Tuesday Movie Deal

Diane Keaton

young deane keatonBorn Diane Hall in Los Angeles, California, Keaton is the oldest of four children. Her father Jack Hall (1921–1990) was a civil engineer, and her mother Dorothy Keaton (b. 1921) was a homemaker and amateur photographer. Her father came from an Irish American Catholic background, and her mother came from a Methodist family. Keaton was raised a Methodist by her mother. Her first ambition to become an actor came after seeing her mother win the “Mrs. Los Angeles” pageant for homemakers. Keaton claimed that the theatricality of the event inspired her to become a stage actor. She has also credited Katharine Hepburn, whom she admires for playing strong and independent women, as one of her inspirations.

Keaton is a 1964 graduate of Santa Ana High School in Santa Ana, California. During her time there she participated in singing and acting clubs at school, and starred as Blanche DuBois in a school production of A Streetcar Named Desire. After graduation she attended Santa Ana College, and later Orange Coast College as an acting student, but dropped out after a year to pursue an entertainment career in Manhattan. Upon joining the Actors’ Equity Association she adopted the surname of Keaton, her mother’s maiden name, as there was already a registered Diane Hall. For a brief time, she also moonlighted nightclubs with a singing act. She would later revisit her nightclub act in Annie Hall (1977), and in a cameo in Radio Days (1987).

Keaton began studying acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City. She initially studied acting under the Meisner technique, an ensemble acting technique made popular in the 1920s by Sanford Meisner, a New York acting director. She has described her acting technique as, “[being] only as good as the person you’re acting with … As opposed to going it on my own and forging my path to create a wonderful performance without the help of anyone. I always need the help of everyone!” According to her Reds co-star Warren Beatty, “She approaches a script sort of like a play in that she has the entire script memorized before you start doing the movie, which I don’t know any other actors doing that.”

In 1968, Keaton became an understudy on the original Broadway production of Hair. She gained some notoriety for her refusal to disrobe in the portions of the musical when the entire cast performed nude, even though nudity in the production was optional for actors. (Those who performed nude received a $50 bonus.) After acting in Hair for nine months, she auditioned for a part in Woody Allen’s production of Play It Again, Sam. After nearly being passed over for being too tall (at 5 ft 8 in./1.73 m she is two inches/5 cm taller than Allen), she won the part.

Credit : Wikipedia

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Ron Howard

baby ron howardHoward was born in Duncan, Oklahoma, to actors Rance Howard and Jean F. Speegle Howard. He has Dutch, Scottish, English, Irish, German and Cherokee Indian ancestry. His younger brother, Clint Howard, is a well-known character actor. Howard attended the University of Southern California’s School of Cinematic Arts but did not graduate.

Howard first earned recognition for playing Winthrop Paroo, the child with the lisp in the film version of The Music Man with Robert Preston and Shirley Jones. After The Music Man, he appeared in the role of Opie Taylor in the television series The Andy Griffith Show. There he portrayed the son of the local sheriff in the fictional town of Mayberry, North Carolina. The credits referred to him as “Ronny Howard.” He also appeared in “The Courtship of Eddie’s Father” with Glenn Ford.

Howard made a notable guest-star appearance on the popular television series M*A*S*H during that show’s first season as an underage American soldier serving in the Marines during the Korean War.

Howard is also well known for his role as Richie Cunningham in television’s Happy Days on which, beginning in 1974, he played the likable “buttoned down” boy, in contrast to Henry Winkler’s Fonz. He attained film success with his role as Steve Bollander in George Lucas‘ teen movie American Graffiti. In 1977, while still starring on Happy Days, he directed his first film, a low-budget comedy/action film called Grand Theft Auto. After leaving Happy Days in 1980, he directed several TV movies. His big theatrical directing break came in 1982 when he directed the bigger budget film Night Shift featuring soon-to-be well-known actors such as Michael Keaton and Shelley Long, and reuniting Howard with his Happy Days co-star Henry Winkler.

