Robert De Niro - Wikipedia
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- 中文 Edit linksRobert Anthony De Niro10 was born in the Manhattan borough of New York City on August 17, 1943,11 the only child of painters Virginia Admiral and Robert De Niro Sr.12 His father was of Irish and Italian descent,13 while his mother had Dutch, English, French, and German ancestry.14 His parents, who had met at the painting classes of Hans Hofmann in Provincetown, Massachusetts, separated when he was two years old after his father announced that he was gay.15 He was raised by his mother in the Greenwich Village and Little Italy neighborhoods of Manhattan. His father lived nearby, and remained close with De Niro during his childhood.16 Nicknamed “Bobby Milk” because of his pale complexion, De Niro befriended many street kids in Little Italy, much to the disapproval of his father.17 Some, however, have remained his lifelong friends.18 His mother was raised Presbyterian but became an atheist as an adult, while his father had been a lapsed Catholic since the age of 12.1920 Against his parents’ wishes, his grandparents had De Niro secretly baptized into the Catholic Church while he was staying with them during his parents’ divorce.20 De Niro attended PS 41, a public elementary school in Manhattan, through the sixth grade. He began acting classes at the Dramatic Workshop and made his stage debut in school at age 10, playing the Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz.2122 He later went to Elisabeth Irwin High School, the upper school of the Little Red School House, for the seventh and eighth grades.23 He was then accepted into the High School of Music & Art for the ninth grade, but attended for only a short time before transferring to a public junior high school: IS 71, Charles Evans Hughes Junior High School.24 De Niro attended high school at McBurney School and later, Rhodes Preparatory School.2526 He found performing as a way to relieve his shyness, and became fascinated by cinema, so he dropped out of high school at 16 to pursue acting.18 He later said, “When I was around 18, I was looking at a TV show and I said, ‘If these actors are making a living at it, and they’re not really that good, I can’t do any worse than them.’“27 He studied acting at HB Studio and Lee Strasberg’s Actors Studio.2528 De Niro also studied with Stella Adler, of the Stella Adler Conservatory, where he was exposed to the techniques of the Stanislavski system.29 As a young actor, De Niro was inspired by the work of Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, James Dean, Greta Garbo, Geraldine Page, and Kim Stanley.30
Career
1963–1973: Early roles and breakthrough
De Niro’s had minor film roles in Encounter, Three Rooms in Manhattan (both released in 1965) and Les Jeunes Loups (1968). Shortly afterwards, De Niro landed a major role in Greetings (1968), a satirical film about men avoiding the Vietnam Wardraft. The film marked the first of a series of early collaborations between De Niro and director Brian De Palma. A year later, De Niro appeared in the drama Sam’s Song in which he portrays a New York City filmmaker. Also in 1969, he appeared in De Palma’s comedy The Wedding Party; although it was filmed in 1963, it was kept unreleased for six years. De Niro, who was still unknown at the time, gained a favorable review from The New York Times‘Howard Thompson: “This farcical comedy, modestly produced by a trio of young people and utilizing some unfamiliar faces, is great fun”.31 He then appeared in Roger Corman’s low-budget crime drama Bloody Mama (1970), a loose adaptation of Ma Barker’s life, who was the mother of four American criminals, of which De Niro portrayed one: Lloyd Barker. Thompson praised the film and thought the cast gave “fine performances”.32 Next, De Niro starred in De Palma’s comedy Hi, Mom! (1970), a sequel to Greetings. Writing for The New Yorker, Richard Brody opined that De Niro “brings unhinged spontaneity” to his character.33 He also had a small role in Jennifer on My Mind (1971) and in Ivan Passer’s Born to Win (1971). His last film appearance of 1971 was in The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight, a crime-comedy based on the 1969 novel by Jimmy Breslin. In 1972, De Niro starred in two performances at The American Place Theatre, directed by Charles Maryan.34 He then returned to the big screen with Bang the Drum Slowly (1973), in which he played the lead role as Bruce Pearson, a Major League Baseball player with Hodgkin disease. His co-stars were Michael Moriarty and Vincent Gardenia. Adapted from the 1956 novel of the same name by Mark Harris, the film received critical acclaim and helped De Niro gain further recognition. The Hollywood Reporter wrote, “De Niro proves himself to be one of the best and most likable young character actors in movies with this performance”.35Variety magazine’s Alex Belth also took note of De Niro’s “touching” portrayal,36 while Gardenia was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.37 Harris later wrote about De Niro, “He learned only as much baseball as he needed for his role … I doubt that he ever cared to touch a baseball again”.36 In 1973, De Niro began collaborating with Martin Scorsese when he appeared in the crime film Mean Streets (1973), co-starring Harvey Keitel.21 Although De Niro was offered a choice of roles, Scorsese wanted De Niro to play “Johnny Boy” Civello, a small time criminal working his way up into a local mob.38 While De Niro and Keitel were given freedom to improvise certain scenes, assistant director Ron Satlof recalls De Niro was “extremely serious, extremely involved in his role and preparation”, and became isolated from the rest of the cast and crew.39Mean Streets debuted at the Cannes Film Festival, followed by the New York Film Festival five months later, to a generally warm response.40 Film critic Roger Ebert thought De Niro gave a “marvelous performance, filled with urgency and restless desperation”.41Pauline Kael of The New York Times was equally impressed by De Niro, writing he is “a bravura actor, and those who have registered him only as the grinning, tobacco-chewing dolt of that hunk of inept whimsey Bang the Drum Slowly will be unprepared for his volatile performance. De Niro does something like what Dustin Hoffman was doing in Midnight Cowboy, but wilder; this kid doesn’t just act – he takes off into the vapors”.40 In 1997, Mean Streets was selected for preservation in the U.S. National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.42
1974–1980: Scorsese collaboration and acclaim
De Niro had a pivotal role in Francis Ford Coppola’s crime epicThe Godfather Part II (1974), playing the young Vito Corleone. De Niro had previously auditioned for the first installment, The Godfather (1972), but quit the project in favor of doing The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight. Coppola, having remembered him, gave De Niro a role in Part II instead.43 To portray his character, De Niro spoke mainly in several Sicilian dialects,21 although he delivered a few lines in English. The film was a commercial success and grossed $48 million at the worldwide box office.44The Godfather Part II received eleven nominations at the 47th Academy Awards, winning six, including one for De Niro as Best Supporting Actor.45 It was De Niro’s first Academy win; Coppola accepted the award on his behalf as he did not attend the ceremony. De Niro and Marlon Brando, who played the older Vito Corleone in the first film, were the first pair of actors to win Academy Awards for portraying the same fictional character.46 After working with Scorsese in Mean Streets, De Niro collaborated with him again for the psychological drama Taxi Driver (1976). Set in gritty and morally bankrupt New York City following the Vietnam War, the film tells the story of Travis Bickle, a lonely taxi driver who descends into insanity. In preparation for the role, De Niro spent time with members of a U.S. army base to learn their Midwestern accent and mannerisms.47 He also lost 30 pounds (13 kg) in weight, took firearm training and studied the behavior of taxi drivers.48 The film was critically acclaimed, in particular for De Niro’s performance; The Washington Post critic hailed it as his “landmark performance”,49 and the San Francisco Chronicle wrote “De Niro is dazzling in one of his signature roles”.50 The film was nominated for four Academy Awards, including Best Actor for De Niro.5152 His “You talkin’ to me?” quote, which he improvised,53 was selected as the 10th most memorable quote in the AFI’s 100 Years…100 Movie Quotes by the American Film Institute. In 2005, the film was chosen by Time magazine as one of the 100 best films of all time.54 De Niro and Dominique Sanda play a married couple in the film 1900. De Niro had two other film releases in 1976. He starred in 1900, a historical drama directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. Starring an ensemble cast, the film is set in the Emilia region of Italy, and tells the story of two men, the landowner Alfredo Berlinghieri (De Niro) and the peasant Olmo Dalcò (Gérard Depardieu), as they witness and participate in the political conflicts between fascism and communism in the first half of the twentieth century. Next, he played a CEO in The Last Tycoon, based on F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel of the same name, as adapted by British screenwriterHarold Pinter. De Niro lost 42 pounds (19 kg) for the role, and director Elia Kazan observed that De Niro would rehearse on Sundays, adding “Bobby and I would go over the scenes to be shot. Bobby is more meticulous… he’s very imaginative. He’s very precise. He figures everything out both inside and outside. He has good emotion. He’s a character actor: everything he does he calculates. In a good way, but he calculates”.55: 766 The film received mixed reviews; Variety magazine’s critic opined that the film was “unfocused” and called De Niro’s performance “mildly intriguing”.56 Film critic Marie Brenner wrote, “it is a role that surpasses even his brilliant and daring portrayal of Vito Corleone in The Godfather Part II… his performance deserves to be compared with the very finest”.57 For De Niro’s sole project of 1977, he starred in Scorsese’s musical drama New York, New York opposite Liza Minnelli. De Niro learned to play the saxophone from musician Georgie Auld, to portray saxophonist Jimmy, who falls in love with a pop singer (Minnelli).58 The film received generally mixed reception, although critics were kinder to De Niro.59 The film was nominated for four Golden Globe awards including Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for De Niro.6061 In 1978, De Niro starred in Michael Cimino’s epic war film The Deer Hunter, in which he played a steelworker whose life was changed after serving in the Vietnam War. He co-starred with Christopher Walken, John Savage, John Cazale, Meryl Streep, and George Dzundza. The story takes place in Clairton, Pennsylvania, a working-class town on the Monongahela River south of Pittsburgh, and in Vietnam. Producer Michael Deeley pursued De Niro for the role, because the fame of his previous films would help make a “gruesome-sounding storyline and a barely known director” marketable.62 De Niro, impressed by the script and director’s preparation, was among the first to sign on to the film.63 Reviews for The Deer Hunter were generally positive, and the cast attracted strong praise for their performances.63 The film received nominations at the Academy Awards, Golden Globes and British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs), and earned De Niro a nomination for Best Actor at the Academy Awards.646566 In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked it as the 53rd-greatest American film of all time in their 10th Anniversary Edition of the AFI’s 100 Years…100 Movies list.67 The fourth collaboration between De Niro and Scorsese was in 1980, with the biographical drama Raging Bull. Adapted from Jake LaMotta’s memoir Raging Bull: My Story, De Niro portrays LaMotta, the Italian-American middleweightboxer whose violent behavior and temper destroyed his relationship with his wife and family. Co-starring Joe Pesci and Cathy Moriarty, De Niro later said it was one of the toughest roles to prepare for because he had to gain 60 pounds (27 kg), and had to learn to box.2168 “The book’s not great literature, but it’s got a lot of heart”, De Niro told Scorsese at the time.69 Although the film received critical acclaim, some reviewers were divided and criticized its “exceedingly violent” content; however, De Niro garnered praise for his realistic portrayal.70 The critic from The Hollywood Reporter declared that “De Niro is incredible and makes the actor almost unrecognizable as himself; he looks amazingly like La Motta. De Niro’s appearance is also astonishing in the final scenes”.71 Michael Thomson of the BBC observed “the power of Scorsese is matched by the intensity of De Niro who delves deep into the soul of the boxer”.7273 At the 53rd Academy Awards, the film received eight nominations, including Best Actor for De Niro for which he won.74Raging Bull has since been regarded as one of the greatest films of the 1980s by American critics.72 De Niro was strongly considered for the role of Jack Torrance in Stanley Kubrick’sThe Shining, but it ended up going to Jack Nicholson, the director’s first choice for the role.75
1981–1991: Dramas, comedies and awards success
