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Felis | |
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Wildcat, Felis silvestris | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Carnivora |
Family: | Felidae |
Subfamily: | Felinae |
Genus: | Felis Linnaeus, 1758 |
Species | |
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Felis range |
Felis is a genus of cats in the family Felidae, including the familiar domestic cat and its closest wild relatives. The wild species are distributed widely across Europe, southern and central Asia, and Africa; the domestic cat has been introduced worldwide.
Members of the genus Felis are all small felines, with a more or less close resemblance to the domestic cat. The smallest species is the sand cat, which may be less than 40 centimetres (16 in) in length, while the largest is the jungle cat, which can reach 94 centimetres (37 in). They inhabit a range of different habitats, from swampland to desert, and generally feed on small rodents, supplementing their diet with birds and other small animals, depending on their local environment.
Genetic studies indicate that the genus Felis first evolved around eight to ten million years ago, probably in the Mediterranean region.[1]
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The genus Felis is currently considered to consist of six living species, although the domestic cat and Chinese mountain cat are sometimes considered subspecies of F. silvestris.
The classification of the cat family (Felidae) has seen many permutations over the years, and nearly all other species of the family were at one point placed in the genus Felis.
Felis once contained most of the small cats, and at times contained a very large number of species. In 1951, the zoologist Reginald Innes Pocock identified forty taxa previously described as separate species as actually being subspecies of Felis silvestris, thus greatly reducing the size of the genus.[3] Today, few of these subspecies are recognised as being distinct, while the majority of species of small cat have been separated off into their own genera, such as Leopardus and Puma.
Pallas's Cat has an especially complicated taxonomic history. The bloated genus was later split into many smaller genera, resulting in Pallas's Cat being reclassified as the only member of the genus Otocolobus. However, during the late 20th century Pallas's Cat was considered to be closely related to the remaining species of the genus Felis and was classified accordingly. Finally, recent research has shown Pallas's Cat to be closely related to both Felis and Prionailurus. As a result, the genus Otocolobus has been resurrected and Pallas's Cat has been reclassified (again).
Media related to Felis at Wikimedia Commons
Data related to Felis at Wikispecies
Alejandro Sanz | |
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![]() Alejandro Sanz at the Tony Bennett Birthday Gala on September 17, 2011. |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Alejandro Sánchez Pizarro |
Born | (1968-12-18) December 18, 1968 (age 43) |
Origin | Madrid, Spain |
Genres | Latin pop |
Occupations | Singer, songwriter |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar, piano |
Years active | 1988–present |
Labels | Warner Music Benelux |
Associated acts | Juanes, Shakira, Alicia Keys, Calle 13 |
Website | AlejandroSanz.com |
Alejandro Sanz (born Alejandro Sánchez Pizarro on December 18, 1968) is a Spanish singer-songwriter and musician. For his work, Sanz has won a total of fifteen Latin Grammy Awards and three Grammy Awards. He has won the Latin Grammy for Album of the Year three times, more than any other artist. Throughout his career, he has released a total of ten studio albums and six DVDs. The singer is noted for his flamenco-influenced ballads, but he has also experimented with rock, salsa, and hip hop.
Born in Madrid, Sanz began playing guitar at age seven, taking influence from his family's flamenco roots. He released his debut album at age sixteen, although he did not gain commercial success until his second release, Viviendo Deprisa. His next two records, Si Tú Me Miras and 3 also fared well commercially, but it was his 1997 breakthrough album Más that garnered international success. El Alma al Aire followed in 2000, selling more than a million copies in its first week.
In 2002, he became the first Spanish artist to record an MTV Unplugged album. His collaboration with Shakira on the single "La Tortura" reached number one on several charts worldwide. His albums No Es lo Mismo (2003) and El Tren de los Momentos (2006) showed Sanz experimenting with more diverse styles of music, while his most recent release, Paraíso Express (2009) served as a return to form for the musician. He signed to Universal Music Group in 2011 and is reported to be working on his tenth studio album.
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Sanz was born in Madrid, Spain, on December 18, 1968, the youngest son of María Pizarro and Jesús Sánchez.[1] He grew up in the high-crime neighborhood of Moratalaz in eastern Madrid.[2] Sanz recalled that "Back then, kids grew up on the street...I was a bit like the group troubadour; the one who played the guitar and sang. That kept me out of a lot of trouble."[2] Sanz's father, a door-to-door book salesman, played guitar professionally, which inspired seven-year-old Sanz to learn to play the instrument.[1][3] He pursued the instrument with an intensity that eventually frustrated his mother, who broke his guitar one morning after his playing kept the family from sleeping.[3]
He was exposed to traditional flamenco music as a child while vacationing each summer in his parents' native Andalucía in southern Spain.[3] Originally, Sanz intended to become a flamenco performer, but he found the music teachers to be overly strict. Commenting on his early experiences, Sanz explained, "Flamenco can be very hard on beginners. If you lose the rhythm, they toss you out with, 'You're no good, boy!' They're very strict and very cruel. But it's also a marvelous education, because you either learn to play or else."[3] He felt that he could not compete with his peers, and decided to focus on creating pop music with flamenco influences, viewing flamenco to be a "lifestyle" better suited to others.[4]
As a teenager, Sanz performed in various venues in his hometown. He became acquainted with Miguel Ángel Arenas, a music industry executive who had signed several popular Spanish groups such as Mecano.[1] Arenas helped Sanz find work, eventually leading to a record deal with the Spanish label Hispavox.[1] In 1989, sixteen-year-old Sanz released his debut album, Los Chulos Son Pa' Cuidarlos under the name of Alejandro Magno (Spanish for "Alexander the Great").[4] The record, which fused techno and flamenco, was met with critical and commercial indifference, and today Sanz views the record to be "insignificant".[3] However, the album is now considered to be a collector's item.[1] In an attempt to promote Los Chulos Son Pa' Cuidarlos, he performed at strip clubs, playing short sets between acts.[3] This proved to be unsuccessful and Sanz took a break from music, choosing to study business administration.[3] He also took a job at a recording studio in which he wrote material for other artists. He persuaded Arenas to send demos of his songs to record companies, which led to being signed by Warner Music Latina.[3] At this time, he began performing under his current name.[1]
Sanz's rise to fame began in 1991, when he released his first album from Warner, Viviendo Deprisa. The record and the songs "Pisando Fuerte" and "Se le Apagó la Luz" helped him gain a dedicated fan base in Spain.[5] In 1993, he released Si Tú Me Miras shortly followed by a live album, titled Básico. That same year, he recorded a song entitled "Mi Primera Canción" with flamenco pioneer Paco de Lucía, whom Sanz idolized as a child.[6] He released his third studio album, 3, in 1995. In addition to Spanish, 3 was also released in Italian and Portuguese.[7] "La Fuerza del Corazón", the first single released from 3, was his first song to chart internationally.[1] All three albums proved to be successful, reaching multi-platinum status in Spain.[1]
Sanz spent two years in Milan, Italy to work on a follow-up for 3.[8] For the album, he wished to create a "true fusion" of many different sounds, and began studying the saxophone and piano in addition to guitar.[8] In 1997, Sanz released his fifth studio album, Más, a record containing ballads strongly influenced by flamenco, pop, and tropical rhythms.[9]
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Driven by the singles "Corazón Partío", "Y, ¿Si Fuera Ella?", "Amiga Mía", "Aquello Que Me Diste", and "Siempre Es de Noche", Más sold more than two million copies in Spain and was certified 22× Platinum in the country, making it the best-selling album in Spanish history.[1][4][12][13] The album remained on the Billboard Latin Albums chart for 74 weeks, and one year after the record's release, Sanz was granted an Ondas Award for Best Song for "Corazón Partío".[14][15] According to David Cazares of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, the album "made Sanz an international star on the strength of the pop-salsa hit 'Corazón Partío', a song on the lips of fans from Spain to Cuba and the United States."[5] Following the success of the album, Sanz began touring in United States for the first time.[4]
This record is important because it represents me choosing what I want to do...You're always learning things about music if you want to, and you can apply it to what you want to do. It has a rhythmic complexity and a proximity to flamenco, however it's less obvious.
