Job Actor
Years active 1945-2001
Known for Method Acting, rebellious streak, raw animal magnetism and unwavering intensity
Top Roles Lt. Christian Diestl, Sky Masterson, Stanley Kowalski, Rio, Sakini
Top GenresDrama, Film Adaptation, Romance, Comedy, War, Western
Top TopicsBook-Based, Based on Play, Romance (Drama)
Top Collaborators , (Director), (Director),
Shares birthday with Doris Day, Leslie Howard, Mary Anderson  see more..

Marlon Brando Overview:

Legendary actor, Marlon Brando, was born Marlon Brando Jr. on Apr 3, 1924 in Omaha, NE. Brando appeared in over 40 roles. His best known films include A Streetcar Named Desire, The Wild One, On the Waterfront, Guys and Dolls, Sayonara, The Godfather, Superman and Apocalypse Now. Brando died at the age of 80 on Jul 1, 2004 in Los Angeles, CA and was cremated and his ashes scattered in Tahiti and Death Valley.

EARLY YEARS:

Brando, the silver screen's great enigma, was born on April 3, 1924 in Omaha, Nebraska. From a young age he took to acting, mimicking those around him, practicing their mannerisms and peculiarities. His rebellious streak started as a child. He was expelled from his high school for riding a motorcycle through the halls, and then was expelled from Shattuck Military Academy for sneaking off campus grounds while on probation. Although invited back the next year, he decided to drop out and took a job as a ditch digger. After his father agreed to further finance his education in the arts, Brando relocated to New York City to study at the Actors Studio. He became a student of Stella Adler, who taught a form of acting commonly called “the method,” otherwise known as the Stanislavski System. The acting style emphasized character motives and inundation. His first play was for a Long Island production in Sayville, New York. In 1944, Brando made his Broadway debut in I Remember Mama. In 1946, he starred as a wayward veteran in the Broadway play Truckline Café. Although the play was a financial failure, critics voted Brando “Broadway's Most Promising Actor.” He would star again on Broadway in the political drama A Flag is Born and a revival of Candida before getting his big break in what was to become his signature role.

A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE:

In 1947, Brando starred as brutish Stanley Kowalski in the Tennessee Williams' play A Streetcar Names Desire. Audiences and critics alike were floored by the raw animal magnetism and unwavering intensity Brando brought to the character. The role was immediately seen as groundbreaking, ushering in a new era of acting and a new era of star. Seemingly overnight, Brando became the toast of Broadway and it wasn't long before Hollywood starting calling. Although resisting the initial invites, Brando eventually gave in and went west to Hollywood. His first silver screen role came in the form of an anguished paraplegic veteran in Stanley Kramer's 1950 film The Men. To prepare for the role, Brando spent over a month at a Birmingham Army hospital. Although the film was only a moderate success at the box office, critics everywhere were praising Brando for his performance. In 1951, Brando re-teamed with A Streetcar named Desire director, Elia Kazan, to star in the Hollywood film adaptation opposite Vivien Leigh. Like the stage play, the film was a massive success both at the box office and in the papers. Critics everywhere were tasked with the responsibly of praising Brando's raw and seething performance, and audiences found their new sex symbol. The film would go on to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards, as well as acting awards for the film's co-stars Vivien Leigh, Karl Malden and Kim Hunter. Brando received his first Oscar nomination for the role, but did not win. His next film would have him portray Mexican Revolutionary Emiliano Zapata in 1952's Viva Zapatas, earning him a second Oscar nomination in the process. The next year Brando proved himself as a master of his craft, moving into the world of Shakespeare to play Marc Antony in Julius Caesar. The film was Brando's third consecutive Oscar Nomination and only his fourth film.

THE WILD ONE:

In 1954, Brando starred as Johnny Strabler, leader of The Black Rebels Motorcycle Club, in The Wild One. Riding into town with a black leather jacket and devil-may-care attitude, the film forever made Brando a symbol of angst, youth, and rebellion. That same year, Brando gave yet another groundbreaking performance as Terry Mallory in On the Waterfront. His take as the ex-boxer turned longshoreman is considered by many to be his definitive performance, and for that performance he was award his fourth Academy Award nomination and first win. For his next film, Brando would the infamous conqueror Napoleon in Desiree. A role for which he had very little interest, Brando gave no effort and the film was his first box office and critical failure. In 1955, he starred as opposite Frank Sinatra as Sky Masterson in the big screen adaption of Guys and Dolls. The film was to be his first and last musical. In 1956, he starred in The Teahouse of the August Moon. Later that year, he portrayed a United States Air Force officer in Sayonara, a film that sparked controversy due to its open discussion of interracial marriage. The film, however, was a hit, earning ten Academy Award nominations, including a fifth for Brando. For his next role, he would star opposite fellow Actors Studio student, Montgomery Clift in 1958's The Young Lions. His next film, 1960's The Fugitive Kid, was a huge financial disaster and the start of an incredibly turbulent decade for Brando.

