Rob Marshall

After establishing himself as a Tony Award-winning choreographer, Rob Marshall made the rare transition to accomplished film director with the acclaimed feature adaption of the popular stage musical, “Chicago” (2002). Prior to his feature success, Marshall earned a reputation on Broadway as one of the finest choreographers working in the business, thanks to his work on such hits as “Kiss of the Spider Woman” (1993), “Damn Yankees” (1994) and “Cabaret” (1998). Though “Chicago” put him on the Hollywood map, Marshall actually made his screen debut with a television adaptation of the musical “Annie” (ABC, 1999), which starred Kathy Bates and earned the director his first Emmy Award. Marshall made his first foray into non-musical territory with a solid take on Arthur Golden’s “Memoirs of a Geisha” (2005), which did allow him put on his choreographer hat for an elaborate ceremonial dance. Though not as revered as “Chicago,” his second feature effort attracted Academy attention and informed critics that Marshall was a legitimate talent. With his third feature, the eagerly-awaited musical “Nine” (2009), Marshall was on firm ground to make his case for being one of Hollywood’s premiere directors.

Born on Oct. 17, 1960 in Madison, WI, Marshall first began making home movies as a youth, including a parody of "The Brady Bunch” which starred his sisters, while appearing in productions of “The King and I” and “The Sound of Music” as a child. But by the time he was preparing to enroll at Carnegie Mellon University, he had shifted his interest to dance, training in both jazz and ballet. In 1980, he took a year off from school to join in a touring company of “A Chorus Line,” directed by noted choreographer Michael Bennett. Marshall took his experiences back to Carnegie Mellon, becoming a much better dancer by the time he graduated in 1982. The next year, he landed a part in the musical “Zorba” (1983), which he followed by appearing in “The Rink” (1984) and “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” (1985). All three productions were choreographed by Graciela Daniele, who took the young Marshall under her wing to become his mentor. By the time he performed in “Edwin Drood,” Marshall was Daniele’s dance captain and assistant. But his career as a dancer came to a sudden end when he suffered a back injury while performing in “Cats,” which marked his final appearance on Broadway as a performer.

Despite his career being temporarily derailed, Marshall found himself fielding offers to choreograph regional theater. He moved rapidly up to the big leagues, choreographing his first Broadway effort, "The Kiss of the Spider Woman" (1993), with music and lyrics by Kander and Ebb. Starring star Chita Rivera and directed by the legendary director Hal Prince, the popular musical earned Marshall his first Tony Award nomination for Best Choreography, which he shared with fellow choreographer Vincent Patterson. Marshall's next big moment came when he choreographed the Tony Award-winning Broadway production of "She Loves Me" (1993), which earned him an Olivier nomination when the show ran in London. He won major acclaim for his choreography of the 1994 Broadway revival of "Damn Yankees" starring Victor Garber and Bebe Neuwirth, while the show's national tour with Jerry Lewis and subsequent London production – which earned him a second Olivier nomination – only enhanced his reputation. Meanwhile, he reunited with Hal Prince to choreograph the dance moves for a revival of "Company" (1995), which closed after 60 performances, followed by a production of "The Petrified Prince" at the Public Theater.

Only two years into his Broadway career, Marshall had already established himself as a top choreographer. Following a production of Blake Edwards’ "Victor/Victoria" (1995), starring Julie Andrews, he added his touch to the smash revival of "A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the Forum" (1996) which starred Nathan Lane, and later Whoopi Goldberg. Of course, Marshall's string of successes on stage soon attracted the attention of Hollywood. He was tapped to choreograph the dance sequences in lavish musical television productions like "Mrs. Santa Claus" (CBS, 1996), starring Angela Lansbury, and an all-star small screen version of "Rogers & Hammerstein's Cinderella" (ABC, 1997) starring singer Brandy, Whitney Houston, Whoopi Goldberg and Jason Alexander. After working with actor-director Tim Robbins on "Cradle Will Rock" (1998), Marshall returned to Broadway to make his co-directorial debut alongside Sam Mendes and choreograph the wildly popular revival of Kander and Ebbs' sensation, "Cabaret" (1998). Starring Alan Cumming as the Master of Ceremonies and Natasha Richardson as Sally Bowles, the acclaimed production won just about every award imaginable, including the Tony, the Drama Desk Award and the Outer-Critics Circle Award. That same year, he also helmed the Tony-winning Broadway run of Neil Simon's "Little Me," starring Faith Prince and Martin Short, as well as "Promises, Promises" for the City Center Encores! Series.

Marshall made a major splash on the small screen with the ratings-earning television adaptation of "Annie" (1999) with Kathy Bates, Victor Garber, Alan Cumming and Kristin Chenoweth. The made-for-television musical marked Marshall's first professional foray behind the camera as a director and became the most-viewed small screen movie of that year. The Peabody-award winning broadcast also resulted in Marshall winning an Emmy Award for Outstanding Choreography, as well as earning a Director's Guild of America Award nod. Marshall soon found himself being strongly beckoned by big screen Hollywood. After replacing the original director on the Broadway musical "Suessical" (2000) – which he did uncredited, working with the show's choreographer, his sister Kathleen – he began meeting with movie studio executives looking for his first feature film project. Thanks to the children of Miramax studio head Harvey Weinstein obsessively watching "Annie," Marshall found himself pitching his long-dreamed-of ambition of putting the famous musical, "Chicago," onto celluloid. Marshall had earlier directed a well-received Los Angeles production of the musical starring Bebe Neuwirth in 1992, which had earned him a Dramalogue Award, making him exactly the right person for the job.

Though there had been several failed efforts since the 1980s to bring “Chicago” to the screen that involved a revolving door of talent, Marshall believed that he had the concept that would allow contemporary filmgoers to embrace the inherent unreality of the movie musical. Marshall determined that he would keep the music sequences theatrical and showy by making them imaginary figments unfolding in the head of the delusional lead character, Roxie Hart (Renee Zellweger). Miramax agreed and Marshall set to work crafting a script with writer-director Bill Condon. He also cannily cast major stars who were proven box office draws – Zellweger, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Richard Gere – but were not known for their musical talents. He also populated the supporting roles with highly unconventional choices, including Queen Latifah, John C. Reilly, Taye Diggs and Lucy Liu, which helped amplify the curiosity factor. But no amount of gimmicks beat Marshall's remarkably assured direction and whip-smart style, which resulted in a potent, energetic and highly original film that captured the electricity of Broadway-style dance without sacrificing a theatrical sensibility for cinematic realism. It did not hurt that “Moulin Rouge” (2001), Baz Luhrmann’s kaleidoscopic musical starring Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor, had been released a year prior to resounding box office success; in effect, altering the public’s long-held perception of movie musicals as silly and unwatchable. This shift, as well as all of Marshall’s heartfelt efforts, proved fruitful when his musical vision was released in 2002 to gushing critical accolades and strong box office receipts, a ride that resulted in several major award nominations, including an Academy Award nomination for Best Director.

Marshall found himself in non-musical territory for his next feature directing effort, the long-awaited adaptation of Arthur S. Golden’s “Memoirs of a Geisha” (2005), starring Asian heavyweights Ziyi Zhang, Ken Watanabe and Michelle Yeoh. Despite its sweeping story, lush cinematography and Oscar-winning art direction and costume design, Marshall failed to create an emotionally satisfying or financially successful endeavor. The film followed the life of a beautiful geisha (Zhang) during World War II who is in love with a man beyond her reach (Watanabe). Returning to the more comfortable genre of musical and variety programming, Marshall directed “Tony Bennett: An American Classic” (NBC, 2006), an all-star 80th birthday tribute to the legendary crooner featuring Elton John, Stevie Wonder and Bill Crystal. Marshall won two Emmy awards for his efforts; one for Outstanding Directing for a Variety, Musical or Comedy Program; the other he shared with the other producers for Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Special. Back to directing features, he joined forces with the Weinsteins again to helm “Nine” (2009), a musical drama loosely based on Federico Fellini’s “8 ½” (1963), which focused on a film director (Daniel Day-Lewis) stuck in neutral as he tries to make a movie while dealing with the demands of all the women in his life, including his deceased mother (Sophia Loren). The film was indeed an A-list grab bag, as Marshall’s reputation and the material presented attracted not only Day-Lewis and Loren – two notoriously choosy actors – but also Nicole Kidman, Penelope Cruz, Dame Judi Dench, Marion Cotillard and Kate Hudson.

  • Also Credited As:
    Robert Marshall
  • Born:
    Robert Marshall on October 17, 1960 in Madison, Wisconsin, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Choreographer, Dancer, Director
Family
  • Sister: Kathleen Marshall.
  • Sister: Maura Marshall.
Significant Others
  • Companion: John DeLuca.
Education
  • Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, 1982
Milestones
  • 1992 Directed production of Chicago, starring Bebe Neuwirth in Los Angeles
  • 1993 Choreographed the Broadway production of She Loves Me
  • 1993 Provided additional choreography for Kiss of the Spider Woman on Broadway
  • 1994 Choreographed the revival of Damn Yankees, starring future collaborators Victor Garber and Bebe Neuwirth
  • 1995 Choreographed the stage production of Victor/Victoria
  • 1996 Choreographed the revival of A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the Forum
  • 1996 Oversaw the dance sequences in the CBS TV movie, Mrs. Santa Claus
  • 1997 Choreographed ABC s version of Rogers & Hammerstein s Cinderella
  • 1998 Made Broadway co-directorial debut (with Sam Mendes) with revival of Cabaret
  • 1998 Provided the dance numbers for director Tim Robbins The Cradle Will Rock
  • 1999 Made television directorial debut with ABC s adapatation of the musical, Annie
  • 2000 Uncredited directing on the Broadway show, Suessical
  • 2002 Directed the screen adaptation of the musical, Chicago ; earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Director
  • 2005 Directed the feature adaptation of Memoirs of a Geisha, from Arthur Golden s best-selling novel
  • 2006 Produced and directed the NBC variety show, Tony Bennett: An American Classic ; also choreographed
  • 2009 Directed the screenplay adaptation of the Broadway musical, Nine
  • Began career as a Broadway dancer

George Clooney

After a decade spent toiling on series television, mostly in roles easily forgotten, actor George Clooney jolted to stardom with his portrayal of the charming, but troubled pediatrician Doug Ross on the acclaimed medical series, "ER" (NBC, 1994-2009). Thanks to his newfound celebrity, Clooney made the jump to films while still on the series, quickly establishing himself as a major Hollywood star with leading roles in “From Dusk Till Dawn” (1996), “Batman & Robin” (1997) and “Out of Sight” (1998). When he left the confines of the small screen for big screen pastures, Clooney transcended mere stardom to become one of the most prominent actors of his era, emulating the devil-may-care nonchalance of a Cary Grant or Clark Gable, while at the same time, becoming an Academy Award-winning performer, risk-taking director and socially-conscious activist. While raking in the box office as the breezy Danny Ocean in “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001) and its two sequels, Clooney forged ahead on a directing career with “Confessions of a Dangerous Mind” (2002). But it was his sophomore effort behind the camera, “Good Night, and Good Luck” (2005), that catapulted the star into the realm of top-ranking filmmakers, thanks to a number of Academy Award nominations. Meanwhile, his Oscar-winning performance as a disillusioned CIA agent in “Syriana” (2005) helped put to rest any residual notions that Clooney was just a famously devout bachelor out to have a good time.

