Jack Nicholson

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John Joseph "Jack" Nicholson (born April 22, 1937) is a highly successful, iconic American method actor known for his often dark, comedic portrayals of neurotic characters.

He has been nominated for an Academy Award twelve times (winning 3 of them), more than any other male actor, and second only to Meryl Streep (who has 13 nominations and 2 wins) in total nominations.

He has also won seven Golden Globe Awards and he received a Kennedy Center Honors in 2001.

Contents

Personal life

Nicholson was born at Bellevue Hospital Center in New York City to June Frances Nicholson (alias June Nilson), a showgirl of English and Irish descent who had previously married an Italian-American showman Donald Furcillo (stage name Donald Rose) six months earlier in Elkton, Maryland, on October 16, 1936. Elkton was a town known for its "quickie" marriages. However, Furcillo was already married, and, although he offered to take care of the child, June's mother Ethel insisted that she bring up the baby, partly so that June could pursue her dancing career.

Jack was therefore brought up believing his grandparents John (a department store window dresser in Asbury Park, New Jersey) and Ethel May Nicholson (a hairdresser and beautician and amateur artist in Neptune, New Jersey) were his parents. He attended high school at nearby Manasquan High School, where a drama award was ultimately named in his honor. Nicholson only discovered that his parents were actually his grandparents and his sister was in fact his mother in 1974 after being informed by a Time Magazine journalist who was doing a feature on him, while he was filming The Fortune with Stockard Channing. By this time both his mother and grandmother had died (in 1963 and 1970, respectively). Nicholson has stated he doesn't know who his father is, saying "Only Ethel and June knew and they never told anybody". Although Donald Furcillo claimed to be Nicholson's father and to have committed bigamy by marrying June, biographer Patrick McGilligan, who wrote Jack's Life (published in December 1995) asserted that Eddie King, June's manager, may be the father and other (see[1]) sources have suggested that June Nicholson was unsure of who the father was. Jack Nicholson has chosen not to have a DNA test or to pursue the matter. Although Nicholson is personally anti-abortion, he is pro-choice: "I'm very contra my constituency in terms of abortion because I'm positively against it. I don't have the right to any other view. My only emotion is gratitude, literally, for my life."

In his adult personal life, Nicholson has been notorious for his inability to "settle down". He has four children by three different mothers despite only being married once (Jennifer Nicholson with former wife Sandra Knight, Caleb Goddard with Susan Anspach, his Five Easy Pieces co-star, and Lorraine and Raymond Nicholson with Rebecca Broussard). He has been romantically linked to numerous actresses and models for decades. Nicholson's longest relationship was for 17 years to actress Anjelica Huston, the daughter of the legendary director John Huston, but that relationship ended when the news broke that Nicholson had sired a child by Rebecca Broussard.

Jack Nicholson has stated that he is not an atheist, but he "has claimed that he is not at all religious and that the only times he prays is during jogging" [2].

Acting career

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Nicholson started his career as an actor, writer, and producer, working for and with Roger Corman. This included his screen debut in The Cry Baby Killer (1958), where he played a juvenile delinquent who panics after shooting two other teenagers, The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), in which he had a small role as a masochistic dental patient, and The Terror (1963), co-starring then-wife Sandra Knight.

His work on the LSD-fueled screenplay for 1967's The Trip, which starred Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper, led to his first big break in Easy Rider (1969). Nicholson fell in with the Monkees camp, cowriting the screenplay for their movie Head (1968) with producer Bob Rafelson (storylines coming from a weekend of brainstorming with the band, Rafelson and partner Bert Schneider), and assembling its soundtrack album. (He also makes a cameo appearance in Head, as a production assistant.) Easy Rider was Rafelson and Schneider's next work, coproducing with Hopper and Fonda. Nicholson played hard-drinking lawyer George Hanson, for which he received his first Oscar nomination.

