Anthony Hopkins





A census taker once tried to test me.-- I ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice chianti. -- Anthony Hopkins, as Hannibal "The Cannibal" Lecter


ANTHONY HOPKINS

received an Academy Award® as Best Actor for his performance in “The Silence of the Lambs” (1991), and was subsequently nominated in the same category for his performances in “The Remains of the Day” (1993) and “Nixon” (1995).  He was also given the Best Actor Award by the British Academy of Film & Television Arts for “The Remains of the Day.”  In 1993, he starred in Richard Attenborough’s “Shadowlands” with Debra Winger, winning numerous critics awards in the U.S. and Britain.  In 1998, he was nominated as Best Supporting Actor for his performance in Steven Spielberg’s “Amistad” and starred in “Meet Joe Black” and “Instinct.”  He starred in “Titus,” Julie Taymor’s film adaptation of Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, with Jessica Lange and recently completed production on the upcoming “The Devil and Daniel Webster,” co-starring and directed by Alec Baldwin.  Last year he recorded the narration for the blockbuster hit film “Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas” and reprised his role as the title character in “Hannibal,” the phenomenally successful sequel to the “Silence of the Lambs,” directed by Ridley Scott.

In 1992, he appeared in “Howards End” and in “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” before starring in “Legends of the Fall” and “The Road to Wellville.”  He made his directorial debut in 1995 with “August,” an adaptation of Chekhov’s “Uncle Vanya,” for which he composed the musical score and also played Vanya.  He starred in the title role in “Surviving Picasso” and with Alec Baldwin in “The Edge,” a dramatic adventure written by David Mamet and directed by Lee Tamahori.  “The Mask of Zorro,” directed by Martin Campbell and co-starring Antonio Banderas and Catherine Zeta-Jones, was released in July 1998.

Earlier films include “84 Charing Cross Road,” “The Elephant Man,” “Magic” and “A Bridge Too Far” (the latter two films were both written by “Hearts in Atlantis” screenwriter William Goldman).  “The Bounty” and “Desperate Hours” were his first two collaborations with the Dino De Laurentiis Company.  For his American television work, he received two Emmy Awards for “The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case” (1976) in which he portrayed Bruno Hauptmann, and “The Bunker” (1981) in which he portrayed Adolph Hitler.

Born December 31, 1937 in Margam, near Port Talbot, Wales, he is the only child of Muriel and Richard Hopkins.  His father was a baker.  He was educated at Cowbridge Grammar School.  At 17, he wandered into a YMCA amateur theatrical production and knew immediately that he was in the right place.  With newfound enthusiasm, combined with proficiency at the piano, he won a scholarship to the Welsh College of Music & Drama in Cardiff where he studied for two years (1955-1957).

He entered the British Army in 1958 for mandatory military training, spending most of the two-year tour of duty clerking in the Royal Artillery unit at Bulford.

In 1963, he graduated from the Royal Academy for Dramatic Arts in London and was then mentored by Sir Laurence Olivier, then the director of the National Theater in Britain.  Two years later, Hopkins was Olivier’s understudy in Strindberg’s “Dance of Death.”  Hopkins made his film debut in 1967, playing Richard the Lionheart in “The Lion in the Winter,” starring Peter O’Toole and Katherine Hepburn.  He received a British Academy Award nomination and the film received an Academy Award® as Best Picture.

American television viewers discovered Hopkins in the 1973 ABC production of Leon Uris’ “QBVII,” the first American mini-series, in which he played the knighted Polish-born British physician Adam Kleno who is ultimately destroyed by his wartime past.  The following year, he starred on Broadway in the National Theatre production of “Equus,” and later mounted another production of the play in Los Angeles where he has lived for 10 years, working extensively in American films and television.

After starring as Captain Bligh in “The Bounty” (1984), he returned to England and the National Theatre in David Hare’s “Pravda,” for which he received the British Theatre Association’s Best Actor Award and The Observer Award for Outstanding achievement at the 1985 Laurence Olivier Awards.  During this time at the National he starred in “Antony and Cleopatra” and “King Lear.”

Hopkins recently appeared in the feature adaptation of Stephen King’s Hearts In Atlantis for director Scott Hicks and the original comedy Bad Company with Chris Rock. He also recorded the narration for the 2000 holiday season’s hit film Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas.

He will next be seen in the film adaptation of the Philip Roth novel The Human Stain, opposite Nicole Kidman and directed by Robert Benton.

Hopkins became a U.S. citizen in 1999.

Anthony Hopkins - Filmography - uk.hollywood.com


 
The Wolfman - 12th February 2010
Spartacus - 5th June 2009
Beowulf - 16th November 2007
Bobby - 26th January 2007
All The King's Men - 27th October 2006
The World's Fastest Indian - 10th March 2006
Proof - 24th February 2006
Alexander - 7th January 2005
The Human Stain - 23rd January 2004
Red Dragon - 11th October 2002
Bad Company - 12th July 2002
Hearts In Atlantis - 8th March 2002
Hannibal - 16th February 2001
Titus - 1st September 2000
Mission : Impossible 2 - 7th July 2000
Instinct - 17th September 1999
Meet Joe Black - 15th January 1999
The Mask of Zorro - 11th December 1998
Amistad - 27th February 1998
The Edge - 6th February 1998
Legends of the Fall - 28th April 1995
Shadowlands - 14th January 1994
Bram Stoker's Dracula - 29th January 1993
The Remains Of The Day - 1993
A Bridge Too Far - 23rd June 1977
Beowulf: Digital 3D - Unknown


Stories about Anthony Hopkins

THOR production lets hammer fly! (14th January 2010)
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Townsend Quits 'Thor' (12th January 2010)
Irish actor Stuart Townsend has quit superhero blockbuster Thor just days before the movie was set to start shooting...

Marlon Hopkins (23rd June 2006)
Sir Anthony Hopkins is to star as Marlon Brando in a new movie about his life...

Pregnant Paltrow's April baby (18th January 2006)
Gwyneth Paltrow has revealed her baby is due in three months time...

Angelina engaged, claims co-star (25th October 2005)
Angelina Jolie is already engaged to lover Brad Pitt, her Beowulf co-star Ray Winstone has claimed...

De Niro voted greatest living actor (1st November 2004)
Robert De Niro has been voted the world's greatest living movie star over the age of 50...

Hopkins help for Hollywood Golden Guys (27th January 2004)
Screen killer Sir Anthony Hopkins is advising all Hollywood's senior stars to get themselves a younger lover...

Hannibal still hungry for fame (23rd January 2004)
Human Stain star Sir Anthony Hopkins says he loves his movie star life more than ever - if only because it keeps him from being a barfly...

Lecter gets his teeth into Kidman (23rd September 2003)
Hannibal Lecter star Sir Anthony Hopkins got his teeth into a steamy sex scene with Nicole Kidman in new movie The Human Stain - and ended up biting off more than he could chew...

Teenage Hannibal Lecter (10th September 2003)
Home Alone's Macaulay Culkin is being lined up to play the teenage Hannibal Lecter...

Nicole queried over ultra-slim look (8th September 2003)
While Nicole Kidman's sexually-charged scenes with Anthony Hopkins in The Human Stain were the talk of the Toronto Film Festival yesterday, her publicist has defended her new ultra slimline look...

Hannibal the Wordsmith (8th October 2002)
Anthony Hopkins is so keen to carry on playing serial killer Hannibal Lecter, he's written the next film himself...


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14th January 2010 to 8th October 2002