Clooney was born on May 6, 1961 and raised in the small Kentucky town of Augusta – a scant 40 miles north of Cincinnati, OH. His father, Nick – brother of famed singer and actress Rosemary Clooney – was a local talk show host-turned-popular news anchor. His mother, Nina, was a beauty queen. Clooney grew up on the set of his father's shows, occasionally serving as a commercial pitchman and sketch player, before later working as a floor manager. With dreams of becoming a professional baseball player, Clooney was invited to tryout for the Cincinnati Reds in 1977 when he was just 16. But his best proved not good enough, and he failed to make the team. Instead, Clooney enrolled at Northern Kentucky University, where he proceeded to party, chase girls and occasionally show up for class. Not that he was entirely irresponsible – Clooney worked odd jobs to put himself through school, selling women’s shoes and men’s suits. After dropping out of NKU, Clooney’s cousin, actor Miguel Ferrer, came to Kentucky to make a low-budget movie about horseracing. Clooney was cast in a small part based on his good looks and became instantly seduced with the business.

In 1982, with money saved up from cutting tobacco, Clooney piled into his rusted 1976 Monte Carlo and drove to Los Angeles, CA in two days without stopping. His car guzzled oil and had ignition problems that forced him to keep it running on the side of the road while he caught an hour’s worth of sleep. He eventually sputtered into Beverly Hills, where he stayed with Rosemary, doing odd jobs around the house and driving his aunt and her famous friends around. Clooney then landed a job cleaning a theater – the money from which he used to pay for his first acting class. His first acting job was a Japanese commercial for Panasonic, followed by a part on the detective series “Riptide” (NBC, 1983-86). Clooney quickly made the jump from thankless television roles to forgettable horror flicks like "Grizzly II - The Predator" (1984), “Return to Horror High” (1986) and "Return of the Killer Tomatoes" 1988). But at least he was working.

Undeterred by the dearth of quality projects, Clooney continued plugging away on auditions, taking whatever job came his way (By the time he was a star, Clooney had worked on a total of 15 unsold pilots). Ironically, his first regular series role was as a young physician working in an emergency room in the short-lived sitcom "E/R" (CBS, 1984-85). He maintained a steady stream of bad recurring roles, playing a good-natured carpenter on "The Facts of Life" (NBC, 1979-1988) during the 1985-86 season; a womanizing factory manager on "Roseanne" (ABC, 1988-1997) for the 1988-89 season; and a construction worker on the short-lived sitcom "Baby Talk" (ABC, 1990-1992), which he left after clashing with the show's producer. After playing a detective on "Bodies of Evidence" (CBS, 1992-93), Clooney stayed with law enforcement, but switched to drama, starring as the married detective who falls for Teddy (Sela Ward) during the 1993-94 season of "Sisters" (NBC).

Clooney often said how his peripatetic upbringing and the experiences of both his father and aunt prepared him for the pitfalls of a showbiz career. When he finally achieved stardom on "ER,” he took his newfound success in stride. Clooney played womanizing emergency room pediatrician, Doug Ross, whose lack of personal judgment was usually trumped by compassion for his patients, though sometimes he defended an abused child with righteous indignation that bordered on professional misconduct. On the personal front, Ross was a carefree bachelor much like Clooney himself. But his darker nature lead to a stormy romantic entanglement with registered nurse, Carol Hathaway (Julianna Margulies), who began the series by attempting suicide after he broke her heart. Despite several twists and turns over the course of six seasons, including a few failed marriage proposals and the birth of twins, Ross and Hathaway – and consequently Clooney and Margulies – ended their stints on “ER,” having moved to Seattle to get married and raise their daughters.

As film offers poured in, Clooney began stretching as an actor, handling roles in diverse genres – though several efforts fell below expectations. He was alongside Quentin Tarantino, battling vampires in the action adventure "From Dusk Till Dawn" (1996), then displayed his boyish charm opposite Michelle Pfeiffer in the romantic comedy "One Fine Day" (1996). Though the former acquired some cult status, neither fared particularly well at the box office. In a bold, but ultimately damaging turn, Clooney inherited the “Batman” franchise from Val Kilmer, making a surprisingly mediocre Bruce Wayne/Batman in Joel Schumacher's "Batman & Robin" (1997). Clooney took the critical drubbings with typical good humor, often joking about his part in the debacle ("I think I've buried that franchise!"). The true culprits, however, were a confusing script, overblown visuals and an ear-splitting soundtrack. Clooney’s other big blockbuster from that year, "The Peacemaker,” also proved disappointing.

Despite a tough year at the box office, Clooney was dubbed “Sexiest Man Alive” by People magazine in 1997, a time when he was publicly battling the paparazzi for their bounty hunter tactics, especially in light of Princess Diana’s August death in Paris while being chased in her car by photographers. The first glimmers of Clooney’s activist nature surfaced when he organized a celebrity boycott of “Entertainment Tonight” (syndicated, 1981- ) in retaliation for another Paramount show, “Hard Copy” (syndicated, 1986-1999), which used this new form of intrusive paparazzi. Clooney was joined by the likes of Steven Spielberg, Tom Cruise and Madonna in an effort that proved effective – “Hard Copy” toned down its invasive tactics. Back on screen, Clooney firmly established himself as a bona fide presence in his next project, "Out of Sight" (1998), directed by Steven Soderbergh. As Elmore Leonard's smart-alecky, but fallible escaped con, Jack Foley, Clooney romanced a federal marshal (Jennifer Lopez) while en route to stealing a cache of diamonds from a crooked businessman (Albert Brook). Both Clooney and Lopez entranced critics with their sizzling onscreen chemistry, while Clooney earned praise for the easy-going charm and intelligence of his laid-back, debonair bank robber. Despite good reviews, however, few turned up in the theaters, sadly making “Out of Sight” a box office failure.

After making a cameo as a platoon leader in Terrence Malick's elegiac war film, "The Thin Red Line" (1998), his big screen fortunes changed dramatically with David O Russell's "Three Kings" (1999) – an uncommonly political Hollywood action feature set during the Gulf War that delivered a cautionary message about the responsibility accompanying America's role as policeman of the world. Clooney proved his mettle as an action star with his turn as career military man Major Archie Gates, though not without paying a price. Despite high critical praise for the film, he later cited the enormous stress of working with Russell, who routinely berated everyone on set. Russell was so combative, that the typically unflappable Clooney eventually put him in a chokehold after the director went ballistic, butting heads with the actor while daring him to strike back. Clooney later told Playboy magazine in 2000 that working on the film “was truly, without exception, the worst experience of my life.”

Regardless of his experiences with Russell, Clooney felt that his film career had warranted the decision to leave "ER" in February 2000. He made periodic returns to television, including as executive producer and star of the two-hour live broadcast of "Fail Safe" (CBS, 2000), a black-and-white homage to the days of live television and adapted from the Cold War novel by Harvey Wheeler and Eugene Burdick. Superbly acted and flawlessly produced, this welcome addition amidst the standard small screen fare failed to register with younger audiences weaned on MTV. The quality outing was the first real fruit born of Clooney’s production company, Maysville Pictures, and his contract with Warner Bros. – he previously served as executive producer and co-writer on the failed HBO pilot, "Kilroy" (1999). Clooney next reunited with "Three Kings" co-star Mark Wahlberg for Wolfgang Petersen's film adaptation of Sebastian Junger's best selling-novel, "The Perfect Storm" (2000), playing Captain Billy Tyne of the doomed fishing boat, Andrea Gail. Anxiously awaited for its tale of men in the grip of nature's fury, "The Perfect Storm" solidified Clooney as a bankable big screen star in a fine turn as the captain of the doomed boat.

Also in 2000, he starred as escaped con Ulysses Everett McGill in the Coen brothers' deliriously loopy Depression-era jail break movie, "O Brother, Where Art Thou?", based loosely on Homer's Odyssey. Back behind the camera, he served as producer on "Rock Star" (2001), a dopey comedy about a cover band singer (Wahlberg) drafted into the world of his heavy metal heroes. Clooney kept his stellar career in fast motion with a starring in Steven Soderbergh's all-star ensemble hit, "Ocean's Eleven" (2001) opposite Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Don Cheadle and Bernie Mac, among others. As heist leader Danny Ocean – an ex-con obsessed with robbing a casino heavyweight (Andy Garcia) and winning back his ex-wife (Julia Roberts) from him – Clooney’s comic charm was on full blast, easily overshadowing younger co-stars Pitt and Damon. That same year, following the Sept. 11 attacks, Clooney was instrumental in rallying dozens of Hollywood friends and colleagues for a televised fundraiser for the victims of the terrorist attack, "America: A Tribute to Heroes" (2001). Clooney and company managed to raise over $30 million through the telethon. A public row with Fox News personality Bill O’Reilly erupted, however, when the conservative pundit erroneously claimed that the United Way was mishandling the money. Clooney responded with a sharply worded letter excoriating O’Reilly’s unsubstantiated accusations and questionable journalism. The two continued their public row over the years on various topics, with Clooney typically getting the better of the ill-informed O’Reilly.

In 2002, Clooney had small but memorable role as a crippled crook in "Welcome to Collinwood.” Following up, he made his directorial debut with "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind," based on the book by Chuck Barris, the former host of "The Gong Show," who claimed he was a CIA hit man. Clooney aped Soderbergh’s off-kilter visual style, while at the same time, infusing his own breezy sense of humor, creating a daring first film that garnered many admirers. Clooney then co-starred with Natascha McElhorne in the thriller feature, "Solaris," a sci-fi remake of a 1972 Russian film which reunited the actor again with pal Steven Soderbergh. A metaphorical meditation on life and death co-produced by James Cameron, “Solaris” failed to attract much attention at the box office. Meanwhile, a spotty track record was being formed for Section Eight – a production company formed by Clooney and Soderbergh. Though developing an interesting array of film and television projects – including the surprisingly subdued Washington insider docudrama “K Street” (HBO, 2003-04) – Section Eight failed to generate much profit outside “Ocean’s 11.” The team rebounded – creatively at least – with "Unscripted" (2005), a chronicle of the ups and downs of a trio of actors making their way in Hollywood.

