Synopsis
George
Clooney was born May 6, 1961, son of Nick, a local TV host/newsman, and
nephew of Rosemary, a popular mid-century singer. He scored his
breakout role in 1992 as Dr. Doug Ross on TV's ER. The hit show lead to major film roles, including a turn as Batman. In 2005 Clooney won an Oscar for Syriana. Time declared Clooney "The Last Movie Star," and People selected him "Sexiest Man Alive" twice.
Born
George Timothy Clooney on May 6, 1961, in Lexington, Kentucky, into a
well-known family of media and entertainment personalities. His father,
Nick, spent many years as a television personality and news anchor. His
aunt, Rosemary Clooney, had a long career as a singer and actress.
Due
to the nature of his father's work, George Clooney and his older
sister, Ada, moved several times to various locations throughout
Kentucky and Ohio with their parents. In 1974, they settled down for
good in a rambling, old Victorian home in downtown Augusta, Kentucky, a
small town on the Ohio River about an hour south of Cincinnati.
There,
despite some name recognition, the Clooneys led a fairly modest life.
They were a close-knit family, with Nick Clooney making sure to carve
time out of his busy schedule in Cincinnati to be home in the evenings
for dinner. At the Clooney supper table, the family often discussed
current events. Nick, a true newsman, had grown up in awe of men like
CBS news anchor Edward R. Murrow and, later, Walter Cronkite.
Exposed
to the entertainment industry at a young age, Clooney made his first
television appearance at 5 years old, playing sketch characters on the
local talk shows his dad hosted. In middle school, however, Clooney
struggled with his talent for expression when he developed Bell's palsy,
which causes partial facial paralysis. He eventually recovered from the
illness.
Catching the Acting Bug
In
school, Clooney was more focused on sports than books, but still
managed to be a good student. "I pulled out my report cards ... I had
all A's and a B," the actor told Esquire magazine. A fairly
good baseball player, he managed to land a tryout with the Cincinnati
Reds at the age of 16. A baseball contract, however, never materialized.
Clooney
eventually opted for college. Staying close to home, he attended
Northern Kentucky University, where he studied broadcast journalism. But
Clooney didn't last long at college. He didn't think he had what it
took to become a good television journalist, and he hated the constant
comparisons to his father. He dropped out of school in 1981, without a
thought as to what he would do next.
Clooney
stuck around the Cincinnati area for a while, finding work as a shoe
salesman and, later, as a farmhand picking tobacco. He had been
harvesting tobacco when he got a call from his his cousin, Miguel
Ferrer, the son of Rosemary Clooney and Oscar winner Jose Ferrer. Miguel
and his father were making a film in Kentucky about horse racing, and
Ferrer offered Clooney a little acting work. Clooney hung around the set
for a good three months, where he worked as an extra and even landed a
few lines. To make extra money, he loaned his old Monte Carlo to his
uncle and cousin for $50 a day. The movie never got released , but the
experience gave Clooney the acting bug again.
Move to L.A.
Encouraged
by his cousin Miguel, Clooney decided to move to Los Angeles to become
an actor when the movie shoot was over. "I had just spent the summer
cutting tobacco, which is a miserable job. So that's what made me move
to Hollywood," Clooney later told Esquire. To make ends meet, he picked up whatever work he could find. He even ran errands for his aunt and chauffeured her around town.
Slowly
parts came, even if they weren't the kind of roles he dreamed about. He
landed a recurring role on the popular teen comedy The Facts of Life, from 1985 to 1987. From 1988 to 1991, Clooney also made guest appearances on the dysfunctional family sitcom Roseanne. In 1992, he starred in the short-lived series Bodies of Evidence, playing a detective. On the drama Sisters,
he played another detective and the love interest for Sela Ward's
character. There were small movie roles, too, including the part of a
lip-synching transvestite in a 1993 thriller called The Harvest.
Clooney
worked steadily in Hollywood, but he had yet to land a significant
career breakthrough. Feeling that he was always on the cusp of something
bigger, something greater, Clooney found his situation difficult. "I
had a work ethic," he told The New Yorker in 2007. "I was
making a couple of hundred grand a year, which is beating all the odds,
so you don't really think things are going terribly. You actually feel
like you're succeeding. [But] I wished I was doing better projects, and I
didn't think I was going to get that chance."
Big Break
All that changed in 1994, when Clooney was cast in a new NBC medical drama called ER.
Clooney played Dr. Doug Ross, a caring pediatrician and a notorious
ladies man, in the ensemble drama, which also featured Anthony Edwards,
Julianna Margulies, and Sherry Stringfield. Soon after its September
1994 debut, Clooney was on his way to becoming one of the show's
breakout stars, attracting the attention of film industry movers and
shakers. His classic good looks and easygoing charm made him a natural
for the big screen.
Clooney worked at a hectic pace, managing to appear in several films during his time on ER. He battled evil vampires with Quentin Tarantino in Robert Rodriguez's From Dusk to Dawn(1996). In the romantic comedyOne Fine Day(1996),
Clooney played a divorced father who falls for a single mother
(Michelle Pfeiffer). Assuming the role of the caped crusader, Clooney
starred as Batman in the summer blockbuster Batman & Robin(1997), which eventually netted more than $107 million. The following year, Clooney starred opposite Jennifer Lopez in Steven Soderbergh's Out of Sight(1998). He also had a role in Terrence Malick's war drama The Thin Red Line.
In 1999, Clooney turned in his ER scrubs to pursue his film career full time. He starred in the Persian Gulf War tale Three Kings with Mark Wahlberg and Ice Cube that same year. Working with the Coen brothers, Clooney starred as a charming conman in O Brother , Where Are Thou? (2000), an imaginative retelling of the epic poem The Odyssey.
