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Al Pacino 

Alfredo James Pacino (born April 25, 1940) in East Harlem, NY. Is an Academy Award, Golden Globe, Tony, BAFTA, Emmy and SAG award winning American film and stage actor and director, widely considered to be one of the greatest and most influential actors of all time.

Biography

Raised in the Bronx, he attended the legendary High School for Performing Arts, but dropped out at the age of 17.

He spent the next several years drifting from job to job, continuing to study acting and occasionally appearing in off-off-Broadway productions. In 1966, Pacino was accepted to train at the Actors' Studio, and after working with James Earl Jones in The Peace Creeps, he starred as a brutal street youth in the off-Broadway social drama The Indian Wants the Bronx, earning an Obie Award as Best Actor for the 1967-1968 theatrical season.

A year later, he made his Broadway debut in Does the Tiger Wear a Necktie? Although the play itself closed after less than 40 performances, Pacino was universally praised for his potent portrayal of a sociopathic drug addict, and he won a Tony Award for his performance.

Pacino made his film debut in the 1969 flop Me, Natalie. After making his theatrical directorial debut with 1970's Rats, he returned to the screen a year later in Panic in Needle Park, again appearing as a junkie. (To prepare for the role, he and co-star Kitty Winn conducted extensive research in known drug-dealer haunts as well as methadone clinics.) While the picture was not a success, Pacino again earned critical raves. Next came Francis Ford Coppola's 1972 Mafia epic The Godfather.

As Michael Corleone, the son of an infamous crime lord reluctantly thrust into the family business, Pacino shot to stardom, earning a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for his soulful performance. While the follow-up, 1973's Scarecrow, was received far less warmly, the police drama Serpico was a smash, as was 1974's The Godfather Part II for which he earned his third Academy Award nomination. The 1975 fact-based Dog Day Afternoon, in which Pacino starred as a robber attempting to stick up a bank in order to finance his gay lover's sex-change operation, was yet another staggering success.

The 1977 auto-racing drama Bobby Deerfield, on the other hand, was a disaster. Pacino then retreated to Broadway, winning a second Tony for his performance in the title role in The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel. Upon returning to Hollywood, he starred in ...And Justice for All, which did not appease reviewers but restored him to moviegoers' good graces. Pacino next starred in William Friedkin's controversial Cruising, portraying a New York City cop on the trail of a serial killer targeting homosexuals; it was not a hit, nor was the 1982 comedy Author! Author!

Brian DePalma's violent 1983 remake of Scarface followed; while moderately successful during its initial release, the movie later became a major cult favorite. Still, its lukewarm initial reception further tarnished Pacino's star. However, no one was fully prepared for the fate which befell 1985's historical epic Revolution; made for over 28 million dollars, the film grossed not even one million dollarsa at the box office. Pacino subsequently vanished from the public eye, directing his own film, The Local Stigmatic, which outside of a handful of 1990 showings at the Museum of Modern Art was never screened publicly.

While his name was attached to a number of projects during this time period, none came to fruition, and he disappeared from cinema for over four years.

Finally, in 1989, Pacino returned with the stylish thriller Sea of Love; the picture was a hit, and suddenly he was a star all over again. A virtually unrecognizable turn as a garish gangster in 1990's Dick Tracy earned him a sixth Oscar nomination, but The Godfather Part III was not the financial blockbuster many anticipated it to be. The 1991 romantic comedy Frankie and Johnny was a success, however, and a year later Pacino starred in the highly regarded Glengarry Glen Ross as well as Scent of a Woman, at last earning an Oscar for his performance in the latter film. He reunited with DePalma for 1993's stylish crime drama Carlito's Way, to which he'd first been slated to star in several years prior.

Remaining in the underworld, he starred as a cop opposite master thief Robert De Niro in 1995's superb Heat, written and directed by Michael Mann. Pacino next starred in the 1996 political drama City Hall, but earned more notice that year for writing, directing, producing, and starring in Looking for Richard, a documentary exploration of Shakespeare's Richard III shot with an all-star cast. In 1997, he appeared with two of Hollywood's most notable young stars, first shooting Donnie Brasco opposite Johnny Depp, and then acting alongside Keanu Reeves in The Devil's Advocate. Following roles in The Insider and Any Given Sunday two-years later, Pacino would appear in the film version of the stage play Chinese Coffee (2000) before a two-year perios in which the actor was curiously absent from the screen.

Any speculation as to the workhorse actor's slowing down was put to rest when in 2002 Pacino returned with the quadruple-threat of Insomnia, Simone, People I Know and The Farm. With roles ranging from that of a troubled detective investigating a murder in a land of eternal sunlight to a film producer who sucessfully establishes the worlds first virtual actress, Pacino proved to filmgoers that he was as versitile, energetic and adventurous an actor as ever.

 

Al Pacino's Photos

 

Filmography

1969 Me, Natalie
1971 The Panic in Needle Park
1972 The Godfather
1973 Scarecrow
1973 Serpico
1974 The Godfather Part II
1975 Dog Day Afternoon
1977 Bobby Deerfield
1979 …And Justice for All
1980 Cruising
1982 Author! Author!
1983 Scarface
1985 Revolution
1989 Sea of Love
1990 Dick Tracy
1990 The Local Stigmatic
1990 The Godfather Part III
1991 Frankie and Johnny
1992 Scent of a Woman
1992 Glengarry Glen Ross
1993 Carlito's Way
1995 Heat
1995 Two Bits
1996 Looking for Richard
1996 City Hall
1997 The Devil's Advocate
1997 Donnie Brasco
1999 Any Given Sunday
1999 The Insider
2000 Chinese Coffee
2002 S1m0ne
2002 Insomnia
2002 People I Know
2003 The Recruit
2003 Angels in America
2003 Gigli
2004 The Merchant of Venice
2005 Two for the Money
2007 88 Minutes
2007 Ocean's Thirteen
2008 Righteous Kill
2009 Dali & I: The Surreal Story

Academy Award

Won: Best Actor, Scent of a Woman

BAFTA Award

* Won: Best Actor, The Godfather: Part II
* Won: Best Actor, Dog Day Afternoon

Emmy Award

* Won: Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie, Angels in America

Golden Globe Award

* Won: Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama, Serpico

*Won: Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama, Scent of a Woman (1993)
*Won: Cecil B. DeMille Award (2001)
*Won: Best Actor in a Mini-Series or a Motion Picture Made for Television, Angels in America

   
   
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