His fifth album, El Alma al Aire, released September 26, 2000, featured Sanz exploring diverse genres of music, including jazz, R&B, soul and tango.[5] In Spain, the album sold more than one million copies in the first week, breaking the record of one million copies sold in four months, also set by Sanz with his previous album, Más.[17][18] At the 2001 Latin Grammy Awards, Sanz walked away with four awards: Best Pop Male Vocal Album and Album of the Year for El Alma al Aire, and Record of the Year and Song of the Year for the title track from the album.[19] Later that year, El Alma al Aire was released in a special edition including Sanz's duets with Irish band The Corrs. In October 2001, Sanz collaborated with Michael Jackson and various other artists on the Spanish version of the charity single "What More Can I Give", which benefited the victims of the September 11 attacks.[17][20]
In 2002, Sanz recorded MTV Unplugged at the Gusman Center for the Performing Arts in Miami, Florida.[4] He was the first Spanish artist to record and release an MTV Unplugged album.[21] For Sanz, the recording of the album "changed the way I do my music. It was a rediscovery of how to perform, and also how to record, music with live musicians. That was the spirit of the music in its pure form, though [it is ironic] that the more people who are playing, the more simple it is."[4] With the MTV Unplugged, he garnered three Latin Grammy Awards (Album of the Year, Recording of the Year and Song of the Year for "Y Sólo Se Me Ocurre Amarte").[22]
On September 2, 2003, Sanz released his sixth studio album, No Es lo Mismo. On this record, Sanz took a more political approach than he had on previous releases. The song "Sandy a Orilla do Mundo" discusses oil spills on the Spanish coast, while "Labana" tells the story of people fleeing from Cuba on makeshift rafts.[23] The album won four awards at the 2004 Latin Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year and Record of the Year.[24] Sanz was unable to attend the event and his awards were accepted by presenters and colleagues.[24] Also in 2004, he became the first Spanish musician to give a lecture at Harvard University, speaking about Hispanic culture at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies.[25]
In 2005, Sanz collaborated with Shakira on her song "La Tortura". Co-written by Sanz, the song became an international hit, breaking the record for the most weeks at the number one spot on the Hot Latin Songs chart.[26] The song exposed Sanz to a more diverse audience, and helped build anticipation for his next release.[1] The first single from the album El Tren de los Momentos, "A la Primera Persona", became his first song to enter the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 100 on the chart.[1][27] The record was also noted for its guest appearances, which featured Shakira, Juanes, Alex González of Maná, and Residente of Calle 13.[1]
In the spring of 2007, Sanz suffered a mental breakdown and took two months off in the middle of a world tour at the request of his doctor. The breakdown was caused by several events in his personal life, including the death of his father in 2005, his separation with Mexican model and actress Jaydy Mitchel, and his announcement that he had a three-year-old son outside of his marriage with Mitchel.[28] He commented on the situation, saying "You have to put things in perspective. It was stress, something that had never affected me, but this time, yes, it did. So I had to pay. A doctor told me to stop for a couple of months to recuperate completely."[28] Sanz spent time in therapy, a time which "helped [him] a lot" and gave him "more power" to perform.[28]
In a press conference in late 2007, he criticized Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, calling him "undemocratic" in the wake of a petition made by Venezuelan citizens to prevent Chávez from running for re-election.[5][29] Sanz further stated "If they gave me 3 million signatures to stop singing, I would stop singing immediately."[29] Supporters of Chávez subsequently gathered 230,000 signatures in response to Sanz' comments.[29]
To promote his new record, Paraíso Express, Sanz started a campaign in which fans could create a video about their definition of paradise and upload it to his YouTube channel.[30] Artists such as Shakira, Laura Pausini and Paulina Rubio also participated.[30] On November 10, 2009, Sanz released Paraíso Express. This record was described as a return to form for Sanz, focusing more on melody as opposed to the experimentation he pursued on his previous two albums.[31] He commented that "On this album, I first composed the melody and then the lyrics. It is more of a rock album than my past releases, with more elegant and positive lyrics and a happier and more rhythmic spirit."[32]
The bilingual single "Looking for Paradise" featuring Alicia Keys reached number one on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart.[33] At the 2010 Latin Grammy Awards, the album was nominated Album of the Year and Best Male Pop Vocal Album, while the single "Desde Cuándo" received both Record and Song of the Year nominations.[34] On February 15, 2011, Sanz announced that he would be signing with Universal Music Group after twenty years with Warner.[35]
Sanz is known for his distinctive raspy vocals, which he attributes to his flamenco roots, crediting singer Camarón de la Isla as a major influence.[36][37] His song "Sí, He Cantado Mal" (Yes, I Have Sung Badly) from No Es lo Mismo references this, with Sanz saying "I'm laughing a little at myself so that I can laugh at other things. Sometimes, I'm harder on myself than any music critic can be. I'm laughing at that."[36] Throughout his youth, Sanz was heavily influenced by English-language heavy metal groups such as Iron Maiden and Dio, referring to himself as a "heavy metal radical".[36] He also feels that living in the city of Cadiz had a major impact on his musical style, where "Any 7-year-old kid you find knows how to play guitar, play the cajón, knows how to sing. When the family comes together we start to sing. In a way it's not just music, it's culture."[37]
Early in his career, his music generally consisted of romantic ballads. However, in the late 1990s, his collaborations with other artists greatly expanded his musical style.[1] On No Es lo Mismo, he experimented with rock, salsa, and hip hop.[4] While recording the album, he noted that he often entered the studio with a rough idea for a song and the guest artists would "contaminate it with their rhythms...in a good way."[23] El Tren de los Momentos continued this pattern of musical experimentation, featuring diverse genres such as funk, jazz, and country.[38] Despite this, Jason Birchmeier of Allmusic described his musical evolution by saying "Even as Sanz broadened his style over the years, he never ventured far from his strength: romantic songs, generally ballads, tinged with flamenco and sung wholeheartedly with his distinct voice."[1]
Sanz married Mexican fashion model and actress Jaydy Michel in Bali on December 30, 1999, but this marriage was never legally recognized in either of their home countries. Sanz felt that having a legally recognized marriage was unnecessary: "My wife is my wife and I am her husband. For me, that has enough validity...I am married with the heart."[39] The couple separated in 2005.[28] Their daughter, Manuela Sánchez Michel, was born in 2001. Sanz later had a son named Alexander with Valeria Rivera, a Puerto Rican fashion designer.[40]
Sanz welcomed his third child in New York, a boy named Dylan (b. July 2011), the first child from his relationship with girlfriend and former assistant, Raquel Perera.[41] Sanz chose flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucía to be the godfather to his son. Sanz and Perera are godparents to David Bisbal's daughter, Ella.[42] On May 23, 2012, Sanz married Raquel Perera in a private ceremony in Barcelona.[43]
In addition to music, Sanz enjoys painting, which he often does while trying to create ideas for new songs.[44] He explains that painting "teaches you that taking risks rarely leads to failure. In fact, from the moment you assume a risk, you have succeeded."[3]
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Alejandro Sanz |
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Persondata | |
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Name | Sanz, Alejandro |
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Short description | |
Date of birth | December 18, 1968 |
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Date of death | |
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Jamie Grace | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Jamie Grace Harper |
Born | (1991-11-25) November 25, 1991 (age 20) |
Origin | Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A. |
Genres | Contemporary Christian music, acoustic, folk, Christian hip hop, reggae |
Occupations | Singer, Rapper, Songwriter, Actress |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar, piano, ukulele, drums |
Years active | 2009–present |
Labels | Gotee |
Associated acts | TobyMac, Newsong |
Website | www.jamie-grace.com |
Notable instruments | |
vocals, guitar, ukulele |
Jamie Grace Harper (born November 25, 1991)[1] is an American Contemporary Christian musician, singer, rapper, songwriter, and actress from Atlanta, Georgia. In 2010 she was discovered (via her Youtube channel) by TobyMac and signed to his label Gotee Records. She released the song "Hold Me" in 2011 and won the 2012 Dove Award for New Artist of the Year.
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Jamie Grace's debut EP, Hold Me was released by the label on February 22, 2011.[2] Jamie Grace released the title track to the album at the same time and it was one of the most added singles to Christian Hit Radio stations.[3] Her debut album, One Song at a Time, was released in stores September 20, 2011.[1] Her second EP, Christmas Together was released November 29, 2011.[citation needed]
In a somewhat unique style, Jamie Grace combines elements of hip hop, folk, and pop into one distinct sound. In addition, she occasionally uses elements of guest vocalists, such as TobyMac in "Hold Me" and GabeReal from DiverseCity in "One Song at a Time."
