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Biography for Marlon Brando

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One-Eyed Jacks (1961)
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Citizen Brando (2010)
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Score, The (2001)
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Brave, The (1997)
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Island of Dr. Moreau, The (1996)
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Don Juan de Marco (1995)
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 MARLON BRANDO
AKA: Marlon Brando Jr;
Born: 1924-04-03
Birth Name: Marlon Brando Jr
Birth place: Omaha, Nebraska, USA
Death: 2004-07-01
Death cause: lung condition
Profession: actor, director, elevator operator, producer
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Biography

An influential, eccentric stage and screen actor--perhaps the most influential and respected of his generation--Marlon Brando first made his name as an exponent of 'The Method', an acting style based on the teachings of Constantin Stanislavsky. Method acting rejected the traditional techniques of stagecraft in favor of an emotional expressiveness ideally suited to the angst-ridden atmosphere of postwar American society. Brando studied the Stanislavsky technique in the 1940s, first at the New School and later at the Actors Studio.

The Nebraska native made his Broadway debut in the sentimental hit "I Remember Mama" (1944), and co-starred opposite Katharine Cornell in "Candida" (1946) and briefly toured with Tallulah Bankhead in "The Eagle Has Two Heads" the same year. His breakthrough came with his searing portrayal of Stanley Kowalski in Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire" (1947), directed by Elia Kazan. The role established a new order of acting intensity and eventually led Brando to Hollywood. He also made his first TV appearance during this period, on a 1949 episode of "Actors Studio" (ABC). Brando's only other contributions to TV have been a ten-minute, Emmy-winning cameo as American Nazi leader George Lincoln Rockwell in "Roots: The Next Generation" (ABC, 1979) and a 1991 PBS special on the Actors Studio.

Implementing what he learned under Lee Strasberg and Stella Adler, Brando has influenced American film actors from James Dean to Robert De Niro to River Phoenix. As the unappointed spokesman for his generation, the young Brando became identified with a character in revolt against something he could not comprehend. When asked in "The Wild One" (1954), "What are you rebelling against?" he replies, "Whaddaya got?" Although Brando's rebels conveyed a strong sense of danger, the actor has also lent a pathos to their stance, leaving his characters both menacing and vulnerable. Since he had became synonymous with these types, Brando has spent most of his career trying to purge himself of this initial identification.

Brando's first film was Fred Zinnemann's "The Men" (1950), in which he portrayed a paraplegic war veteran struggling for dignity. Rather than play the role for its inherent pathos, however, Brando etched a portrait of an embittered, incoherent man-child. Kazan's film version of "A Streetcar Named Desire" (1951) followed, forever stamping the Brando image in the public imagination and making him one of the first actors of the "new generation" to break through to stardom, before Dean, Newman and Hudson. The role earned him the first of four consecutive Best Actor Academy Award nominations. He followed up with impressive, very individualistic performances as a Mexican revolutionary in "Viva Zapata!" (1952) and as Marc Anthony in Joseph L Mankiewicz's adaptation of Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" (1953).

Brando's film heft was affirmed with "The Wild One", a motorcycle melodrama, which also helped make the black motorcycle jacket the uniform of the young tough (or young tough wanna-be). The Stanley Kowalski brute was now removed from Tennessee Williams' confining New Orleans ghetto, his anger directed scattershot against society at large. Brando earned a richly-deserved Best Actor Oscar for his multi-layered performance as an ex-fighter who becomes involved with corrupt union officials and witnesses a murder in Kazan's powerful "On the Waterfront" (1954). With this success, Brando became a full-fledged Hollywood power. He played against type in a number of subsequent roles: an ill-tempered Napoleon in "Desiree" (1954); a smarmy singing gambler in "Guys and Dolls" (1955); the Japanese interpreter in "The Teahouse of the August Moon" (1956); a Korean War pilot in love with a Japanese entertainer in Joshua Logan's "Sayonara" (1957, receiving yet another Best Actor nomination); and a controversially effete Fletcher Christian in the 1962 remake of "Mutiny on the Bounty". He even tried his hand behind the camera, assuming directing chores from Stanley Kubrick on "One-Eyed Jacks" (1961), a psychological Western that pitted him against Karl Malden. Despite all his efforts, his rebel persona had nevertheless become a cliche by the end of the decade. (Actor-impressionist Frank Gorshin performed a devastating send-up of it in 1960's "Bells Are Ringing", and Brando was frequently parodied on TV shows from "The Flintstones" to "The Dick Van Dyke Show".)