As he delved further into producing and directing, Clooney remained among the most in-demand A-list leading men in Hollywood. He reunited with the Coen Brothers, taking the lead in the disappointingly unfunny screwball comedy "Intolerable Cruelty" (2003) as divorce attorney Miles Massey, the millionaire author of a prenuptial agreement so tightly written that it has never been cracked. Meanwhile, he falls for a scheming, gold-digging serial divorcee (Catherine Zeta-Jones) looking to get even after Miles defends her ex-husband and leaves her with nothing. Clooney's disarming performance was one of the film's few comic strengths, though critics tagged the film for being intolerably cold, particularly in regards to the onscreen chemistry – or lack thereof – between Clooney and Zeta-Jones. The actor then recruited Zeta-Jones to join his ensemble of actor friends for the inevitable sequel, "Ocean's Twelve" (2004), which did tremendously at the box office, but suffered in comparison to the group's initial effort. Set in Italy, the film was more like a home movie of the gang on an extended vacation than an actual film.

Clooney the director came to full fruition with his sophomore effort, "Good Night and Good Luck" (2005), an ambitious and adroitly executed profile of pioneer newscaster Edward R. Murrow (David Straithairn) and his effort to publicly expose the headline-grabbing, bully-pulpit tactics of Sen. Joseph McCarthy and his Communist witch hunt in the 1950s. Clooney, who grew up watching his broadcast journalist father in action, showed a great aptitude for the ethical journalistic issues at hand, co-writing the screenplay with his longtime friend and partner Grant Heslov; the duo took greater-than-average pains to insure the historical accuracy of the events dramatized. As director, Clooney made creative use of real news interviews with McCarthy in place of casting an actor in the part, displaying a measured hand and a stylish touch with the rich black and white footage. Clooney also took on a side role as Murrow's respected news producer and confidant Fred Friendly, a role that displayed the actor in his most assured and adult performance. Clooney earned his first award nominations as a director, earning nods at the Independent Spirit Awards, Golden Globes and Academy Awards.

As an actor, Clooney signed onto writer-director Stephen Gaghan's multi-plot potboiler, "Syriana" (2005), playing a career CIA operative who uncovers a disturbing truth about the politics of oil in the Persian Gulf, before finding himself hung out to dry by his government when a mission goes awry. Clooney grew a scraggly beard and gained several extra pounds to play the role, while suffering a painful back injury on the final day of shooting, which required therapy and rehabilitation in a scene that failed to even make the finished film. But his pain and suffering wasn’t for naught – Clooney won a Golden Globe award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture and an Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role. Clooney next reunited with Soderbergh for "The Good German" (2006), playing an American reporter sent to cover the final Allied summit meeting of World War II, secretly hoping to search for a lost love, but becoming tangled up in a murder mystery.

Clooney was again voted “Sexiest Man Alive” by People magazine in 2006 – only the second time an actor received the title – with his pal Brad Pitt being the other. Then in a third go-round, Clooney hopped back onto the gravy train for “Ocean’s 13” (2007). This time, the gang seeks revenge on a ruthless Las Vegas casino owner (Al Pacino) whose double-crossing of Danny Ocean and company leads to his downfall. He next starred in as the titular “Michael Clayton” (2007), playing a corporate fixer who takes care of all the dirty work for one of the biggest law firms in New York City. But when the firm’s top litigator (Tom Wilkinson) suffers from a nervous breakdown and threatens to sabotage the a lucrative settlement suit, Clayton tries cleaning up the mess, only to come face-to-face with who he’s really become. Meanwhile, Clooney directed his third film, “Leatherheads” (2008), a period sports comedy set in the 1920s world of professional football. While he was awaiting the release of that film, Clooney received an Academy Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role for “Michael Clayton.” Unfortunately, "Leatherheads" tanked horribly, with the film and Clooney receiving some of the more brutal reviews of his career.

A turn as a slippery federal agent in The Coen Brothers’ dark farce “Burn After Reading” (2008) marked one of the filmmakers’ bigger commercial successes, and was well-suited to Clooney’s penchant for both political-leaning material and social satire, though the film’s dips into slapstick territory were a curious choice for an A-list cast. The prolific actor returned to theaters the following year alongside Jeff Bridges, Ewan McGregor, and Kevin Spacey in “The Men Who Stare At Goats” (2009), a comedy based on a little-known U.S. military program that once trained personnel to develop psychic abilities to be used during combat. In theaters almost simultaneously was Jason Reitman’s adaptation of the novel “Up in the Air” (2009), starring Clooney as a traveling executive addicted to his peripatetic lifestyle but faced with the possibility of having to set down both figurative and literal roots. Clooney also voiced the title character of Roald Dahl’s “The Fantastic Mr. Fox” (2009) in a stop-motion animated adaptation of the classic tale helmed by Wes Anderson and also starring the voice-over talent of Meryl Streep, Bill Murray and Jason Schwartzman. Clooney closed out the year with a beautiful new girlfriend, Italian TV presenter, Elisabetta Canalis, on his arm, as well as nominations at the Screen Actors Guild Awards and Golden Globes for Best Actor for "Up in the Air."

  • Also Credited As:
    George Timothy Clooney
  • Born:
    George Timothy Clooney on May 6, 1961 in Lexington, Kentucky, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Director, Producer, Screenwriter, Floor manager (for father s TV show), Caricaturist, Shoe salesman, Tobacco cutter
Family
  • Aunt: Rosemary Clooney. Appeared on two episodes during the first season of NBC s ER as an Alzheimer s patient prone to belting out songs; formerly married to actor Jose Ferrer with whom she had five children; died on June 29, 2002 of lung cancer
  • Cousin: Miguel Ferrer. Born Feb. 7, 1955; son of Jose Ferrer and Rosemary Clooney
  • Father: Nick Clooney.
  • Mother: Nina Bruce Clooney. Met husband when she was crowned first runner up at Miss Kentucky pageant and he was emcee
  • Sister: Ada Zeidler. Born c. 1959; married with two children
Significant Others
  • Companion: Brooke Langton. Reportedly dated in 1999; no longer together
  • Companion: Dedee Pfeiffer. Briefly dated; no longer together
  • Companion: Elisabetta Canalis. Italian; began dating in the Summer of 2009
  • Companion: Kelly Preston. Dated from 1987-1989; later married actor John Travolta
  • Companion: Krista Allen. Reportedly dated during filming of Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002); began seeing eachother again in 2003; split March 2004
  • Companion: Lisa Snowdon. Dated in 2001 and again in 2004, while he was filming Ocean s Twelve (2004); no longer together
  • Companion: Maria Bertrand. Canadian; briefly dated in 2002; no longer together
  • Companion: Renee Zellweger. Rumored to have dated in 2001; both claim they were only friends
  • Companion: Sarah Larson. Began dating in 2007; involved in motorcycle accident with Clooney on Sept. 21, 2007, both suffered broken bones; split in May 2008
  • Companion: Traylor Howard. Reportedly dated in 2000; no longer together
  • Companion: Brooke Langton. reportedly dating as of fall 1999
  • Companion: Celine Balitran. born c. 1973; French; former law student; dated from 1996 to 1999; met at the trendy Paris nightclub Barfly where she was waitressing while he was filming The Peacemaker (1997)
  • Companion: DeDee Pfeiffer.
  • Companion: Denise Crosby.
  • Companion: Jennifer Siebel. dated as of August 2002
  • Companion: Kelly Preston. together from 1987-89; later married actor John Travolta
  • Companion: Kimberly Russell. together briefly in mid-1995
  • Companion: Krista Allen. reportedly dated during filming of Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
  • Companion: Lisa Snowden. dated in 2001
  • Companion: Maria Betrand. Canadian; born c. 1974; reportedly dating as of spring 2002
  • Companion: Renee Zellweger. reportedly dated in fall 2001
  • Companion: Trayler Howard. reportedly dated as of spring 2000
Education
  • Augusta Independent High School, Augusta, KY
  • Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY
Milestones
  • 1974 Served as a floor manager on his father s locally produced TV show
  • 1975 Suffered for a year with Bell s palsy
  • 1977 Tried out for Cincinnati Reds baseball team at age 16
  • 1982 Appeared as an extra in ... And They re Off, a film starring his cousin Miguel Ferrer
  • 1982 Moved to Los Angeles at age 21; lived with his aunt, Rosemary Clooney, working as her handyman and chauffeur
  • 1984 Debut as TV series regular in the CBS sitcom E/R playing a young orderly named Ace
  • 1985 Had a recurring role as carpenter George Burnett on the The Facts of Life (NBC)
  • 1986 TV-movie debut, Combat High (NBC)
  • 1987 Played a drug dealer in the play Vicious at the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago
  • 1987 Played role of Tom Bennett in failed NBC comedy pilot Bennett Brothers
  • 1988 Had starring role in the horror spoof The Return of the Killer Tomatoes
  • 1988 Played the recurring role of Booker, the male chauvinist boss on the first season of Roseanne (ABC)
  • 1990 Cast in the short-lived detective series Sunset Beat (ABC); show cancelled after three episodes
  • 1991 Appeared on the ABC sitcom Baby Talk ; quit in frustration over creative differences with the producers
  • 1991 Declined Quentin Tarantino s request to read for a role in Reservoir Dogs
  • 1993 Played Falconer, a married policeman who becomes involved with Teddy Reed (Sela Ward), on Sisters (NBC)
  • 1994 Cast as pediatrician, Dr. Doug Ross on the hit NBC medical drama ER ; reprised role for one episode in the final season (2009)
  • 1996 Co-starred with Quentin Tarantino in the vampire horror flick From Dusk Till Dawn
  • 1996 Formed Maysville Pictures (formerly Left Bank Productions), named for the Kentucky town in which he grew up
  • 1996 Played romantic lead opposite Michelle Pfeiffer in One Fine Day
  • 1997 Portrayed Batman/Bruce Wayne in Batman & Robin, the fourth installment in the series, directed by Joel Schumacher
  • 1997 Provided the voice of Sparky the dog on an episode of the Comedy Central animated series South Park
  • 1998 Played an escaped prisoner in Steven Soderbergh s Out of Sight
  • 1998 Signed separate two-year development deals with CBS and Warner Bros.
  • 1999 Contributed the voice of Dr Gouache to the feature South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
  • 1999 Teamed with Ice Cube and Mark Wahlberg in David O Russell s critically-acclaimed Three Kings
  • 1999 Wrote and executive produced the HBO comedy series pilot Kilroy
  • 2000 Co-starred in the Coen brothers O Brother, Where Art Thou?
  • 2000 Executive produced and acted in the live, two-hour broadcast of Fail Safe (CBS), adapted from the Cold War novel by Harvey Wheeler and Eugene Burdick; directed by Stephen Frears; project reteamed him with ER co-star Noah Wyle
  • 2000 With Wahlberg, co-starred in the film version of Wolfgang Petersen s The Perfect Storm
  • 2001 Reteamed with Soderbergh for remake of Ocean s Eleven ; made through production company Section Eight
  • 2001 With Soderbergh, served as producer of Marc Rocco s The Jacket
  • 2002 Cast as a divorce attorney in the Coen brothers feature Intolerable Cruelty
  • 2002 Feature directorial debut, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind ; also had supporting role
  • 2002 Had small but memorable role as a crippled crook in Welcome to Collinwood, a farcical comedy screened at Cannes
  • 2002 Starred in the sci-fi thriller feature Solaris, directed by Soderberg
  • 2004 Returned with the original cast for Ocean s Twelve directed by Steven Soderbergh
  • 2005 Directed, co-wrote and portrayed producer Fred Friendly in Goodnight, and Good Luck, the 1950s-era drama about legendary TV newsman Edward R. Murrow; earned an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Director; received Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for Directing and Screenplay; was also nominated by the Directors Guild of America
  • 2005 Produced and starred in Syriana, a geopolitical thriller based on the real-life memoirs of CIA agent Robert Baer; earned a SAG nomination for Supporting Actor
  • 2006 Co-starred with Cate Blanchett in The Good German, about an American journalist trying to solve a murder mystery in post-war Berlin; directed by Steven Soderbergh
  • 2006 Formed Smoke House production company with Grant Heslov and signed a three-year first-look production and development deal with Warner Bros. Pictures and Warner Bros. Television
  • 2007 Played the title role in Michael Clayton, written and directed by Tony Gilroy; also co-produced; earned Golden Globe, SAG and Oscar nominations for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama
  • 2007 Reprised role of Danny Ocean for Ocean s 13
  • 2008 Directed and co-starred with Renée Zellweger in the 1920s-era football comedy, Leatherheads
  • 2008 Joined an ensemble cast for the Coen s brothers Burn After Reading
  • 2009 Directed by Grant Heslov in The Men Who Stare At Goats ; also co-produced
  • 2009 Nominated for the 2009 Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama ( Up in the Air )
  • 2009 Nominated for the 2009 Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role ( Up in the Air )
  • 2009 Played an isolated man who travels around the country to terminate corporate employees in Jason Reitman s Up in the Air ; earned Golden Globe and SAG nominations for Best Actor
  • 2009 Voiced the title role in Wes Anderson s stop-motion animation adaptation of the Roald Dahl book, Fantastic Mr. Fox
  • Beginning at age five, assisted on father s local Cincinnati talk show, The Nick Clooney Show
  • Feature acting debut in the unreleased Grizzly II - The Predator (Note: some sources say this was filmed in 1982 while others say 1984)
  • Raised in rural Kentucky and Ohio
  • Received first professional job, a stereo commercial, by appearing at the audition with a six-pack
  • With Soderbergh, formed Section Eight, a production company
  • Worked cutting tobacco to earn enough money to buy a car in order to drive cross-county