Jamie Grace is featured as a main artist and speaker in the Revolve Tour by Women of Faith[4] alongside artists such as Britt Nicole, Group 1 Crew, and Hawk Nelson.[5] On May 4, 2011, Jesus Freak Hideout announced that "Hold Me," her first single, had attained the No. 1 spot at CHR.[6]
Grace graduated from college on May 12, 2012.[citation needed] When she is not on tour, she studies children's ministry at Point University.[3]
Jamie Grace was diagnosed with Tourette syndrome in 2003 when she was 11.[3] She has spoken of this illness in various American states through her music and speaking.[7]
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September 20, 2011 | One Song at a Time | Gotee Records |
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February 22, 2011 | Hold Me | Gotee Records |
November 29, 2011 | Christmas Together | Gotee Records |
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2011 | "Hold Me" |
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Year | Award | Song | Result |
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2012 Grammys | Best Contemporary Christian Music Song | "Hold Me" | Nominated |
2012 Dove | Song of the Year | "Hold Me" | Nominated |
New Artist of the Year | Won | ||
Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year | "Hold Me" | Nominated | |
Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year | "One Song at a Time" | Nominated |
Persondata | |
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Name | Grace, Jamie |
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Date of birth | November 25, 1991 |
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Christian Bale | |
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![]() Bale in June 2009 |
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Born | Christian Charles Philip Bale (1974-01-30) 30 January 1974 (age 38) Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire |
Residence | Los Angeles, California |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1982–present |
Spouse | Sandra Blažić (2000–present) |
Children | 1 |
Parents | David Bale, Jenny (née James) Bale |
Family | Gloria Steinem (Step-Mother) |
Christian Charles Philip Bale (born 30 January 1974) is an English actor.[1] Best known for his roles in American films, Bale has starred in both big budget Hollywood films and the smaller projects from independent producers and art houses.
Bale first caught the public eye at the age of 13, when he was cast in the starring role of Steven Spielberg's Empire of the Sun (1987). He played an English boy who is separated from his parents and subsequently finds himself lost in a Japanese internment camp during World War II.[2] He is also notable for his role as serial killer Patrick Bateman in American Psycho (2000), and for portraying Bruce Wayne/Batman in Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins (2005), The Dark Knight (2008) and the upcoming finale The Dark Knight Rises (2012).
In 2010, Bale portrayed Dicky Eklund in the biopic The Fighter. He received critical acclaim for his role and won several awards, including the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor and the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role.
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Bale was born in Wales to parents of English descent. His South African–born father, David Bale, was an entrepreneur, commercial pilot and talent manager, and his mother, Jenny (née James), was a circus performer.[3][4][5][6] He spent his childhood in England, Portugal, and the United States.
Bale's first foray into acting was a commercial for the fabric softener Lenor in 1982.[7] A year later, he appeared in a Pac-Man cereal commercial playing a child rock star. In 1984, he made his stage debut in The Nerd, opposite Rowan Atkinson.[8]
Bale made his film debut as Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich of Russia in the made-for-television film Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna in 1986, which was followed by leading roles in the miniseries Heart of the Country and the fantasy adventure Mio in the Land of Faraway, in which he appeared with Christopher Lee and Nick Pickard.
Bale's performance as Jim Graham in Empire of the Sun earned him widespread critical praise and the first ever "Best Performance by a Juvenile Actor" award from the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures.[9] The attention the press and his schoolmates lavished upon him after this took a toll on Bale, and he contemplated giving up acting until Kenneth Branagh approached him and persuaded him to appear in Henry V in 1989.[9] In 1990, he played the role of Jim Hawkins opposite Charlton Heston (as Long John Silver) in Treasure Island, an adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's classic book.
In 1992, Bale starred as Jack Kelly in the Disney musical Newsies, and followed it up in 1993 with another release, Swing Kids, a film about teenagers who secretly listened to forbidden jazz during the rise of Nazi Germany.[10] Bale was recommended by actress Winona Ryder to star in Gillian Armstrong's 1994 film Little Women.[9] Bale provided the voice for Thomas, a young compatriot of Captain John Smith, in Disney's Pocahontas (1995) and in 1997 played Arthur Stuart in Velvet Goldmine, Todd Haynes' tribute to glam rock.[10] In 1999, Bale contributed to an all-star cast, including Kevin Kline, Michelle Pfeiffer, Stanley Tucci and Rupert Everett, portraying Demetrius in an updated version of William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.[10]
In 1999, Bale played serial killer Patrick Bateman in American Psycho, director Mary Harron's adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis' controversial novel. Bale was briefly dropped from the project in favour of Leonardo DiCaprio, but DiCaprio eventually dropped out to star in The Beach, and Bale was cast once again. He researched his character by studying the novel and prepared himself physically for the role by spending months tanning and exercising in order to achieve the "Olympian physique" of the character as described in the original novel.[11] He went so far as to distance himself from the cast and crew to maintain the darker side of Bateman's character. American Psycho premiered at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival to much controversy. Roger Ebert condemned the film at first, calling it pornography,[12] and "the most loathed film at Sundance,"[13] but gave it a favourable review, writing that Harron "transformed a novel about bloodlust into a film about men's vanity." Of Bale's performance, he wrote, "Christian Bale is heroic in the way he allows the character to leap joyfully into despicability; there is no instinct for self-preservation here, and that is one mark of a good actor."[14]
On 14 April 2000, Lions Gate Films released American Psycho in cinemas. Bale was later approached to make a cameo appearance in another Bret Easton Ellis adaptation, The Rules of Attraction, a film loosely connected to American Psycho, but he declined out of loyalty to Harron's vision of Bateman, which he felt could not be properly expressed by anyone else.[15] In 2000, he again played a wealthy murderer, this time in John Singleton's Shaft.
Bale has played an assortment of diverse characters since 2001. His first role after American Psycho was in the John Madden adaptation of the best-selling novel Captain Corelli's Mandolin. Bale played Mandras, a Greek fisherman who vied with Nicolas Cage's title character for the affections of Pelagia (Penelope Cruz). Captain Corelli's Mandolin was Bale's second time working with John Hurt, after All the Little Animals.
From 2002 to 2003, Bale starred in three feature films. Laurel Canyon (2002) was generally well received by critics.[16] This film also marked the second time he worked with actress Kate Beckinsale, his costar in Prince of Jutland (1994). Critics generally focused on star Frances McDormand's performance over the rest of the cast, however.[17]
Reign of Fire was Bale's first action vehicle and had, compared to all his previous work, an immense budget estimated at US$95,000,000.[18] Bale entered into negotiations about starring in the film with reservations, but director Rob Bowman convinced him to take the lead role.[19] Bale starred as Quinn Abercromby opposite Matthew McConaughey's Denton Van Zan. Bale and McConaughey trained for their respective roles by boxing and working out.[19]
Equilibrium was Bale's third film of 2002, costing US$20 million to produce but earning just over US$5 million worldwide.[20] In Equilibrium, Bale played John Preston, an elite law enforcer in a dystopian society. Equilibrium featured a fictional martial art called Gun Kata that combined gunfighting with hand-to-hand combat. According to moviebodycounts.com, the character of John Preston has the third most on-screen kills in a single movie ever with 118, exactly half of the movie's total of 236.[21]
After a year's hiatus, Bale returned in 2004 to play Trevor Reznik, the title character in the psychological thriller The Machinist. Bale gained attention for his devotion to the role and for the lengths to which he went to achieve Reznik's emaciated, skeletal appearance. He went without proper rest for prolonged periods, and placed himself on a crash diet of generally coffee and apples,[22] which reduced his weight by 63 pounds (4 st 4 lb/27 kg) in a matter of months.[23] By the end of filming Bale weighed only 121 pounds (8 st 9 lb/55 kg),[22] a transformation he described as "very calming mentally"[24] and which drew comparisons to Robert De Niro's alternate weight-gaining regimen for his role as Jake LaMotta in the 1980 film Raging Bull.[25] Bale claimed that he had not worked for a period of time before he was cast in the film. "...I just hadn't found scripts that I'd really been interested in. So I was really dying for something to arrive. Then when this one did, I just didn't want to put it down. I finished it and, upon the kind of revelation that you get at the end, I immediately wanted to go back and re-visit it, to take a look at what clues I could have gotten throughout".[26] The Machinist was a low-budget production, costing roughly US$5 million to produce, and was given only a limited US release. It was well received, with the review tallying website Rotten Tomatoes reporting that 75% of the critics' reviews tallied were positive.[27]
