Robert De Niro
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert De Niro | |
De Niro press conference |
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Birth name | Robert Mario DeNiro Jr |
Born | August 17, 1943 (age 63) New York City, New York, USA |
Spouse(s) | Diahnne Abbott (1976-1988) Grace Hightower (1997-) |
Notable roles | Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver Jimmy Conway in Goodfellas Don Vito Corleone in The Godfather Part II Al Capone in The Untouchables |
Academy Awards | |
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Best Actor 1980 Raging Bull Best Supporting Actor 1974 The Godfather Part II |
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Golden Globe Awards | |
Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama 1981 Raging Bull |
Robert Mario DeNiro Jr., credited professionally as Robert De Niro (born August 17, 1943), is a highly acclaimed, two-time Academy Award-winning American film actor, director, and producer.
He is noted for his portrayal of conflicted, troubled characters, and for his enduring collaboration with director Martin Scorsese, and early work with director Brian De Palma. He is considered by many to be the greatest actor of his generation and one of the world's greatest living actors.[1]
He is the son of the noted painter Robert De Niro, Sr.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
De Niro was born in New York City, to father Robert De Niro, Sr., an abstract expressionist painter and sculptor, who was of Irish and Italian descent and mother Virginia Admiral, who was of French, German, and Dutch descent. De Niro's Italian great-grandparents, Mario and Sofia Di Niro, had emigrated from Ferrazzano, in the province of Campobasso, Molise[1] in the early 20th century.[citation needed] His parents, who had met at the painting classes of Hans Hofmann in Provincetown, Massachusetts, divorced when he was two years old. De Niro grew up in the Hell's Kitchen area of New York City. His childhood nickname was Bobby Milk due to his pale complexion.
[edit] Education
De Niro first attended the Little Red School House and was then enrolled by his mother at the High School of Music and Art in New York. He dropped out at the age of 13 and joined a Little Italy street gang. He then had a falling-out with his father, though they were eventually reconciled when, at 18, he flew to Paris to bring home his father, who had been suffering from depression.[citation needed]
De Niro attended the Stella Adler Conservatory, as well as Lee Strasberg's Actor's Studio (though De Niro conflicted with Strasberg's methods, and used his membership there mostly as a professional advantage). At the age of 16 he toured in Chekhov's The Bear.
[edit] Early film career
At the age of 20, in 1963, came De Niro's first film role and collaboration with Brian De Palma, when he appeared in The Wedding Party; it was not released until 1969, however. He spent much of the 1960s working in theater workshops and off-Broadway productions. He was an extra in the French film Three Rooms in Manhattan (1965), and made his film debut after he reunited with De Palma in Greetings (1968) and again in Hi, Mom (1970).
He gained popular attention with his role as a dying Major League baseball player in Bang the Drum Slowly (1973). The same year he began his fruitful collaboration with Scorsese when he played his memorable role as the smalltime Mafia hood "Johnny Boy" alongside Harvey Keitel's "Charlie" in Mean Streets. This led to a very successful relationship between the pair in films such as Taxi Driver (1976), New York, New York (1977), Raging Bull (1980), The King of Comedy (1983), Goodfellas (1990), Cape Fear (1991), and Casino (1995).
In these films, De Niro has primarily played charming sociopaths. Taxi Driver is particularly important to De Niro's career; his iconic performance as Travis Bickle shot him to stardom and forever linked De Niro's name with Bickle's famous "You talkin' to me?" monologue, which De Niro himself improvised.
In 1974, De Niro took part in Francis Coppola's The Godfather Part II and played young Don Vito Corleone. His performance earned him his first Academy Award of Best Supporting Actor.
In 1976 De Niro appeared, along with Gerard Depardieu, in Bernardo Bertolucci's epic biographical exploration of life during World War II, Novecento (1900), seen through the eyes of two Italian childhood friends at the opposite sides of society's hierarchy.
In 1978, De Niro played "Michael Vronsky" in the acclaimed Vietnam War film The Deer Hunter, for which he was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role .
He was offered role of Cowboy in director Walter Hill's The Warriors (1979) but turned it down. The role went instead to Tom McKitterick.[2]
[edit] Later film career
Praised for his commitment to roles (stemming from his background in Method acting), De Niro gained 60 pounds (27 kg) and learned how to box for his portrayal of Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull, ground his teeth for Cape Fear, lived in Sicily for The Godfather Part II, and learned to play the saxophone for New York, New York. He also put on weight and shaved his hairline to play Al Capone in The Untouchables.