Matt Damon

Despite his All-American persona, actor Matt Damon thrived in roles that ran counter to his mom-and-apple pie image. Whether playing a combative mathematics genius, a serial killer hunting the rich and famous, or a lethal spy unable to recall his identity, Damon built a strong and respected career tackling characters that went against type. After appearing in several supporting roles, Damon forged his own path with best friend Ben Affleck by writing and starring in “Good Will Hunting” (1997), which earned the duo an Academy Award for Best Screenplay while opening numerous doors. From there, he delivered a brief, but acclaimed performance as the titular soldier in “Saving Private Ryan” (1998), followed by a more devious part as a social-climbing killer in “The Talented Mr. Ripley” (1999). Though he stalled a bit with “The Legend of Bagger Vance” (2000) and “All the Pretty Horses” (2000), Damon became a bona fide star by aptly trading one-liners with the likes of George Clooney and Brad Pitt in the stylish action comedy, “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001) and its sequels. But Damon became his own man with “The Bourne Identity” (2002), which allowed him to solo drive a successful action franchise that earned big box office dollars and critical acclaim across the board. By the time he landed a meaty leading role in Martin Scorsese’s Oscar-winning thriller, “The Departed” (2006), Damon was one of the biggest stars working in Hollywood.

Damon was born on Oct. 8, 1970 in Cambridge, MA and raised in nearby Newton. His father, Kent, was a stockbroker and his mother, Nancy, a professor of early-childhood education at Lesley College. When Damon was 2-years old, his parents divorced, leaving him to be reared by his mother in a commune-style home back in Cambridge. Because of the open and creative environment, Damon developed a taste for artistic endeavors at an early age. Although he acted onstage in school plays and declared his intention to pursue that career when he enrolled at Harvard University, Damon found it difficult at first. He made his feature debut screen with a one-line role of Adam Storke's younger brother in "Mystic Pizza" (1988). In 1991, Damon ditched Harvard 12 credits shy of his bachelor’s degree in English, choosing instead to co-star opposite Brian Dennehy as a medical school dropout in the made-for-cable movie, "Rising Son" (TNT, 1990).

With his acting career on the rise, he excelled as an anti-Semitic preppie in "School Ties" (1992), but later stated that the competition for the roles in his age range was fierce. Nearly all the young men in "School Ties" had auditioned for the co-starring role in "Scent of a Woman" (also 1992), but that plum role opposite an Oscar-winning Al Pacino went to Chris O'Donnell. In fact, Damon and O'Donnell often competed for roles, with the latter generally winning out. Meanwhile, Damon proved adequate as the narrator of Walter Hill's revisionist Western "Geronimo: An American Legend" (1993), only to be overshadowed by more seasoned actors, notably Gene Hackman and Wes Studi. On the other hand, he all but pulled the rug out from under Denzel Washington in "Courage Under Fire" (1996), offering a vivid turn as a guilt-ridden veteran of the Persian Gulf War tormented by an incident in battle. He even lost 40 pounds to achieve the gaunt, haunted look of the character.

When he was at Harvard, Damon began writing a script about a troubled mathematics genius with childhood buddy, Affleck. They fashioned a screenplay that soon became the talk of Hollywood, with studios bidding competitively for the project. Old friend and director Kevin Smith did his best to get it noticed by the Weinstein’s at Miramax, going to bat for his two buddies. In 1994, Castle Rock initially purchased the rights for over a half-million dollars in a pay-or-play deal. The story then focused on Will, a South Boston resident with superior intelligence whom the government attempts to recruit. A year later, with the project in turnaround, Miramax purchased the rights and the script evolved to focus more strongly on the emotional difficulties of the leading character. Before "Good Will Hunting" went before the cameras, however, Damon landed his first screen lead as a newly-minted crusading attorney in Francis Ford Coppola's adaptation of "John Grisham's 'The Rainmaker'" (1997). The one-two punch of the two leading roles – undoubtedly assisted by the resulting mythology building for Damon and Affleck as writers and actors – solidified the actor's status as the so-called “It” boy of 1997, along with Affleck. Earning a Best Actor Academy Award nomination and sharing an Oscar win for Best Screenplay with Affleck only upped his profile and provided Academy Award history with one of its most fairy-tale like moments come to life when, as their respective mothers sat in the audience, the two young bucks ran cheering to the stage, breathlessly thanking everyone in funny, quick succession. The twosome were, in fact, guys struggling to make it in the biz that everyone could relate to; thus, making their win that much sweeter.

Director Stephen Spielberg tapped Damon to play the title role in the World War II epic "Saving Private Ryan" (1998), a film worthy of critical praise for its showy camerawork and impressively staged battle set pieces. As the soldier whose three brothers have been killed in action, the All-American looking Damon was in only the last third of the film, but still managed to make a significant impression. He fared less well as the poker hustler-turned-law student who agrees to help his ex-con best friend in "Rounders" (1998). In this redux of Martin Scorsese's "Mean Streets" (1974), Damon relied on his winning personality, warm smile and good looks than on his acting ability, giving more of a movie star portrayal than a real performance.

Repaying writer-producer-director Kevin Smith for his assistance on "Good Will Hunting,” he joined Affleck to play a pair of fallen angels trying to get back into heaven in the oddly dark comedy, "Dogma" (1999). Damon followed by undertaking the more challenging title role of an American who decides to murder his traveling companion (Jude Law) and assume his identity in Anthony Minghella's well-crafted "The Talented Mr. Ripley" (1999), resulting in one of the actor's most intense performance – though the film largely built its reputation and devoted admirers after its initial release. And it was newcomer Law, in a winningly charming performance, who received the lion’s share of the spotlight. But it was Damon’s obsessive, bespectacled killer who was the glue that held the beautifully shot film together.

Damon's career hit a brief but worrisome slump with the release of three creative and box-office duds in a row: director Robert Redford's lethargic "The Legend of Bagger Vance," with Damon as a washed up golf pro opposite wise caddy Will Smith; "All the Pretty Horses,” director Billy Bob Thornton's failed adaptation of novelist Cormac McCarthy's romantic Western; and a small supporting turn in Van Sant's by-the-numbers "Finding Forrester" (2000). The actor recaptured his A-list cachet when he joined the all-star cast of Steven Soderbergh's remake of "Ocean's Eleven,” playing pickpocket and aspiring big-time thief, Linus Caldwell, in the popular hit – a role he returned to for the sequels "Ocean's Twelve" (2004) and Ocean’s Thirteen” (2007). His next film was a complete about-face from those slick, polished crowd-pleasers: Damon and Casey Affleck starred (and co-wrote) the largely improvised drama, "Gerry" (2002), a little-seen effort directed by Van Sant about two men named Gerry who are stranded in the desert during a hiking mishap – an intriguing experiment that proved to be unfit for mainstream audiences.