De Niro returned to the crime genre with True Confessions (1981), adapted from the 1977 novel of the same name by John Gregory Dunne. Less challenging than his previous film, De Niro played a priest who clashes with his brother (Robert Duvall), a detective investigating the murder of a prostitute. Vincent Canby of The New York Times thought the plot was hard to follow at times but praised the actors who “work so beautifully together it sometimes seems like a single performance”.76 To expand his range of acting roles and to prove his acting abilities, De Niro sought out films with a comedic tone throughout the 1980s.77 He found it in The King of Comedy (1982), in which he played the struggling stand-up comedian Rupert Pupkin. De Niro was first to bring the script to the attention of Scorsese, who then gave it a New York setting and darker tone.77 The film failed to find an audience, and was a box office disappointment, grossing only $2.5 million from a budget of $19 million.7879 However, most critics praised De Niro’s performance.80 His next film credit was in Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in America (1984), in which he plays David “Noodles” Aaronson, a New York City Jewish gangster. The theatrical cut, with a runtime of 229 minutes, premiered at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival and received a 15-minute standing ovation.81 The film was shortened for theaters in the U.S. (139 minutes), but this proved to be highly unpopular with critics.81 After seeing the full cut, Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times described the film “excessive as well as tightly controlled” with the actors showing “impressive restraint and power”.82 Falling in Love, a romantic comedy starring opposite Meryl Streep, was his last release of 1984. One year later, De Niro starred in a science fiction for the first time, Brazil, about a daydreaming man living in a dystopian society. Although the film was unsuccessful at the box office, Brazil was included in The Criterion Collection.83 In May 1986, De Niro returned to the stage at Longacre Theatre, playing the lead role in the production *Cuba and His Teddy Bear.*84 For his next feature film, he co-starred in The Mission (1986) with Jeremy Irons, a period drama about the experiences of a Jesuit missionary in eighteenth century South America. Vincent Canby reviewed the film negatively, and was critical of De Niro’s casting: “De Niro, who was very fine as the street-wise priest in True Confessions, is all right here until he opens his mouth”.85 However, the film won an Academy Award for Best Cinematography, three BAFTAs, including Best Editing, and two Golden Globes for Best Screenplay and Best Original Score.868788 In 1987, De Niro had two minor film roles. In the first, he was cast as Louis Cyphre in Alan Parker’s horror Angel Heart, an adaptation of William Hjortsberg’s 1978 novel Falling Angel.89 In the second, he portrayed Al Capone in De Palma’s crime drama, The Untouchables. While Pauline Kael opined that De Niro was “lazy” for undertaking small roles, De Palma defended him by saying he was “experimenting with those characters”.34 In July 1987, he traveled to Russia to serve as president of the jury at the 15th Moscow International Film Festival.90 Finally that year, he provided a voice-over for the documentary Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam. The buddy cop film, Midnight Run, was his next effort in 1988. Starring opposite Charles Grodin, De Niro played bounty hunter Jack Walsh. The film received amicable reception and was a commercial success, grossing $81 million worldwide.9192 In his mixed review, Hal Hinson of The Washington Post wrote of De Niro: De Niro has reduced himself in scale here, too, and it’s a relief to see him drop the great-actor mantle, and the theatricality. As a result, he hasn’t seemed as fresh since Mean Streets or New York, New York. Walsh is more of a character role than the ones he played in those films; there’s less specificity in the conception – he’s more of a type – but the actor fits into him snugly, effortlessly, and the chance to play comedy, particularly opposite a comic foil as ideal as Grodin, appears to have revitalized him.93 He turned down an opportunity to play Jesus Christ in Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), although he told the director that he would do it as a favor if needed. Scorsese cast Willem Dafoe instead.94 In 1989, De Niro starred in several films that were not widely seen. He starred alongside Ed Harris and Kathy Baker in the drama Jacknife. The film revolves around the complex relationship between a Vietnam veteran, his sister and fellow army buddy. Next, he starred in the crime comedy We’re No Angels (1989) with Sean Penn and Demi Moore, a remake of the 1955 film of the same name. The pair play escaped convicts who go on the run towards Canada. A year later, he starred in the romantic drama Stanley & Iris opposite Jane Fonda. Film critics did not receive We’re No Angels or Stanley & Iris positively; modern review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives them approval ratings of 47% and 33%, respectively.9596 De Niro at the Deauville Film Festival, 1988 De Niro and Scorsese soon reunited for their sixth collaboration in 1990, with the crime film Goodfellas. It is an adaptation of the 1985 non-fiction book Wiseguy by Nicholas Pileggi. The film narrates the life of mob associate Henry Hill (Ray Liotta) and his friends and family from 1955 to 1980. De Niro played James Conway, an Irish truck carjacker and gangster. Goodfellas premiered at the 47th Venice International Film Festival to an “enthusiastic” response from Italian critics, although it grossed a moderate $46 million upon its wider release.9798 Writing for Rolling Stone magazine, Peter Travers, praised the cast performances, and called De Niro’s character “a smooth killer acted with riveting restraint”.99Chicago Tribune‘sGene Siskel was equally impressed by their improvised performances and concluded “easily one of the year’s best films”.100 In the awards season, the film was nominated for six Academy Awards, and De Niro was nominated for Best Actor at the BAFTAs.101102 In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked it as the 92nd-greatest American film of all time in their 10th Anniversary Edition of the AFI’s 100 Years…100 Movies list.67 Also in 1990, De Niro appeared in the lead role for Awakenings, directed by Penny Marshall. The drama, based on Oliver Sacks’ 1973 book of the same title, tells the story of Dr. Malcolm Sayer (Robin Williams), who discovers benefits of the drug L-Dopa in 1969 and administers it to catatonic patients. The film was nominated for three Academy Awards, including Best Actor for De Niro.101 Sacks later remarked of the film: “I was pleased with a great deal of it. I think in an uncanny way, De Niro did somehow feel his way into being Parkinsonian. … At other levels I think things were sort of sentimentalized and simplified somewhat”.103 De Niro’s next film project was the drama Guilty by Suspicion (1991) in which he plays David Merrill, a fictitious film director, returning to the U.S. during the McCarthy era and Hollywood blacklist. The film received generally favorable reviews.104 He then had a minor role in the mystery drama Backdraft (1991), playing a veteran fire inspector. De Niro’s biggest success of 1991 was Cape Fear, his seventh film with Scorsese and a remake of the 1962 film of the same name. De Niro portrays convicted rapist Max Cady, who seeks revenge against a former public defender who originally defended him. De Niro’s performance was widely lauded.105David Ansen of Newsweek remarked that De Niro “dominates the film with his lip-smacking, blackly comic and terrifying portrayal of psychopathic self-righteousness”.106 The film grossed a successful $182 million and earned De Niro a Best Actor nomination at the 64th Academy Awards.107108
1992–1997: Directorial debut and crime dramas
In 1992, De Niro appeared in two films. The first, Mistress, is a comedy-drama in which he played ruthless businessman Evan Wright. Of his performance, the critic from The Independent called De Niro “more urbane and coherent than we’ve seen him for a while”.109Irwin Winkler’s Night and the City was his second release, a crime drama remake of the 1950 film noirof the same name. He was cast as New York lawyer Harry Fabian. Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a rating of “B−” and was critical of De Niro: “The actor who once got so far inside his roles that he just about detonated the screen – now plays characters who don’t seem to have any inner life at all”.110 Next, he served as a producer for the mystery thriller Thunderheart (1992).111 In 1993, he played crime scene photographer Wayne Dobie in the comedy drama Mad Dog and Glory with co-stars Uma Thurman and Bill Murray. The feature received reasonable reviews and was lauded for the chemistry between De Niro and Murray; The Washington Post critic noted that their “real-life friendship spills over into this jittery, very funny look at the male bonding experience”.112 Next, De Niro starred in the coming-of-age film This Boy’s Life (1993), based on the memoir of the same name by Tobias Wolff. It features Ellen Barkin and Leonardo DiCaprio. Playing stepfather Dwight Hansen of Wolff (DiCaprio), the film was mostly well received, although Timeout magazine believed that “DiCaprio steals the show”.113 De Niro starred in his directorial debut, A Bronx Tale (1993), a coming-of-age story about an Italian-American boy who is torn between the temptations of organized crime, racism in his community, and the values of his decent father. The film also stars Chazz Palminteri, who wrote the play of the same name, and is based on his childhood. A Bronx Tale premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival to a positive response; Marjorie Baumgarten of The Austin Chronicle wrote “De Niro’s choices as a director all seem prudent and un-showy, designed to draw attention to the characters and the story rather than its technical assemblage and much-lauded star”.114Variety magazine’sTodd McCarthy took issue with the film’s slow start but complimented De Niro’s “impressive sensitivity to the irrational roots of racism and violence”.115 A year later, De Niro was cast in the lead role of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, an adaptation of Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel Frankenstein. Although the film was commercially successful, earning $112 million worldwide, the general consensus of reviews were largely negative.116117 Film critic James Berardinelli opined that it was entertaining and De Niro gave a strong performance, despite the film’s “frantic” pace.118 De Niro at the Venice Film Festival, 1993 Casino (1995) marked De Niro’s return to the crime genre with Scorsese in their eighth collaboration. Co-starring Sharon Stone and Joe Pesci, the film is based on the book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas by Nicholas Pileggi. De Niro portrays Sam “Ace” Rothstein, a mob-connected casino operator in Las Vegas. The film’s themes revolve around greed, betrayal, wealth, status, and murder that occur between two mobsters, Sam “Ace” Rothstein (De Niro) and Nicky Santoro (Pesci), and a trophy wife (Stone) over a gambling empire. Casino was released to mostly positive critical reception, and was a success at the worldwide box office.119 Roger Ebert was impressed with the lead performers’ abilities to “inhabit their roles with unconscious assurance”,120 and *The Globe and Mail’*s critic thought “De Niro does an extraordinarily subtle job of capturing the paradox … that lie at the heart of this picture”.121 Shortly afterwards, he starred in 1995’s crime thriller Heat, about a group of professional bank robbers. Art Linson, who had previously produced films starring De Niro, sent him the script first. “It was very good, very strong, had a particular feel to it, a reality and authenticity,” De Niro said.122 Co-starring Al Pacino and Val Kilmer, the film was released to wide acclaim; Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune wrote: De Niro and Pacino redeem everything. In Heat, they represent a high postwar tradition for movie actors – the ones inspired by Marlon Brando, John Cassavetes and James Dean – who aren’t afraid of emotion, who run right into the jaws of a scene to grab it. Like others from their generation – Jack Nicholson, Gene Hackman, Harvey Keitel – they have a keener slant on machismo. They easily explore its darker strata.123 In 1995, De Niro had minor roles in the French comedy One Hundred and One Nights and in the drama Panther. In 1996, De Niro starred in the sports thriller The Fan, based on the novel of the same name by Peter Abrahams. De Niro plays Gil Renard, a baseball fanatic who loses his sanity.124 His fiftieth film credit was in the crime drama Sleepers (1996), about four boys who become involved with crime, and are sentenced to a detention center where they are abused by guards, and seek vengeance upon release. De Niro plays priest Bobby Carillo, a father figure to the four boys.125 Afterwards, he appeared in Marvin’s Room (1996) as Dr. Wallace Carter, who treats a woman (Diane Keaton) with leukemia. Writing for the British Empire magazine, Bob McCabe opined that “Performances are all eminently watchable … but the truncated feel robs the film of anything more than perfunctory pleasures”.126 Also in 1996, De Niro co-produced the crime-comedy Faithful.127 In 1996 a video game produced by De Niro called 9: The Last Resort was released. A surreal point and click puzzle game about a hotel filled with strange characters. De Niro met the game’s director Buzz Hayes when Hayes worked at Lucasfilm.128 The game did not do well at launch and Hayes is quoted as saying “I wouldn’t call it a failure. it was just kind of a quiet landing”.129 The following year, he appeared in James Mangold’s Cop Land (1997), a crime-drama co-starring Sylvester Stallone, Harvey Keitel and Ray Liotta. De Niro plays Internal Affairs investigator Lt. Moe Tilden, who explores police corruption in a New Jersey town. The film opened to a generally warm response, although Barbara Shulgasser of San Francisco Examiner criticized De Niro’s acting in certain scenes, suggesting Mangold put De Niro in a “manufactured situation”, preventing him from realizing his full potential.130 De Niro co-starred and co-produced Wag the Dog (1997). The film is a political satire about a biased publicist (De Niro) and a Hollywood producer (Dustin Hoffman) who fabricate a war in Albania to cover up a U.S. president’s sex scandal. In January 1998, a month after its release, the Clinton–Lewinsky scandal dominated the headlines, which helped the film generate publicity.131 As a result, Wag the Dog was well-received and made the list of Roger Ebert’s ten best films of 1997.132 De Niro also had a supporting role in Quentin Tarantino’s Jackie Brown in that same year.133
1998–2006: Comic roles, thrillers, and slump