Fearing he had become typecast in mob roles — another of which was Jewish gangster David "Noodles" Aaronson in Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in America (1984) — De Niro from the mid-1980s began expanding into occasional comedic roles, and has had much success there as well with such films as Brazil (1985), in which he had a small role; the hit action-comedy Midnight Run (1988); and the film-and-sequel pairs Analyze This (1999) and Analyze That (2002), and Meet the Parents (2000) and Meet the Fockers (2004).
Other films include Falling in Love (1984), The Mission (1986), The Untouchables (1987), Heat (1995), Wag the Dog (1997) and Ronin (1998).
In 1997, he reteamed with Harvey Keitel and Ray Liotta, along with Sylvester Stallone, in the noir-crime drama Cop Land. De Niro proved he was able to play a supporting role taking a back seat to Stallone, Keitel and Liotta.
De Niro is considered[citation needed] a skilled observer of physical and trivial details, from the way a cigarette is held by a mobster in GoodFellas to the kind of shirt-jacket the character needed to wear in Raging Bull. In 1995 De Niro starred in Michael Mann's Heat, along with fellow actor Al Pacino. The duo drew much attention from fans as both have generally been compared throughout their careers. Though both Pacino and De Niro starred in The Godfather Part II, they shared no screen time.
De Niro had to turn down a role in The Departed (in the Jack Nicholson role) due to commitments preparing The Good Shepherd. He said "I wanted to. I wish I could've been able to, but I was preparing The Good Shepherd so much that I couldn't take the time to. I was trying to figure a way to do it while I was preparing. It just didn't seem possible."[3]
In De Niro's next project, he directed and co-starred in The Good Shepherd (2006), also starring Matt Damon and Angelina Jolie. The movie also reunited him onscreen with Joe Pesci, with whom De Niro had starred in Raging Bull, GoodFellas and Casino.
On June 7, 2006, it was announced that De Niro donated his film archive, including scripts, costumes and props, to the Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin.
De Niro has said that he is working with Martin Scorsese on a new project. "I'm trying to actually work..Eric Roth (screenwriter) and myself and Marty are working on a script now, trying to get it done."[3]
[edit] Awards and honors
De Niro has won two Academy Awards: Best Actor for his role in Raging Bull; and Best Supporting Actor for The Godfather Part II.
De Niro and Marlon Brando are the only actors who won Academy Awards for portraying the same character: Brando won for playing the elderly Don Vito Corleone (though he declined the award) in The Godfather while De Niro later won the award for playing the young Vito in The Godfather Part II. Brando and De Niro did not work together on screen until The Score (2001). De Niro actually auditioned for the role of Sonny in the first Godfather[4] but the role was given to James Caan. When The Godfather Part II was in preproduction, the director, Francis Ford Coppola, remembered De Niro's audition, and cast him to play the young Vito Corleone. De Niro's performance is one of only four to win an Academy Award for working in a foreign language, as he primarily spoke Italian, with very few phrases in English ("I didn't come here to fight with you" and "I make him an offer he can't refuse").
[edit] Personal life
De Niro has been married twice. He has a stepdaughter, Drena and son Raphael with first wife Dianne Abbott, as well as twin sons Julian Henry and Aaron Kendrick (conceived by in vitro fertilization) from a long-term live-in relationship with former model Toukie Smith. Raphael, a former actor, now works in New York real estate. .
Since 1989, De Niro has been investing in the TriBeCa neighborhood in lower Manhattan. His capital ventures have included co-founding the film studio TriBeCa Productions, the hugely popular TriBeCa Film Festival, and finally the TriBeCa Grill, Nobu, and Layla restaurants that usually need advance reservations.
In February 1998, during a film shoot in France, he was taken in for questioning for nine hours by French police and questioned by a magistrate, over a prostitution ring. De Niro denied any involvement saying that he had never paid for sex, "and even if I had, it wouldn't have been a crime".[5] The magistrate wanted to speak to him after his name was mentioned by one of the call girls. In an interview with the French newspaper Le Monde, he said, "I will never return to France. I will advise my friends against going to France", and he would "send your Legion of Honour back to the ambassador, as soon as possible". French judicial sources say that the actor is regarded as a potential witness, not a suspect. In 2003, Robert De Niro, with film director Woody Allen, jazz musician Wynton Marsalis and writer George Plimpton joined a pro-French tourism campaign as a direct response to anti-French sentiment in the US related to the Iraq invasion.
In 2004, De Niro re-married his second wife, Grace Hightower, a former flight attendant, at their estate near Marbletown in upstate New York. De Niro's has residences are on the east and west sides of Manhattan. Their son Elliot was born in 1998 and the couple filed for divorce shortly after his birth, although the action was never officially finalized.
