Al Pacino's
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VITAL
STATS:
Occupation: Actor, Director
Date of Birth: April 25, 1940
Place of Birth: New York, N.Y., USA
Sign: Sun in Taurus, Moon in Sagittarius
Education: High School of the Performing Arts
dropout; studied acting at the Actors Studio and the
Herbert Berghof Studio, both in New York City
Relations: Kid: Julie Marie (mother, Jan Tarrant);
companion: Beverly D'Angelo (actress)
CONTACT:
Fan Mail: C/O Creative Artists Agency
9830 Wilshire Blvd
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
USA
BIOGRAPHY:
A NATIVE son of New York City's East Harlem, Al
Pacino was the only child of Salvatore (an insurance
salesman) and Rose Pacino. His parents divorced when
he was two, and Al and his mother moved in with her
parents in a poor neighborhood near the Bronx Zoo.
Little Alfredo was a rather sensitive child, and his
overprotective grandparents cherished and coddled him
to such a degree that he wasn't even allowed out of
the house until he had safely passed his seventh
birthday. He got to tag along with his mother to
evening features at the local movie theatre, but his
days were spent housebound with nothing better to do
than reenact for his grandmother the plots of the
films he had seen. His improvisational skills spilled
over into his schoolyard bravado, which included
regaling the other kids with whoppers about his
exciting and colorful past, living in Texas with his
ten dogs--a very cool alternative reality to
ten-year-old boys living in the Bronx circa 1950.
Tall-tale-telling, sports, and mostly harmless street
mischief kept Pacino's attentions pretty well
diverted from academics, so when his teachers began
to see his talent for drama, they encouraged him to
perform in school plays, and to read passages from
the Bible during assemblies.
At fourteen, Pacino attended a performance of
Chekhov's The Seagull at Elsmere Theater in the South
Bronx, whereupon he decided to transfer to the High
School of the Performing Arts. Unfortunately, English
seemed to be the only subject he wasn't continually
flunking at the renowned school, and so at the age of
seventeen, it took little deliberation for Pacino to
decide to throw in the academic towel once and for
all. He spent several years drifting from odd job to
odd job, working variously as a mail deliverer in the
offices of Commentary magazine, a messenger, an usher
in a movie theatre, and as a building superintendent.
But his life wasn't all errands and leaky
faucets--during this period, Pacino began taking
acting classes and appearing in basement-staged plays
of little repute. He squirrelled away enough money to
enroll at the Herbert Berghof Studio, where he
trained under drama coach Charlie Laughton.
Apprenticing in acting, directing, and writing in a
handful of way-off-Broadway theatres, Pacino
eventually gained acceptance to the famed Actors
Studio in 1966, where he received further training in
Lee Strasberg's school of Method acting.
This period of leaps-and-bounds advancement was
marked by his appearance opposite James Earl Jones in
a production of John Wolfson's The Peace Creeps and a
stint performing at the Charles Playhouse in Boston.
He returned to New York to appear in an off-Broadway
production of The Indian Wants the Bronx, in which he
played Murph, one of two young hoods who accost and
brutally terrorize an aging Native American man in
the street. The critics couldn't say enough nice
things about Pacino's unstagey and potent
performance, and the young actor was awarded an Obie
as Best Actor for the 1967-68 season. The following
year, Pacino stepped onto an honest-to-goodness
Broadway stage for the first time, in the role of a
psychotic junkie named Bickham, in Does the Tiger
Wear a Necktie? Though the production closed after a
meager thirty-nine performances, the critics deemed
its star "sensationally menacing,"
"spectacularly good," and
"magnificent," and Pacino scored his first
Tony Award.
Drowning in umpteen plaudits, the critics' darling
decided to make a bid for a film career. Pacino's
first two features, Me, Natalie and The Panic in
Needle Park, recycled his proven virtuosity in the
role of junkie. In preparation for the latter film,
Pacino and Panic co-star Kitty Winn schooled
themselves in the mannerisms of heroin addicts by
doing extensive research in and around various
methadone treatment centers and drug-pusher haunts.
On the basis of his gut-wrenching performance in the
film, Pacino was offered the role of Michael Corleone
in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather, a plum
assignment plucked handily away from the likes of
Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty. Stealing quietly
into the film as the reluctant Mafia scion thrust
into the family business, Pacino crafted an ingenious
study of Michael's metamorphosis from idealistic war
hero to lethal underworld lord. He swaggered away
from The Godfather with movie stardom and an Oscar
nomination for Best Supporting Actor to his credit.
He followed up quickly with forceful performances, in
Serpico (in the role of a scrupulously honest cop who
attempts to uncover corruption in the N.Y.P.D.), The
Godfather, Part II (in another Oscar-nominated
performance as the rancorous don), and Dog Day
Afternoon (in the role of a volcanic bisexual
bankrobber). Sure, Pacino made the inevitable
missteps along the way: Bobby Deerfield (1977),
Cruising (1980), and Revolution (1985) were about as
well-received as a death sentence, but he
successfully counterbalanced their disappointments
with Scarface (1983), Sea of Love (1989), and Frankie
and Johnny (1991).
From the beginning of his film career, Pacino had
remained something of a commuter between Hollywood
and Broadway. His title role in a production of The
Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel won him a second Tony
in 1977, and memorable turns as Antony in Julius
Caesar, and as Walter Cole in David Mamet's American
Buffalo, alleviated any fan fatigue that might result
from being one of the most popular and most
frequently Oscar-nominated (a career total of seven
to date) film stars in the biz. On-screen, Pacino
kept cranking out popular favorites: he donned his
dark habit once again to play Michael Corleone in
1990's The Godfather, Part III; he blistered as a
slick real estate salesman in 1992's Glengarry Glen
Ross; at long last he took home the elusive Best
Actor Oscar for 1992's Scent of a Woman, in which he
employs Chris O'Donnell as his seeing-eye dog;
Carlito's Way gave him the chance to essay another
effective ethnic characterization, this time as a
Puerto Rican ex-con trying to go straight; and he
played cool cop to Robert De Niro's equally cool
robber in 1995's Heat.
While it may be true that Pacino's fame was cemented
with his true-to-life portrayals of urban toughies on
film, his heart has always remained tethered to the
stage. "The play is the thing. That's my
motivation," Pacino commented in an interview
about his double-duty as actor and director in his
well-received 1996 documentary Looking for Richard. A
love letter to Shakespeare and a forthright statement
on the craft that has captured his imagination for
over a quarter-century, the film sets about
familiarizing audiences with one of Shakespeare's
most dense and rich works, through deconstruction of
scenes and interviews with Shakespearean scholars,
with prominent actors like Sir John Gielgud, Kevin
Kline, Winona Ryder, and Kenneth Branagh, and with
your average men and women encountered on the street.
Just when we all thought he'd cleaned up his act, he
returned as his stock-in-trade urban crime figure in
Donnie Brasco, and portrayed a Mephistophelean lawyer
in Devil's Advocate (both 1997). As for upcoming
projects, Pacino has been mentioned to direct Amedeo
Modigliani; to produce The Cincinnati Kid; and to
star in The Ruth Etting Story, Mr. Vertigo, and
Angels in America. He next takes to the stage for a
Broadway production of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman
Cometh.