De Niro in 1998 De Niro began 1998 with an appearance in Great Expectations, a modern adaptation of Charles Dickens’ 1861 novel of the same name, in which he played Arthur Lustig. Later that year, his next major role came in Ronin (1998), about a team of former special operatives that are hired to steal a mysterious briefcase while navigating a maze of shifting loyalties. De Niro plays Sam, an American mercenary formerly associated with the CIA. Ronin premiered at the 1998 Venice Film Festival to favorable response; Janet Maslin of The New York Times praised De Niro’s confident portrayal as an action hero.134 In 1999, De Niro ventured back into crime-comedy; he was cast as an insecure mob boss opposite Billy Crystal and Lisa Kudrow in Harold Ramis’ Analyze This. The film was a box office hit, earning $176 million worldwide, and De Niro was nominated for Best Actor at the Golden Globes.135136 In Flawless (1999), De Niro appeared as a homophobic police officer, who suffers a stroke, and is assigned to a rehabilitative program with a gay singer. The critic from the BBC gave the film 3 out of 5 stars, and thought De Niro gave a “refreshingly low-key” performance, in comparison to his previous work.137 In 2000, De Niro produced and starred in his first live-action animation comedy, The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle. He voiced the character Fearless Leader, who is a dictator and employer of two mobsters. The film was critically panned, with Rotten Tomatoes giving the film a 43% approval rating.138 De Niro played Master Chief ‘Billy’ Sunday in the biographical drama Men of Honor (2000), based on the life of Carl Brashear, the first African-American to become a U.S. Navy Master Diver. Although the film garnered mixed reviews, Bob Thomas of the Associated Press wrote “De Niro infuses the role with all his dynamism. It is his best performance in years”.139 That same year, he starred in the comedy Meet the Parents opposite Ben Stiller as Jack Byrnes, a former CIA operative who takes a dislike to Stiller’s character. De Niro, who had been seeking comic roles at the time, was encouraged by his producing partner Jane Rosenthal, to take on the role.140 The film was a high earner at the box office, with $330 million in receipts.141 Film critics welcomed De Niro’s transition as a comic actor and ability to make audiences laugh.142143 After several comedies, De Niro landed a lead role in the crime thriller 15 Minutes (2001), a story about a homicide detective (De Niro) and a fire marshal (Edward Burns) who join forces to apprehend a pair of Eastern European murderers. The film’s reception was generally unfavorable; William Arnold of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer took issue with the “in-your-face exaggeration”, but he thought De Niro delivered “his usual edgy flair, … on the mean streets of his native Manhattan”.144 De Niro followed up with a heist, in Frank Oz’s The Score (2001), starring Edward Norton, Angela Bassett and Marlon Brando. He plays a retiring thief when a young man (Norton) persuades him into doing one last heist together. Upon release, The Score fared well with critics, although Peter Rainer of New York magazine did not think the film challenged De Niro or fully utilize his talents.145 The next year, he played an LAPD detective opposite Eddie Murphy in the action-comedy Showtime. The reviewer from LA Weekly remarked “De Niro isn’t actually playing a part but riffing on his own legend”, and thought the references to Taxi Driver were “cheap”.146 De Niro at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, 2008 Also in 2002, he collaborated with Michael Caton-Jones in City by the Sea, who had previously directed De Niro in This Boy’s Life. Starring opposite Frances McDormand and James Franco, he portrayed another police detective in the drama. The film received mixed reviews and under-performed at the theaters.147 He appeared in Analyze That (2002), a sequel to 1999’s Analyze This. Filming began in New York City, seven months after the September 11 attacks. De Niro insisted on filming there, stating “It’s a New York story, a New York movie. We always intended to keep it there and I’m glad we were able to do it”.148 Upon release, most critics thought the sequel was weak; CNN’s Paul Clinton remarked “Unfortunately the result is just a bunch of one-liners strung together, of which some work and some don’t. The actual story never gets off the ground”.149 Despite these failures, De Niro served as a producer for the critically acclaimed romantic-comedy About a Boy (2002), and appeared in 9/11 (2002), a CBS documentary about the September 11 attacks, told from the New York City fire department’s point of view.150 Several critics consider De Niro’s career as having begun to slump in the early 2000s, with De Niro starring in roles that were less dramatic than those in the previous decade.151152 He returned to the screen in 2004, playing a doctor in the fantasy drama Godsend. As of 2020, the film is De Niro’s poorest-performing work; Rotten Tomatoes gave the film an approval rating of 4% based on 139 critic reviews.153 He voiced a character in DreamWorks’ animation of Shark Tale (2004). Most critics were also unimpressed, but it was a high earner at the box office.154 After co-producing Stage Beauty (2004), De Niro reprised his role of Jack Byrnes in 2004’s Meet the Fockers, the sequel to Meet the Parents. In a scathing review of De Niro, the critic from Slant Magazine wrote “In self-parody mode for the umpteenth time, De Niro mugs for the camera with a series of overblown grimaces and faux-menacing glares”.155The Bridge of San Luis Rey, was De Niro’s last release of 2004, based on Thornton Wilder’s novel of the same name. It was also critically panned.156 In 2005, De Niro starred in the horror Hide and Seek opposite Dakota Fanning, playing Dr. David Callaway who leaves the city with his traumatized daughter after the mother’s suicide. Although the film was a financial success, some critics thought De Niro had been miscast, and queried his decision to star in a mediocre feature.157158 In 2006, De Niro turned down a role in The Departed to direct his second film,159 the spy thrillerThe Good Shepherd, a fictional account about the growth of the CIA during its formative years*.* The film reunited him onscreen with Joe Pesci, co-star from Raging Bull, Goodfellas, A Bronx Tale, Casino, among others*.* Based on the screenplay by Eric Roth, the project was personal for De Niro, who was raised during the Cold War and fascinated by it.160 Despite starring some of Hollywood’s leading actors; Matt Damon, Angelina Jolie and Alec Baldwin, the film garnered a mixed reception. Writing for The Sydney Morning Herald, Sandra Hall noted its slow pace, stating “There’s a potentially fascinating slice of American history here, but De Niro has carved it up with an excruciatingly dull knife”.161 The critic from USA Today found the plot initially hard to follow, but praises De Niro for “creating a stirring personal tale”.162The Good Shepherd was nominated for Best Art Direction at the 79th Academy Awards.163 Finally in 2006, he voiced the character Emperor Sifrat XVI in *Arthur and the Invisibles.*164
2007–2016: Further film roles
His sole project in 2007 was Matthew Vaughn’s Stardust, a fantasy adventure, based on Neil Gaiman’s 1999 novel of the same name. He plays Captain Shakespeare, the leader of a ship. The film was generally well received, although one critic from New York magazine thought De Niro’s performance was “god-awful – yet his gung-ho spirit wins him Brownie points”.165 The following year, he starred in the police procedural thriller Righteous Kill opposite Al Pacino, both playing New York City detectives who investigate serial executions of criminals who escaped justice. The film’s response was mainly disappointing; Peter Hartlaub of San Francisco Chronicle thought the story was unoriginal and De Niro lacked energy.166 The film grossed $78 million from a budget of $60 million.167 Next, he starred in What Just Happened (2008), a satirical comedy based on Art Linson’s experiences as a producer in Hollywood. The film was screened at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival as an out-of-competition entry.168The Sydney Morning Herald opined that most reviewers gave the film a lukewarm reception because of the character he plays, which is “sympathetic” and quieter than his earlier roles.169 In 2009, he was cast as Frank Goode in the drama Everybody’s Fine, a remake of Giuseppe Tornatore’s Italian film of the same name. Although the film’s response was equally mixed, The Guardian’s critic praised De Niro for a “his first decent, watchable performance in quite a while”.170 De Niro at the Cannes Film Festival, 2011 In 2010, he had a minor part as Senator John McLaughlin in the action film Machete. That same year, he starred in Stone opposite Milla Jovovich and Edward Norton, co-star from The Score. It is a crime drama where De Niro plays a manipulated parole officer. The film was met with a divided reception; Toronto Star’s critic thought De Niro delivered a respectable performance due to Jovovich’s support.171 Another critic, Jesse Cataldo from Slant Magazine noted the film’s restraint and thought De Niro is repeating himself by playing the same basic characters.172 Next he starred in Little Fockers (2010), the second sequel to Meet the Parents and Meet the Fockers. Despite universally negative reviews from critics, the film was a box office success, grossing over $310 million worldwide.173 In one review, The Daily Telegraph wrote “Despite the farcical script, De Niro in particular has his paterfamilias character sensitively tuned”.174 That year, De Niro was cast in Edge of Darkness, but he left the project citing creative differences. He was replaced by Ray Winstone.175176 In 2011, De Niro starred in the Italian comedy Manuale d’amore 3.177 He also appeared in three other films: Killer Elite, Limitless, and New Year’s Eve. Except for Limitless, which received an approval rating of 69% from Rotten Tomatoes, the other two films were met with mixed-to-negative reviews.178 De Niro was also appointed president of the jury for the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, making it the second time he has served.179 Continuing into 2012, he starred in the drama Being Flynn, based on Another Bullshit Night in Suck City, a memoir by Nick Flynn. It was met with a mixed response; critic A. O. Scott complimented De Niro’s ability for playing an estranged father (opposite Paul Dano), calling him “unpredictable and subtle”, despite an uncertain plot.180 De Niro also appeared in the thrillers Red Lights and Freelancers (both 2012).181182 De Niro made his first appearance in a David O. Russell film, in the romantic comedy Silver Linings Playbook (2012), as the father of Pat Solatano (Bradley Cooper), who is released from a psychiatric hospital and moves back in with his parents to rebuild his life. The film was a critical and commercial success, earning eight Academy Award nominations, including Best Supporting Actor for De Niro.183 The film grossed $236 million worldwide.184 Critics lauded the entire cast; Variety magazine’sJustin Chang noted De Niro’s calm performance, writing “it’s hard to remember the last time De Niro was this effortlessly endearing and relaxed onscreen”.185 In 2012, De Niro served as an executive producer for the television series NYC 22.186 Next, he was cast in 2013’s The Big Wedding, Killing Season, and The Family; all three were met with mainly a negative response. His other 2013 release, Last Vegas, received some respectable reviews. Co-starring Michael Douglas, Morgan Freeman, Kevin Kline and Mary Steenburgen, the film is about three retirees who travel to Las Vegas to have a bachelor party for their last remaining single friend. In a harsh assessment of De Niro’s performance, the A.V. Club’s critic considered it “arguably the low point of De Niro’s career”.187 Shortly afterwards, he starred in Grudge Match (2013) opposite Sylvester Stallone, as aging boxers stepping into the ring for one last match. They had previously worked together in 1997’s Cop Land.188 That same year he starred in the crime thriller, The Bag Man. In 2014, De Niro appeared in a documentary about his father, Robert De Niro Sr., titled Remembering the Artist Robert De Niro Sr. which aired on HBO.189 In 2015, he starred in Nancy Meyers’ comedy The Intern alongside Anne Hathaway. The latter fared better with critics; Mark Olsen of the Los Angeles Times cordially remarked “De Niro brings a fresh, relaxed lightness to his performance, tinged with the gruff charm of Spencer Tracy”.190 His performance won him a nomination from the Critics Choice Movie Awards for Best Actor in a Comedy.191 Also in 2015, he appeared in two short films, Scorsese’s The Audition and JR’s Ellis. Returning to the heist genre, he starred in Heist, playing Francis “The Pope” Silva, a gangster casino owner who is targeted by criminals. The film was not a box office success.192 He starred in the biographical drama Joy (2015), opposite Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper, about an American inventor Joy Mangano; it gained generally mixed reviews. In 2016, he co-starred in Dirty Grandpa, playing a grandfather who goes to Florida during spring break with his grandson (Zac Efron). Upon release, the film received a polarized reception for its reputedly distasteful content, and appeared in several critics’ lists of worst films of 2016.193194 He also appeared in Hands of Stone (2016), a biographical sports drama about the career of Panamanian former professional boxerRoberto Durán. His last release of the year was The Comedian, which premiered at the AFI Fest, a film festival celebrating filmmakers’ achievements.195
2017–present: Resurgence and Scorsese reunion
In 2017, De Niro starred as Bernie Madoff in Barry Levinson’s HBO film The Wizard of Lies, a performance which earned him critical praise and a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Television Movie.196 In 2019, De Niro won acclaim for portraying Robert Mueller alongside Alec Baldwin’s Donald Trump in various episodes of Saturday Night Live, earning him an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series.197 He received another Emmy nomination for his work as a producer on Ava DuVernay’s acclaimed limited series When They See Us.198 In 2019, De Niro returned to the screen by playing talk show host Murray Franklin in Todd Phillips’ Joker, a possible origin story for the Batman character The Joker (Joaquin Phoenix).199 The film was a commercial success, and earned eleven nominations at the Academy Awards.200 Also that year, De Niro reunited with Scorsese for The Irishman, based on the 2004 book I Heard You Paint Houses by Charles Brandt.201 It is their ninth feature film together and the first since 1995’s Casino, and co-stars Al Pacino, Harvey Keitel, and Joe Pesci. The film received critical acclaim; Robbie Collin of The Daily Telegraph, praised De Niro’s “sensational” performance and the chemistry between his co-stars, whom he has worked with in earlier films.202Variety magazine’s critic also noted the chemistry, calling him “superb”, despite perceived weaknesses in the film’s special effects.203 De Niro (right) and Al Pacino during the 25th Critics’ Choice Awards in January 2020 In September 2020, De Niro appeared in Nancy Meyers’ comedy short film Father of the Bride Part 3(ish). The short co-starred Diane Keaton, Steve Martin, Kieran Culkin, Martin Short and Florence Pugh.204 Also in that year, De Niro appeared in The Comeback Trail, a crime comedy directed by George Gallo.205 De Niro was cast in James Gray’s period drama Armageddon Time, but he dropped out of the project by the time production began.206 In January 2021, De Niro signed on for the historical comedy Amsterdam, playing an army veteran. Released in October 2022, the ensemble includes Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, John David Washington, Michael Shannon, Mike Myers, Timothy Olyphant and Anya Taylor-Joy.207 The reviewer from South China Morning Post thought De Niro “brings just the right gravitas to his decorated general”.208 In August 2022, De Niro signed on to star in the Warner Bros. mob drama Alto Knights, directed by Barry Levinson.209 De Niro appeared in Savage Salvation as Sheriff Church, which was released on December 2, 2022.210 In 2023, De Niro played William King Hale, a cattleman and perpetrator of the Osage Indian murders, in Killers of the Flower Moon, directed by Scorsese and adapted from the book of the same name by David Grann. He starred alongside Leonardo DiCaprio and Lily Gladstone.211212 It was reported that the film’s budget of $200 million had prompted Scorsese to seek Netflix or Apple TV+ for production and distribution,213 and in May 2020, Apple TV+ was announced to co-finance and co-distribute the film with Paramount.214 De Niro received an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor nomination for the role. Niles Schulz praised the performance as “one of De Niro’s best,” evoking “a figure of beguiling charm, with a good humor that cloaks bottomless indifference.“215 In 2023, De Niro also appeared in the comedy About My Father,216 and in the television series *Nada.*217 On March 1, 2023, it was announced that De Niro will produce and star in the six-episode limited series Zero Day for Netflix, a conspiracy thriller created by Eric Newman and Noah Oppenheim, who will also executive produce along with Jonathan Glickman.218 Another film he starred in, Ezra, made its premiere at Toronto International Film Festival 2023 and was acquired by Bleecker Street. It will made its United States debut in theaters on May 31, 2024. De Niro said he took interest in the film as it features the complexities of parenting an autistic child; De Niro has an autistic son himself.219