De Niro, whose paternal great-grandparents emigrated from Ferrazzano, in the region of Molise, Italy, was due to be bestowed with honorary Italian citizenship at the Venice Film Festival in September 2004. However, the Sons of Italy lodged a protest with Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi, claiming De Niro had damaged the image of Italians and Italian-Americans by frequently portraying them in criminal roles. Culture Minister Giuliano Urbani dismissed the objections and the ceremony was rescheduled to go forward in Rome in October. Controversy flared again when De Niro failed to show for two media appearances in Italy that month, which De Niro blamed on "serious communication problems" that weren't "handled properly" on his end, and stating, "The last thing I would want to do is offend anyone. I love Italy." The citizenship was conferred to De Niro on October 21, 2006, during the Rome Film Festival finale.
During a People Magazine interview[6], actor/comedian Jerry Lewis claimed that he was "going for Bobby's throat" after De Niro directed a slew of anti-Semitic epithets against Lewis[7]. Lewis, who was unfamiliar with De Niro's style of method acting, later came to realize that the epithets were all part of the act.
[edit] Selected Filmography
- For more details on this topic, see Robert De Niro filmography .
Bang the Drum Slowly (1973) • Mean Streets (1973) • The Godfather Part II (1974) • 1900 (1976) • Taxi Driver (1976) • The Last Tycoon (1976) • New York, New York (1977) • The Deer Hunter (1978) • Raging Bull (1980) • King of Comedy (1983) • Once Upon a Time in America (1984) • The Mission (1986) • Angel Heart (1987) • The Untouchables (1987) • Midnight Run (1988) • Goodfellas (1990) • Stanley and Iris (1990) • Awakenings (1990) • Cape Fear (1991) • This Boy's Life (1993) • A Bronx Tale (1993) • Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994) • Casino (1995) • Heat (1995) • Ronin (1998) • Analyze This (1999) • Meet the Parents (2000) • The Score (2001) • Analyze That (2001) • Meet the Fockers (2004) • The Good Shepherd (2006) •
[edit] Academy Awards and Nominations
- 1974 — Won - Best Actor in a Supporting Role; The Godfather, Part II
- 1976 — Nominated - Best Actor in a Leading Role; Taxi Driver
- 1978 — Nominated - Best Actor in a Leading Role - Deer Hunter
- 1980 — Won - Best Actor in a Leading Role - Raging Bull
- 1990 — Nominated - Best Actor in a Leading Role - Awakenings
- 1991 — Nominated - Best Actor in a Leading Role - Cape Fear
Awards | ||
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Preceded by John Houseman for The Paper Chase |
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor 1974 for The Godfather Part II |
Succeeded by George Burns for The Sunshine Boys |
Preceded by Dustin Hoffman for Kramer vs. Kramer |
Academy Award for Best Actor 1980 for Raging Bull |
Succeeded by Henry Fonda for On Golden Pond |
Preceded by Tom Hanks |
AFI Life Achievement Award 2003 |
Succeeded by Meryl Streep |
[edit] References
- ^ Among other sources, De Niro topped a "greatest actor" poll of 10,000 readers of the UK magazine Empire (The Sun (date n.a.): "De Niro is De Biggest hero", by Thomas Whitaker), and a similar poll of 13,500 viewers of the UK movie channel FilmFour (BBC News (14 December, 2001): "De Niro voted greatest star"
- ^ NonStarring.com: Robert De Niro
- ^ a b Graham, Jamie (2007-03). "The Total Film Interview". Total Film (125): 105. Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
- ^ The Godfather Family: A Look Inside (1991 documentary)
- ^ BBC News
- ^ "After open-heart surgery, King of Comedy Jerry Lewis bounces back with a bride-to-be". People Magazine. February 7, 1983. Page 40.
- ^ King of Comedy at the imdb.com
[edit] External links
- Robert De Niro at the Internet Movie Database
- Robert De Niro Online (fan site)
- Tiscali UK: Robert De Niro
- Robert De Niro at Rotten Tomatoes
Persondata | |
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NAME | DeNiro, Robert |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | DeNiro Jr., Robert Mario (realname) |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | American actor, director |
DATE OF BIRTH | August 17, 1943 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | New York City |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | 1943 births | Living people | Actors Studio alumni | American film actors | Best Actor Academy Award winners | Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winners | Irish-American actors | Italian-American actors | People from Manhattan | Roman Catholic entertainers