason
2011 Teaching the Life of Music Himself/Narrator Documentary
Wannabe Macks Stu
Monte Carlo Owen Andrews[69]
Sisters & Brothers Justin Montegan[70]
Glee: The 3D Concert Movie Finn Hudson
2013 All the Wrong Reasons James Ascher[71] Posthumous release
McCanick Simon Weeks[72]

Television[]

Year Title Role Notes
2004 Stargate Atlantis Genii Private Episode: "The Storm"
2005 Young Blades Marcel Le Rue Episode: "To Heir is Human"
Supernatural Gary Episode: "Wendigo"
Smallville Frat cowboy Episode: "Thirst"
Killer Instinct Windsurfer Bob Episode: "Forget Me Not"
2006 Whistler Lip Ring Episode: "The Burden of Truth"
Stargate SG-1 Young Cameron Mitchell Episode: "200"
Kyle XY Charlie Tanner 7 episodes
2007 Flash Gordon Ian Finley Episode: "Life Source"
Kaya Gunnar 10 episodes
2008 Fear Itself James Episode: "New Year's Day"
2009 Mistresses Jason
The Assistants Shane Baker 2 episodes
2009–2013 Glee Finn Hudson Lead role (seasons 1–4); 81 episodes
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series
Teen Choice Award for Choice TV: Actor Comedy (2011)
Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Choice TV: Breakout Star Male (2009)
Nominated – People's Choice Award for Favorite TV Comedy Actor (2012)
2010 The Simpsons Flynn Episode: "Elementary School Musical"
2011 The Cleveland Show Finn Hudson Episode: "How Do You Solve a Problem Like Roberta?"
2012 The Glee Project Himself Episode: "Vulnerability"
2013 MasterChef Himself[73] Season 4, Episode 10; Last TV appearance

Awards and nominations[]

Year Title Award Category Result
2009 Glee 16th Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series Won[74]
2009 Teen Choice Awards Choice TV: Actor Breakout Star Male Nominated[75]
2010 Hollywood Style Awards 2010 Male Future Style Icon Award Won[76]
Glee 17th Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series Nominated[75]
2010 Teen Choice Awards Choice TV: Comedy Actor and Choice Smile[9] Nominated[75]
2011 2011 Grammy Awards Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals Nominated
2011 Teen Choice Awards Choice TV: Actor Comedy Won[75]
Monte Carlo 2011 Teen Choice Awards Summer: Movie Star – Male Nominated[75]
Glee 18th Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series Nominated[75]
2012 Do Something Awards 2012 TV Star: Male Won[77]
People's Choice Awards Favorite TV Comedy Actor Nominated
19th Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series Nominated[75]

Discography[]

References[]

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External links[]

Media offices
Preceded by
Jonas Brothers
Teen Choice Awards co-host
2010
Succeeded by
Kaley Cuoco
Preceded by
Ron James
Gemini Awards host
2010
Succeeded by
Russell Peters
Retrieved from ""