Brando finally killed his rebel image in the 1960s. He appeared as a drifter romancing a middle-aged Italian woman (Anna Magnani) and a Southern belle (Joanne Woodward) in Sidney Lumet's uneven "The Fugitive Kind" (1960), an adaptation of Tennessee Williams' stage play "Orpheus Descending". Brando went on to appear as a figure of authority in "The Ugly American" (1963) and a con artist in "Bedtime Story" (1964). But despite complex performances in John Huston's "Reflections in a Golden Eye" (1967) and "Burn!" (1969), he had been largely abandoned by his audience. Voted a top boxoffice star from 1955 to 1958, he dropped to a has-been in the late 1960s.

It was not until Francis Ford Coppola cast him in the title role of "The Godfather" (1972) that he regained stature. Brando's sensitive turn as the aging Don Corleone received critical praise, set the tone for the entire film and earned him a second Best Actor Oscar (which he declined). He gave a bizarre, somewhat controversial performance as a self-destructive American in Bernardo Bertolucci's disturbing "Last Tango in Paris" (1972); the sexually charged role--in which has been long rumored that Brando took the "Method" to new levels in his love scenes with Maria Schneider--earned the actor his seventh Best Actor Academy Award nomination.

Since then, Brando has repeatedly announced his retirement from acting, but has made more than a dozen films. In Arthur Penn's "The Missouri Breaks" (1976), he offered an eccentric, over-the-top performance as a hired gun tracking horse thief Jack Nicholson and followed with a highly-paid but brief cameo as Jor-El, father of "Superman" (1978). He was downright terrifying as Kurtz, the dark heart of Coppola's hallucinogenic war drama "Apocalypse Now" (1979)--Brando, at the height of his professional ecentricity and engaged in a unique cat-and-mouse dance with his director, delivers one of the most compelling and avant garde performances of his career, and both the role and the film would become more potent with the passage of time. He earned a well-deserved Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for his engaging performance as a crusty South African civil rights lawyer in Euzhan Palcy's "A Dry White Season" (1989). Brando also impressed critics and audiences with his comic send-up of Don Corleone in the lightweight romp "The Freshman" (1990) and for his turn as a psychiatrist married to Faye Dunaway in the offbeat romance "Don Juan DeMarco" (1995).

He also sometimes phoned in his performances in unworthy films in exchange for hefty paydays, appearing as the mysterious scientist who creates half-humans in John Frankenheimer's remake of "The Island of Dr. Moreau" (1996) and in 1997 filmed the muddled flop "Free Money" as the corrupy prison warden The Swede. Brando's last screen outing was the routine heist thriller "The Score" (2001), in which he had a supporting role opposite acting heavyweights of subsequent generations Robert DeNiro and Edward Norton. Although that screen combo didn't ignite the level of sparks audiences may have been hoping for, Brando nevertheless delivers charming and charismatic turn that blew his colleagues off the screen each time he briefly appeared, despite word of his refusal to be on the set at the same time as director Frank Oz. Prior to his death in 2004, Brando had agreed to appear as himself in the planned film "Brando and Brando," but it did not come to pass, but the actor did vocally reprise his role as Don Vito Corleone along with co-stars James Caan and Robert Duvall) for the video game "The Godfather: The Game," which was released a year after his passing.

