Leonardo Dicaprio

advertisement
Leonardo Dicaprio
•
•
•
Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio (born November 11, 1974)[1] is an American
actor and film producer whose career rose with his role in the television
sit-com Growing Pains. His critically acclaimed breakthrough film
performance came in This Boy's Life, and was quickly followed by What's
Eating Gilbert Grape. His performance as the mentally handicapped
brother of Gilbert (Johnny Depp), in the title role, brought him
nominations for the Golden Globe and Academy Award for Best
Supporting Actor.
He gained fame for his role as Jack Dawson in Titanic, and has starred in
many other successful films including Romeo + Juliet, Catch Me If You
Can, and Blood Diamond, for which he was nominated for the Academy
Award for Best Actor. Another Academy Award nomination came for his
role as Howard Hughes in The Aviator, directed by Martin Scorsese. He
has also worked with Scorsese in films such as Gangs of New York and
The Departed. This working partnership brought comparison to the
earlier working relationship between Scorsese and actor Robert De Niro,
who also benefited from roles in Scorsese films early in his career.[2]
DiCaprio has also been nominated two times for BAFTA, three times for
SAG, and seven times for the Golden Globe Awards. He is a Golden Globe
and a Silver Bear Award winner
•
•
•
Early life
DiCaprio was born in Los Angeles, California, the only child of Irmelin
(née Indenbirken), a former legal secretary, and George DiCaprio, an
underground comic artist and producer/distributor of comic books.[3] His
mother moved from Oer-Erkenschwick at the Ruhr, Germany, to the U.S.
during the 1950s,[4] while his father is a fourth-generation American of
half Italian and half German descent.[1][5][6] His maternal grandmother,
Helene Indenbirken, who was born Yelena Smirnova, was a Russian
immigrant to Germany.[7] DiCaprio's parents met while attending college
together and subsequently moved to Los Angeles.[1] He was named
Leonardo because his pregnant mother was looking at a Leonardo da
Vinci painting in a museum in Italy when DiCaprio first kicked.[8] His
parents divorced when he was a year old and he lived mostly with his
mother, although his father was around intermittently. During his
childhood, DiCaprio was interested in baseball cards, comic books, and
frequently visited museums with his father.
DiCaprio and his mother lived in several Los Angeles neighborhoods, such
as Echo Park, and at 1874 Hillhurst Avenue, Los Feliz district (which was
later converted into a local public library), while his mother worked
several jobs to support them.[1] He attended Seeds Elementary School
and graduated from John Marshall High School a few blocks away, after
attending the Los Angeles Center for Enriched Studies for four years.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Career
Early career
DiCaprio's career began with his appearing in several commercials and educational films. He got his break on
television in 1990 when he was cast in the short-lived series based on the movie Parenthood. On set, he met
another struggling child actor, Tobey Maguire. The two quickly became friends and made a pact to help each other
find roles in TV and movies. After Parenthood, DiCaprio had bit parts on several shows, including The New Lassie
and Roseanne, as well as a brief stint on the soap opera Santa Barbara, playing the young Mason Capwell.
His debut film role was Critters 3, a B-grade horror film, which later went straight to video. Soon after, in 1991, he
became a recurring cast member on the hit ABC sitcom Growing Pains, playing Luke Brower, a homeless boy who
is taken in by the Seavers.
His breakthrough came in 1992, when he beat out hundreds of other boys for the role of Toby Wolff in This Boy's
Life, co-starring Robert De Niro and Ellen Barkin. His performance as the troubled, abused teenager was critically
acclaimed and Hollywood soon took notice. Later in 1993, he co-starred as the mentally handicapped brother to
Johnny Depp in What's Eating Gilbert Grape. His performance earned him both Academy Award and Golden Globe
nominations for best supporting actor.
1995 was an eventful year for DiCaprio. That year he starred in four movies; in the first one, The Quick and the
Dead, he played Gene Hackman's alleged son, Fee, starring alongside Sharon Stone and Russell Crowe.