Over the years, Damon cultivated a reputation as one of the most affable movie actors in Hollywood and frequently collaborated with friends to give their projects a boost. His desire to help others get their careers off the ground led he and Affleck to create the HBO reality series, "Project: Greenlight" (2001- ), which documented and bankrolled untried aspiring filmmakers' attempts to create a motion picture to be released by Miramax – the show resulted in the films "Stolen Summer" (2002) and "The Battle of Shaker Heights" (2003), both executive produced by Affleck and Damon. The duo also created and produced the short-lived "Push, Nevada" (ABC, 2002-03), an interactive mystery show that gave viewers the chance to solve the crime and win $1 million. Damon also had a cameo in films by his friend, Kevin Smith, including "Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back" (2001) and "Jersey Girl" (2004); and in films from his "Ocean's Eleven" collaborators, including "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind" (2002); and up-and-coming filmmaker pals, such as the creators of the comedy "Eurotrip" (2004). As a voice actor, Damon lend his distinctive vocals to the films "Titan A.E." (2000), "Spirit: Stallion of the Cimmaron" (2002), "The Majestic" (2001), and "Howard Zinn: You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train" (2004).

Demonstrating his increasing diversity and believability, Damon took on the role of the amnesiac über-spy Jason Bourne in the film adaptation of Robert Ludlum's sprawling espionage novel, "The Bourne Identity" (2002), a crackerjack thriller that did solid box office business and became a mega-hit on home video. The actor would reprise the role for the equally well-crafted, but ultimately unsatisfying sequel "The Bourne Supremacy" (2004). Demonstrating a flair for goofball comedy, Damon delivered a wickedly funny turn on the small screen as Jack's scheming rival to join the gay men's chorus in a 2002 episode of the hit NBC sitcom "Will & Grace;" a role he reprised the following season. Damon next joined – literally – Greg Kinnear to play one half of a pair of conjoined twins in the flawed but still winning comedy, "Stuck On You" (2003), a silly romp from the Farrelly Brothers that proved to be a rare miss for the filmmaking duo.

His next film cast him opposite Heath Ledger as a fictionalized version of Wilhelm and Jacob Grimm, the Bavarian fairy tale spinners known as "The Brothers Grimm" (2005), re-imagined by director Terry Gilliam as a pair of curse-removing con artists who are suddenly tasked with solving a genuine mystery that will ultimately inspire their famous stories. Damon showed a great deal of panache and charisma as practical scoundrel Wilhelm, but the story ultimately left him too little to do; the film itself lacked the spark and imagination expected of a Gilliam project. Behind the scenes, Damon was credited with frequently playing peacemaker between the embattled Gilliam and the films' producers, the Weinstein brothers. At the end of that year Damon delivered a fine turn in the complex potboiler, "Syriana" (2005), playing an oil industry analyst living a comfortable life in Geneva until the death of his son while visiting an oil-rich country, drives him to obsession with helping the country's benevolent prince (Alexander Siddig) raise his nation with sound business dealings.

Damon next joined an all-star cast that included Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Wahlberg and Jack Nicholson for “The Departed” (2006), playing a hardened criminal employed by a crime syndicate who infiltrates the police while his counterpart (DiCaprio) on the force goes undercover in the mob. Based on the excellent Hong Kong action thriller, “Infernal Affairs” (2002) and directed by Martin Scorsese, “The Departed” earned a huge helping critical kudos prior to its early October release – as well as several Academy Award wins. In “The Good Shepherd” (2006), a historical look at the beginnings of the CIA, Damon played Edward Wilson, a bright, idealistic Yale student recruited by the OSS to work intelligence during World War II. While later helping to form the CIA, he becomes disenfranchised during the heightened suspicions and deep-rooted paranoia of the Cold War. In 2007, Damon revived two favorite characters for a second time, appearing as Linus Caldwell in the much-improved “Ocean’s Thirteen” (2007), and Jason Bourne for “The Bourne Ultimatum” (2007), who comes out of retirement to defeat arch rival, The Jackal, in a once-and-for-all showdown.

In 2009, Damon made a cameo appearance on the hit Hollywood sitcom, “Entourage” (HBO, 2004- ), playing a hyper-real version of himself in an effort to pressure Vince Chase (Adrian Grenier) into donating money to his real-life charity, OneXOne, only to grow more and more angry as Vince continues to avoid him. Back in features, he reunited with Steven Soderbergh to star in “The Informant!” (2009), a dark political comedy in which he portrayed Mark Whitacre, a former high-ranking executive at Archer Daniels Midland who blew the whistle on the company’s illegal price-fixing scheme, only to find himself in trouble with the FBI himself when they discover he has embezzled $9 million. The role earned Damon a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. He next starred in “Invictus” (2009), director Clint Eastwood’s compelling sports drama about how Nelson Mandela (Morgan Freeman) joined forces with South African rugby star Francois Pienaar (Damon) to unite their country. Damon earned his second Golden Globe nomination that year, this time for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture, as well as a Screen Actors Guild award in the same category.

  • Also Credited As:
    Matthew Paige Damon
  • Born:
    Matthew Paige Damon on October 8, 1970 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Screenwriter
Family
  • Brother: Kyle Damon. Born c. 1967
  • Daughter: Gia Zavala Damon. Born Aug. 20, 2008; mother is Luciana Bozan
  • Daughter: Isabella Damon. Born June 11, 2006; mother is Luciana Bozan
  • Father: Kent Damon. Born c. 1943; divorced from Damon s mother c. 1973
  • Mother: Nancy Carlsson-Paige. Divorced from Damon s father c. 1973
Significant Others
  • Companion: Claire Danes. Briefly dated during the filming of The Rainmaker in 1997
  • Companion: Minnie Driver. Met in 1997 while filming Good Will Hunting (1997); no longer together
  • Companion: Odessa Whitmire. Met when she was working as a personal assistant to Billy Bob Thornton and Ben Affleck; began dating in 2001; split in October 2003
  • Companion: Skylar Statenstein. Born c. 1961; her relationship with Damon was the basis for the Good Will Hunting (1997) character Skylar, played by Minnie Driver; later married rock musician Lars Ulrich of Metallica
  • Companion: Winona Ryder. Introduced by Gwyneth Paltrow at a New Year s Eve party on Dec. 31, 1997; began relationship in 1998; split in April 2000
  • Wife: Luciana Bozan. Argentine-born; previously went by the name Luciana Barroso; began dating in 2003 when they met in Miami Beach while Damon was filming the comedy Stuck on You ; has a daughter, Alexia, from a previous relationship; married Dec. 9, 2005 in a private ceremony in New York City
  • Companion: Claire Danes. dated during filming of The Rainmaker
  • Companion: Kara Sands. no longer together
  • Companion: Minnie Driver. met during filming of Good Will Hunting ; dated in 1997
  • Companion: Odessa Whitmire. reportedly dating as of 2001; worked as a personal assistant to Billy Bob Thornton and Ben Affleck; rumored to be engaged as of December 2002
  • Companion: Skylar Statenstein. reportedly the model for Minnie Driver s character in Good Will Hunting ; later married rock musician Lars Ulrich; born c. 1961
  • Companion: Winona Ryder. introduced by Gwyneth Paltrow at a New Year s Eve party on December 31, 1997; began relationship in 1998; separated in April 2000
Education
  • Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, English
Milestones
  • 1981 Met and became friends with Ben Affleck, who lived two blocks away (date approximate)
  • 1988 Made feature film debut in Mystic Pizza ; had one line
  • 1990 TV acting debut in the TV-movie, Rising Son (TNT)
  • 1992 Played first prominent screen role in School Ties, also featuring Affleck
  • 1995 Last TV acting role (to date) in the TNT movie The Good Old Boys, directed by Tommy Lee Jones
  • 1996 Had strong supporting role in Courage Under Fire
  • 1996 Sold script co-written with Ben Affleck, Good Will Hunting ; Damon and Affleck co-starred in feature which was released in 1997; received Oscar for Best Original Screenplay; had also been nominated as Best Actor
  • 1997 Had first leading role in features in John Grisham s The Rainmaker, directed by Francis Ford Coppola
  • 1997 Made cameo appearance in Chasing Amy, starring Affleck and directed by Kevin Smith
  • 1998 Had titular role in Steven Spielberg s WWII drama Saving Private Ryan
  • 1998 Played leading role of a reformed gambler in Rounders
  • 1999 Co-starred with Gwyneth Paltrow and Jude Law in The Talented Mr Ripley, scripted and directed by Anthony Minghella
  • 1999 Reteamed with Affleck to play a pair of renegade angels in Kevin Smith s Dogma
  • 2000 LivePlanet sponsored Project Greenlight, an Internet screenwriting competition created in partnership with HBO and Miramax
  • 2000 Portrayed a 1930s golfer in The Legend of Bagger Vance, directed by Robert Redford
  • 2000 Starred in the film version of All the Pretty Horses, scripted and directed by Billy Bob Thornton
  • 2001 Was an executive producer (with Ben Affleck and others) and appeared in the HBO series Project Greenlight which followed the making of the film Stolen Summer (2002)
  • 2001 Appeared in the ensemble of Ocean s Eleven
  • 2002 Had lead role of a spy with amnesia in The Bourne Identity based on the Robert Ludlum novel
  • 2002 Made rare TV acting appearance in a guest spot on the NBC sitcom Will & Grace playing a heterosexual who poses as a gay man to land a spot in a chorale group
  • 2002 With Casey Affleck, co-wrote and co-starred in the Sundance-screened Gerry
  • 2003 Co-Starred with Greg Kinnear in the comedy Stuck on You, directed by Peter and Bobby Farrelly
  • 2004 Reprised role of Jason Bourne in The Bourne Supremacy based on the Robert Ludlum novel
  • 2004 Returned with the original cast for Ocean s Twelve directed by Steven Soderbergh
  • 2005 Cast as an oil executive in the geopolitical thriller Syriana, based on the real-life memoirs of CIA agent Robert Baer; produced by George Clooney
  • 2005 Cast in Terry Gilliam s The Brothers Grimm opposite Heath Ledger
  • 2006 Cast as a criminal who has infiltrated the police department in Martin Scorsese s mob drama The Departed
  • 2006 Executive produced Feast a horror film, which is a result of the third season of the Project Greenlight contest
  • 2006 Portrayed CIA agent, Edward Wilson in Robert De Niro s long-anticipated The Good Shepherd, which recounts the history of the CIA from World War II through its involvement in the Bay of Pigs
  • 2007 Re-teamed with the original cast for Ocean s 13
  • 2007 Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
  • 2007 Reprised role of Jason Bourne in The Bourne Ultimatum
  • 2009 Nominated for the 2009 Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture ( Invictus )
  • 2009 Nominated for the 2009 Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy ( The Informant )
  • 2009 Nominated for the 2009 Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role ( Invictus )
  • 2009 Portrayed Francois Pienaar, the South African Rugby team captain, opposite Morgan Freeman as former President Mandela in Clint Eastwood s Invictus ; earned Golden Globe and SAG nominations for Best Supporting Actor
  • 2009 Portrayed Mark Whitacre, the ADM executive turned whistleblower, in Steven Soderbergh s The Informant ; earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor
  • Acted with the prestigious American Repertory Theatre in Cambridge and with various Harvard theatre groups
  • Formed LivePlanet with Affleck and producers Sean Bailey and Chris Moore
  • Lived in a commune-like house in Cambridge with his mother and older brother
  • Raised in Newton and Cambridge, Massachusetts
  • With Ben Affleck, formed Pearl Street Productions