A Best Actor nomination came the following year for his persona-defining role in Five Easy Pieces (1970), which includes his famous chicken salad dialogue about getting what you want. Also that year, he appeared in the movie adaptation of On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, in a surprisingly normal-guy role as Daisy Gamble (Barbra Streisand)'s stepbrother.

Other early movies he is known for include Hal Ashby's The Last Detail (1973), Roman Polanski's Chinatown (1974), Milos Forman's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), for which he received his first Oscar, and Stanley Kubrick's The Shining.

Jack Nicholson won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Terms of Endearment (1983).

The 1989 Batman movie, where Nicholson played The Joker, was an international smash hit, and a lucrative percentage deal earned Nicholson about $50 million.

For his role as hotheaded Col. Nathan R. Jessep in A Few Good Men (1992), a dark movie about a murder in a US Marine Corps unit, he received yet another nomination by the Academy.

This film contains Nicholson's "You can't handle the truth!" scene, which has since become widely known and imitated.

Nicholson would go on to win his next Oscar for his role as the neurotic lead in the romance As Good as It Gets (1997).

In About Schmidt (2002), Nicholson portrayed a retired Omaha, Nebraska insurance man who questions his own life and the death of his wife shortly afterward.

The deeply emotional, slow film stands in sharp contrast to many of his previous roles. In the comedy Anger Management, he plays an aggressive therapist assigned to help overly pacifist Adam Sandler.

His most recent film is the 2003 Something's Gotta Give as an aging playboy who falls for the mother (Diane Keaton) of his young girlfriend.

Not all of Nicholson's performances have been well-received. He was nominated for Razzie Awards as worst actor for Man Trouble (1992) and Hoffa (1992). His portrayal of the American President in Mars Attacks (1996) was widely criticised for being over-the-top and unfunny.

Nicholson will return to villainous form as a tough Boston Irish Mob boss presiding over Matt Damon and Leonardo DiCaprio in Martin Scorsese's The Departed (2006).

Trivia

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  • Nicholson is also a well-known and highly visible fan of the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers; he has courtside seats. It is in his contract that he does not film movies during Lakers games. When he is at a televised Lakers game, he is invariably sought out for celebrity camera shots during one or more breaks in the game. While he used to be often accompanied by a girlfriend, he can usually be seen with one of his young children now.
  • In 1998, after Nicholson visited Cuba and had a three hour conversation with Fidel Castro, he told Daily Variety: "He is a genius". According to former Cuban intelligence officer Delfin Fernandez, Nicholson's hotel room was bugged with both video and audio recording devices at the instruction of Castro.
  • He is known to his friends as Pickles.
  • He was friends with famous Gonzo Journalist Hunter S. Thompson, who has a humorous account of himself pranking Jack Nicholson at his home by placing a thawing elk's heart on his doorstep, playing sounds of a recorded pig slaughter, and firing guns in the air, in his last book before he died: Kingdom of Fear.
  • Nicholson's height is 177 cm (5 ft 9 in).
  • When Oona O'Neill Chaplin saw Nicholson in the film Reds, where he protrayed her estranged father Eugene O'Neill, she wrote him a letter saying "Thanks to you, I now can love my father." Nicholson has said that "that is the best compliment I ever got."
  • According to movie producer Robert Evans in the E! True Hollywood Story on Nicholson, Evans was looking to get Chinatown off the ground and they were in need of a male actor. Evans was intent on finding an unknown who could play the role when Nicholson stepped into an office to deliver a package. When Nicholson departed the office with his devilish grin, it caught Evans' eye who went right after Nicholson and told him about Chinatown with an offer of $10,000 to star in the film. Nicholson told Evans that he was paying alimony along with a child to support, if the producer could raise it to $15,000. Evans offered him $12,500, and Nicholson hugged Evans right on the spot.
  • He lived by friend Danny DeVito in the same New Jersey neighborhood during their early years. The basis for DeVito's decision to play the Penguin in Batman Returns was partly influenced by Nicholson's advice. Nicholson's participation in Batman (1989) was one of Hollywood's most lucrative roles – his share of the film's profits netted him somewhere in the neighborhood of $50,000,000 to $60,000,000 US dollars.
  • The late Batman creator Bob Kane had recommended Nicholson for the Joker for years prior to his being cast as the Joker for the 1989 film.
  • The sardonic sailor character Shipwreck from GI Joe: A Real American Hero animated series of the 1980s was partly based on Nicholson (and partly based on Popeye the Sailor Man).
  • in 2006 the Agnostic Exchange Forum [3], a pope of Neutral faith, ordained Jack and honorary "Pope of Neutral Faith" though only as a tribute, encouraging visitors to pay their appropriate respects in a humorous way.