THE SIXTIES:

In 1961, Brando made his directorial debut with One Eyed Jack, after two directors, Stanley Kubrick and Sam Peckinpah, quit the project. Although the film made a moderate amount of money at the box office, the film's budget skyrocketed under Brando, thus leaving the film finically in the red. In 1962, Brando starred in the disastrous remake of Mutiny on the Bounty. The film failed to make even half its 19 million dollar budget at the box office and Brando's excesses and ego were beginning to wear at this reputation. He forced the halting of production while waiting on script changes, would throw on-set tantrums, drank too much and distanced himself from cast and crew alike. Brando continued his descent from celluloid grace with roles many considered to be beneath his talent, such as The Ugly American and The Chase. In 1967, he starred in Reflections in a Golden Eye, playing a closeted army man in a sham marriage to his wife, Elizabeth Taylor. As the decade began to wither to end, so did Hollywood's relationship with Brando. Although still viewed as a great actor by the movie-going populace, his self-indulgent behavior and ego had rendered him an unnecessary risk within the walls of Hollywood. And after finishing the decade with films like Candy and Burn! (aka Queimada!), his prospects seemed as grim as ever.

THE SEVENTIES:

By the 1970's, some would believe Brando's career was over. However, the film that changed a generation of filmmakers would also be the film that revived Brando's faulting career. In 1972, Brando began the next phase of his career with Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather. In the film, Brando played “Don” Vito Corleone, the aging patriarch of a powerful mafia family. His performance was the best he had given in decades, winning him his second Academy Award. However, Brando continued to breed controversy when he boycotted the Oscar Ceremony and instead sent Indigenous American Rights activist Sacheen Littlefeather in his place to speak of his objections to the representation of Indigenous Americans in Hollywood. More controversy was stirred by his next film, 1973's Last Tango in Paris. The film, by Italian Director Bernardo Bertolucci, focused on the sexual liaisons of an older American widower and a young French woman. Although the film received high critical acclaim for its masterful depiction of erotica and the performance of its principle actors, the film received a X-rating, causing its ban in many areas around the world. It would take 3 years before Brando would appear on screen again, this time opposite Jack Nicholson in The Missouri Breaks.

LATER CAREER:

By this time, Brando began stating that he was acting for only money, taking whatever part came his way if the price was right. He received 3.7 million dollars for what became a glorified cameo as Jor-El in the highly commercial Superman. In 1979, he had a short but power appearance in Coppola's, Apocalypse Now, choosing to buck the script and create his own dialog on the spot. For his week of work, Brando received 1 million dollars. He appeared one more time on the silver screen in The Formula before going into self-imposed exile, gaining girth and wealth on his pacific island getaway. He would return to Hollywood on his own time, a decade later to co-star in the anti-Apartheid film, A Dry White Season. The film was of political interest to him and for this work he received an Academy Award nomination. In 1990, Brando's personal life suffered a great tragedy when his son, Christian, was found guilty of murdering his sister's partner. The trial came at great financial cost to Brando, who was then forced to return to acting with less favorable roles in films such as Christopher Columbus: The Discovery and Don Juan DeMarco. In 1996, Brando co-starred in The Island of Dr. Moreau. The film was poorly received and was perhaps the worst received performance of Brando's career. His next film, Johnny Depp's directorial debut, The Brave, was far better received.

LAST YEARS:

Brando's final film came was the 2001 ensemble heist flick, The Score. Three years later, on July 1, 2004, Brando passed away of respiratory failure from pulmonary fibrosis with congestive heart failure at the UCLA Medical Center. He was 80 years old.

(Source: article by Minoo Allen for Classic Movie Hub).

HONORS and AWARDS:

.

