Ben Gazzara

Ben Gazzara

actor, director, writer

Ben Gazzara was born on Aug 28, 1930 in USA. Ben Gazzara's big-screen debut came with Danger - Season 1 directed by Sidney Lumet in 1950, strarring 4 episodes, 1951-1954. Ben Gazzara is known for Paris, je t'aime directed by Olivier Assayas, Fanny Ardant stars as Fanny (segment "Pigalle") and Julie Bataille as Julie (segment "Tuileries"). Ben Gazzara has got 7 awards and 9 nominations so far. The most recent award Ben Gazzara achieved is San Sebastián International Film Festival. The upcoming new movie Ben Gazzara plays is Ristabbànna which will be released on Jun 17, 2011.

Ben Gazzara's screen career began with two critically acclaimed roles as heavies in the late 1950s. He turned to television in the 1960s but made a big screen comeback with roles in three John Cassavetes films in the 1970s. The 1980s and 1990s saw Gazzara work more frequently than ever before in character parts. If he never became the leading man his early films and stage work promised, he had a career notable for its longevity. He was born Biagio Anthony Gazzara on August 28, 1930, in New York City. The son of a Sicilian immigrant laborer, he grew up on New York's tough Lower East Side. After seeing Laurette Taylor in "The Glass Menagerie," Gazzara decided he wanted to become an actor. He studied engineering (unhappily) but quit after receiving an acting scholarship (he worked under well-known coach Erwin Piscator).Gazzara then joined the Actors Studio, where a group of students improvised a play from Calder Willingham's novel End as a Man. The tale of a brutal southern military academy reached Broadway slightly changed in 1953 but with Gazzara still in the principal role. It was a star making part (he won a Theatre World award) and he then played leads in the original productions of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" (1955) and "A Hatful of Rain" (1955) (he was nominated for a Tony). Bigger names Paul Newman and Don Murray played those last two roles on the big screen but Gazzara made his movie debut in Demain ce seront des hommes (1957) the film version of "End as a Man." The film was a critical but not commercial success. His next role was as the defendant in Autopsie d'un meurtre (1959) which was a big hit.Gazzara followed this with an Italian venture co-starring Anna Magnani, Larmes de joie (1960), two Hollywood films Les blouses blanches (1961) and Convicts 4 (1962) and then another Italian film L'arsenal de la peur (1962). None of these did much for his career, and he turned to television. He appeared in the successful series Arrest and Trial (1963) and Match contre la vie (1965). In between, he made À corps perdu (1965), a film version of John O'Hara's novel. He returned to films in Le pont de Remagen (1969) and with a cameo appearance in Mardi?... C'est donc la Belgique (1969). His buddy in the cameo was John Cassavetes, who directed and co-starred with him in Husbands (1970), a critical success. Gazzara made two more well-received films with his good friend Cassavetes: Le Bal des vauriens (1976) and Opening Night (1977).Gazzara's other films in the 1970s were undistinguished apart from the sprawling Le voyage des damnés (1976) and a rare leading role in director Peter Bogdanovich's Jack le magnifique (1979). Liés par le sang (1979) and Et tout le monde riait... (1981) (also directed by Bogdanovich) were only notable because of Gazzara's off-screen relationship with co-star Audrey Hepburn (ironically, Gazzara had declined to make his screen debut in Guerre et Paix (1956) starring Hepburn). Conte de la folie ordinaire (1981) was another lead for Gazzara, but it received a mixed critical reception. Other big-screen roles in the 1980s were scarce apart from Road House (1989), a Patrick Swayze vehicle that Gazzara believed out of all his films had been the most repeated on television. He worked much on the small screen, including the groundbreaking television movie Un printemps de glace (1985), playing the father of an AIDS victim.The 1990s saw Gazzara working like never before, appearing in 38 films. Most were for free-to-air television or cable but he also worked on the big screen in La prisonnière espagnole (1997), The Big Lebowski (1998), Happiness (1998) and Summer of Sam (1999). His television work included a guest appearance as an executive assistant attorney in a 2001 episode of New York - Unité spéciale (1999)

  • Birthday

    Aug 28, 1930
  • Place of Birth

    Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA

Known For

Awards

7 wins & 9 nominations

San Sebastián International Film Festival
2005
Winner - Donostia Lifetime Achievement Award
Primetime Emmy Awards
2003
Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie
Winner - Primetime Emmy
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Movies & TV Shows

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Movies
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