Real Name: Leonardo
Wilhelm DiCaprio
Occupation: Actor,
Teen heartthrob
Date of Birth:
November 11, 1974
Place of Birth: Los
Angeles, CA, USA
Sign: Sun in Scorpio,
Moon in Libra
Education: Center for
Enriched Studies, Los
Angeles
Relations: Parents:
George and Irmalin
DiCaprio
Fan Mail: C/O
Addis-Weschler &
Associates
955 South Carrillo Drive
Suite 300
Los Angeles, CA 90048
USA
Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio was destined
from the beginning to be a wild and
spirited boy. He received his first name after swiftly kicking
his mother from her
womb as she admired a Leonardo DaVinci painting in the Uffizi. He
was born in
Los Angeles, CA on the eleventh of November of 1974 to George and
Irmalin
DiCaprio. Leo was an only child (though he does have a
stepbrother named
Adam), and his parents divorced each other within a year after
his birth.
His mother is German and his father is Italian, and their
backgrounds had a
major influence on his upbringing. His father produces
underground comic books
and comic arts out of his garage. His mother was a legal
secretary (before she
began managing Leo's affairs.) They might be best described as
liberal, pot-smoking
hippies: "Whatever I did would be something they'd already
done. I mean, my dad
would welcome it if I got a nose ring." He remembers such
household guests as
comic-book artist Robert Crumb, writer Charles Bukowski, and
novelist Hubert
Selby, Jr. visiting as a child. "We're not the hippie family
who only eats organic and
the children meditate and go to a school of the arts. But we're
not apple-pie and
Republican, either."
Leo was educated at the Center for Enriched Studies and John
Marshall High
School, both in LA. He often cheated in school (especially in
math), and seemed
more interested in entertaining his classmates than in doing his
homework. "School, I
never truly got the knack of. I could never focus on things I
didn't want to learn. I
used to, like, take half of the school and do break-dancing skits
with my friend in
front of them at lunchtime."
But his troubles concentrating in school didn't stifle his acting
dreams. Leo's
acting debut was on the television show Romper Room, at age five.
Booted from
the set because of his uncontrollable behavior, it would be
eleven years until he
would land a big-screen role. At age ten, on the way home from a
casting call
where he had just been callously rejected, he cried to his
father, "Dad, I really want
to become an actor, but if this is what it's all about I don't
want to do it." Leo recalls
his father put his arm around him and said, "Someday,
Leonardo, it will happen for
you. Remember these words. Just relax."
When searching for an agent Leo was further discouraged by the
commercialism of the industry, exemplified by an attempt from one
agent to alter his
"wrong" haircut and change his ethnic-sounding name to
Lenny Williams. He was
finally signed at the age of fourteen, and struggled to break
into the movie industry
through obscure commercials and educational films such as
"How to Deal With a
Parent Who Takes Drugs" and "Mickey's Safety
Club." He took part in over thirty
commercials in all, and eventually procured guest appearances on
such television
shows as Lassie, The Outsiders, Roseanne, and Parenthood. Though
he was cast
in his first movie in 1991, Leo would rather forget his minor and
embarassing
contribution to Critters III altogether. At sixteen, he finally
landed a successful,
regular role as a homeless boy in the teen sitcom Growing Pains
that lasted for two
years (24-episodes). Though only a small part, Leo's performance
proved he had
great potential; he easily outshined the rest of the cast.
His big break was undoubtedly his leading role as Tobias Wolff in
This Boy's
Life. Though Leo's natural, brilliant performance in this
"coming of age" movie didn't
hit home at the box office, he gained instant recognition as a
talented rising actor.
Leo received a few prestigious awards for his performance (see
below) and herein
began his rise to fame.
Now given the opportunity to be picky about his roles, Leo
chooses them
carefully. He welcomes help from his father in sifting through
the facile, mainstream
roles most actors gleefully accept. Leo has turned down such
commercially popular
roles as Robin in Batman Forever, and continues to look for the
more challenging
"dark roles." "I want to take my time with each
role and that's how you plan a long
career rather than doing it all at once in a big explosion. I
turned down a lot of
movies about death and a few cheesy little comedies as
well."
Leo is a favorite of many professional and amateur critics
because of his
unique ability to play the "boy/man" border with such
ease and natural spontaneity.
Though 23, Leo's boyish looks allow him to apply his learned
experience and charm
to younger roles that many of his immature competitors cannot
handle. "The best
thing about acting is that I get to lose myself in another
character and actually get
paid for it. It's a great outlet. As for myself, I'm not sure who
I am. It seems that I
change every day."