Bale, an admirer of Hayao Miyazaki's Spirited Away,[15] was then cast as the voice of the title character, Howl, in the English language dub of the Japanese director's fantasy anime adventure Howl's Moving Castle, an adaptation of Diana Wynne Jones's children's novel. Its gross in the US was US$4,711,096, a fraction of its worldwide gross (US$235,184,110).[28]
It was reported that Bale had previously auditioned for the role of Robin in Batman Forever (1995) and later Batman and Robin (1997), but lost out to Chris O'Donnell. However, this rumour was later dispelled by Bale himself in a magazine interview in 2008.[29] In 2004, after completing filming for The Machinist, Bale won the coveted role of Batman and his alter ego Bruce Wayne in Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins, a reboot of the Batman film series. Bale beat out Jake Gyllenhaal, the closest competition for the role.[30]
Still fresh off The Machinist, it became necessary for Bale to bulk up to match Batman's muscular physique. He was given a deadline of six months to do this. Bale recalled it as far from a simple accomplishment: "...when it actually came to building muscle, I was useless. I couldn't do one push up the first day. All of the muscles were gone, so I had a real tough time rebuilding all of that."[23] With the help of a personal trainer, Bale succeeded in meeting the deadline, gaining a total of 100 lb (45 kg) in six months. He went from about 130 lbs to 230 lbs.[31] He then discovered that he had actually gained more weight than the director desired, and dropped his weight to 190 lbs by the time filming began.[32]
Bale had initial concerns about playing Batman, as he felt more ridiculous than intimidating in the Batsuit. He dealt with this by depicting Batman as a savage beast.[23] To attain a deeper understanding of the character, Bale read various Batman comic books. He explained his interpretation of the young boy: "Batman is his hidden, demonic rage-filled side. The creature Batman creates is an absolutely sincere creature and one that he has to control but does so in a very haphazard way. He's capable of enacting violence — and to kill — so he's constantly having to rein himself in." For Bale, the most gruelling part about playing Batman was the suit. "You stick it on, you get hot, you sweat and you get a headache in the mask," he said. "But I'm not going to bitch about it because I get to play Batman."[33] When promoting the film in interviews and public events, Bale retained an American accent to avoid confusion.[34]
Batman Begins was released in the U.S. on 15 June 2005 and was a U.S. and international triumph for Warner Bros., costing approximately US$135 million to produce and taking in over US$370 million in returns worldwide.[35] Bale earned the Best Hero award at the 2006 MTV Movie Awards for his performance.[36]
Bale reprised his role as Batman in the Batman Begins sequel The Dark Knight. He trained in the Keysi Fighting Method, and performed many of his own stunts.[37] The Dark Knight was released in the U.S. on 18 July 2008 and stormed through the box office, with a record-breaking $158.4 million in the U.S. in its first weekend.[38] It broke the $300 million barrier in 10 days, the $400 million mark in 18 days and the $500 million mark in 43 days, three new U.S. box office records set by the film.[39] The film went on to gross over $1 billion at the box office worldwide, making it the fourth-highest grossing movie worldwide of all time, before adjusting for inflation.[40]
Bale will reprise his role in The Dark Knight Rises which will be released on 20 July 2012,[41] making Bale the actor who has played Batman the most times in feature film. Bale has given the same opinion as Nolan that, if the latter was forced to bring Robin into the films, he would never again play Batman; even though one of his favourite Batman stories, Batman: Dark Victory, focuses on Robin's origin.[42]
After Batman Begins, Bale returned to appearing in independent films. He was cast as one of the two leads in the South Central David Ayer-helmed crime drama Harsh Times, co-starring Freddy Rodriguez and Eva Longoria. Bale played Jim Luther Davis, a grim Afghanistan War veteran afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder, approached by the Department of Homeland Security and hired as a federal agent. Harsh Times premiered at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival and had a wide release on 10 November 2006.[43]
Terrence Malick directed The New World, a period piece inspired by the stories of Pocahontas, and Bale was cast as John Rolfe. He shared the screen with Colin Farrell and Q'Orianka Kilcher, who played John Smith and Pocahontas. The majority of screen time was devoted to Farrell and Kilcher; Bale was a secondary character, and only appeared during the last third of the film. The film was a failure at the U.S. box office and its worldwide total (US$29,506,437) fell short of turning a profit (the production budget was placed at US$30 million).[44]
In 2006, Bale took on four projects. Rescue Dawn, by German filmmaker Werner Herzog, had him playing U.S. Fighter pilot Dieter Dengler, who has to fight for his life after being shot down while on a mission during the Vietnam War. Bale left a strong impression on Herzog, with the director complimenting his acting abilities: "I find him one of the greatest talents of his generation. We made up our own minds long before he did Batman."[45]
"I kind of like movies where I just get to just be dirty and crawling in the mud, "Rescue Dawn" it was all very primordial stuff, and with this one it was all about wearing the same clothes day after day and getting sweaty and dirty and sun exposure, and it's meant to be like that; Westerns are meant to be dirty, they shouldn't be all nice and clean. And I like getting my hand dirty."
In The Prestige, an adaptation of the Christopher Priest novel about a rivalry between two Victorian stage magicians, Bale was reunited with Batman Begins' Michael Caine and director Christopher Nolan. The cast of The Prestige also included Hugh Jackman, Scarlett Johansson, Piper Perabo, and David Bowie. I'm Not There, a film in which Bale again worked alongside Todd Haynes and Heath Ledger (who would go on to play The Joker in The Dark Knight), is an artistic reflection of the life of Bob Dylan. He starred opposite Russell Crowe in a commercially and critically successful Western film, 3:10 to Yuma.
Bale was originally cast to play George W. Bush in Oliver Stone's film W., but dropped out due to the prosthetics involved.[47] Bale played John Connor in Terminator Salvation[48] and FBI agent Melvin Purvis in Michael Mann's Public Enemies.[49]
In July 2008, Bale flew into an angry tirade on the sets of Terminator Salvation, while filming in New Mexico.[50] In February 2009, the audio recording of the incident was released.[51][52] The tirade was directed at Shane Hurlbut, director of photography for the film. According to Bale, Hurlbut had, for the second time, ruined his concentration by walking onto the set during a scene.[50][53][54] The recording is of a highly agitated Bale directing profanities at Hurlbut, threatening and belittling him, and finally threatening to quit the film if Hurlbut repeated his offence without being fired for it.[53] It was reported that Warner film executives sent the tape to the insurer of the film in case Bale decided to quit the movie.[55] In an interview with E! Online, assistant director and producer of Terminator Salvation, Bruce Franklin, said it was an isolated incident. "If you are working in a very intense scene and someone takes you out of your groove ... It was the most emotional scene in the movie ... [A]nd for him to get stopped in the middle of it. He is very intensely involved in his character. He didn't walk around like that all day long. It was just a moment and it passed," Franklin said.[56]
Actors Whoopi Goldberg and Terry Crews,[57][58] directors Darren Aronofsky[59] and Ron Howard,[60] as well as Ain't It Cool News website creator Harry Knowles[61] have also publicly defended Bale's actions, some of them citing the practice that crew members are to remain still while the camera is rolling. The incident also inspired experimental band The Mae Shi to write the song, "R U Professional", which features samples from the recording;[62] similarly, Lucian Piane's remix "Bale Out" is composed almost entirely of audio from the incident. Stephen Colbert parodied the incident on 4 February 2009 episode of The Colbert Report, in which guest Steve Martin repeatedly walked in front of the camera and was berated by Colbert.[63] The incident was re-enacted on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, with Inside the Actor's Studio host James Lipton giving performances of both Bale and the crewmember.[64] An episode of the animated comedy series Family Guy also mixed in the voice of Peter Griffin interacting with Bale and reacting to Bale's comments as if they were directed at him to comedic effect.