Filmography

Year Film Role
2006 The Departed Costello (filming)
2003 Something's Gotta Give Harry Sanborn
2003 Anger Management Dr. Buddy Rydell
2002 About Schmidt Warren R. Schmidt
2001 The Pledge Jerry Black
1997 As Good as It Gets Melvin Udall
1996 Mars Attacks! President James Dale
Art Land
1996 The Evening Star Garrett Breedlove
1996 Blood and Wine Alex Gates
1995 The Crossing Guard Freddy Gale
1994 Wolf Will Randall
1992 Hoffa James R. 'Jimmy' Hoffa
1992 A Few Good Men Col. Nathan R. Jessep
1992 Man Trouble Eugene Earl Axline
aka Harry Bliss
1990 The Two Jakes Jake Gittes
(director)
1989 Batman The Joker/
Jack Napier
1987 Ironweed Francis Phelan
1987 Broadcast News Bill Rorich
1987 The Witches of Eastwick Daryl Van Horne
1986 Heartburn Mark Louis Forman
1986 Elephant's Child Narrator
1985 Prizzi's Honor Charley Partanna
1983 Terms of Endearment Garrett Breedlove
1982 The Border Charlie Smith
1981 Reds Eugene O'Neill
1981 The Postman Always Rings Twice Frank Chambers
1980 The Shining Jack Torrance
1978 Goin' South Henry Lloyd Moon
(director)
1976 The Last Tycoon Brimmer
1976 The Missouri Breaks Tom Logan
1975 One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Randle Patrick McMurphy
1975 The Fortune Oscar Sullivan
1975 Tommy The Specialist
1975 Professione: reporter
aka The Passenger
David Locke
1974 Chinatown Jake 'J.J' Gittes
1973 The Last Detail Billy 'Bad Ass' Buddusky
1972 The King of Marvin Gardens David Staebler
1971 A Safe Place Mitch
1971 Carnal Knowledge Jonathan Fuerst
1970 Five Easy Pieces Robert Eroica Dupea
1970 On a Clear Day You Can See Forever Tad Pringle
1970 The Rebel Rousers Bunny
1969 Easy Rider George Hanson
1968 Psych-Out Stoney
(co-director, producer)
1968 Head "Production Assistant" (cameo)
(also screenplay and soundtrack)
1967 Hells Angels on Wheels Poet
1967 The St. Valentine's Day Massacre Gino, Hitman
(uncredited)
1967 The Shooting Billy Spear
1967 The Trip (screenplay)
1965 Ride in the Whirlwind Wes
1964 Back Door to Hell Burnett
1964 Flight to Fury Jay Wickham
1964 Ensign Pulver Dolan
1963 The Terror Lt. Andre Duvalier
1963 The Raven Rexford Bedlo
1962 The Broken Land Will Brocius
1960 Studs Lonigan Weary Reilly
1960 The Little Shop of Horrors Wilbur Force
1960 Too Soon to Love Buddy
1960 The Wild Ride Johnny Varron
1958 The Cry Baby Killer Jimmy Wallace

Academy Awards and nominations

External links

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