Master of Ceremonies: Alec Baldwin
Alec Baldwin is the eldest of his brothers, Daniel, William, and Stephen
Baldwin, all of whom are actors in film and television.
Born April 3, 1958 , Alec grew up in Massapequa, Long Island where
his father was a high school teacher for twenty-eight years and his
mother raised six children, including his sisters, Beth and Jane. Alec
attended George Washington University and planned to attend law school,
when he auditioned for the New York University Undergraduate Drama Program
on a dare. He was accepted, and in 1979 began what would become his
professional training. In 1980, he was cast in the daytime TV series
The Doctors on NBC and, subsequently, has worked in nearly
every venue as a professional actor ever since.
Whether in regional theater or Saturday Night Live, blockbuster movies
or Broadway, literary festivals or television mini-series, Alec has
always attempted to balance his love of communicating with an audience
with the demands of a motion picture career.
On Broadway, Baldwin recently appeared in The Roundabout Theatre Company's
2004 revival of Hecht and MacArthur's The Twentieth Century,
directed by Walter Bobbie, co-starring Anne Heche. He was nominated
for a Tony Award for his performance in the 1992 revival of Tennessee
Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire, was nominated for an Emmy
Award and a Golden Globe Award for the television movie of that same
production, won an Obie Award for the 1991 off-Broadway production of
Craig Lucas' Prelude to a Kiss and a Theatre World Award in
1986 for his turn in Joe Orton's Loot on Broadway. He has also
performed on Broadway in Caryl Churchill's Serious Money. Other
stage includes David Mamet's Life in the Theatre, (directed
by the late AJ Antoon), the Williamstown Theatre Festival and at the
Bay Street Theatre in Sag Harbor , New York , where he performed in
Ira Lewis's Gross Points.
Alec has starred in several films, including The Hunt for Red October,
Miami Blues, Prelude to a Kiss, Malice, The Shadow, Glengarry Glen Ross,
Heaven's Prisoners, Ghosts of Mississippi, The Edge, Pearl Harbor
and Cat in the Hat, among others. In 2004, Baldwin received
a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination for his role in Wayne
Kramer's The Cooler.
In 2004, Baldwin can be seen in The Last Shot which he stars
in with Mathew Broderick, Toni Collette, Calista Flockhart and Tony
Shaloub, written and directed by Jeff Nathanson. In December 2004, Baldwin
can be seen in Martin Scorsese's The Aviator starring Leonardo
DiCaprio.
His production company, El Dorado Pictures, has co-produced The
Confession (winner of the 2000 Writers Guild Award for best adapted
screenplay by David Black) for Cinemax Television, Nuremberg: Infamy
on Trial for Turner Network Television, State and Main,
a motion picture comedy written and directed by David Mamet and TNT
Productions Second Nature co-starring Powers Boothe.
Alec is an out-spoken supporter of various causes related to public
policy, including environmentalism, the government's support of the
arts, campaign finance reform, animal rights and gun control. He serves
on the board of directors of The Bay Street Theatre (Sag Harbor, Long
Island ), The New York University/Brennan Center for Justice Program
Advisory Board, People For The American Way and the Carol M. Baldwin
Breast Cancer Research Fund, dedicated in honor of his mother. He is
a vigorous supporter of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
(PETA), Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), and The
Performing Animal Welfare Society (PAWS). Alec is a dedicated supporter
of the East Hampton Daycare Center.
Baldwin is a graduate of New York University (BFA, Tisch School of
the Arts), 1994.
Alec has a daughter, Ireland Eliesse.