After remaining silent for most of the week, Bale gave a public apology on 6 February 2009, to a Los Angeles radio station, KROQ. He stated that the outburst was "inexcusable" and that it was motivated by the day's shooting intensity.[65] Bale said he "acted like a punk", and that he and Hurlbut talked after the incident and "resolved this completely".[66] Bale acknowledged that the two worked together for several hours after the incident, and "at least a month after that... I've seen a rough cut of the movie and he has done a wonderful job. It looks fantastic".[66]
Bale starred alongside Mark Wahlberg in the David O. Russell-directed 2010 drama The Fighter, for which he won the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor and the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and thirty other awards in 2011.[67] Near the end of his acceptance speech during the televised Golden Globes awards ceremony, Bale complimented Robert DeNiro by saying he was "the shit". The comment was censored by NBC.[68]
Writer/director Joe Carnahan confirmed in November 2007 that Bale is also involved in the upcoming movie Killing Pablo in which he is to play Major Steve Jacoby.[69] According to a Nuts magazine interview, Bale stated that he will be in the running to play the role of Solid Snake in a film adaptation of Metal Gear Solid.[70] Niels Arden Oplev, director of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, is to have Bale as lead in his current project The Last Photograph, which Oplev hopes to start filming early 2011.[71] In December 2010, it was announced that Christian Bale would be starring in the historical drama war film The Flowers of War, directed by Zhang Yimou.[72]
While filming The Flowers of War in December 2011, Bale and a CNN crew attempted to visit Chen Guangcheng, a blind "barefoot lawyer" under unofficial house arrest for his activism against China's One Child Policy. While on camera, Bale was punched, shoved, and denied access by dozens of Chinese security guards who failed to recognize him.[73] Bale later stated that he had wanted "to meet the man, shake his hand and say what an inspiration he is".[74][75] Video footage also showed Bale and the CNN crew having stones thrown at them, and a minivan then chased their car for more than 40 minutes.[73]
Bale is set to appear in two Terrence Malick directed films to be shot in 2012, Lawless and Knight of Cups.[76][77]
In early 2012, it was confirmed that Bale was portraying the character Russell Baze in Scott Cooper’s upcoming thriller Out of the Furnace.[78][79][77]
On 29 January 2000, Bale married Sandra "Sibi" Blažić (born 1970), a former model, make-up artist and personal assistant to Winona Ryder; the couple have a daughter, Emmeline,[80] who was born on 27 March 2005 in Santa Monica, California.[81][82] Since 1992, Bale has resided in Los Angeles.[83]
Like his late father, Christian Bale actively supports environmental groups such as Greenpeace and the World Wildlife Fund.[7] Feminist activist Gloria Steinem became Christian Bale's stepmother on 3 September 2000;[84] it was her first marriage (at the age of 66), and the couple were together until David's death.[5]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | Dreamthief, TheThe Dreamthief | Rufus | Pilot film Voice only |
1986 | Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna | Alexei | TV movie |
1987 | Heart of the Country | Ben Harris | TV miniseries |
1987 | Mio min Mio | Benke Jum-Jum |
|
1987 | Empire of the Sun | Jamie "Jim" Graham | |
1989 | Henry V | Falstaff's Boy | |
1990 | Treasure Island | Jim Hawkins | TV movie |
1991 | Murder of Quality, AA Murder of Quality | Tim Perkins | TV movie |
1992 | Newsies | Jack "Cowboy" Kelly Francis Sullivan |
|
1993 | Swing Kids | Thomas Berger | |
1994 | Prince of Jutland | Amled | |
1994 | Little Women | Theodore "Laurie" Lawrence | |
1995 | Pocahontas | Thomas | Voice only |
1996 | Portrait of a Lady, TheThe Portrait of a Lady | Edward Rosier | |
1996 | Secret Agent, TheThe Secret Agent | Stevie | |
1997 | Metroland | Chris Lloyd | |
1998 | Velvet Goldmine | Arthur Stuart | |
1998 | All the Little Animals | Bobby Platt | |
1999 | Midsummer Night's Dream, AA Midsummer Night's Dream | Demetrius | |
1999 | Mary, Mother of Jesus | Jesus of Nazareth | TV movie |
2000 | American Psycho | Patrick Bateman | |
2000 | Shaft | Walter Wade, Jr. | |
2001 | Captain Corelli's Mandolin | Mandras | |
2002 | Laurel Canyon | Sam Bentley | |
2002 | Reign of Fire | Quinn Abercromby | |
2002 | Equilibrium | Cleric John Preston | |
2004 | Machinist, TheThe Machinist | Trevor Reznik | |
2004 | Howl's Moving Castle | Howl | Voice for English language dub only |
2005 | Batman Begins | Bruce Wayne/Batman | Also voiced the character in the film's video game adaptation |
2005 | Harsh Times | Jim Luther Davis | Also executive producer |
2005 | New World, TheThe New World | John Rolfe | |
2006 | Rescue Dawn | Dieter Dengler | |
2006 | Prestige, TheThe Prestige | Alfred Borden | |
2007 | 3:10 to Yuma | Dan Evans | |
2007 | I'm Not There | Jack Rollins/Pastor John | |
2008 | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Bruce Wayne/Batman | |
2009 | Terminator Salvation | John Connor | |
2009 | Public Enemies | Melvin Purvis | |
2010 | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Dicky Eklund | |
2011 | The Flowers of War | John Miller | |
2012 | Dark Knight Rises, TheThe Dark Knight Rises | Bruce Wayne/Batman | Post-production |
2013 | Lawless | TBA | Filming |
2013 | Out of the Furnace | Russell Baze | Filming |
Year | Award | Category | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | National Board of Review | Best Juvenile Performance | Empire of the Sun | Won |
1988 | Young Artist Award | Best Young Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama | Empire of the Sun | Won |
2001 | Chlotrudis Awards | Best Actor | American Psycho | Won |
2001 | Empire Award | Best Actor | American Psycho | Nominated |
2001 | London Film Critics' Circle Awards | British Actor of the Year | American Psycho | Nominated |
2001 | OFCS Award | Best Actor | American Psycho | Nominated |
2004 | Catalonian International Film Festival | Best Actor | Machinist, TheThe Machinist | Won |
2005 | Irish Film and Television Award | Best International Actor | Batman Begins | Nominated |
2005 | European Film Awards | Best Actor | Machinist, TheThe Machinist | Nominated |
2005 | Saturn Award | Best Actor | Machinist, TheThe Machinist | Nominated |
2006 | London Film Critics' Circle Awards | British Actor of the Year | Machinist, TheThe Machinist | Nominated |
2006 | MTV Movie Awards | Best Hero | Batman Begins | Won |
2006 | Empire Awards | Best Actor | Batman Begins | Nominated |
2006 | Saturn Awards | Best Actor | Batman Begins | Won |
2006 | Scream Awards | Best Superhero | Batman Begins | Nominated |
2006 | Scream Awards | Most Heroic Performance | Batman Begins | Nominated |
2007 | Empire Award | Best Actor | Prestige, TheThe Prestige | Nominated |
2007 | San Diego Film Critics Society Awards | Special Award | 3:10 to Yuma, I'm Not There, Rescue Dawn | Won |
2007 | Satellite Award | Best Actor in a Motion Picture, Drama | Rescue Dawn | Nominated |
2008 | London Film Critics' Circle Awards | British Actor of the Year | 3:10 to Yuma | Nominated |
2008 | Independent Spirit Award | Robert Altman Award (with Todd Haynes, Laura Rosenthal, Cate Blanchett, Richard Gere, Heath Ledger, Ben Whishaw, Marcus Carl Franklin, Bruce Greenwood, Charlotte Gainsbourg) |
I'm Not There | Won |
2008 | Scream Awards | Best Fantasy Actor | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Nominated |
2008 | Scream Awards | Best Superhero | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Won |
2009 | Empire Awards | Best Actor | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Won |
2009 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite Male Action Star | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Nominated |
2009 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite Leading Man | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Nominated |
2009 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite Superhero | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Won |
2009 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite On Screen Match Up (with Heath Ledger) | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Won |
2009 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite Cast (with Heath Ledger, Gary Oldman, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman, Aaron Eckhart, Maggie Gyllenhaal) |
Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Won |
2009 | West Point Cadet Choice Awards | Best Exemplification of Leadership | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Won |
2009 | Saturn Award | Best Actor | Dark Knight, TheThe Dark Knight | Nominated |
2010 | BAFTA Award | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Nominated |
2010 | Alliance of Women Film Journalists | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Austin Film Critics Association | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Black Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Boston Society of Film Critics | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Boston Society of Film Critics | Best Ensemble (with Amy Adams, Melissa Leo, Jack McGee, Mark Wahlberg) | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards | Best Ensemble (with Amy Adams, Melissa Leo, Jack McGee, Mark Wahlberg) | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Central Ohio Film Critics Circle Association Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Nominated |
2010 | Central Ohio Film Critics Circle Association Awards | Best Ensemble (with Amy Adams, Melissa Leo, Jack McGee, Mark Wahlberg) | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Chicago Film Critics Association | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Denver Film Critics Society | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Detroit Film Critics Society | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Florida Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Golden Globes | Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Houston Film Critics Society | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Indiana Film Journalists Association Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Kansas City Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Las Vegas Film Critics Society | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | London Film Critics' Circle | British Actor of the Year | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | National Board of Review | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | New York Film Critics Online | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | North Texas Film Critics Association | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Oklahoma Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Online Film Critics Society | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Phoenix Film Critics Society | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | San Diego Film Critics Society | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Nominated |
2010 | San Diego Film Critics Society | Best Ensemble (with Amy Adams, Melissa Leo, Jack McGee, Mark Wahlberg) | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Nominated |
2010 | Satellite Awards | Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2011 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Best Cast | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Nominated |
2011 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Utah Film Critics Association | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Vancouver Film Critics Circle | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
2010 | Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association | Best Ensemble (with Amy Adams, Melissa Leo, Jack McGee, Mark Wahlberg) |
Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Nominated |
2011 | Academy Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Fighter, TheThe Fighter | Won |
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Christian Bale |
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Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Christian Bale |
|
Persondata | |
---|---|
Name | Bale, Christian |
Alternative names | Bale, Christian Charles Philip |
Short description | English actor |
Date of birth | 30 January 1974 |
Place of birth | Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK |
Date of death | |
Place of death |
Eddie Murphy | |
---|---|
![]() Murphy at the Tribeca Film Festival for Shrek Forever After in 2010. |
|
Birth name | Edward Regan Murphy |
Born | (1961-04-03) April 3, 1961 (age 51) Brooklyn, New York, United States |
Medium | Film, television, stand-up, music, books |
Nationality | American |
Years active | 1976–present |
Genres | Observational comedy, musical comedy, black comedy, satire, physical comedy, Dance Pop |
Subject(s) | African American culture, race relations, racism, marriage, everyday life, current events, pop culture, human sexuality |
Influences | Bill Cosby,[1] Richard Pryor,[1] Peter Sellers, Redd Foxx[1] Robin Williams,[1] |
Spouse | Nicole Mitchell (1993–2006) (divorced) 5 children Tracey Edmonds (2008) (unofficial) |
Domestic partner(s) | Melanie Brown (2006–07) 1 child |
Notable works and roles | Axel Foley in Beverly Hills Cop Various on Saturday Night Live Shrek series |
Edward Regan "Eddie" Murphy (born April 3, 1961) is an American stand-up comedian, actor, writer, singer, director, and musician.