Reception and legacy
Several journalists consider De Niro to be among the best actors of his generation.342205 John Naughton of GQ magazine believes that De Niro has “redefined what we can expect of an actor”.6A. O. Scott said that De Niro “was transforming himself – physically, vocally, psychologically – with each new role. And in the process, before our eyes, reinventing the art of acting.“221 As early as 1977, Newsweek remarked that the actor “gives you the shock of becoming, of a metamorphosis that can be thrilling, moving, or frightening.“222 Biographer Douglas Brode praises De Niro’s versatility and ability to inhabit any role, although Pauline Kael once said in 1983 that she did not like how the actor was “disfiguring” himself in films such as Raging Bull.223 When asked why he undertook such roles, De Niro responded, “To totally submerge into another character and experience life through him, without having to risk the real-life consequences—well it’s a cheap way to do doing things that you would never dare to do yourself.“222 In 2009, he was announced as one of the Kennedy Center Honorees with the commemoration: “One of America’s greatest cinematic actors, Robert De Niro has demonstrated a legendary commitment to his characters and has co-founded one of the world’s major film festivals”.224Martin Scorsese and Meryl Streep honored him at the event. In 2016, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama.225 Obama said “Everybody on this stage has touched me in a very powerful, very personal way … These are folks who have helped make me who I am”.226White House Press SecretaryJosh Earnest added, “There is no arguing that the individuals who will be honored today are richly deserving,” he said.226 Many of De Niro’s films have become classics of American cinema, in which six of them have been inducted into the U.S. National Film Registry as of 2022.8 Five films are featured on the American Film Institute’s (AFI) list of the 100 greatest American films of all time. De Niro and James Stewart share the title for the most films represented on the AFI list.227228Timeout magazine’s list of 100 best movies included seven of De Niro’s films, as chosen by actors in the industry.9 In 2006, De Niro donated his collection of film-related materials, such as scripts, wardrobe pieces and props, to the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin.229 The collection, which took more than two years to process and catalog, opened to the public in 2009.230 Fan songIn 1984, the English girl group Bananarama’s fan song “Robert De Niro’s Waiting…” reached the third place of the UK Singles Chart, remaining on the charts for 12 weeks.231 Honors
- 1993 – Venice Film Festival Career Golden Lion
- 1997 – Moscow International Film Festival Honorable Prize
- 2001 – Gotham Award Lifetime Achievement Award
- 2003 – AFI Life Achievement Award and tribute
- 2009 – Kennedy Center Honors
- 2011 – Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award
- 2013 – Santa Barbara International Film Festival Kirk Douglas Award
- 2016 – Presidential Medal of Freedom
- 2017 – Film Society of Lincoln Center Gala Tribute
- 2019 – National Board of Review Icon Award
- 2020 – Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award
Business interests
In 1989, De Niro and partner Jane Rosenthal co-founded the film production company TriBeCa Productions, which also organizes the Tribeca Film Festival. De Niro owns Tribeca Grill (co-owned with Broadway producer Stewart F. Lane), a New American restaurant located at 375 Greenwich Street (at Franklin Street) in Tribeca, Manhattan.232 It opened in 1990.233 He is also the owner of the Greenwich Hotel in Tribeca.234 De Niro co-owns Nobu restaurants and hotels with partners Meir Teper and Chef Nobu Matsuhisa. The first Nobu Hotel opened inside Caesars Palace, Las Vegas, in 2013. Two years later, the second Nobu Hotel opened at City of Dreams in Manila, Philippines. In 2015, De Niro partnered with James Packer after the billionaire acquired a 20 percent stake in Nobu for $100 million.235 He is a stakeholder in Paradise Found Nobu Resort, a company planning to build a luxury resort on the island of Barbuda. The plan for a luxury resort on the island of Barbuda has been criticized by many residents of Barbuda and the Barbuda People’s Movement, as it is in violation of the Barbuda Land Act.236237238
Personal life
De Niro is a long-term resident of New York City, and has been investing in Manhattan’s Tribeca neighborhood since 1989. He has properties on the east and west sides of Manhattan. He also has a 78-acre (32-hectare) estate in Gardiner, New York, which serves as his primary residence.239 In 1998, De Niro lobbied U.S. Congress against impeaching President Bill Clinton.240 In October 2003, De Niro was diagnosed with prostate cancer. He underwent surgery at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in December 2003.241 In 2006, De Niro received Italian citizenship, despite opposition by the Sons of Italy, who believe that De Niro damaged the public image of Italians by portraying criminals.242243 In 2012, De Niro joined the anti-fracking campaign Artists Against Fracking.244 In 2016, De Niro initially defended the inclusion of a controversial documentary, Vaxxed, at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival.245246247 He explained that his interest in the film was from his personal experience with his autistic son, Elliot.246 The film was withdrawn from the schedule after consultation with the festival organizers and scientific community.246248 In February 2017, De Niro took part in a joint presentation with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., chairman of the anti-vaccine non-profit Children’s Health Defense, to discuss their concerns with vaccine safety. De Niro has stated that he is not anti-vaccination, but does question their efficacy.249 In October 2018, De Niro was targeted by an explosive device. The device was found at the Tribeca Grill, which also houses his production company in Manhattan. According to the FBI, similar devices were sent to high-profile politicians including Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, former Attorney General Eric Holder, and former CIA DirectorJohn Brennan.250251
Relationships
De Niro with Grace Hightower in April 2012 De Niro married actress Diahnne Abbott in 1976. They have a son, Raphael, a former actor who works in New York real estate.252 De Niro also adopted Abbott’s daughter Drena De Niro from a previous relationship. He and Abbott divorced in 1988. Afterwards, he was in a relationship with model Toukie Smith between 1988 and 1996. The couple has twin sons, Julian and Aaron, conceived by in vitro fertilization and delivered by a surrogate mother in 1995.253254 In 1997, De Niro married actress Grace Hightower.255 Their son, Elliot, was born in 1998 and the couple split in 1999. The divorce was never finalized and in 2004 they renewed their vows.255 In December 2011, their daughter Helen was born via surrogate.256 In 2014, he and Hightower moved into a 6,000-square-foot, five-bedroom apartment at 15 Central Park West.257258 Four years later, De Niro and Hightower separated after 20 years of marriage.259 De Niro has four grandchildren: one from his daughter Drena and three from his son Raphael.260261 On April 19, 2021, De Niro’s lawyer argued in a virtual divorce hearing presided by a Manhattan judge that he is “working at an unsustainable pace” in order “to support Hightower and pay off all his back taxes”. Hightower’s lawyer claimed that since the pair filed for divorce in 2018, De Niro had been “unfairly decreasing” the agreed-upon payments to her.262 In April 2023, De Niro welcomed his seventh child, a daughter Gia, with his girlfriend Tiffany Chen.263264265266 At age 79, De Niro is one of the oldest fathers on record.267268 In July 2023, it was announced that De Niro’s grandson through his daughter Drena, Leandro De Niro Rodriguez, had died at age 19.269 The cause of death was determined as a combined drug intoxication involving particularly fentanyl and cocaine.270
Legal issues
In February 1998, De Niro was held for questioning by French police in connection with an international prostitution ring.271dead link De Niro denied any involvement,272 and later filed a complaint against the examining magistrate for “violation of secrecy in an investigation”.273274275 He stated he would not return to France, but has since traveled there several times including for the 2011 Cannes Film Festival.276 In 1999, De Niro threatened to sue the owners of “De Niro’s Supper Club” in Vancouver, under section 3 of the BC Privacy Act.277 The restaurant subsequently changed its name to “Section (3)".278 In 2006, the trust that owns De Niro’s Gardiner estate sued the town to have its property taxassessment reduced, arguing that $6 million was too high and should be compared only with similar properties in Ulster County, where Gardiner is located. The town, which had been comparing its value to similar estates in Dutchess County, across the Hudson River, and Connecticut’s Litchfield County, where many other affluent New York residents maintain estates on large properties, won in State Supreme Court.279 In 2014, the trust’s lawyers appealed the decision and the town was unsure if it should continue to defend the suit because of financial limitations (it would have earned far less in payments on the increased taxes than it had spent on legal costs). This angered many residents, who initially sympathized with De Niro, and some proposed to raise money privately to help the town continue the suit.239 The dispute was publicized by The New York Times. “When he (De Niro) read about it on Election Day, he went bananas,” due to the negative publicity, said Gardiner town councilman Warren Wiegand.280 He was unaware that a lawsuit was filed; the trust’s accountants took responsibility citing fiduciary duty.280 Shortly afterwards, De Niro directed his lawyer, Tom Harvey, to withdraw the suit and reimburse the town’s legal bills of $129,000. Harvey conveyed to Wiegand that “De Niro didn’t want to screw the town”.281 In August 2019, De Niro’s company Canal Productions filed a $6-million lawsuit against former employee Graham Chase Robinson, for breaching her fiduciary duties and violating New York’s faithless servant doctrine by misusing company funds and watching hours of Netflix during work hours.282283 In October 2019, Robinson filed a lawsuit against De Niro, claiming harassment and gender discrimination.284 In November 2023 the jury found De Niro not personally liable for gender discrimination but his production company was ordered to pay her $1.2 million in damages.285
Filmography and accolades
Main articles: Robert De Niro filmography and List of awards and nominations received by Robert De Niro Prolific in film since the 1970s, De Niro’s most critically acclaimed films, according to the review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes, include Bang the Drum Slowly (1973), Mean Streets (1973), The Godfather Part II (1974), Taxi Driver (1976), The Deer Hunter (1978), Raging Bull (1980), The King of Comedy (1983), Once Upon a Time in America (1984), Brazil (1985), The Mission (1986), Midnight Run (1988), Goodfellas (1990), Casino (1995), Heat (1995), Meet the Parents (2000), Silver Linings Playbook (2012), The Irishman (2019) and Killers of the Flower Moon (2023).286 De Niro has been recognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the following performances:287
- 47th Academy Awards (1974): Best Supporting Actor, win, for The Godfather Part II
- 49th Academy Awards (1976): Best Actor, nomination, for Taxi Driver
- 51st Academy Awards (1978): Best Actor, nomination, for The Deer Hunter
- 53rd Academy Awards (1980): Best Actor, win, for Raging Bull
- 63rd Academy Awards (1990): Best Actor, nomination, for Awakenings
- 64th Academy Awards (1991): Best Actor, nomination, for Cape Fear
- 85th Academy Awards (2012): Best Supporting Actor, nomination, for Silver Linings Playbook
- 92nd Academy Awards (2019): Best Picture, nomination, for The Irishman
- 96th Academy Awards (2023): Best Supporting Actor, nomination, for Killers of the Flower Moon De Niro has won two Golden Globe Awards: Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama for Raging Bull and a Cecil B. DeMille Award for “outstanding contributions to the world of entertainment”.288 He was also the 56th recipient of Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award; Leonardo DiCaprio, who co-starred with De Niro in This Boy’s Life, presented him the award, citing him as an inspiration and influence.289290
See also
- List of Academy Award records
- List of actors with Academy Award nominations
- List of actors with two or more Academy Award nominations in acting categories
- List of actors with two or more Academy Awards in acting categories
Notes
- ^Attributed to multiple references:23456
References
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- ^ abBaron, Zach (November 20, 2019). “Robert De Niro and Al Pacino: A Big, Beautiful 50-Year Friendship”. GQ. Archived from the original on January 19, 2021. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
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- ^Levy 2014, p. 18.