After The Quick and The Dead, he starred in Total Eclipse, a fictionalized account of the homosexual relationship
between Paul Verlaine (David Thewlis) and Arthur Rimbaud. River Phoenix was originally cast as Rimbaud, but died
before production.
The black-and-white film Don's Plum, a low budget drama featuring the actor and his friends (including Tobey
Maguire) was filmed between 1995 and 1996. Its release was blocked by DiCaprio and Maguire, who argued that
they never intended to make it a theatrical release. Nevertheless, it premiered in Berlin in 2001.
Also in 1995, he starred as Jim Carroll in The Basketball Diaries, a life story of drugs and prostitution. Baz
Luhrmann's 1996 film Romeo + Juliet, again featured DiCaprio as the male lead and was one of the first films to
cash in on DiCaprio's future star-status, with a worldwide box office take of $147 million.[9] Later that year he
starred in Marvin's Room, reuniting with Robert De Niro and appearing alongside Meryl Streep and Diane Keaton
• Superstardom and "Leo-Mania"
• The move from "star" to "superstar" came when
DiCaprio played Jack Dawson in the 1997
blockbuster Titanic, alongside Kate Winslet as
Rose DeWitt Bukater, which soon became the
highest grossing film of all time and received 11
Oscars. In 1998, he made a cameo appearance in
Woody Allen's satire Celebrity. That year he also
starred in the dual roles of the villainous King Louis
XIV and his secret, sympathetic twin brother
Philippe in The Man in the Iron Mask. His popularity
at the time was dubbed "Leo-mania", comparing his
sudden fame and fan frenzy to that of the Beatles in
the 1960s, known as Beatlemania. The Man in the
Iron Mask may have benefited from Leo-Mania,
considering its remarkably high worldwide box
office gross (especially outside North-America)
despite mediocre reviews.[10]
• What came with fame were tales in the tabloids of
excesses and indulgence. Time summed up the
fame superhighway and its trappings in an
interview with the actor in 2000, reporting:[11]
• DiCaprio still thinks of himself as an edgy indie
actor, not the Tiger Beat cover boy. "I have no
connection with me during that whole Titanic
Phenomenon and what my face became around the
world," DiCaprio commented, adding, "I'll never
reach that state of popularity again, and I don't
expect to. It's not something I'm going to try to
achieve either."
• Acting acclaim
• In 2002, DiCaprio starred in Gangs of New
York (directed by Martin Scorsese) and
Catch Me If You Can (directed by Steven
Spielberg). Both films were very well
received by critics. Forging a collaboration
with Scorsese, the two paired again for a
biopic of American aviation pioneer
Howard Hughes in The Aviator, a film that
scored DiCaprio a second Academy Award
nomination, for Best Actor.
• DiCaprio at the Gangs of New York
screening at the Cannes Film Festival with
Martin Scorsese and Cameron Diaz
• DiCaprio continued his run with Scorsese
in the 2006 film The Departed as Billy
Costigan, a smart undercover cop in
Boston. His next film was Blood Diamond,
released in December 2006. The film itself
received generally favorable reviews and
DiCaprio was praised for the authenticity
of his South African Afrikaner accent,
known as a difficult accent to emulate
• Recent work
• DiCaprio starred in 2008's Body of Lies, directed by
Ridley Scott and co-starring Russell Crowe, Vince
Colosimo, and Golshifteh Farahani. The same year,
he appeared in Revolutionary Road, an adaptation
of Richard Yates' 1961 novel. The latter reunited
DiCaprio with his Titanic costars Kate Winslet and
Kathy Bates. DiCaprio was nominated for the
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture
Drama for his performance.
• DiCaprio starred in 2010's Shutter Island, a film
adaptation of the novel of the same name by Dennis
Lehane. He will also play in the science-fiction film
Inception, directed and produced by Christopher
Nolan.
Sources
http://images.google.ro/images?u
m=1&hl=ro&rlz=1R2ADSA_roRO
367&tbs=isch:1&q=leonardo+di
caprio&sa=N&start=108&ndsp=
18
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leona
rdo_DiCaprio
Download