He has since directed a number of high-visibility films, the most acclaimed of which include Curious George, Splash, Cocoon, Apollo 13 (nominated for several Academy Awards), A Beautiful Mind, for which he won the Oscar for Best Director, and Cinderella Man. His latest film, The Da Vinci Code, reteaming Howard with Splash and Apollo 13 star Tom Hanks, has been a box office hit earning more than $700 million at the box office, but was a critical letdown. Howard is the co-chairman, with Brian Grazer, of Imagine Entertainment, a major film and television production company, which has produced notable projects like Friday Night Lights, 8 Mile, Inside Deep Throat, and the television series 24 and Felicity. His last significant on-screen role was when he reprised his famous role as Opie Taylor in the 1986 TV reunion movie Return to Mayberry reuniting him with Andy Griffith, the now late Don Knotts, and most of the old cast.

Through his company Imagine Television, Howard continues to have a presence in television, most recently as the executive producer and uncredited narrator of the critically acclaimed FOX sitcom Arrested Development. The show, despite having won six Emmy awards and near-unanimous praise from critics, did not enjoy high ratings and was limited by Fox Television in 2006. A series finale took place in February 2006, but Howard, on-screen for the first time in the show, suggested a movie version may be in the works.

Howard casts his younger brother Clint with a minor role in most of his movies.

Credit : Wikipedia

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Francis Ford Coppola

Francis-Ford-Coppola

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

Clint Eastwood

young clint eastwoodClinton Eastwood Jr. was born on May 31, 1930 in San Francisco, California. Before making it to Hollywood in the mid ’50s, he worked a number of dead-end, unskilled jobs, served in the U.S. Army, and dropped out of Los Angeles City College where he was pursuing a business-related degree. He married Maggie Johnson in December 1953, and the couple had two children, son Kyle (born 1968) and daughter Alison (born 1972).

In 1955, Eastwood landed a contract with Universal Pictures and got bit parts in B-movies such as Tarantula, Revenge of the Creature and Francis in the Navy, in which he appeared with the famous “talking mule.” Universal soon dropped him, but his luck changed after a CBS executive spotted him on the studio’s lot in 1959. The exec, who thought Eastwood looked like a real cowboy, signed him to star on TV’s Rawhide. He would play the character Rowdy Yates for the next seven years, becoming a household name in the process.

young clint eastwood Eastwood began work as an actor, making brief appearances in B-films such as Revenge of the Creature, Tarantula and Francis in the Navy. In 1958, he got his first starring role in a feature film, Ambush at Cimarron Pass, which he has dismissed as “probably the lousiest Western ever made.” In 1959, he got his first break with the long-running television series, Rawhide. As Rowdy Yates (whom Eastwood would later refer to in interviews as “the idiot of the plains”), he made the show his own and became a household name across the country.

Eastwood, who stands at 6 ft 4 inches (193 cm), found lead roles as the mysterious Man With No Name in Sergio Leone’s loose trilogy of westerns: A Fistful of Dollars / Per un pugno di dollari (1964), For a Few Dollars More / Per qualche dollaro in più (1965), and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly / Il Buono, il brutto, il cattivo (1966). Although the first of these was evidently a tribute to Akira Kurosawa’s Yojimbo, Leone used his innovative style to depict a wilder, more lawless and desolate world than traditional westerns. All three films were hits, particularly the third, and Eastwood became an instant international star, redefining the traditional image of the American cowboy, though his character was actually a gunslinger and bounty hunter rather than a traditional hero.

Stardom brought more roles, though still in the “tough guy” mold. In Where Eagles Dare (1968) he had second billing to Richard Burton but was paid $800,000. In the same year, he starred in Don Siegel’s Coogan’s Bluff (1968), in which Eastwood was a lonely deputy sheriff who came to the big city of New York to enforce the law in his own way. The film was controversial for its straightforward portrayal of violence, but it launched a more than ten-year collaboration between Eastwood and Siegel and set the prototype for the macho cop hero that Eastwood would play in the Dirty Harry series of films. In the next year Eastwood began to branch out. Paint Your Wagon (1969) was a musical, albeit a western musical.

Credit : Wikipedia

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Page 1 of 212»
Close
E-mail It