Marlon Brando was nominated for eight Academy Awards, winning two for Best Actor for On the Waterfront (as Terry Malloy) and The Godfather (as Don Vito Corleone) in 1954 and 1972 respectively.

Academy Awards

YearAwardFilm nameRoleResult
1951Best ActorA Streetcar Named Desire (1951)Stanley KowalskiNominated
1952Best ActorViva Zapata! (1952)Emiliano ZapataNominated
1953Best ActorJulius Caesar (1953)Marc AntonyNominated
1954Best ActorOn the Waterfront (1954)Terry MalloyWon
1957Best ActorSayonara (1957)Major Lloyd GruverNominated
1972Best ActorThe Godfather (1972)Don Vito CorleoneWon
1973Best ActorLast Tango in Paris (1972)PaulNominated
1989Best Supporting ActorA Dry White Season (1989)McKenzieNominated
.

He was honored with one star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the category of Motion Pictures. He appears on the cover of The Beatles' Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album.

BlogHub Articles:

makes his film debut with Teresa Wright in "The Men"

By Stephen Reginald on Feb 6, 2023 From Classic Movie Man

makes his film debut with Teresa Wright in "The Men" The Men (1950) is an American drama directed by Fred Zinnemann and starring —in his film debut—and Teresa Wright. The supporting cast includes Everett Sloane and Jack Webb. The film was produced by Stanl... Read full article


Sayonara (1957): and Miiko Taka

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Some years ago, I stopped in a used books sale next to a church with a friend who loves books (she works as a librarian now). As we were browsing around the books, she spotted a biography book on and immediately caught my attention as she knew I was a fan of him. As it was inexpensive ... Read full article


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By KC on Jan 20, 2020 From Classic Movies

Image Source I showed Lost Highway to Brando after I finished it but before it was released. We rented this theater and told the owner Brando was going to come to see this film, and the theater owner was pretty pumped. So we get this thing all set up and Brando comes into the theater by himself a... Read full article


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Image Source It grated on me that movie stars were elevated into icons; Hollywood was simply a place where people, including me, made money, like a mill town in New England or an oil field in Texas. - Source... Read full article


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Marlon Brando Quotes:

Capt. Hardenberg: [two Nazi officers, escaping on a motorcycle in the middle of the endless desert] Don't fall asleep, damn you. Talk! Talk to me!
Lt. Christian Diestl: [confused] Uh, I wish I was back in Austria! I wish I was back in the snow... in the winter... in the mountains...
Capt. Hardenberg: [impatient] Not like that! Talk about something else!
Lt. Christian Diestl: [amused] Can I talk about what I did with your wife the last time I was in Berlin?


Stanley Kowalski: I am not a Pollack. People from Poland are Poles. They are not Pollacks. But what I am is one hundred percent American. I'm born and raised in the greatest country on this earth and I'm proud of it. And don't you ever call me a Pollack.


Edie: Which side are you with?
Terry: Me? I'm with me, Terry.


read more quotes from Marlon Brando...



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Marlon Brando Facts
Both of his Oscar-winning roles have been referenced in the Oscar-winning roles of Robert De Niro. DeNiro played the younger version of his character, Vito Corleone, in The Godfather: Part II (1974). Brando's first Oscar was for On the Waterfront (1954), where his famous lines were "I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I could been somebody." DeNiro imitates this monologue in Raging Bull (1980), which won him his second Oscar.

Turned down the role of the Sundance Kid in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) after Paul Newman took over the production from Steve McQueen. McQueen, who was obsessed with Newman as his rival as a movie actor and superstar, had bought the script from William Goldman, originally called "The Sundance Kid and Butch Cassidy". McQueen was slated to play "The Sundance Kid". When he dropped out and Newman took over the production, the title was reversed and Brando was offered the role. He declined in order to film _Queimada! (1969) ("Burn") with Gillo Pontecorvo. Brando earlier had dropped out of Elia Kazan's The Arrangement (1969) shortly after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. Brando told Kazan he could not star in a run-of-the-mill movie after King's assassination. Instead, he opted for "Burn", which was a pro-revolutionary story about a rebellion of African slaves in the Caribbean.

According to Lawrence Grobel's "Conversations with Brando" (NY: Hyperion, 1991), Brando ultimately made $14 million from Superman (1978). The Salkinds, producers of the movie, tried to buy out his share of the profits for $6 million, but Brando refused and had to file a lawsuit to recover what was owed him.

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