Clint Eastwood

In a career that spanned over half a century, actor and director Clint Eastwood managed to become both a top box office draw and an Oscar-winning director, while managing to shrug off the trappings of Hollywood. Never one to worry about critical or audience reception, Eastwood amassed a staggeringly impressive body of work both in front of and behind the camera, while at the same time starring in two film series that were both legendary and notorious. After breaking through on television on “Rawhide” (CBS, 1959-1966), he personified the laconic Man With No Name in a trilogy of Spaghetti Westerns made by Italian director, Sergio Leone – “A Fistful of Dollars” (1964), “For a Few Dollars More” (1965) and “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” (1966). While continuing to churn out revisionist Westerns throughout the 1970s, Eastwood essayed another taciturn loner bucking the system in “Dirty Harry” (1971). Spawning four sequels throughout the years, Eastwood’s loose cannon police detective became both scourge and hero to audiences. Though he made his directing debut with “Play Misty for Me” (1971), Eastwood reached full fruition as a filmmaker with his Oscar-winning Western, “Unforgiven” (1992). As unpredictable as he was indefinable, Eastwood branched out into new territory in the new millennium, helming such moving and deeply rich films as “Mystic River” (2003), “Million Dollar Baby” (2004) and “Letters From Iwo Jima” (2006), all of which earned considerable acclaim and awards, while cementing Eastwood as one of the truly great creative talents in cinematic history.

Born on May 31, 1930 in San Francisco, Eastwood grew up in Depression-era California, where his parents, Clinton and Ruth, were itinerant workers. Because of his father’s difficulty in finding steady work, Eastwood moved with his family from one Northern California town to another, attending some eight elementary schools in the process. The experience profoundly affected him to the point of turning Eastwood into an isolated and lonely child. By the time he was attending Oakland Technical High School, he was excelling at swimming and basketball, while playing jazz piano for meals at a local club. After graduation, he worked as a firefighter and lumberjack in Oregon, as well as a steelworker in Seattle. In 1951, Eastwood was drafted into the U.S. Army, where he was a swimming instructor during the Korean War. It was at Fort Ord near Carmel, CA that Eastwood first became interested in acting, thanks to his friendship with actors David Janssen and Martin Milner, who encouraged him to pursue a career in Hollywood after serving in the military. Taking their advice, Eastwood made his way to Southern California, where he studied at Los Angeles City College on the G.I. Bill.

Upon his arrival in Hollywood, Eastwood signed with Universal Studios as a contract player. Soon he began landing bit parts in rather inane movies, most notoriously in "Francis in the Navy" (1955), one of several comedies featuring Francis the Talking Mule. Also that year, Eastwood made a brief appearance as a lab technician in “Revenge of the Creature,” the sequel to “Creature from the Black Lagoon” (1954), which was years later lampooned on the popular cult television show, “Mystery Science Theater 3000” (Comedy Central/Sci Fi Channel, 1989-2000). After more small roles in B-movie fare like “Lady Godiva” (1955), “Star in the Dust” (1956) and “Never Say Goodbye” (1956), Eastwood was dropped by Universal, forcing the young actor to make ends meet digging swimming pools and pumping gas while he contemplated a return to college. But while eating lunch with a friend at the CBS cafeteria, Eastwood was approached by a producer who asked him to audition for a new Western television series, “Rawhide.” Despite blowing his lines at the audition, Eastwood was cast as Rowdy Yates, a ramrod under the command of trail boss Gil Favor (Eric Fleming) who helps lead a group of cowboys solving various problems while driving cattle along the Sedalia Trail.

Over the years, “Rawhide” steadily became a top-rated show, turning the unknown Eastwood into a television star. But film stardom, however, still remained out of his reach until he was handed a script written by up-and-coming Italian director, Sergio Leone. Though reluctant at first to read a script for a film to be shot by an Italian company in Spain, Eastwood was convinced by his agent to give the screenplay a once over. He was immediately drawn into a revisionist take on the classic Western, which featured a nameless antihero out to get what he wants rather than helping those in need. On condition that he be allowed to cut some of his dialogue – the rare instance of an actor requesting fewer lines – Eastwood traveled to Spain to film what became the first in a trilogy of Spaghetti Westerns, “A Fistful of Dollars” (1964), a remake of Akira Kurosawa’s “Yojimbo” (1961). Eastwood played the laconic and lethal Man With No Name, who finds himself in a nameless town torn apart by two feuding families. Hiring himself out as a mercenary, the lone drifter plays one side against the other until nothing remains of either side. Onscreen, Eastwood started to develop a minimalist acting style for which he soon became famous.

Eastwood went on to revive the nameless drifter in “For a Few Dollars More” (1965), a richer, more mythologized film that focused on two ruthless bounty hunters (Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef) who form a tenuous partnership to hunt down a wanted bandit (Gian Maria Volontè). Perhaps because it was the middle film, “For a Few Dollars More” was less appreciated than its predecessor, despite enhanced character motivation, visual style and production values. But it was the last film, “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966), that placed the Man With No Name into the cinematic pantheon. Set during the waning days of the Civil War, Eastwood’s enigmatic loner – nicknamed Blondie – teams up with Tuco (Eli Wallach), a.k.a. The Ugly, an oafish bandito with a price on his head, in a search for $200,000 in Confederate coin. Since both possess one half of the location – Tuco knows the graveyard; Blondie knows what grave – they are forced into an uneasy partnership. Meanwhile, a bloodthirsty Union officer, Angel Eyes (Van Cleef), a.k.a. The Bad, wants in on the money and will do anything – including torture and murder – to get it. Visually stunning and stylistic – particularly the legendary three-way standoff in a circular graveyard – “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” was an immediate hit upon its American release in 1967 and caped a trilogy of films that were inspirational for generations of future filmmakers.

Returning stateside an international star, Eastwood was in demand for lead roles in Hollywood films – several of which cemented his status as a top box office draw. After forming his production company, Malpaso, he starred in a pseudo-Western, “Hang ‘Em High” (1968), playing a former lawman-turned-rancher who seeks revenge on nine men after they wrongfully accused him of stealing a herd of cattle and hang him by the neck, leaving him for dead. In “Coogan’s Bluff” (1968), a smart urban Western that marked the beginning of a long and successful collaboration with director Don Siegel, Eastwood played an Arizona sheriff sent to New York City to extradite an escaped killer (Don Stroud). He next starred in his first bona fide blockbuster, “Where Eagles Dare” (1968), a World War II espionage actioner that followed a group of British special forces lead by a secretive major (Richard Burton) on a dangerous operation behind German lines to rescue a captured American general (Robert Beatty). But the major knows more about their mission than he lets on, until it’s finally revealed – after members of his squad get killed one by one – that the operation was designed to ferret out a high-level traitor inside British intelligence. Despite the costly budget, “Where Eagles Dare” was a financial hit and became one of Eastwood’s most revered films of his early career.

By the time that the 1960s were coming to a close, Eastwood had become one of the biggest stars in the world. He did, however, get a chink in his armor from his next film, “Paint Your Wagon” (1969) a much-maligned, but ultimately enjoyable Western musical set during the California gold rush about two prospectors (Eastwood and Lee Marvin) who somehow wind up married to the same woman (Jean Seberg). Despite the strong leading cast, “Paint Your Wagon” suffered from all three stars being unable to carry a tune. Eastwood proved especially embarrassing with his strained wailing on “I Talk to the Trees” and “Gold Fever.” Somewhat redeeming himself, he took one of his first romantic leads in “Two Mules for Sister Sara” (1970), playing a tough cowboy who rescues a woman (Shirley Maclaine) from being raped. But while escorting her to a band of anti-French revolutionaries, he’s surprised to learn that she’s a nun who may or may not be what she claims.

Eastwood then joined forces with an all-star cast – which included Telly Savalas, Don Rickles, Carroll O’Connor and Donald Sutherland – for “Kelly’s Heroes” (1970), a World War II action comedy that depicted a motley crew of Army soldiers who go 30 miles behind enemy lines to steal a cache of gold bars from the Nazis. Despite a discordant convergence of black comedy, anti-war commentary and action sequences, coupled with a middling critical reception, “Kelly’s Heroes” went on to become another hit for Eastwood. Then with the encouragement and guidance of mentor Don Siegel, Eastwood made his directorial debut with “Play Misty for Me” (1971), a sexual thriller about an obsessive woman (Jessica Walters) who pursues a jazz deejay (Eastwood) after they had what was supposed to be a one-night stand. Though Universal was doubtful about Eastwood in this sort of lead role, he offered his directing services gratis. The result was a successful take at the box office and confirmation that the actor’s talents extended into other avenues.

While he was laying the foundation for what turned out to be an acclaimed and award-winning career as a director, Eastwood joined forces again with Siegel to create one of the most memorable and controversial characters of the late 20th century. In “Dirty Harry” (1971), he played Inspector Harry Callahan, a loose cannon San Francisco detective who liked to shoot first and ask questions later. Eastwood injected both a seething callousness and deep sense of morality into his rogue cop, who runs afoul of the system while ridding the streets of punks and degenerates, often in an unflinchingly violent way. Both actor and director were wholly unprepared for the reception they received; they simply thought they were making an exciting action movie. Despite the controversy over the hardcore violence – film critic Pauline Kael called it a “right-wing fantasy” and “fascist medievalism” – “Dirty Harry” was an enormous success at the box office, while the character himself entered the halls of cinematic infamy with the line, “[B]eing as this is a .44 Magnum, the most powerful handgun in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question: Do I feel lucky? Well, do you, punk?