Box office takes from Murphy's films make him the second-highest grossing actor in the United States.[2][3] He was a regular cast member on Saturday Night Live from 1980 to 1984 and has worked as a stand-up comedian. He was ranked #10 on Comedy Central's list of the 100 Greatest Stand-ups of All Time.[4]
He has received Golden Globe Award nominations for his performances in 48 Hrs, Beverly Hills Cop series, Trading Places, and The Nutty Professor. In 2007, he won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor and received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of soul singer James "Thunder" Early in Dreamgirls.[5]
Eddie Murphy's work as a voice actor includes Thurgood Stubbs in The PJs, Donkey in the Shrek series and the dragon Mushu in Disney's Mulan. In some of his films, he plays multiple roles in addition to his main character, intended as a tribute to one of his idols Peter Sellers, who played multiple roles in Dr. Strangelove and elsewhere. Murphy has played multiple roles in Coming to America, Wes Craven's Vampire In Brooklyn, the Nutty Professor films (where he played the title role in two incarnations, plus his father, brother, mother, and grandmother), Bowfinger, Norbit, and Meet Dave.
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Murphy grew up in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Bushwick.[6] His mother, Lillian, was a telephone operator, and his father, Charles Edward Murphy, was a transit police officer and an amateur actor and comedian.[1][7][8][9] His father died when he was young. When Murphy's single mom became ill, the eight-year-old Eddie Murphy and his older brother lived in foster care for one year.[10] In interviews, the actor and comedian says that his time in foster care was influential in developing his sense of humour. Later Murphy and his older brother Charlie were raised in Roosevelt, New York by his mother and stepfather Vernon Lynch, a foreman at an ice cream plant.[1] Around the age of 15, Murphy was writing and performing his own routines, which were heavily influenced by Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor.[1]
Murphy performed stand-up at the same Bay Area Comedy Club as Robin Williams and Whoopi Goldberg. His early comedy was characterized by frequent swearing and sketches lampooning a diverse group of people (including WASPs, African Americans, Italian Americans, overweight people, and gay people). This racy content was akin to that of Richard Pryor, whom Murphy has credited as his inspiration to enter comedy;[1] however, in his autobiography, Pryor Convictions, Pryor wrote that he found Murphy's comedy at times excessively insensitive. Murphy later apologized for insensitive jokes about gay people and HIV. The stand-up shows Delirious and Raw have been recorded and released.
Murphy first earned attention as a regular actor at Saturday Night Live, and was credited with helping revitalize the series during its first true slump in quality in the early 1980s.[11] Some of his notable characters included a grown version of the Little Rascals character Buckwheat,[12] impoverished but street-wise children's show host Mr. Robinson (a spoof of Fred Rogers, who found it amusing),[13] and Gumby,[12] a harshly cynical version of the animated character; Murphy's take on the latter character spawned one of SNL's many catchphrases, "I'm Gumby, dammit!" Although Buckwheat was his most popular character, Murphy asked that he be retired because the actor grew tired of people asking him to "Do Buckwheat! Do Buckwheat!"; the character was assassinated on camera in front of 30 Rockefeller Plaza.[14]
In 1982, Murphy made his big screen debut in the film 48 Hrs. with Nick Nolte.[1] 48 Hrs. proved to be a hit when it was released in the Christmas season of 1982. Nolte was scheduled to host the December 11, 1982 Christmas episode of Saturday Night Live, but became too ill to host, so Murphy took over. He became the only cast member to host while still a regular. Murphy opened the show with the phrase, "Live from New York, It's the Eddie Murphy Show!" The following year, Murphy starred in Trading Places with fellow SNL alumnus Dan Aykroyd.[1] The movie marked the first of Murphy's collaborations with director John Landis (who also directed Murphy in Coming to America and Beverly Hills Cop III) and proved to be an even greater box office success than 48 Hrs. In 1984, Murphy starred in the successful action comedy film Beverly Hills Cop.[1] The film was Murphy's first full-fledged starring vehicle, originally intended to star Sylvester Stallone (who later tweaked the script as his own starring vehicle Cobra in 1986).[1] Beverly Hills Cop grossed over $230 million at the box office and is 40th in the list of all-time total U.S. box office grosses (4th-highest amongst "R" rated films), after adjusting for inflation, as of March 2011[update].[15]
In 1984, Murphy appeared in Best Defense, co-starring Dudley Moore. Murphy, who was credited as a "Strategic Guest Star", was added to the film after an original version was completed but tested poorly with audiences. Best Defense was a major financial and critical disappointment. When he hosted SNL, Murphy joined the chorus of those bashing Best Defense, calling it "the worst movie in the history of everything". Murphy's Trading Places co-star Dan Aykroyd had originally written the character of Winston Zeddemore in Ghostbusters specifically for Murphy, but he was unable to commit at the time due to the Beverly Hills Cop shooting schedule. The part ultimately went to Ernie Hudson. Murphy was also offered a part in 1986's Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, a role that, after being heavily re-written from comic relief to love interest, ultimately went to future 7th Heaven star Catherine Hicks. By this point[16] Murphy's near-exclusive contract with Paramount Pictures rivaled Star Trek as Paramount's most lucrative franchise.
In 1986, Murphy starred in the supernatural comedy, The Golden Child.[1] The Golden Child was originally intended to be a serious adventure picture starring Mel Gibson. After Gibson turned the role down, the project was offered to Murphy as it was subsequently rewritten as a partial comedy. Although The Golden Child (featuring Murphy's "I want the knife!" routine) performed well at the box office, the movie was not as critically acclaimed as 48 Hrs., Trading Places, and Beverly Hills Cop. The Golden Child was considered a change of pace for Murphy because of the supernatural setting as opposed to the more "street smart" settings of Murphy's previous efforts. A year later, Murphy reprised his role of Axel Foley in the Tony Scott-directed Beverly Hills Cop II. It was a box office success, grossing over $150 million. Producers reportedly wanted to turn the Beverly Hills Cop franchise into a weekly television series. Murphy declined the television offer, but was willing to do a film sequel instead.
Murphy was one of the last movie actors to sign an exclusive contract with a studio. In this case, it was Paramount Pictures, which released all of his early films.
Murphy is also a singer and musician, having frequently provided background vocals to songs released by The Bus Boys, which their song "The Boys Are Back in Town" was featured in 48 Hrs. and Murphy's comedy special Eddie Murphy Delirious. As a solo artist, Murphy had two hit singles, "Party All the Time" (which was produced by Rick James) and "Put Your Mouth on Me" in the mid-1980s (although he actually started singing earlier in his career, with the songs "Boogie In Your Butt" and "Enough Is Enough", the latter being a parody of Barbra Streisand and Donna Summer's 1979 song, "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)". They both appear on his 1982 self-titled comedy album.) "Party All the Time" was featured on Murphy's 1985 debut album How Could It Be, which included a minor follow-up R&B hit in the title track, a duet with vocalist Crystal Blake. This track was written by Rusty Hamilton and was produced by Stevie Wonder's cousin Aquil Fudge after a brief falling out and bet with Rick James. In 2004, VH-1 and Blender voted "Party All the Time" number seven among the "50 Worst Songs of All-Time." Sharam used a sample of the song for the UK #8 hit "PATT (Party All The Time)" in 2006.