He won a Golden Globe Award for his work on the film. Clooney also
reteamed with Wahlberg for the popular disaster-at-sea film The Perfect Storm,
based on Sebastian Junger's bestselling novel. The actor, who for so
long had wondered if he'd truly make it big, was now Hollywood royalty.
Hollywood A-List
In 2001, Clooney starred in the remake of Ocean's Eleven
directed by Steven Soderbergh. He played Danny Ocean, a role originated
by famed crooner Frank Sinatra. The comedic heist film featured an
all-star cast, which included Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts, Bernie Mac, and Matt Damon. It proved to be such a successful venture on- and off-screen that it spawned two sequels, Ocean's Twelve and Ocean's Thirteen.
The following year, Clooney made his directorial debut with Confessions of a Dangerous Mind(2002). The biopic focused on the life of Chuck Barris, host of The Gong Show
and reportedly a CIA agent. Despite the film's poor box office
performance and weak reviews, Clooney continued to work behind the
scenes, serving as a producer on the 2004 political drama Syriana.
The
usually fit Clooney gained roughly 30 pounds to play a government agent
in the film, which explored political intrigue and corruption in the
Middle East. Badly hurt during the filming of a scene, he damaged the
membrane around his spine. The injury caused spinal fluid to leak from
his nose and left him with terrible back pain. After completing the
film, Clooney underwent two surgeries to fix the problem.
All of his hard work on Syriana
did not go unnoticed. In 2005, Clooney won the Academy Award for Best
Supporting Actor for his role in the film. He was also nominated for
another important project, Good Night, and Good Luck, that same year. The film examines the clash between distinguished news anchor Edward R. Murrow
and Senator Joseph McCarthy. Clooney directed the film and co-wrote the
screenplay, which served partly as a tribute to his newsman father.
Widely praised, the black-and-white drama helped Clooney earn his first
nominations for Best Director and Writing (Original Screenplay).
Political Causes
An
outspoken liberal, Clooney has been a frequent target of right-wing
politicos and personalities, including FOX News's Bill O'Reilly. Beyond
his disappointment with the election of George W. Bush as President in
2000, the actor was also an early opponent of the Iraq War, and later
called the president "dim" in a 2003 interview. "America's policies
frustrate me," Clooney told a German television program. "I think a war
against Iraq is as unavoidable as it is senseless. I think it's coming.
But I also think the real danger is going to be what happens after it."
Following
the September 11th attacks, Clooney organized a fundraiser that
featured dozens of Hollywood stars and assembled more than $129 million
for the United Way. Four years later, he donated $1 million to the
United Way Hurricane Katrina Response Fund.
In
2006, Clooney stepped up his involvement in political and social
causes. He teamed up with his father and a few others to travel around
the western region of Sudan, known as Darfur. Armed with a few small
video cameras,
Clooney
and his father set out report on how the area had been ravaged by war
and how the international community was struggling to set up refugee
camps to help those in need. By leveraging Clooney's Hollywood status,
they believed they could bring greater attention to the Darfur crisis
and could help fuel global interest in helping the region. Their edited
footage was broadcast on such programs as Oprah.
Upon his return to the United States, Clooney brought his celebrity clout to Washington, D.C., where he spoke at a rally against the genocide in Darfur. Later he spoke to a special meeting of the U.N. Security Council. With other celebrities, including Brad Pitt, Don Cheadle, and Matt Damon, he formed a non-profit organization called Not On Our Watch to help the people in Darfur. In 2007, he and Cheadle were recognized for their work for Darfur. The pair shared a Peace Summit Award at the 8th Annual World Summit of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates in Rome. The following year, with his parents standing at his side, Clooney was officially appointed as a U.N. peace envoy.
Personal Life
Often
the target of paparazzi, both in the United States and at his vacation
home in Italy, Clooney's career has been a balancing act between
maintaining his privacy and his Hollywood status. Much of these lessons
were gleaned from advice given by his aunt Rosemary, who experienced an
astounding level of fame early in her career only to fall prey to
addictions and depression later in life.
"She
wouldn't tell you, 'Don't do it,'" Clooney said, "but you could see it,
you could read it on her body. You know? Don't smoke three packs a day.
Do a little exercising along the way. And don't believe everybody when
they tell you how great you are when you're 21. And don't believe
everybody when they tell you how lousy you are when you're 27."
Still,
the world never seems to tire of Clooney news, particularly when it
comes to his romantic life. Clooney has been married once to the actress
Talia Balsam. That union was short lived, and Clooney has vowed he will
never marry again nor have children. The pledge managed to catch the
attention of actresses Nicole Kidman
and Michelle Pfeiffer, both of whom said he would be a father before he
turned 40. Both lost their bets, and both sent Clooney checks to pay
up. The actor, who's twice been named People magazine's Sexiest Man Alive, returned the money to his friends.
Recent Projects
Clooney continues to excel both in front of and behind the camera. His performance in the 2009 dramatic comedy,Up in the Air, earned the star raves. In the film, Clooney played Ryan Bingham, a consultant who specializes in firing employees. For 2011's The Ides of March,
Clooney proved to be a triple-threat, serving as the project's star,
director, and co-writer. The political drama featured Clooney as a
presidential candidate and Ryan Gosling as one of his aides.
Also that same year, Clooney gave another impressive performance in the family drama The Descendants
directed by Alexander Payne. He won a Golden Globe for his turn as a
husband and father who must cope with new challenges and unpleasant
revelations after his wife is severely injured in a boating accident.
Source: biography.com
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