After starring in an Americanized version of Leone’s Spaghetti Western, “Joe Kidd” (1972), Eastwood revived Dirty Harry Callahan in “Magnum Force” (1973), which followed the wayward detective as he tracks down a vigilante group that kills scofflaws set free by the courts. Not as stylistic or as memorable as the first installment, “Magnum Force” proved successful enough to warrant another sequel. In the meantime, Eastwood returned to the director’s chair for “High Plains Drifter” (1973), a bleak, apocalyptic Western in which he offered a variation on his Man With No Name, playing a mythical stranger who sweeps into a desolate town ravaged by a group of outlaws. Eastwood borrowed heavily from his experiences with Sergio Leone to create an unsettling tale about an antihero hell-bent on exacting revenge, which was publicly criticized by old school Western hero, John Wayne, for offending his sensibilities. Nonetheless, “High Plains Drifter” was the biggest box office draw of that year. Exploring new territory, Eastwood directed “Breezy” (1973), a long-forgotten romantic drama about a recently divorced middle-aged man (William Holden) who develops a love affair with a younger counterculture girl (Kay Lenz). Despite the chemistry between the two leads and sweet nature of the story, “Breezy” ranked low on the list of Eastwood’s directorial accomplishments.

In 1975, following a turn as a retired thief who teams up with an innocent drifter (Jeff Bridges) on a cross-country journey after a robbery gone bad in “Thunderbolt and Lightfoot” (1974), Eastwood once again directed two films in differing genres. Returning to the Western, he directed and starred in “The Outlaw Josey Wales” (1975), another revisionist take on the classic movie staple that saw him play a peaceful farmer driven to revenge after his family is murdered by gunmen. He then turned to an action thriller for “The Eiger Sanction” (1975), playing an art history professor who moonlights as a hired assassin for an international intelligence consortium. For a third time, Eastwood played Dirty Harry; this time in “The Enforcer” (1976), an underappreciated installment to the series that paired Harry with a female detective (Tyne Daly), while inserting a much-needed comedic tone with several funny and memorable verbal exchanges. Back in the director’s chair, he directed and starred in “The Gauntlet” (1977), an action comedy that was a subtle spoof on his Dirty Harry persona. Eastwood played Detective Ben Shockley, an alcoholic do-nothing tasked with escorting a Las Vegas hooker (Sandra Locke) to a mob trial in Phoenix.

By the late 1970s, Eastwood began to break away from his tough guy characterizations by diversifying his resume with more comedies and romantic roles. Despite the shift in focus, he remained one of the biggest box office draws in the world, while simultaneously adding more colors to his directing palette. In “Every Which Way But Loose” (1978), he played a bare-knuckle boxer who pals around with his orangutan, Clyde, while falling for a country-and-western singer (Eastwood’s off-screen girlfriend, Locke, again). Despite the threadbare plot and overall goofiness of the concept, the film nonetheless proved to be another gigantic hit for Eastwood. Turning to prison drama, he starred in Siegel’s tense thriller, “Escape From Alcatraz” (1979), playing real-life convict Frank Morris, who in 1962 managed to escape from the famed island prison with two other cons (Fred Ward and Jack Thibeau), only to disappear without a trace. The following year, he scored again with the sequel “Any Which Way You Can” (1980), then showed touches of a sweeter, gentler side with his modern Western, “Bronco Billy” (1980), a light-hearted look at a traveling Old West show led by a loveable loser yearning for freedom and days gone by. Despite his deft direction, “Bronco Billy” was a rare box office failure for Eastwood.

In 1982, Eastwood churned out two more films as a star and director – the Cold War-themed spy thriller, “Firefox,” in which he played an American pilot who gets smuggled into the Soviet Union in order to steal a top secret supersonic jet fighter, and “Honkytonk Man,” a touching drama about a farmer who gets one last chance at musical stardom in Nashville. Eastwood then stepped behind the camera to direct himself as Dirty Harry in "Sudden Impact" (1983), a lesser installment to the series that nonetheless bestowed the immortal line, "Go ahead, make my day,” upon the collective conscience. Always one to try a different take on a familiar character, Eastwood starred in “Tightrope” (1984), a crime thriller in which he played a New Orleans detective on the trail of a serial killer whose penchant for prostitutes and S&M mirrors his own. Eastwood then made another rare misstep with the period comedy “City Heat” (1984), playing a police detective trying to take down a mob boss with a roguish private eye (Burt Reynolds). Eastwood jumped back into the saddle again – an infrequent occurrence later in his career – for the bleak Western, “Pale Rider” (1985), in which he played the Preacher, a mysterious drifter who rides into a small gold mining town and helps the locals fight back against corporate interests threatening to take their land.

Never one to be pulled into the claptrap of Hollywood, Eastwood chose to make his residence in Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA, a wealthy town and artist enclave where in 1986, he ran a brief, but successful campaign for mayor. Frustrated by politics as usual, the actor decided to enter the race late in the election cycle, promising better relations between business and the community. Surprisingly, he won with an astounding 72 percent of the vote, and proceeded to strike a balance between conservationists and business development. During his one-and-only two-year term, Eastwood continued to make films, starring in “Heartbreak Ridge” (1986), in which he played an old fashioned, tough-as-nails Marine drill sergeant tasked with straightening out a squad of misfits, then returned for a fifth and perhaps last time as Dirty Harry in “The Dead Pool” (1988), the least enjoyable installment of the series. Back to directing, his portraits of tormented men with intense inner lives and little ability to communicate reached an apogee with "Bird" (1988), a moody look at troubled jazz musician Charlie “Bird” Parker (Forest Whitaker). A longtime fan of jazz, as well as an accomplished musician and composer in his own right, Eastwood was a natural fit to direct the film. One of his most accomplished features, “Bird” marked the first time that Eastwood opted to break away from straightforward narrative in favor of a more impressionistic style.

By the time the 1990s rolled around, Eastwood began to see signs that he was becoming less of a box office draw. After starring in the forgettable “Pink Cadillac” (1989), Eastwood encountered two significant financial failures: "The Rookie” (1990), a formulaic cop thriller about a veteran detective schooling a rookie (Charlie Sheen) while trying to track down a drug dealer, and “White Hunter, Black Heart” (1990), an interesting, but ultimately flawed fictional take on the shooting of John Huston’s “The African Queen” (1951). Eastwood directed the latter, which proved to be another welcome departure stylistically, though the engaging film barely made a peep at the box office. But Eastwood enjoyed a popular and critical rebirth with "Unforgiven" (1992), a so-called anti-Western which earned him Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director, as well as several other major awards. A spellbinding morality tale about the effects of killing on a man’s soul, "Unforgiven" took both an ironic and sentimental view of several of Eastwood's earlier gunfighter incarnations. Dedicated to his mentors "Sergio" and "Don," the film was a commercial hit, grossing over $100 million during its long run, while single-handedly reinvigorating a favorite Hollywood genre that had seemingly run its course.

Eastwood's next star vehicle, "In the Line of Fire" (1993), was an immediate hit, turning the tide against the decline in his box office prowess. The taut political thriller pitted a veteran Secret Service agent (Eastwood), still troubled by his inability to protect John F. Kennedy in Dallas, against a brilliant, but obsessed assassin (John Malkovich) determined to kill the current president (Jim Curley). Eastwood directed his next feature, "A Perfect World" (1993), in which he played an experienced law man tracking down a dangerous escaped convict (Kevin Costner) with an eight-year-old hostage (T.J. Lowther). Even the most jaded of critics praised Eastwood's restrained adaptation of "The Bridges of Madison County" (1995), which took an overwrought best-seller and honed it into a finely-acted, adult love story. A detailed, mature look at passion, “Bridges” not only exhibited Eastwood's subtle directorial touch, but also provided him with a romantic lead that he played with confidence and charm. Starring opposite Meryl Streep, he exuded a low-key sexuality while revealing a soft, yet masculine side. Eastwood also contributed original compositions to the soundtrack, which were released on his newly-launched Malpaso Records. That same year, Eastwood made an uncredited cameo in the children’s fantasy, "Casper” (1995).

With "Absolute Power" (1997), Eastwood began to address the issue of growing old. In this uneven thriller, he portrayed a thief out to commit one last crime before retiring, but witnesses a murder involving the President of the United States (Gene Hackman). Also that year, he stayed behind the camera for “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil” (1997), a slow-moving adaptation of the acclaimed true-life novel about a shocking murder in Savannah, GA that gets pinned on a high-society figure (Kevin Spacey). For "True Crime" (1999), Eastwood portrayed a burnt-out reporter who finds a last shot at redemption when he becomes convinced a death row inmate (Isaiah Washington) is innocent. He made his most blatant attempt to deal with aging with his next directorial effort, "Space Cowboys" (2000), in which he played the leader of a quartet of veteran astronauts called out of retirement to fix a satellite first sent into space 40 years earlier. In 2002, he directed and starred in "Bloodwork," a competent, but standard thriller with Eastwood as an FBI agent taunted by a clever serial killer (Jeff Daniels).

Eastwood received high praise when he stepped behind the camera for "Mystic River" (2003), an adaptation of Dennis Lehane’s crime novel which explores the interwoven history of three men (Sean Penn, Tim Robbins and Kevin Bacon) and the terrible events from their boyhood that later force them to make irrevocable choices. Considered one of his best pictures since "Unforgiven," the film earned six Oscar nominations, including Eastwood's second as Best Director. Oscar buzz ignited anew with his follow up, “Million Dollar Baby” (2004), which was an even more effective effort than "Mystic River." Eastwood played Frankie Dunn, an old-school boxing trainer afraid of intimacy after a painful rift with his daughter. With the pointed advice of his friend and former boxer (Morgan Freeman), Dunn gets a last shot at coaching a champion (Hilary Swank), who in turn becomes the daughter he never had, only to be faced with a moral choice after a sudden tragedy. Praised by critics as an exquisite and subtle film, “Million Dollar Baby” received wide acclaim after earning five Golden Globe nominations, including Best Director – the trophy that Eastwood ultimately claimed. Meanwhile, the film earned seven Academy Award nods, including Best Picture, Best Director and a surprising Best Actor nomination for Eastwood – only the second of his long career. Eastwood failed to win the acting award, but did take home Oscars for Best Director and Best Picture.

As he mellowed with age, Eastwood became more ruminative and thought-provoking on a variety of themes – echoes of which were seen in his examination of violence in “Unforgiven.” With “Flags of Our Fathers” (2006), an epic World War II drama that focused on the three surviving U.S. servicemen who raised the American flag during the battle for Iwo Jima, Eastwood used the war genre to explore how a single image can rally a nation in a time of great need, while cynical politicians callously disregard the truth. Leapfrogging from the violence of the black sand beaches to the war bond campaign back home, “Flags of Our Fathers” focused on two Marines (Adam Beach and Jesse Bradford) and a Navy corpsman (Ryan Phillippe) being shuttled across the nation by the government to raise money as they cope with the official sanitized version of events.