Far from the athletic figure he cut in his youth, Brando ballooned to enormous girth and his almost androgynous good looks suffered with his seeming indifference to his physical gifts. He also became known for his reclusive existence on the Tahitian island he purchased after filming "Mutiny on the Bounty," and, later in life, at his home above Beverly Hills. His eccentric lifestyle, though, kept him in the press: his (at least) nine children by various wives and companions; his 1972 Oscar refusal delivered by faux Native American Sasheen Littlefeather, in protest of Hollywood's depiction of the indiginous tribes; offbeat and outrageous on-set behavior; the killing of daughter Cheyenne's fiance by son Christian; Cheyenne's subsequent suicide at age 25; and an amusing televised incident where he playfully insisted interviewer Larry King kiss him on the lips. Brando co-authored his autobiography Songs My Mother Taught Me which was published in 1994, and by the time of his death in 2004 it was clear he had traveled a long way from his native Nebraskan farmland and his life became both more celebrated and more baroque than any Hollywood film plot.



Family

FATHER: Marlon Brando Sr. Cattle feed, chicken feed and limestone salesman. Later became Brando's business manager; died in July 1965 at age 70.

MOTHER: Dorothy Pennebaker. Amateur actor. One of the founders of the Omaha Community Playhouse; died of effects of alcoholism c. 1954.

SISTER: Jocelyn Brando. Actor. Born on November 19, 1919.

SISTER: Frances Brando. Artist. Born in 1922.

SON: Christian Devi Brando. Born on May 11, 1958; mother, Anna Kashfi; subject of a custody battle; on January 4, 1991 pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter in the death of Dag Drolet, boyfriend of half-sister Cheyenne; released from prison in December 1995.

SON: Miko Brando. Security guard. Born in 1960; mother, Movita Castenada; security guard to Michael Jackson; his former wife Jiselle Honore Brando was killed by a hit-and-run driver June 2, 1991.

DAUGHTER: Rebecca Brando. Mother, Tarita Teriipia.

SON: Simon Tehotu Brando. Mother, Tarita Teriipia.

DAUGHTER: Tarita Cheyenne Brando. Born in 1970; mother, Tarita Teriipia; commited suicide in April 1995.

DAUGHTER: Ninna Priscilla Brando. Born in May 1989; mother, Christina Ruiz.

DAUGHTER: Petra Barrett Brando. Adopted; birth father was author James Clavell; born c. 1970.



Companion

COMPANION: Josanne Marianna Berenger. Model. 19-year-old French woman from Toulon working in NYC as a governess when she met Brando at a party; announced engagement in 1954; separated.

COMPANION: Rita Moreno. Actor. Had a 12-year on-and-off relationship; she attempted suicide when they finally separated.

COMPANION: Jackie Collins. Writer. Had brief relationship when Collins was 16 (c. 1956).

WIFE: Anna Kashfi. Actor. Married in October 1957; divorced in 1959; made screen debut in "The Mountain" (1956); her father (a Mr. Callahan) claimed she had no Indian blood; introduced by producer A C Lyles; separated when son Christian was born; reconciled and later divorced.

WIFE: Movita. Actor. Born on December 4, 1916 in Nogales, Arizona; married in secret ceremony in 1960; separated in 1962; marriage annulled in 1968; had co-starred as Clark Gable's Tahitian love interest in "Mutiny on the Bounty" (1935); met while making "Viva Zapata" (1952); broke up during the filming of "On the Waterfront" (1954); reunited.

COMPANION: France Nuyen. Actor.

WIFE: Tarita Teriipia. Actor, former waitress. Married in 1962; featured with Brando in "Mutiny on the Bounty" (1962).

COMPANION: Christina Ruiz. Former maid. Born c. 1958; mother of Brando's daughter Ninna.



Milestone

1930: Moved to Libertyville, Illinois

1942: Worked as an elevator operator at Best & Company in New York for one week

1943: Acted in little scenes to illustrate Dramatic Workshop teacher John Gassner's lectures

1944: Debut stage performance in the dual roles of a school teacher and a dark angel in Erwin Piscator's production of Gerhardt Hauptman's "Hannele's Way to Heaven"

1944: Appeared with a troupe of Dramatic Workshop students in summer stock in Sayville, New York

1944: Broadway acting debut in "I Remember Mama"

1946: Played a psychologically maimed war veteran in the short-lived Broadway drama, "Truckline Cafe"; first brought to the attention of Elia Kazan who produced the play

1946: Performed in the Broadway production of "Candida" opposite Katharine Cornell