Murphy recorded the album Love's Alright in the early 1990s. He performed in a music video of the single "Whatzupwitu", featuring Michael Jackson. He recorded a duet with Shabba Ranks called "I Was a King". In 1992, Murphy appeared in Michael Jackson's "Remember the Time" alongside Magic Johnson and Iman.
Though uncredited, Murphy provided vocal work on SNL castmate Joe Piscopo's comedy single, "The Honeymooners Rap."[citation needed] Piscopo impersonated Jackie Gleason on the single, while Murphy provided an imitation of Art Carney.
In Coming to America, he imitated Jackie Wilson when he sang "To Be Loved", but because the character he was playing had a thick accent, he had to sing it in character. In later years, Murphy performed several songs in the Shrek film franchise. In the first film, he performed a version of "I'm a Believer" in the film's final scene; in Shrek 2 he performed Ricky Martin's hit "Livin' La Vida Loca" along with co-star Antonio Banderas.
Murphy's all-time favorite singer is Elvis Presley.
From 1989 until the mid 1990s, box office results and reviews for Murphy's films dropped, hitting a low point with the critically panned Beverly Hills Cop III (1994),[17] a movie Murphy would ultimately denounce during an appearance on Inside the Actors Studio,[1] although he did find box office success with Boomerang and Another 48 Hrs. Harlem Nights featured Murphy, who had previously been known only as a performer, as director, producer, star, and co-writer, with his brother, Charlie Murphy, as well as supporting roles for Murphy's comic idols Redd Foxx and Richard Pryor.[1]
During this period Murphy was criticized by filmmaker Spike Lee for not using his show business stature to help black actors break into film, despite Murphy's films (especially those he produced) often being populated with predominantly black casts (Coming To America, Harlem Nights, Boomerang, Vampire In Brooklyn, Life). Many black actors who would later gain wider recognition make early appearances in Murphy films such as Damon Wayans in Beverly Hills Cop, Halle Berry and Martin Lawrence in Boomerang, Samuel L. Jackson and Cuba Gooding Jr. in Coming to America, Dave Chappelle in The Nutty Professor and Chris Rock in Beverly Hills Cop II.
Although Murphy has enjoyed commercial success since Saturday Night Live, he has never attended cast reunions or anniversary specials, nor did he participate in the making of the Live From New York: An Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live retrospective book by Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller (2002).
Murphy's box office results began to recover in 1996, starting with The Nutty Professor. He followed with a series of very successful family-friendly movies like Mulan, Dr. Dolittle and its sequel, the Shrek series, Daddy Day Care, and The Haunted Mansion, along with Nutty Professor II: The Klumps. However, most of his movies meant for more adult audiences performed moderately; Metro, I Spy, and Showtime all ended to gross less than $40 million domestically, Holy Man performed poorly, grossing less than $13 million, and The Adventures of Pluto Nash is on record as one of the biggest theatrical money-losers of all time, grossing just $7 million worldwide on a reported $110 million budget. A notable exception to this run of poorly received adult-themed films was the Frank Oz comedy Bowfinger, also starring Steve Martin. The film garnered generally positive critical reviews, and grossed $98 million at the box office.
In 2006, he starred in the motion picture version of the Broadway musical Dreamgirls as soul singer James "Thunder" Early. Murphy won a Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor, as well as a Screen Actors Guild Award and a Broadcast Film Critics Association Award in that category. Several reviews for the film highlighted Murphy's performance while he received some pre-release Academy Awards buzz.[18] Murphy was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor on January 23, 2007, but lost to Alan Arkin for his performance in Little Miss Sunshine. Dreamgirls was the first film distributed by Paramount Pictures to star Murphy (who once was on an exclusive contract with the studio) since Vampire in Brooklyn in 1995.
In 2007, Murphy was invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[19] As a result of Viacom's acquisition of Dreamworks SKG, Paramount distributed his other 2007 releases: Norbit and Shrek the Third. He starred in the 2008 film Meet Dave and the 2009 film Imagine That for Paramount Pictures.
Murphy co-starred in Tower Heist, directed by Brett Ratner. Murphy played a thief who joins a group of hardworking men who find out they have fallen victim to a wealthy businessman's Ponzi scheme, and conspire to rob his high-rise residence. Ben Stiller, Matthew Broderick, and Casey Affleck also starred in the film, released on November 4, 2011.[1][20][21]
It was reported in late 2011 that Murphy would host the 84th Academy Awards in 2012. However, he dropped out of his hosting duties on November 9, 2011, in the wake of the Brett Ratner scandal.[22]
Murphy began a longtime romantic relationship with Nicole Mitchell (born January 5, 1968) after meeting her in 1988 at an NAACP Image Awards show. They lived together for almost two years before getting married at the Grand Ballroom of The Plaza Hotel in New York City on March 18, 1993.[23] Murphy and Mitchell had five children together: Bria L. Murphy (born November 18, 1989), Myles Mitchell (born November 7, 1992), Shayne Audra (born October 10, 1994), Zola Ivy (born December 24, 1999) and Bella Zahra (born January 29, 2002). In August 2005, Mitchell filed for divorce, citing "irreconcilable differences". The divorce was finalized on April 17, 2006.[24]
He also has a child by Tamara Hood: son Christian Murphy (born on 29 November 1990).[25]
Murphy as of 2008 resided in Long Island, New York.[26]
Following his divorce from Mitchell, in 2006, Murphy began dating former Spice Girl Melanie Brown, who became pregnant and stated that the child was Murphy's. When questioned about the pregnancy in December 2006 by RTL Boulevard, Murphy told Dutch reporter Matthijs Kleyn, "I don't know whose child that is until it comes out and has a blood test. You shouldn't jump to conclusions, sir". Brown gave birth to a baby girl, Angel Iris Murphy Brown, on Murphy's 46th birthday, April 3, 2007. On June 22, 2007, representatives for Brown announced in People that a DNA test had confirmed that Murphy was the father.[27] Brown has stated in an interview that Murphy has not sought a relationship with Angel.[28][29]
Murphy exchanged marriage vows with film producer Tracey Edmonds, former wife of Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds, on January 1, 2008, in a private ceremony on an island off Bora Bora.[30] On January 16, the couple released a statement saying, "After much consideration and discussion, we have jointly decided that we will forego having a legal ceremony as it is not necessary to define our relationship further," and called the Bora Bora wedding a "symbolic union". The two had planned on having a legal ceremony upon their return to the U.S. but did not, and their wedding was never official.[31]
According to Murphy's childhood friend Harris Haith in his book, Growing Up Laughing With Eddie, long before Murphy did any writing for Coming to America, Art Buchwald had approached Paramount Pictures with the idea for a similar film. His material was rejected, but the information was retained by Paramount. They liked Buchwald's idea but did not see fit to pay him and saved it for use later down the road. Some years later, Paramount presented the idea of Coming to America to Eddie and gave him the contract. Murphy wrote a screenplay that came to light exactly as it aired on the silver screen. In 1988, Buchwald sued Murphy and Paramount Pictures, but Murphy was not found liable because Paramount had received the material.
