Sunday, 26 June 2011
Leonardo DiCaprio was born November 11, 1974 in Los Angeles, CA
While myriad actors dream of becoming Hollywood icons, DiCaprio has spent a lot of time and energy distancing himself from his megastar image, which was born when he starred in one of the highest-grossing blockbusters of all time: the 1997 epic Titanic. As a charismatic and resourceful artist who wins the heart of the society gal played by Kate Winslet, DiCaprio became an international heartthrob. But the media's sudden and obsessive fascination with the young actor's private life prompted him to step back and carefully plan the rest of his career so he wouldn't forever be pigeonholed. Interestingly, his romantic Titanic role was markedly different than the troubled characters he usually played: a junkie in The Basketball Dairies, an absinthe-drinking poet in Total Eclipse, a juvenile delinquent in Marvin's Room. After starting out in commercials and TV as a child (he was the homeless kid taken in by the Seavers on the last season of Growing Pains), DiCaprio concentrated on the big screen. But 1993 became his breakthrough year: In addition to winning raves for his turn as a rebellious '50s youth clashing with his abusive stepfather in This Boy's Life, he also earned his first Oscar nod as Johnny Depp's sweet but slow brother in What's Eating Gilbert Grape. DiCaprio subsequently appeared in modest hits (Romeo + Juliet) and outright flops (The Quick and the Dead), but nothing prepared him for Titanic's reception and the subsequent hysteria. And even though he poked fun at his situation by appearing as a grossly distorted version of himself in Woody Allen's Celebrity, he still experienced an inevitable backlash, and many of the critics who formerly championed him now dismissed him as only a moderately talented pretty boy. But DiCaprio was out to prove them wrong. In the '00s, he made a trio of films with Martin Scorsese: He played a tough Irish thug out to avenge his father's murder in Gangs of New York; the brilliant but unstable billionaire Howard Hughes in The Aviator, an intense turn that earned him a second Oscar nod; and an undercover cop infiltrating the Boston underworld in The Departed. He also found time to work with Steven Spielberg in Catch Me If You Can, giving a winning performance as charming real-life con man Frank Abagnale. After years of hard work, DiCaprio had finally shed his teeny-bopper image, and in 2007 the industry acknowledged his versatility with a pair of Golden Globe and SAG nominations for his performances in The Departed and Blood Diamond, the latter of which also netted him a third Oscar nod.
While myriad actors dream of becoming Hollywood icons, DiCaprio has spent a lot of time and energy distancing himself from his megastar image, which was born when he starred in one of the highest-grossing blockbusters of all time: the 1997 epic Titanic. As a charismatic and resourceful artist who wins the heart of the society gal played by Kate Winslet, DiCaprio became an international heartthrob. But the media's sudden and obsessive fascination with the young actor's private life prompted him to step back and carefully plan the rest of his career so he wouldn't forever be pigeonholed. Interestingly, his romantic Titanic role was markedly different than the troubled characters he usually played: a junkie in The Basketball Dairies, an absinthe-drinking poet in Total Eclipse, a juvenile delinquent in Marvin's Room. After starting out in commercials and TV as a child (he was the homeless kid taken in by the Seavers on the last season of Growing Pains), DiCaprio concentrated on the big screen. But 1993 became his breakthrough year: In addition to winning raves for his turn as a rebellious '50s youth clashing with his abusive stepfather in This Boy's Life, he also earned his first Oscar nod as Johnny Depp's sweet but slow brother in What's Eating Gilbert Grape. DiCaprio subsequently appeared in modest hits (Romeo + Juliet) and outright flops (The Quick and the Dead), but nothing prepared him for Titanic's reception and the subsequent hysteria. And even though he poked fun at his situation by appearing as a grossly distorted version of himself in Woody Allen's Celebrity, he still experienced an inevitable backlash, and many of the critics who formerly championed him now dismissed him as only a moderately talented pretty boy. But DiCaprio was out to prove them wrong. In the '00s, he made a trio of films with Martin Scorsese: He played a tough Irish thug out to avenge his father's murder in Gangs of New York; the brilliant but unstable billionaire Howard Hughes in The Aviator, an intense turn that earned him a second Oscar nod; and an undercover cop infiltrating the Boston underworld in The Departed. He also found time to work with Steven Spielberg in Catch Me If You Can, giving a winning performance as charming real-life con man Frank Abagnale. After years of hard work, DiCaprio had finally shed his teeny-bopper image, and in 2007 the industry acknowledged his versatility with a pair of Golden Globe and SAG nominations for his performances in The Departed and Blood Diamond, the latter of which also netted him a third Oscar nod.
Labels: Leonardo DiCaprio
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