1946: Played a heroic freedom fighter for the state of Israel in Ben Hecht's play, "A Flag is Born"

1947 - 1949: First leading role on Broadway in "A Streetcar Named Desire"; offered star-making turn as Stanley Kowalski opposite Jessica Tandy as Blanche DuBois

1949: TV debut in the "I'm No Hero" segment of ABC's "Actors Studio"

First screen test for a film titled "Rebel Without a Cause" (not the same as the James Dean film)

1950: Film acting debut, playing a paraplegic war veteran in "The Men"

1951: Reprised stage role of Stanley in film version of "A Streetcar Named Desire"; received first of four consecutive Best Actor Academy Award nominations; was only one of the four nominated principals (Vivien Leigh, Kim Hunter and Karl Malden) not to win an Oscar

1952: Earned second Best Actor Oscar nod in the title role of "Viva Zapata!"

After clashing with French director Claude Autant-Lara, walked off production of "The Red and the Black"

1953: Offered impressive turn as Marc Antony in "Julius Caesar"; earned third Academy Award nomination

1953: Made last stage appearance in a summer stock tour of "Arms and the Man"

1954: Delivered generationally signature performance as the motorcycle-riding rebel in "The Wild One"

1954: Won Best Actor Oscar for performance as washed-up fighter Terry Malloy in "On the Waterfront"

1955: Portrayed gambler Sky Masterson in the movie version of the hit musical "Guys and Dolls"

1956: Played an Okinawan in the feature version of the Broadway play "The Teahouse of the August Moon"

1957: Portrayed a Korean war pilot who falls in love with a Japanese entertainer in "Sayonara"; earned fifth Best Actor Academy Award nomination

1959: Formed Pennebaker Productions (named after his mother's maiden name) to produce films that would "explore the themes current in the world today"

1960: Headlined the film version of Tennessee Williams' play "Orpheus Descending"; later renamed "The Fugitive Kind"

1961: Feature directorial debut, "One-Eyed Jacks"; took over direction from Stanley Kubrick; also producing debut and had a starring role

1962: Headlined the expensive remake of "Mutiny on the Bounty" playing Fletcher Christian

1963: Sold Pennebaker Productions to Universal for a reported $1 million in exchange for a certain number of films to be made for Universal on a non-exclusive basis

1965: Participated in the Selma, Alabama and the Washington DC civil rights marches

1966: Was subject of the documentary, "Meet Marlon Brando"; filmed by the Maysles brothers

1967: Directed by Charlie Chaplin in the misfire "The Countess From Hong Kong"

1968: Acted in the then-controversial film "Candy"

1972: Received second Academy Award playing the title role of "The Godfather"; co-written and directed by Francis Ford Coppola

1973: Garnered seventh Best Actor Oscar nomination for Bernardo Bertolucci's sexually-themed drama "Last Tango in Paris"

1976: Delivered an eccentric turn opposite Jack Nicholson in the oddball Western "The Missouri Breaks"

1978: Portrayed Superman's father Jor-El in "Superman: The Movie"; earned a reported salary of $3.7 million and over 11 percent of the gross for a cameo role that was shot over four days

1979: Re-teamed with Coppola to play the madman Kurtz in the Vietnam-themed drama "Apocalypse Now"

1979: Won an Emmy Award for a rare TV appearance as George Lincoln Rockwell, the founder of the American Nazi Party in "Roots: The Next Generations"

1980: Last feature for almost a decade, the formulaic thriller "The Formula"

1989: Resumed film acting and picked up eighth career Academy Award nomination as a British attorney in the anti-apartheid drama "A Dry White Season"; earned a salary in excess of $3 million which he reportedly donated to anti-apartheid charities

1990: Spoofed his Oscar-winning turn as gangster Don Vito Corleone in the comedy "The Freshman"

1992: Had cameo as Torquemada in the historical drama "Christopher Columbus: The Discovery"

1994: Published memoirs, Songs My Mother Taught Me

1995: Portrayed a psychiatrist treating a man who thinks he is the great lover in "Don Juan DeMarco"; co-starred Johnny Depp

1996: Delivered perhaps the most eccentric turn of his career as the titular scientist in "The Island of Dr. Moreau"