Murphy has donated money to the AIDS Foundation, and cancer, education, creative arts, family/parent support, health and homeless charities. He has donated to the Martin Luther King Jr. Center, various cancer charities and $100,000 to the Screen Actors' Guild's strike relief fund.[32]
Film | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1982 | 48 Hrs. | Reggie Hammond | Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actor |
1983 | Trading Places | Billy Ray Valentine | Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy |
1983 | Eddie Murphy Delirious | Himself | Also Producer |
1984 | Best Defense | Lieutenant T.M. Landry | |
Beverly Hills Cop | Det. Axel Foley | Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy | |
1986 | The Golden Child | Chandler Jarrell | |
1987 | Beverly Hills Cop II | Det. Axel Foley | |
Eddie Murphy Raw | Himself | Also Producer | |
1988 | Coming to America | Prince Akeem/Clarence/Randy Watson/Saul | |
1989 | Harlem Nights | Quick (real name Vernest Brown) | Also Director and Writer |
1990 | Another 48 Hrs. | Reggie Hammond | |
1992 | Boomerang | Marcus Graham | Nominated – MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance |
The Distinguished Gentleman | Thomas Jefferson Johnson | ||
1994 | Beverly Hills Cop III | Det. Axel Foley | |
1995 | Vampire in Brooklyn | Maximillian/Preacher Pauly/Guido | Also Producer |
1996 | The Nutty Professor | Professor Sherman Klump/Buddy Love/ Lance Perkins/Cletus 'Papa' Klump/ Anna Pearl 'Mama' Jensen Klump/ Ida Mae 'Granny' Jensen/Ernie Klump, Sr. |
Also Producer Saturn Award for Best Actor National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy Nominated – NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture Nominated – Satellite Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy |
1997 | Metro | Insp. Scott Roper | |
1998 | Mulan | Mushu | (voice) |
Dr. Dolittle | Dr. John Dolittle | ||
Holy Man | G | ||
1999 | Life | Rayford "Ray" Gibson | Also Producer |
Bowfinger | Kit Ramsey/Jeffernson 'Jiff' Ramsey | Black Reel Award: Best Actor | |
2000 | Nutty Professor II: The Klumps | Professor Sherman Klump/Buddy Love/ Lance Perkins/Cletus 'Papa' Klump/ Anna Pearl 'Mama' Jensen Klump/ Ida Mae 'Granny' Jensen/Ernie Klump |
Also Producer Nominated – Satellite Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy |
2001 | Shrek | Donkey | (voice) Annie Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Feature Production Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role Nominated – Black Reel Award: Best Supporting Actor |
Dr. Dolittle 2 | Dr. John Dolittle | ||
2002 | Showtime | Officer Trey Sellers | Nominated – Razzie Award for Worst Actor Nomianted - Razzie Award for Worst Screen Couple (with either Robert De Niro, Owen Wilson or himself cloned) |
The Adventures of Pluto Nash | Pluto Nash/Rex Crater | ||
I Spy | Kelly Robinson | ||
2003 | Daddy Day Care | Charles "Charlie" Hinton | |
The Haunted Mansion | Jim Evers | ||
2004 | Shrek 2 | Donkey | (voice) |
2006 | Dreamgirls | James 'Thunder' Early | Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Central Ohio Film Critics Association for Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role Nominated – Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated – Black Reel Award: Best Supporting Actor Nominated – Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated – NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture Nominated – Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated – Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated – Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture |
2007 | Norbit | Norbit Rice/Rasputia Latimore-Rice/Mr. Wong | Razzie Award for Worst Actor (as Norbit) Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actor (as Mr. Wong) Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actress (as Rasputia) Razzie Award for Worst Screen Couple (with either Eddie Murphy or Eddie Murphy) Nominated – Razzie Award for Worst Screenplay Nominated – Razzie Award for Worst Picture |
Shrek the Third | Donkey | (voice) Kids' Choice Award for Favorite Voice from an Animated Movie |
|
2008 | Meet Dave | Starship Dave Ming-Chang (Spacecraft), Captain | Nominated – Razzie Award for Worst Actor Nominated – Razzie Award for Worst Screen Couple (in Eddie Murphy) |
2009 | Imagine That | Evan Danielson | |
2010 | Shrek Forever After | Donkey | (voice) Kids' Choice Award for Favorite Voice from an Animated Movie |
2011 | Tower Heist | Darnell ("Slide") | |
2012 | A Thousand Words | Jack McCall |
Television | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1980–1984 | Saturday Night Live | Nominated – Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy, Variety or Music Series (1983) Nominated – Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program (1984) Nominated – Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Variety, Music or Comedy Program (1984) |
|
1983 | Eddie Murphy: Delirious | ||
1989 | What's Alan Watching? | ||
1993 | Dangerous - The Short Films | Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh | Remember the Time music video |
1999–2001 | The PJs | Thurgood Stubbs | Voice Nominated – Annie Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting in an Animated Television Production (1999) Nominated – Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming Less Than One Hour) (1999) |
2004 | Father of the Pride | Donkey | Voice |
2007 | Shrek the Halls | Donkey | TV special Voice Nominated – Annie Award for Best Voice Acting in an Animated Television Production |
2010 | Donkey's Christmas Shrektacular | Donkey | TV special Voice |
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions |
|||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US [33] |
US R&B [34] |
||||||||
1982 | Eddie Murphy
|
97 | — | ||||||
1983 | Comedian
|
35 | 10 | ||||||
1985 | How Could It Be
|
26 | 17 | ||||||
1989 | So Happy
|
70 | 22 | ||||||
1993 | Love's Alright
|
— | 80 | ||||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Year | Album details |
---|---|
1997 | Greatest Comedy Hits
|
1998 | All I Fuckin' Know
|
Year | Single | Peak chart positions | Album | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US [35] |
US R&B [36] |
US Dance [37] |
NZ [38] |
UK | |||||
1982 | "Boogie in Your Butt" | — | 56 | — | — | — | Eddie Murphy | ||
1985 | "Party All the Time" | 2 | 8 | 19 | 3 | 87 | How Could It Be | ||
"How Could It Be" (with Crystal Blake) | — | 63 | — | — | — | ||||
1989 | "Put Your Mouth on Me" | 27 | 2 | — | — | — | So Happy | ||
"Til the Money's Gone" | — | 75 | — | — | — | ||||
1993 | "I Was a King" | — | 61 | — | — | 64 | Love's Alright | ||
"Whatzupwitu" (with Michael Jackson) | — | 74 | — | — | — | ||||
"Desdamona" | — | — | — | — | — | ||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart |
Award | Year | Category | Work | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Academy Awards | 2007 | Best Supporting Actor | Dreamgirls | Nominated |
Annie Awards | 1999 | Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting in an Animated Television Production | The PJs | Nominated |
2001 | Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Feature Production | Shrek | Won | |
2008 | Best Voice Acting in an Animated Television Production | Shrek the Halls | Nominated | |
BAFTA Awards | 2002 | Actor in a Supporting Role | Shrek | Nominated |
Black Reel Awards | 2000 | Best Actor in a Motion Picture | Bowfinger | Nominated |
2002 | Actor in a Supporting Role | Shrek | Nominated | |
2007 | Dreamgirls | Nominated | ||
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards | 2007 | Best Supporting Actor | Dreamgirls | Won |
Central Ohio Film Critics Association | 2007 | Best Supporting Actor | Dreamgirls | Won |
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards | 2007 | Best Supporting Actor | Dreamgirls | Nominated |
Emmy Awards | 1983 | Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy, Variety or Music Series | Saturday Night Live | Nominated |
1984 | Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program | Saturday Night Live | Nominated | |
Outstanding Writing for a Variety or Music Program | Saturday Night Live | Nominated | ||
1999 | Outstanding Animated Program – Less Than One Hour | The PJs "He's Gotta Have It" |
Nominated | |
Golden Globe Awards | 1983 | New Star of the Year (Actor) | 48 Hrs. | Nominated |
1984 | Actor in a Leading Role (Musical or Comedy) | Trading Places | ||
1997 | Actor in a Leading Role (Musical or Comedy) | The Nutty Professor | ||
1985 | Actor in a Leading Role (Musical or Comedy) | Beverly Hills Cop | ||
2007 | Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture | Dreamgirls | Won | |
Kids Choice Awards | 1988 | Favorite Movie Actor | Beverly Hills Cop II | Won |
2005 | Favorite Voice from an Animated Film | Shrek 2 | Nominated | |
2008 | Favorite Voice from an Animated Film | Shrek the Third | Won | |
2011 | Best Voice from an Animated Film | Shrek Forever After | Won | |
NAACP Image Awards | 1997 | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Motion Picture | The Nutty Professor | Nominated |
2007 | Actor in a Supporting Role | Dreamgirls | Nominated | |
National Society of Film Critics Awards | 1997 | Best Actor | The Nutty Professor | Won |
Online Film Critics Society Awards | 2007 | Best Supporting Actor | Dreamgirls | Nominated |
Satellite Awards | 1996 | Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy | The Nutty Professor | Nominated |
2001 | Nutty Professor II: The Klumps | |||
Saturn Awards | 1997 | Best Actor | The Nutty Professor | Won |
2002 | Best Supporting Actor | Shrek | Nominated | |
Screen Actors Guild Awards | 2007 | Actor in a Supporting Role | Dreamgirls | Won |
Cast in a Motion Picture | Nominated |
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Preceded by Dennis Miller |
MTV Movie Awards host 1993 |
Succeeded by Will Smith |
Preceded by Dan Aykroyd and Bette Midler |
MTV Video Music Awards host 1985 |
Succeeded by MTV VJs |
|
Persondata | |
---|---|
Name | Murphy, Eddie |
Alternative names | Murphy, Edward Regan |
Short description | Academy Award nominated, Golden Globe Award-winning American actor |
Date of birth | April 3, 1961 |
Place of birth | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Date of death | |
Place of death |