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- ^ abDougan 2003, p. 17.
- ^“The religion of Robert De Niro, actor”. adherents.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved February 16, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
- ^ abLevy 2014, p. 26.
- ^ abcdStated on Inside the Actors Studio, 1998
- ^Dougan 2003, p. 15.
- ^Dougan 2003, pp. 12–13.
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- ^Baxter 2002, p. 37.
- ^Levy 2014, p. 50.
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Sources
- Baxter, John (2002). De Niro: A Biography. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780002571968.
- Brode, Douglas (1993). The Films of Robert De Niro. Carol Publishing Group. ISBN 0806513055.
- Deeley, Michael (2009). Blade Runners, Deer Hunters, & Blowing the Bloody Doors Off: My Life in Cult Movies. Pegasus Books. ISBN 9781605980386.
- Dougan, Andy (2003). Untouchable: A Biography of Robert De Niro. Da Capo Press. ISBN 1560254696.
- Mell, Eila (2015). Casting Might-Have-Beens: A Film by Film Directory of Actors Considered for Roles Given to Others. McFarland. ISBN 9781476609768.
- Levy, Shawn (2014). De Niro: A Life. Crown. ISBN 9780307716804.
- Naremore, James (1988). Acting in the Cinema. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520062283.
- Rausch, Andrew J. (2010). The Films of Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810874145.
- Santelli, R.; Santelli, J. (2010). The Baseball Fan’s Bucket List: 162 Things You Must Do, See, Get, and Experience Before You Die. Hachette. ISBN 9780762440313.
External links
Robert De Niro at Wikipedia’s sister projects- Media from Commons
- Quotations from Wikiquote
- Tribeca Film
- Robert De Niro at Playbill Vault
- Robert De Niro at Rotten Tomatoes
- Robert De Niro at IMDb
- Robert De Niro at the Internet Broadway Database
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- v - t - e Robert De Niro - Filmography - Awards and nominations Films directed Family Related articles Awards for Robert De Niro — | - v - t - e Academy Award for Best Actor | | 1928–1950 | - Emil Jannings (1928) - Warner Baxter (1929) - George Arliss (1930) - Lionel Barrymore (1931) - Fredric March / Wallace Beery (1932) - Charles Laughton (1933) - Clark Gable (1934) - Victor McLaglen (1935) - Paul Muni (1936) - Spencer Tracy (1937) - Spencer Tracy (1938) - Robert Donat (1939) - James Stewart (1940) - Gary Cooper (1941) - James Cagney (1942) - Paul Lukas (1943) - Bing Crosby (1944) - Ray Milland (1945) - Fredric March (1946) - Ronald Colman (1947) - Laurence Olivier (1948) - Broderick Crawford (1949) - José Ferrer (1950) | | 1951–1975 | - Humphrey Bogart (1951) - Gary Cooper (1952) - William Holden (1953) - Marlon Brando (1954) - Ernest Borgnine (1955) - Yul Brynner (1956) - Alec Guinness (1957) - David Niven (1958) - Charlton Heston (1959) - Burt Lancaster (1960) - Maximilian Schell (1961) - Gregory Peck (1962) - Sidney Poitier (1963) - Rex Harrison (1964) - Lee Marvin (1965) - Paul Scofield (1966) - Rod Steiger (1967) - Cliff Robertson (1968) - John Wayne (1969) - George C. Scott1 (1970) - Gene Hackman (1971) - Marlon Brando1 (1972) - Jack Lemmon (1973) - Art Carney (1974) - Jack Nicholson (1975) | | 1976–2000 | - Peter Finch (1976) - Richard Dreyfuss (1977) - Jon Voight (1978) - Dustin Hoffman (1979) - Robert De Niro (1980) - Henry Fonda (1981) - Ben Kingsley (1982) - Robert Duvall (1983) - F. Murray Abraham (1984) - William Hurt (1985) - Paul Newman (1986) - Michael Douglas (1987) - Dustin Hoffman (1988) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) - Jeremy Irons (1990) - Anthony Hopkins (1991) - Al Pacino (1992) - Tom Hanks (1993) - Tom Hanks (1994) - Nicolas Cage (1995) - Geoffrey Rush (1996) - Jack Nicholson (1997) - Roberto Benigni (1998) - Kevin Spacey (1999) - Russell Crowe (2000) | | 2001–present | - Denzel Washington (2001) - Adrien Brody (2002) - Sean Penn (2003) - Jamie Foxx (2004) - Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) - Forest Whitaker (2006) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) - Sean Penn (2008) - Jeff Bridges (2009) - Colin Firth (2010) - Jean Dujardin (2011) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) - Matthew McConaughey (2013) - Eddie Redmayne (2014) - Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) - Casey Affleck (2016) - Gary Oldman (2017) - Rami Malek (2018) - Joaquin Phoenix (2019) - Anthony Hopkins (2020) - Will Smith (2021) - Brendan Fraser (2022) - Cillian Murphy (2023) | | 1 refused award that year | | - v - t - e Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor | |—| | 1936–1950 | - Walter Brennan (1936) - Joseph Schildkraut (1937) - Walter Brennan (1938) - Thomas Mitchell (1939) - Walter Brennan (1940) - Donald Crisp (1941) - Van Heflin (1942) - Charles Coburn (1943) - Barry Fitzgerald (1944) - James Dunn (1945) - Harold Russell (1946) - Edmund Gwenn (1947) - Walter Huston (1948) - Dean Jagger (1949) - George Sanders (1950) | | 1951–1975 | - Karl Malden (1951) - Anthony Quinn (1952) - Frank Sinatra (1953) - Edmond O’Brien (1954) - Jack Lemmon (1955) - Anthony Quinn (1956) - Red Buttons (1957) - Burl Ives (1958) - Hugh Griffith (1959) - Peter Ustinov (1960) - George Chakiris (1961) - Ed Begley (1962) - Melvyn Douglas (1963) - Peter Ustinov (1964) - Martin Balsam (1965) - Walter Matthau (1966) - George Kennedy (1967) - Jack Albertson (1968) - Gig Young (1969) - John Mills (1970) - Ben Johnson (1971) - Joel Grey (1972) - John Houseman (1973) - Robert De Niro (1974) - George Burns (1975) | | 1976–2000 | - Jason Robards (1976) - Jason Robards (1977) - Christopher Walken (1978) - Melvyn Douglas (1979) - Timothy Hutton (1980) - John Gielgud (1981) - Louis Gossett Jr. (1982) - Jack Nicholson (1983) - Haing S. Ngor (1984) - Don Ameche (1985) - Michael Caine (1986) - Sean Connery (1987) - Kevin Kline (1988) - Denzel Washington (1989) - Joe Pesci (1990) - Jack Palance (1991) - Gene Hackman (1992) - Tommy Lee Jones (1993) - Martin Landau (1994) - Kevin Spacey (1995) - Cuba Gooding Jr. (1996) - Robin Williams (1997) - James Coburn (1998) - Michael Caine (1999) - Benicio del Toro (2000) | | 2001–present | - Jim Broadbent (2001) - Chris Cooper (2002) - Tim Robbins (2003) - Morgan Freeman (2004) - George Clooney (2005) - Alan Arkin (2006) - Javier Bardem (2007) - Heath Ledger (2008) - Christoph Waltz (2009) - Christian Bale (2010) - Christopher Plummer (2011) - Christoph Waltz (2012) - Jared Leto (2013) - J. K. Simmons (2014) - Mark Rylance (2015) - Mahershala Ali (2016) - Sam Rockwell (2017) - Mahershala Ali (2018) - Brad Pitt (2019) - Daniel Kaluuya (2020) - Troy Kotsur (2021) - Ke Huy Quan (2022) - Robert Downey Jr. (2023) | | - v - t - e AFI Life Achievement Award | |—| | - John Ford (1973) - James Cagney (1974) - Orson Welles (1975) - William Wyler (1976) - Bette Davis (1977) - Henry Fonda (1978) - Alfred Hitchcock (1979) - James Stewart (1980) - Fred Astaire (1981) - Frank Capra (1982) - John Huston (1983) - Lillian Gish (1984) - Gene Kelly (1985) - Billy Wilder (1986) - Barbara Stanwyck (1987) - Jack Lemmon (1988) - Gregory Peck (1989) - David Lean (1990) - Kirk Douglas (1991) - Sidney Poitier (1992) - Elizabeth Taylor (1993) - Jack Nicholson (1994) - Steven Spielberg (1995) - Clint Eastwood (1996) - Martin Scorsese (1997) - Robert Wise (1998) - Dustin Hoffman (1999) - Harrison Ford (2000) - Barbra Streisand (2001) - Tom Hanks (2002) - Robert De Niro (2003) - Meryl Streep (2004) - George Lucas (2005) - Sean Connery (2006) - Al Pacino (2007) - Warren Beatty (2008) - Michael Douglas (2009) - Mike Nichols (2010) - Morgan Freeman (2011) - Shirley MacLaine (2012) - Mel Brooks (2013) - Jane Fonda (2014) - Steve Martin (2015) - John Williams (2016) - Diane Keaton (2017) - George Clooney (2018) - Denzel Washington (2019) - Julie Andrews (2022) - Nicole Kidman (2024) | | - v - t - e AACTA International Award for Best Supporting Actor | |—| | - Robert De Niro (2012) - Michael Fassbender (2013) - J. K. Simmons (2014) - Mark Rylance (2015) - Dev Patel (2016) - Sam Rockwell (2017) - Mahershala Ali (2018) - Brad Pitt (2019) - Sacha Baron Cohen (2020) - Kodi Smit-McPhee (2021) - Brendan Gleeson (2022) - Ryan Gosling (2023) | | - v - t - e AARP Movies for Grownups Award for Best Supporting Actor | |—| | - Tom Wilkinson (2007) - Bill Irwin (2008) - Alec Baldwin (2009) - John Malkovich (2010) - Christopher Plummer (2011) - John Goodman (2012) - Chris Cooper (2013) - J. K. Simmons (2014) - Mark Rylance (2015) - Jeff Bridges (2016) - Richard Jenkins (2017) - Richard E. Grant (2018) - Tom Hanks (2019) - Demián Bichir (2020) - Jared Leto (2021) - Judd Hirsch (2022) - Robert De Niro (2023) | | - v - t - e Britannia Awards | |—| | Excellence in Film | - Albert R. Broccoli (1989) - Michael Caine (1990) - Peter Ustinov (1992) - Martin Scorsese (1993) - Anthony Hopkins (1995) - Bob Weinstein and Harvey Weinstein (1996) - Dustin Hoffman (1997) - John Travolta (1998) - Stanley Kubrick (1999) - Steven Spielberg (2000) - George Lucas (2002) - Hugh Grant (2003) - Tom Hanks (2004) - Tom Cruise (2005) - Clint Eastwood (2006) - Denzel Washington (2007) - Sean Penn (2008) - Robert De Niro (2009) - Jeff Bridges (2010) - Warren Beatty (2011) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) - George Clooney (2013) - Robert Downey Jr. (2014) - Meryl Streep (2015) - Jodie Foster (2016) - Matt Damon (2017) - Cate Blanchett (2018) - Jane Fonda (2019) | | Excellence in Directing | - Peter Weir (2003) - Jim Sheridan (2004) - Mike Newell (2005) - Anthony Minghella (2006) - Martin Campbell (2007) - Stephen Frears (2008) - Danny Boyle (2009) - Christopher Nolan (2010) - David Yates (2011) - Quentin Tarantino (2012) - Kathryn Bigelow (2013) - Mike Leigh (2014) - Sam Mendes (2015) - Ang Lee (2016) - Ava DuVernay (2017) - Steve McQueen (2018) - Jordan Peele (2019) | | Worldwide Contribution to Entertainment | - Howard Stringer (2003) - Kirk Douglas (2009) - Ridley Scott & Tony Scott (2010) - John Lasseter (2011) - Will Wright (2012) - Ben Kingsley (2013) - Judi Dench (2014) - Harrison Ford (2015) - Samuel L. Jackson (2016) - Kenneth Branagh (2017) - Kevin Feige (2018) - Jackie Chan (2019) | | British Artist of the Year | - Rachel Weisz (2006) - Kate Winslet (2007) - Tilda Swinton (2008) - Emily Blunt (2009) - Michael Sheen (2010) - Helena Bonham Carter (2011) - Daniel Craig (2012) - Benedict Cumberbatch (2013) - Emma Watson (2014) - James Corden (2015) - Felicity Jones (2016) - Claire Foy (2017) - Emilia Clarke (2018) - Phoebe Waller-Bridge (2019) | | Excellence in Comedy | - Betty White (2010) - Ben Stiller (2011) - Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2012) - Sacha Baron Cohen (2013) - Julia Louis-Dreyfus (2014) - Amy Schumer (2015) - Ricky Gervais (2016) - Aziz Ansari (2017) - Jim Carrey (2018) - Steve Coogan (2019) | | Excellence in Television | - Aaron Spelling (1999) - HBO Original Programming (2002) - Dick Van Dyke (2017) - Damian Lewis (2018) - Norman Lear (2019) | | Humanitarian Award | - Richard Curtis (2007) - Don Cheadle (2008) - Colin Firth (2009) - Idris Elba (2013) - Mark Ruffalo (2014) - Orlando Bloom (2015) - Ewan McGregor (2016) | | Retired Awards | - BBC (1999) - Tarsem Singh (1999) - Angela Lansbury (2003) - Helen Mirren (2004) - Elizabeth Taylor (2005) - Ronald Neame (2005) - Sidney Poitier (2006) - Bob Shaye and Michael Lynne (2007) | | - v - t - e Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor | |—| | 1980–2000 | - Robert De Niro (1980) - Burt Lancaster (1981) - Dustin Hoffman (1982) - Eric Roberts (1983) - Haing S. Ngor (1984) - Jack Nicholson (1985) - Bob Hoskins (1986) - Albert Brooks (1987) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1988) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) - Jeremy Irons (1990) - Nick Nolte (1991) - Denzel Washington (1992) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1993) - Albert Finney (1994) - Nicolas Cage (1995) - Geoffrey Rush (1996) - Al Pacino (1997) - Brendan Gleeson (1998) - Jim Carrey (1999) - Colin Farrell (2000) | | 2001–present | - Brian Cox / Denzel Washington (2001) - Adrien Brody (2002) - Bill Murray (2003) - Jamie Foxx (2004) - Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) - Forest Whitaker (2006) - Frank Langella (2007) - Sean Penn / Mickey Rourke (2008) - Jeremy Renner (2009) - Jesse Eisenberg (2010) - Brad Pitt (2011) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) - Chiwetel Ejiofor (2013) - Michael Keaton (2014) - Paul Dano / Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) - Casey Affleck (2016) - Daniel Kaluuya (2017) - John C. Reilly (2018) - Adam Sandler (2019) - Anthony Hopkins (2020) - Hidetoshi Nishijima (2021) - Colin Farrell (2022) - Paul Giamatti (2023) | | - v - t - e Cecil B. DeMille Award | |—| | - Cecil B. DeMille (1952) - Walt Disney (1953) - Darryl F. Zanuck (1954) - Jean Hersholt (1955) - Jack L. Warner (1956) - Mervyn LeRoy (1957) - Buddy Adler (1958) - Maurice Chevalier (1959) - Bing Crosby (1960) - Fred Astaire (1961) - Judy Garland (1962) - Bob Hope (1963) - Joseph E. Levine (1964) - James Stewart (1965) - John Wayne (1966) - Charlton Heston (1967) - Kirk Douglas (1968) - Gregory Peck (1969) - Joan Crawford (1970) - Frank Sinatra (1971) - Alfred Hitchcock (1972) - Samuel Goldwyn (1973) - Bette Davis (1974) - Hal B. Wallis (1975) - No Award (1976) - Walter Mirisch (1977) - Red Skelton (1978) - Lucille Ball (1979) - Henry Fonda (1980) - Gene Kelly (1981) - Sidney Poitier (1982) - Laurence Olivier (1983) - Paul Newman (1984) - Elizabeth Taylor (1985) - Barbara Stanwyck (1986) - Anthony Quinn (1987) - Clint Eastwood (1988) - Doris Day (1989) - Audrey Hepburn (1990) - Jack Lemmon (1991) - Robert Mitchum (1992) - Lauren Bacall (1993) - Robert Redford (1994) - Sophia Loren (1995) - Sean Connery (1996) - Dustin Hoffman (1997) - Shirley MacLaine (1998) - Jack Nicholson (1999) - Barbra Streisand (2000) - Al Pacino (2001) - Harrison Ford (2002) - Gene Hackman (2003) - Michael Douglas (2004) - Robin Williams (2005) - Anthony Hopkins (2006) - Warren Beatty (2007) - No Award (2008) - Steven Spielberg (2009) - Martin Scorsese (2010) - Robert De Niro (2011) - Morgan Freeman (2012) - Jodie Foster (2013) - Woody Allen (2014) - George Clooney (2015) - Denzel Washington (2016) - Meryl Streep (2017) - Oprah Winfrey (2018) - Jeff Bridges (2019) - Tom Hanks (2020) - Jane Fonda (2021) - No Award (2022) - Eddie Murphy (2023) - No Award (2024) | | - v - t - e Detroit Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor | |—| | - Javier Bardem (2007) - Heath Ledger (2008) - Christoph Waltz (2009) - Christian Bale (2010) - Christopher Plummer (2011) - Robert De Niro (2012) - Jared Leto (2013) - J. K. Simmons (2014) - Liev Schreiber (2015) - Jeff Bridges (2016) - Willem Dafoe (2017) - Josh Hamilton (2018) - Joe Pesci (2019) - Daniel Kaluuya (2020) - Jon Bernthal (2021) | | - v - t - e Donostia Award | |—| | Lifetime Achievement Award at the San Sebastián International Film Festival | | 1980s | - 1986: Gregory Peck / Gene Tierney - 1987: Glenn Ford - 1988: Vittorio Gassman - 1989: Bette Davis | | 1990s | - 1990: Claudette Colbert - 1991: Anthony Perkins - 1992: Lauren Bacall - 1993: Robert Mitchum - 1994: Lana Turner - 1995: Susan Sarandon / Catherine Deneuve - 1996: Al Pacino - 1997: Michael Douglas / Jeremy Irons - 1998: Jeanne Moreau / Anthony Hopkins / John Malkovich - 1999: Anjelica Huston / Fernando Fernán Gómez / Vanessa Redgrave | | 2000s | - 2000: Michael Caine / Robert De Niro - 2001: Julie Andrews / Warren Beatty / Francisco Rabal - 2002: Jessica Lange / Bob Hoskins / Dennis Hopper / Francis Ford Coppola - 2003: Robert Duvall / Sean Penn / Isabelle Huppert - 2004: Annette Bening / Jeff Bridges / Woody Allen - 2005: Willem Dafoe / Ben Gazzara - 2006: Max von Sydow / Matt Dillon - 2007: Liv Ullmann / Richard Gere - 2008: Meryl Streep / Antonio Banderas - 2009: Ian McKellen | | 2010s | - 2010: Julia Roberts - 2011: Glenn Close - 2012: Oliver Stone / Ewan McGregor / Tommy Lee Jones / John Travolta / Dustin Hoffman - 2013: Carmen Maura / Hugh Jackman - 2014: Denzel Washington / Benicio del Toro - 2015: Emily Watson - 2016: Sigourney Weaver / Ethan Hawke - 2017: Ricardo Darín / Monica Bellucci / Agnès Varda - 2018: Hirokazu Kore-eda / Danny DeVito / Judi Dench - 2019: Penélope Cruz / Costa-Gavras / Donald Sutherland | | 2020s | - 2020: Viggo Mortensen - 2021: Johnny Depp / Marion Cotillard - 2022: Juliette Binoche / David Cronenberg - 2023: Javier Bardem / Víctor Erice / Hayao Miyazaki - 2024: Cate Blanchett | | - v - t - e Golden Eagle Lifetime Achievement Award ru | |—| | National Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences of Russia | | - Yevgeny Samoylov / Francis Ford Coppola (2005) - Georgiy Daneliya / Robert De Niro (2006) - Roman Polanski / Edward Gimpel ru (2007) - Vladimir Naumov (2008) - Faye Dunaway / Aleksei Petrenko (2009) - Anouk Aimée / Oleg Strizhenov (2010) - Claudia Cardinale / Grigoriy Dobrygin (2011) - Valentin Gaft (2012) - Viktor Vekselberg / Vadim Yusov (2013) - Georgiy Daneliya / Mark Zakharov (2014) - Stanislav Govorukhin / Ivan Tverdovski ru (2015) - Nikita Mikhalkov (2016) - Vasily Livanov (2017) - Alexander Kalyagin (2018) - Vasily Lanovoy (2019) - Alisa Freindlich (2020) - Svetlana Druzhinina (2021) | | - v - t - e Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama | |—| | 1943–1975 | - Paul Lukas (1943) - Alexander Knox (1944) - Ray Milland (1945) - Gregory Peck (1946) - Ronald Colman (1947) - Laurence Olivier (1948) - Broderick Crawford (1949) - José Ferrer (1950) - Fredric March (1951) - Gary Cooper (1952) - Spencer Tracy (1953) - Marlon Brando (1954) - Ernest Borgnine (1955) - Kirk Douglas (1956) - Alec Guinness (1957) - David Niven (1958) - Anthony Franciosa (1959) - Burt Lancaster (1960) - Maximilian Schell (1961) - Gregory Peck (1962) - Sidney Poitier (1963) - Peter O’Toole (1964) - Omar Sharif (1965) - Paul Scofield (1966) - Rod Steiger (1967) - Peter O’Toole (1968) - John Wayne (1969) - George C. Scott (1970) - Gene Hackman (1971) - Marlon Brando (1972) - Al Pacino (1973) - Jack Nicholson (1974) - Jack Nicholson (1975) | | 1976–2000 | - Peter Finch (1976) - Richard Burton (1977) - Jon Voight (1978) - Dustin Hoffman (1979) - Robert De Niro (1980) - Henry Fonda (1981) - Ben Kingsley (1982) - Robert Duvall / Tom Courtenay (1983) - F. Murray Abraham (1984) - Jon Voight (1985) - Bob Hoskins (1986) - Michael Douglas (1987) - Dustin Hoffman (1988) - Tom Cruise (1989) - Jeremy Irons (1990) - Nick Nolte (1991) - Al Pacino (1992) - Tom Hanks (1993) - Tom Hanks (1994) - Nicolas Cage (1995) - Geoffrey Rush (1996) - Peter Fonda (1997) - Jim Carrey (1998) - Denzel Washington (1999) - Tom Hanks (2000) | | 2001–present | - Russell Crowe (2001) - Jack Nicholson (2002) - Sean Penn (2003) - Leonardo DiCaprio (2004) - Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) - Forest Whitaker (2006) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) - Mickey Rourke (2008) - Jeff Bridges (2009) - Colin Firth (2010) - George Clooney (2011) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) - Matthew McConaughey (2013) - Eddie Redmayne (2014) - Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) - Casey Affleck (2016) - Gary Oldman (2017) - Rami Malek (2018) - Joaquin Phoenix (2019) - Chadwick Boseman (2020) - Will Smith (2021) - Austin Butler (2022) - Cillian Murphy (2023) | | - v - t - e Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement | |—| | 1969–2000 | - Luis Buñuel (1969) - Orson Welles (1970) - John Ford / Marcel Carné / Ingmar Bergman (1971) - Charlie Chaplin / Anatoli Golovnya / Billy Wilder (1972) - Alessandro Blasetti / Luis Buñuel / Frank Capra / George Cukor / Jean-Luc Godard / Alexander Kluge / Akira Kurosawa / Michael Powell / Satyajit Ray / King Vidor / Sergei Yutkevich / Cesare Zavattini (1982) - Michelangelo Antonioni (1983) - Federico Fellini (1985) - Paolo and Vittorio Taviani (1986) - Luigi Comencini / Joseph L. Mankiewicz (1987) - Joris Ivens (1988) - Robert Bresson (1989) - Miklós Jancsó / Marcello Mastroianni (1990) - Mario Monicelli / Gian Maria Volonté (1991) - Francis Ford Coppola / Jeanne Moreau / Paolo Villaggio (1992) - Claudia Cardinale / Robert De Niro / Roman Polanski / Steven Spielberg (1993) - Suso Cecchi d’Amico / Ken Loach / Al Pacino (1994) - Woody Allen / Giuseppe De Santis / Goffredo Lombardo / Ennio Morricone / Alain Resnais / Martin Scorsese / Alberto Sordi / Monica Vitti (1995) - Robert Altman / Vittorio Gassman / Dustin Hoffman / Michèle Morgan (1996) - Gérard Depardieu / Stanley Kubrick / Alida Valli (1997) - Warren Beatty / Sophia Loren / Andrzej Wajda (1998) - Jerry Lewis (1999) - Clint Eastwood (2000) | | 2001–present | - Éric Rohmer (2001) - Dino Risi (2002) - Dino De Laurentiis / Omar Sharif (2003) - Manoel de Oliveira / Stanley Donen (2004) - Hayao Miyazaki / Stefania Sandrelli (2005) - David Lynch (2006) - Tim Burton (2007) - Ermanno Olmi (2008) - John Lasseter (2009) - John Woo (2010) - Marco Bellocchio (2011) - Francesco Rosi (2012) - William Friedkin (2013) - Thelma Schoonmaker / Frederick Wiseman (2014) - Bertrand Tavernier (2015) - Jean-Paul Belmondo / Jerzy Skolimowski (2016) - Jane Fonda / Robert Redford (2017) - David Cronenberg / Vanessa Redgrave (2018) - Pedro Almodóvar / Julie Andrews (2019) - Ann Hui / Tilda Swinton (2020) - Roberto Benigni / Jamie Lee Curtis (2021) - Catherine Deneuve / Paul Schrader (2022) - Liliana Cavani / Tony Leung Chiu-wai (2023) - Peter Weir (2024) | | - v - t - e Hasty Pudding Men of the Year | |—| | - Bob Hope (1967) - Paul Newman (1968) - Bill Cosby (1969) - Robert Redford (1970) - James Stewart (1971) - Dustin Hoffman (1972) - Jack Lemmon (1973) - Peter Falk (1974) - Warren Beatty (1975) - Robert Blake (1976) - Johnny Carson (1977) - Richard Dreyfuss (1978) - Robert De Niro (1979) - Alan Alda (1980) - John Travolta (1981) - James Cagney (1982) - Steven Spielberg (1983) - Sean Connery (1984) - Bill Murray (1985) - Sylvester Stallone (1986) - Mikhail Baryshnikov (1987) - Steve Martin (1988) - Robin Williams (1989) - Kevin Costner (1990) - Clint Eastwood (1991) - Michael Douglas (1992) - Chevy Chase (1993) - Tom Cruise (1994) - Tom Hanks (1995) - Harrison Ford (1996) - Mel Gibson (1997) - Kevin Kline (1998) - Samuel L. Jackson (1999) - Billy Crystal (2000) - Anthony Hopkins (2001) - Bruce Willis (2002) - Martin Scorsese (2003) - Robert Downey Jr. (2004) - Tim Robbins (2005) - Richard Gere (2006) - Ben Stiller (2007) - Christopher Walken (2008) - James Franco (2009) - Justin Timberlake (2010) - Jay Leno (2011) - Jason Segel (2012) - Kiefer Sutherland (2013) - Neil Patrick Harris (2014) - Chris Pratt (2015) - Joseph Gordon-Levitt (2016) - Ryan Reynolds (2017) - Paul Rudd (2018) - Milo Ventimiglia (2019) - Ben Platt (2020) - Jason Bateman (2022) - Bob Odenkirk (2023) - Barry Keoghan (2024) | | - v - t - e Kennedy Center Honorees (2000s) | |—| | 2000 | - Mikhail Baryshnikov - Chuck Berry - Plácido Domingo - Clint Eastwood - Angela Lansbury | | 2001 | - Julie Andrews - Van Cliburn - Quincy Jones - Jack Nicholson - Luciano Pavarotti | | 2002 | - James Earl Jones - James Levine - Chita Rivera - Paul Simon - Elizabeth Taylor | | 2003 | - James Brown - Carol Burnett - Loretta Lynn - Mike Nichols - Itzhak Perlman | | 2004 | - Warren Beatty - Ossie Davis & Ruby Dee - Elton John - Joan Sutherland - John Williams | | 2005 | - Tony Bennett - Suzanne Farrell - Julie Harris - Robert Redford - Tina Turner | | 2006 | - Zubin Mehta - Dolly Parton - Smokey Robinson - Steven Spielberg - Andrew Lloyd Webber | | 2007 | - Leon Fleisher - Steve Martin - Diana Ross - Martin Scorsese - Brian Wilson | | 2008 | - Morgan Freeman - George Jones - Barbra Streisand - Twyla Tharp - Pete Townshend & Roger Daltrey | | 2009 | - Mel Brooks - Dave Brubeck - Grace Bumbry - Robert De Niro - Bruce Springsteen | | - Complete list - 1970s - 1980s - 1990s - 2000s - 2010s - 2020s | | - v - t - e Kirk Douglas Award | |—| | 2007–present | - Kirk Douglas (2007) - John Travolta (2008) - Ed Harris (2009) - Quentin Tarantino (2010) - Harrison Ford (2011) - Michael Douglas (2012) - Robert De Niro (2013) - Forest Whitaker (2014) - Jessica Lange (2015) - Jane Fonda (2016) - Warren Beatty (2017) - Judi Dench (2018) - Hugh Jackman (2019) - Martin Scorsese (2020) - Michelle Yeoh (2023) - Ryan Gosling (2024) | | Festival editions | - 2024 | | - v - t - e Film Society of Lincoln Center Gala Tribute Honorees | |—| | - Charlie Chaplin (1972) - Fred Astaire (1973) - Alfred Hitchcock (1974) - Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman (1975) - George Cukor (1978) - Bob Hope (1979) - John Huston (1980) - Barbara Stanwyck (1981) - Billy Wilder (1982) - Laurence Olivier (1983) - Claudette Colbert (1984) - Federico Fellini (1985) - Elizabeth Taylor (1986) - Alec Guinness (1987) - Yves Montand (1988) - Bette Davis (1989) - James Stewart (1990) - Audrey Hepburn (1991) - Gregory Peck (1992) - Jack Lemmon (1993) - Robert Altman (1994) - Shirley MacLaine (1995) - Clint Eastwood (1996) - Sean Connery (1997) - Martin Scorsese (1998) - Mike Nichols (1999) - Al Pacino (2000) - Jane Fonda (2001) - Francis Ford Coppola (2002) - Susan Sarandon (2003) - Michael Caine (2004) - Dustin Hoffman (2005) - Jessica Lange (2006) - Diane Keaton (2007) - Meryl Streep (2008) - Tom Hanks (2009) - Michael Douglas (2010) - Sidney Poitier (2011) - Catherine Deneuve (2012) - Barbra Streisand (2013) - Rob Reiner (2014) - Robert Redford (2015) - Morgan Freeman (2016) - Robert De Niro (2017) - Helen Mirren (2018) - Spike Lee (2020) - Cate Blanchett (2022) - Viola Davis (2023) - Jeff Bridges (2024) | | - v - t - e Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor | |—| | 1975–2000 | - Al Pacino (1975) - Robert De Niro (1976) - Richard Dreyfuss (1977) - Jon Voight (1978) - Dustin Hoffman (1979) - Robert De Niro (1980) - Burt Lancaster (1981) - Ben Kingsley (1982) - Robert Duvall (1983) - F. Murray Abraham / Albert Finney (1984) - William Hurt (1985) - Bob Hoskins (1986) - Jack Nicholson / Steve Martin (1987) - Tom Hanks (1988) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) - Jeremy Irons (1990) - Nick Nolte (1991) - Clint Eastwood (1992) - Anthony Hopkins (1993) - John Travolta (1994) - Nicolas Cage (1995) - Geoffrey Rush (1996) - Robert Duvall (1997) - Ian McKellen (1998) - Russell Crowe (1999) - Michael Douglas (2000) | | 2001–2021 | - Denzel Washington (2001) - Daniel Day-Lewis / Jack Nicholson (2002) - Bill Murray (2003) - Liam Neeson (2004) - Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) - Sacha Baron Cohen / Forest Whitaker (2006) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) - Sean Penn (2008) - Jeff Bridges (2009) - Colin Firth (2010) - Michael Fassbender (2011) - Joaquin Phoenix (2012) - Bruce Dern (2013) - Tom Hardy (2014) - Michael Fassbender (2015) - Adam Driver (2016) - Timothée Chalamet (2017) - Ethan Hawke (2018) - Antonio Banderas (2019) - Chadwick Boseman (2020) - Simon Rex (2021) | | - v - t - e National Board of Review Award for Best Actor | |—| | 1945–1975 | - Ray Milland (1945) - Laurence Olivier (1946) - Michael Redgrave (1947) - Walter Huston (1948) - Ralph Richardson (1949) - Alec Guinness (1950) - Richard Basehart (1951) - Ralph Richardson (1952) - James Mason (1953) - Bing Crosby (1954) - Ernest Borgnine (1955) - Yul Brynner (1956) - Alec Guinness (1957) - Spencer Tracy (1958) - Victor Sjöström (1959) - Robert Mitchum (1960) - Albert Finney (1961) - Jason Robards (1962) - Rex Harrison (1963) - Anthony Quinn (1964) - Lee Marvin (1965) - Paul Scofield (1966) - Peter Finch (1967) - Cliff Robertson (1968) - Peter O’Toole (1969) - George C. Scott (1970) - Gene Hackman (1971) - Peter O’Toole (1972) - Al Pacino / Robert Ryan (1973) - Gene Hackman (1974) - Jack Nicholson (1975) | | 1976–2000 | - David Carradine (1976) - John Travolta (1977) - Jon Voight / Laurence Olivier (1978) - Peter Sellers (1979) - Robert De Niro (1980) - Henry Fonda (1981) - Ben Kingsley (1982) - Tom Conti (1983) - Victor Banerjee (1984) - William Hurt / Raul Julia (1985) - Paul Newman (1986) - Michael Douglas (1987) - Gene Hackman (1988) - Morgan Freeman (1989) - Robert De Niro / Robin Williams (1990) - Warren Beatty (1991) - Jack Lemmon (1992) - Anthony Hopkins (1993) - Tom Hanks (1994) - Nicolas Cage (1995) - Tom Cruise (1996) - Jack Nicholson (1997) - Ian McKellen (1998) - Russell Crowe (1999) - Javier Bardem (2000) | | 2001–present | - Billy Bob Thornton (2001) - Campbell Scott (2002) - Sean Penn (2003) - Jamie Foxx (2004) - Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) - Forest Whitaker (2006) - George Clooney (2007) - Clint Eastwood (2008) - George Clooney / Morgan Freeman (2009) - Jesse Eisenberg (2010) - George Clooney (2011) - Bradley Cooper (2012) - Bruce Dern (2013) - Michael Keaton / Oscar Isaac (2014) - Matt Damon (2015) - Casey Affleck (2016) - Tom Hanks (2017) - Viggo Mortensen (2018) - Adam Sandler (2019) - Riz Ahmed (2020) - Will Smith (2021) - Colin Farrell (2022) - Paul Giamatti (2023) | | - v - t - e National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor | |—| | 1966–2000 | - Michael Caine (1966) - Rod Steiger (1967) - Per Oscarsson (1968) - Jon Voight (1969) - George C. Scott (1970) - Peter Finch (1971) - Al Pacino (1972) - Marlon Brando (1973) - Jack Nicholson (1974) - Jack Nicholson (1975) - Robert De Niro (1976) - Art Carney (1977) - Gary Busey (1978) - Dustin Hoffman (1979) - Peter O’Toole (1980) - Burt Lancaster (1981) - Dustin Hoffman (1982) - Gérard Depardieu (1983) - Steve Martin (1984) - Jack Nicholson (1985) - Bob Hoskins (1986) - Steve Martin (1987) - Michael Keaton (1988) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) - Jeremy Irons (1990) - River Phoenix (1991) - Stephen Rea (1992) - David Thewlis (1993) - Paul Newman (1994) - Nicolas Cage (1995) - Eddie Murphy (1996) - Robert Duvall (1997) - Nick Nolte (1998) - Russell Crowe (1999) - Javier Bardem (2000) | | 2001–present | - Gene Hackman (2001) - Adrien Brody (2002) - Bill Murray (2003) - Jamie Foxx (2004) - Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) - Forest Whitaker (2006) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) - Sean Penn (2008) - Jeremy Renner (2009) - Jesse Eisenberg (2010) - Brad Pitt (2011) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) - Oscar Isaac (2013) - Timothy Spall (2014) - Michael B. Jordan (2015) - Casey Affleck (2016) - Daniel Kaluuya (2017) - Ethan Hawke (2018) - Antonio Banderas (2019) - Delroy Lindo (2020) - Hidetoshi Nishijima (2021) - Colin Farrell (2022) - Andrew Scott (2023) | | - v - t - e National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor | |—| | 1967–2000 | - Gene Hackman (1967) - Seymour Cassel (1968) - Jack Nicholson (1969) - Chief Dan George (1970) - Bruce Dern (1971) - Eddie Albert / Joel Grey (1972) - Robert De Niro (1973) - Holger Löwenadler (1974) - Henry Gibson (1975) - Jason Robards (1976) - Edward Fox (1977) - Richard Farnsworth / Robert Morley (1978) - Frederic Forrest (1979) - Joe Pesci (1980) - Robert Preston (1981) - Mickey Rourke (1982) - Jack Nicholson (1983) - John Malkovich (1984) - John Gielgud (1985) - Dennis Hopper (1986) - Morgan Freeman (1987) - Dean Stockwell (1988) - Beau Bridges (1989) - Bruce Davison (1990) - Harvey Keitel (1991) - Gene Hackman (1992) - Ralph Fiennes (1993) - Martin Landau (1994) - Don Cheadle (1995) - Martin Donovan / Tony Shalhoub (1996) - Burt Reynolds (1997) - Bill Murray (1998) - Christopher Plummer (1999) - Benicio del Toro (2000) | | 2001–present | - Steve Buscemi (2001) - Christopher Walken (2002) - Peter Sarsgaard (2003) - Thomas Haden Church (2004) - Ed Harris (2005) - Mark Wahlberg (2006) - Casey Affleck (2007) - Eddie Marsan (2008) - Paul Schneider / Christoph Waltz (2009) - Geoffrey Rush (2010) - Albert Brooks (2011) - Matthew McConaughey (2012) - James Franco (2013) - J. K. Simmons (2014) - Mark Rylance (2015) - Mahershala Ali (2016) - Willem Dafoe (2017) - Steven Yeun (2018) - Brad Pitt (2019) - Paul Raci (2020) - Anders Danielsen Lie (2021) - Ke Huy Quan (2022) - Charles Melton (2023) | | - v - t - e New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor | |—| | 1935–1950 | - Charles Laughton (1935) - Walter Huston (1936) - Paul Muni (1937) - James Cagney (1938) - James Stewart (1939) - Charlie Chaplin (1940) - Gary Cooper (1941) - James Cagney (1942) - Paul Lukas (1943) - Barry Fitzgerald (1944) - Ray Milland (1945) - Laurence Olivier (1946) - William Powell (1947) - Laurence Olivier (1948) - Broderick Crawford (1949) - Gregory Peck (1950) | | 1951–1975 | - Arthur Kennedy (1951) - Ralph Richardson (1952) - Burt Lancaster (1953) - Marlon Brando (1954) - Ernest Borgnine (1955) - Kirk Douglas (1956) - Alec Guinness (1957) - David Niven (1958) - James Stewart (1959) - Burt Lancaster (1960) - Maximilian Schell (1961) - No Award (1962) - Albert Finney (1963) - Rex Harrison (1964) - Oskar Werner (1965) - Paul Scofield (1966) - Rod Steiger (1967) - Alan Arkin (1968) - Jon Voight (1969) - George C. Scott (1970) - Gene Hackman (1971) - Laurence Olivier (1972) - Marlon Brando (1973) - Jack Nicholson (1974) - Jack Nicholson (1975) | | 1976–2000 | - Robert De Niro (1976) - John Gielgud (1977) - Jon Voight (1978) - Dustin Hoffman (1979) - Robert De Niro (1980) - Burt Lancaster (1981) - Ben Kingsley (1982) - Robert Duvall (1983) - Steve Martin (1984) - Jack Nicholson (1985) - Bob Hoskins (1986) - Jack Nicholson (1987) - Jeremy Irons (1988) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) - Robert De Niro (1990) - Anthony Hopkins (1991) - Denzel Washington (1992) - David Thewlis (1993) - Paul Newman (1994) - Nicolas Cage (1995) - Geoffrey Rush (1996) - Peter Fonda (1997) - Nick Nolte (1998) - Richard Farnsworth (1999) - Tom Hanks (2000) | | 2001–present | - Tom Wilkinson (2001) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2002) - Bill Murray (2003) - Paul Giamatti (2004) - Heath Ledger (2005) - Forest Whitaker (2006) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) - Sean Penn (2008) - George Clooney (2009) - Colin Firth (2010) - Brad Pitt (2011) - Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) - Robert Redford (2013) - Timothy Spall (2014) - Michael Keaton (2015) - Casey Affleck (2016) - Timothée Chalamet (2017) - Ethan Hawke (2018) - Antonio Banderas (2019) - Delroy Lindo (2020) - Benedict Cumberbatch (2021) - Colin Farrell (2022) - Franz Rogowski (2023) | | - v - t - e New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor | |—| | 1969–2000 | - Jack Nicholson (1969) - Chief Dan George (1970) - Ben Johnson (1971) - Robert Duvall (1972) - Robert De Niro (1973) - Charles Boyer (1974) - Alan Arkin (1975) - Jason Robards (1976) - Maximilian Schell (1977) - Christopher Walken (1978) - Melvyn Douglas (1979) - Joe Pesci (1980) - John Gielgud (1981) - John Lithgow (1982) - Jack Nicholson (1983) - Ralph Richardson (1984) - Klaus Maria Brandauer (1985) - Daniel Day-Lewis (1986) - Morgan Freeman (1987) - Dean Stockwell (1988) - Alan Alda (1989) - Bruce Davison (1990) - Samuel L. Jackson (1991) - Gene Hackman (1992) - Ralph Fiennes (1993) - Martin Landau (1994) - Kevin Spacey (1995) - Harry Belafonte (1996) - Burt Reynolds (1997) - Bill Murray (1998) - John Malkovich (1999) - Benicio del Toro (2000) | | 2001–present | - Steve Buscemi (2001) - Dennis Quaid (2002) - Eugene Levy (2003) - Clive Owen (2004) - William Hurt (2005) - Jackie Earle Haley (2006) - Javier Bardem (2007) - Josh Brolin (2008) - Christoph Waltz (2009) - Mark Ruffalo (2010) - Albert Brooks (2011) - Matthew McConaughey (2012) - Jared Leto (2013) - J. K. Simmons (2014) - Mark Rylance (2015) - Mahershala Ali (2016) - Willem Dafoe (2017) - Richard E. Grant (2018) - Joe Pesci (2019) - Chadwick Boseman (2020) - Kodi Smit-McPhee (2021) - Ke Huy Quan (2022) - Charles Melton (2023) | | - v - t - e Satellite Award for Best Actor in a Miniseries, Limited Series or Television Film | |—| | - Alan Rickman (1996) - Gary Sinise (1997) - Delroy Lindo (1998) - William H. Macy (1999) - James Woods (2000) - Richard Dreyfuss (2001) - William H. Macy (2002) - James Woods (2003) - Jamie Foxx (2004) - Jonathan Rhys Meyers (2005) - Bill Nighy (2006) - David Oyelowo (2007) - Paul Giamatti (2008) - Brendan Gleeson (2009) - Al Pacino (2010) - Jason Isaacs (2011) - Benedict Cumberbatch (2012) - Michael Douglas (2013) - Mark Ruffalo (2014) - Mark Rylance (2015) - Bryan Cranston (2016) - Robert De Niro (2017) - Darren Criss (2018) - Jared Harris (2019) - Ethan Hawke (2020) - Ewan McGregor (2021) - Evan Peters (2022) - Guy Pearce (2023) | | - v - t - e Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award | |—| | - Eddie Cantor (1962) - Stan Laurel (1963) - No Award (1964) - Bob Hope (1965) - Barbara Stanwyck (1966) - William Gargan (1967) - James Stewart (1968) - Edward G. Robinson (1969) - Gregory Peck (1970) - Charlton Heston (1971) - Frank Sinatra (1972) - Martha Raye (1973) - Walter Pidgeon (1974) - Rosalind Russell (1975) - Pearl Bailey (1976) - James Cagney (1977) - Edgar Bergen (1978) - Katharine Hepburn (1979) - Leon Ames (1980) - No Award (1981) - Danny Kaye (1982) - Ralph Bellamy (1983) - Iggie Wolfington (1984) - Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward (1985) - Nanette Fabray (1986) - Red Skelton (1987) - Gene Kelly (1988) - Jack Lemmon (1989) - Brock Peters (1990) - Burt Lancaster (1991) - Audrey Hepburn (1992) - Ricardo Montalban (1993) - George Burns (1994) - Robert Redford (1995) - Angela Lansbury (1996) - Elizabeth Taylor (1997) - Kirk Douglas (1998) - Sidney Poitier (1999) - Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee (2000) - Ed Asner (2001) - Clint Eastwood (2002) - Karl Malden (2003) - James Garner (2004) - Shirley Temple (2005) - Julie Andrews (2006) - Charles Durning (2007) - James Earl Jones (2008) - Betty White (2009) - Ernest Borgnine (2010) - Mary Tyler Moore (2011) - Dick Van Dyke (2012) - Rita Moreno (2013) - Debbie Reynolds (2014) - Carol Burnett (2015) - Lily Tomlin (2016) - Morgan Freeman (2017) - Alan Alda (2018) - Robert De Niro (2019) - No Award (2020) - Helen Mirren (2021) - Sally Field (2022) - Barbra Streisand (2023) | — - v - t - e Cannes Film Festival jury presidents — 1946–1975 1976–2000 2001–present Authority control databases — International National Academics Artists People Other
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