1997: Had small role in Johnny Depp's directorial debut, "The Brave"

1998: Co-starred with Charlie Sheen in the comedy thriller "Free Money"; aired on Starz! before being released on video

2001: Acted in "The Score" alongside Robert De Niro and Edward Norton

2001: Agreed to appear (for a reported $2-3 million salary) in a cameo turn as a priest performing an exorcism in "Scary Movie 2"; forced to drop out due to ill health

2004: Starred as himself in the documentary, "Brando and Brando"

2005: Collaborated with film director Donald Cammell in 1979 on a China Seas pirate story, later published into the novel Fan-Tan



Education

American Theatre Wing Professional School - New York, NY Shattuck Military Academy - Faribault, MN - 1943 - An all-boys Episcopal boarding school; appeared in school productions; expelled after second year Libertyville High School - Libertyville, IL - Expelled from school Actors Studio - New York, NY - Studied with Elia Kazan The New School - New York, NY - 1943-1944 - Studied with Stella Adler at the New School's Dramatic Workshop


Bibliography

"Brando" Richard Schickel 1991

"Conversations With Brando" Lawrence Grobel 1991

"Songs My Mother Taught Me" Marlon Brando and Robert Lindsey 1994

"Brando" Peter Manso 1994

"Marlon Brando: A Penguin Lives Biography" Patricia Bosworth 2001



Citizenship

United States


Notes

"Brando's Terry Malloy is a shatteringly poignant portrait of an amoral, confused, illiterate citizen of the lower depths who is goaded into decency by love, hate and murder. His groping for words, use of the vernacular, care of his beloved pigeons, pugilist's walk and gestures and his discoveries of love and the immensity of the crimes around him are highlights of a beautiful and moving portrayal."---A. H. Weiler's review of "On the Waterfront", in The New York Times, July 30, 1954

"He's the most keenly aware, the most empathetical human being alive... He just knows. If you have a scar, physical or mental, he goes right to it. He doesn't want to, but he doesn't avoid it... He cannot be cheated or fooled. If you left the room he could be you."---Stella Adler quoted in Richard Schickel's "Brando: A Life in Our Times" (1991)

"This was the first of the many ritual beatings characters played by Brando would absorb in his films, punishment for being an outsider and sensitive, a hip messiah in the pop mythology of the time."---Richard Schickel

"Brando always was a weirdo, long before anyone heard of him. Surely his 'eccentricity' deepened with the passing years, but the overall evidence is that he consciously chose to stress that side of his nature less, not more, in his Sixties work... He is less self-consciously witty, less self-satirizing, than he was in the fat Fifties movies... when his spirits were up and he carried with him the feistiness of successs. He is also much less sexy than before, much less volatile than he was in his previous on-screen encounters with women. Indeed, it is impossible to recall a single romantic scene that had either the rapacious menace of 'Streetcar' or the insinuating seductiveness of his scenes with Eva Marie Saint in 'On the Waterfront.'"---Richard Schickel, In discussing Brando's bland, tame professionalism in his work during the 1960s

"We may treasure, as he does not, the moments he gave us, at the same time speculating about the ones he didn't give us, out of spite or goofiness or whatever has moved him to not move us. Looking at him now, one can't help recalling the illimitable promise of his youth and perhaps of our own, and the inevitable confusions and compromises life imposes on us, the inevitable follies we impose on ourselves... Brando has kept faith with incoherence. Whatever he has done and not done, no actor in his life and his work has more consistently kept us in touch with the erratic, that which is unpredicatable and dangerous in ourselves and in the world."---Richard Schickel in "Brando: A Life in Our Times" (1991)

"Brando's a giant on every level. When he acts, it's as if he's landed on another planet. He's got it all. That's why he's endured. When I first saw 'On The Waterfront' I couldn't move. I couldn't leave the theatre. I'd never seen the like of it. I couldn't believe it."---Al Pacino, Brando's co-star from "The Godfather Empire August 2004

"He's simply the best, and if he wants to call acting merely a craft, then he's the greatest craftsman who ever lived."---Dennis Hopper Empire August 2004


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