Even before the film was released, “Flags of Our Fathers” was considered to be a top contender for Oscar consideration, including Eastwood, whose rich and deeply engaging direction seemed to poise him for a third straight nomination. But it was the companion film, “Letters from Iwo Jima” (2006), which was shot on the heels of its predecessor and focused the oft-told tale from the unique perspective of the Japanese defenders led by an ingenuous general (Ken Watanabe), that earned Eastwood major award recognition. “Letters from Iwo Jima” received Golden Globe Award nominations in 2006, including one for Best Director – Motion Picture for Eastwood. Eastwood also earned a second Best Director nod for his work on “Flags of Our Fathers.” He took one out of three nominations, winning a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film for “Letters from Iwo Jima." He went on to earn yet another Best Director nomination at the Academy Awards, but predictably lost out to Martin Scorsese for “The Departed.”

An intensely private person, Eastwood was rarely featured in the tabloid press. His only real brush came in 1989 when former co-star and live-in lover, Sandra Locke, filed a palimony suit after the couple split. Then in 2008, Eastwood was publicly criticized by director Spike Lee for not presenting a single black character in either Iwo Jima film, despite their active participation in the battle. Eastwood shot back, saying that the film was about the flag-raising and told Lee to “shut his face.” Later in the year, Eastwood was earning press for what he did best – acting and directing. He first helmed the period thriller “Changeling” (2008), starring Angelina Jolie as a distraught mother who battles a corrupt Los Angeles Police Department in 1928 after they claim to find her missing son, whom she knows is still missing. Then he directed and starred in “Gran Torino” (2008), a low-key thriller about a widowed, hateful and unhappy old man (Eastwood) who tries to reform a neighborhood Korean boy (Bee Vang) after he tries to steal his prized 1973 car, only to find himself protecting the boy’s family from a local Asian gang. Eastwood earned a Golden Globe nomination for his “Changeling” score, and also earned a nod at the same awards for the title song to “Gran Torino.” Eastwood next directed “Invictus” (2009), the true story about how South African president Nelson Mandela (Morgan Freeman) helped unite a fractured nation by inspiring rugby captain Francois Pienaar (Matt Damon) to lead his subpar team toward an unlikely World Cup championship in 1995. Hailed by critics, “Invictus” was another inspired effort by the director, who earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director – Motion Picture.

  • Also Credited As: Clinton Eastwood Jr
  • Born: Clinton Eastwood Jr on May 31, 1930 in San Francisco, California, USA
  • Job Titles: Actor, Director, Composer, Producer, Piano player, Delivery man, Forest firefighter, Garbage man, Gas pumper, Lifeguard, Lumberjack, Politician, Pool digger, Steel worker, Steel-furnace stoker
Family
  • Daughter: Alison Eastwood. Born May 22, 1972; mother, Maggie Eastwood; directed by father in Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (1997)
  • Daughter: Francesca Ruth Fisher Eastwood. Born Aug. 7, 1993; mother Frances Fisher
  • Daughter: Kathryn Ann Reeves. Born Feb. 2, 1988; mother, Jacelyn Reeves
  • Daughter: Kimber L Eastwood. Born June 17, 1964; mother, Roxanne Tunis, an actress who appeared in Rawhide (CBS) with Eastwood
  • Daughter: Morgan Eastwood. Born Dec. 12, 1996; mother, Dina Ruiz
  • Father: Clinton Eastwood Sr. Born June 11, 1906; died in 1990
  • Granddaughter: Graylen Spencer Eastwood. Born March 28, 1994; father, Kyle Eastwood
  • Grandson: Clinton Eastwood. Born c. 1984; mother, Kimber Eastwood
  • Mother: Ruth Eastwood. Born c. 1909; died February 2006 at the age of 97
  • Sister: Jean Eastwood. Older
  • Son: Kyle C Eastwood. Born May 19, 1968; mother, Maggie Eastwood; co-starred in Honkytonk Man (1982)
  • Son: Scott C Reeves. Born March 21, 1986; mother, Jacelyn Reeves
Significant Others
  • Companion: Frances Fisher. Met during the filming of Pink Cadillac (1989); co-starred together in Unforgiven (1992); they had a daughter, Francesca in 1993; the relationship ended in 1995
  • Companion: Sondra Locke. First met in 1972 and began a romantic relationship during the filming of The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976); lived together for 14 years; when their relationship ended in 1989, Locke filed a palimony suit against him, asking for $1.3 million; Locke sued him, claiming that he made her have two abortions and undergo sterilization, charges Eastwood denied; they settled out of court for a large settlement in 1999
  • Companion: Frances Fisher. appeared in Eastwood s film Unforgiven (1992); mother of Francesca Ruth Fisher Eastwood; no longer together
  • Companion: Jacelyn Reeves. mother of Scott and Kathryn
  • Companion: Roxanne Tunis. had relationship when both appeared on Rawhide in the early 1960s; mother of Eastwood s daughter Kimber
  • Companion: Sondra Locke. born in 1947; together from 1977-89; after breakup she sued him in 1990, claiming that he made her have two abortions and undergo sterilization, charges Eastwood denies
Education
  • Oakland Technical High School, Oakland, California, 1948
  • Los Angeles City College, Los Angeles, California, business
Milestones
  • 1955 Film acting debut in Revenge of the Creature
  • 1964 Breakthrough screen role as the man with no name in the Sergio Leone directed A Fistful of Dollars
  • 1966 Re-teamed with Leone for the sequel For a Few Dollars More
  • 1968 First film with director Don Siegel, Coogan s Bluff
  • 1969 Made singing debut in the film musical Paint Your Wagon
  • 1970 Directed first film, a documentary short about the filming of The Beguiled (1971)
  • 1970 Starred opposite Shirley MacLaine in Two Mules for Sister Sara, directed by Siegel
  • 1971 FMade feature directorial debut with Play Misty For Me ; also starred
  • 1971 First played the role of detective Harry Callahan in Dirty Harry after Frank Sinatra turned down the part
  • 1972 Starred in title role of Joe Kidd
  • 1973 Directed William Holden and Kay Lenz in Breezy ; first directing assignment in which he did not also act
  • 1973 Reprised Harry Callahan in Magnum Force
  • 1975 First of six films with off-screen companion Sondra Locke, The Outlaw Josey Wales
  • 1975 Moved production company, Malapaso Co. to Warner Bros. on a handshake deal
  • 1976 Third outing as Callahan in The Enforcer
  • 1978 Teamed with an orangutan in the comedy Every Which Way But Loose
  • 1980 Sang on the soundtrack to Bronco Billy ; also starred in and directed
  • 1982 Producing debut, Firefox ; also starred in and directed
  • 1983 Last feature with Sondra Locke, Sudden Impact
  • 1984 Earned critical praise for playing a troubled police detective in Tightrope ; also produced
  • 1985 Made TV directorial debut with an episode of NBC s Amazing Stories entitled Vanessa in the Garden ; story by Steven Spielberg
  • 1986 Won a landslide victory as mayor of Carmel, California; served for two years
  • 1988 First credit as an executive producer, Thelonius Monk: Straight, No Chaser
  • 1988 Helmed Bird the biopic of jazz legend Charlie Parker
  • 1990 Portrayed a John Huston-like film director in White Hunter, Black Heart ; also produced and directed
  • 1992 Re-established his superstar status and won widespread acclaim with Unforgiven ; film won the Best Picture and Best Director Oscar
  • 1993 Documentary Clint Eastwood - The Man From Malpaso aired on Cinemax
  • 1993 Had the Clint Eastwood Scholarship Award named after him by Warner Bros.
  • 1993 Played an aging Secret Service agent in In the Line of Fire
  • 1993 Teamed with Kevin Costner in the taut A Perfect World ; also directed and composed a song for the soundtrack
  • 1995 Launched the record label, Malpaso Records; first project was the soundtrack for The Bridges of Madison County ; also directed and co-starred with Meryl Streep
  • 1995 Produced The Stars Fell on Henrietta featuring Frances Fisher and Robert Duvall
  • 1997 Directed (also produced) the film adaptation of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil ; co-starred his daughter Alison Eastwood
  • 1997 Portrayed a thief who becomes embroiled in a murder with political overtones in Absolute Power
  • 1999 Directed and starred in True Crime about a journalist who becomes convinced a man on Death Row is innocent; also produced
  • 2000 Teamed with James Garner, Tommy Lee Jones and Donald Sutherland for the sci-fi adventure Space Cowboys ; also produced and directed
  • 2000 Was subject of documentary Clint Eastwood: Out of the Shadows, directed by David Ricker; screened at Venice Film Festival
  • 2002 Starred in and directed Blood Work
  • 2003 Directed Sean Penn and Kevin Bacon in the film adaption of Mystic River ; received Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations for Best Picture and Best Director; was nominated by the Directors Guild of America for Outstanding Directorial Achievement
  • 2004 Produced, directed, starred in and composed the music for Million Dollar Baby starring Hilary Swank and Morgan Freeman; nominated for Golden Globes for Best Picture and Best Original Score; earned an Oscar nomination for Best Actor
  • 2006 Directed Letters from Iwo Jima, the companion piece to the Iwo Jima drama Flags of Our Fathers told from the Japanese viewpoint; received Golden Globe and Oscar nominations for Best Director and an Oscar nomination for Best Picture
  • 2006 Helmed the WWII drama, Flags of Our Fathers, which centers around the six men that raised the American flag at the Battle of Iwo Jima; received one of two Golden Globe nominations for Best Director
  • 2007 Composed the score for Grace is Gone starring John Cusack; earned Golden Globe nominations for Best Original Score and Best Original Song for a Motion Picture
  • 2008 Directed and also starred in the drama Gran Torino ; earned a Golden Globe nomination for performing the title song
  • 2008 Directed the period thriller, Changeling starring Angelina Jolie; also scored the music; earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Score
  • 2009 Directed Morgan Freeman, as former South African President Mandela, in Invictus, about the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South Africa; earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director
  • 2009 Nominated for the 2009 Golden Globe Award for Best Director - Motion Picture ( Invictus )
  • Made several appearances on the anthology series The West Point Story (CBS 1956-1957; ABC 1957-1958)
  • Starred as Rowdy Yates in the popular TV Western, Rawhide (CBS)

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