MIAMI - Florida historians have discovered a 40-year-old film clip of a clean-cut Jim Morrison that will give fans a different view of the Doors singer before his wilder days as a drug using rock legend who drank hard and died young.
The 1964 black-and-white public-relations film, shot at Florida State University (FSU), shows a nerdy-looking Morrison, who died in 1971 at 27 years old, acting the part of a young man whose university application has been rejected.
The 16-minute video has Morrison among wholesome scenes of college life, parades and football, a sharp contrast to his image as a long-haired, leather-clad rebel poet accused of exposing himself and simulating a sex act at a Miami concert in 1969.
"It's incredible.? He's so clean-cut and soft-spoken," said Jody Norman, archives supervisor at the State Library and Archives of Florida, and a Doors fan.
The web site ifilm.com, which features videos of all kinds, posted the clip under the heading: "Jim Morrison: College Dork."
In the film, the Florida native plays a dejected would-be university student who reads a rejection letter from a school and then earnestly questions why he can't go to college.
Norman said the film was among many turned over by FSU to the state archives and contained no idenfiication or credit for Morrison, who would have been around 20 years old when it was shot.? He was spotted by a sharp-eyed archivist who was reviewing the films.
"We knew he was at FSU for a period of time and he did some acting when he was there," Norman said.
The film was incorporated into Florida's archives and the part featuring Morrison, which runs one minute and 17 seconds, can be found at
http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2665896.