Anthony Hopkins
Anthony Hopkins received an Academy Award® 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 Rich Attenborough’s
Shadowlands with Debra Winger, winning numerous critics awards
in the United States and Britain. In 1998, he was nominated as Best
Supporting Actor for his performance in Amistad.
In 2001, Hopkins starred in the sequel to Silence of the Lambs,
Hannibal, in which he starred with Julianne Moore. Directed
by Ridley Scott, the blockbuster film grossed over $100 million domestically.
He also recorded the narration for the 2000 holiday season’s hit
film Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas.
In 1998, he starred in Meet Joe Black, directed by Martin
Brest and Instinct, directed by Jon Turletaub, and in Titus,
Julie Taymor’s film adaptation of Shakespeare’s Titus
Andronicus with Jessica Lange.
In 1992 he appeared in Howard’s End and 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,
and Amistad, directed by Stephen Spielberg, was released in
December 1997.
Earlier films include 84 Charing Cross Road, The Elephant Man,
Magic, and A Bridge Too Far. The Bounty and Desperate
Hours were his first two collaborations with Dino De Laurentis
Company. In American television, 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 Margum near Port Talbot Wales, he is the
only child of Muriel and Richard Hopkins. His father was a banker. 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 the Royal Artillery
unit at Bulford.
In 1960, he was invited to audition for Sir Laurence Olivier, then
director of the National Theater at the Old Vic. 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 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 “Pravada,”
for which he received the British Theatre Association’s Best Actor
Award and The Observer Award for Outstanding achievement at the 1985
Laurence Oliver Awards. During this time at the National he starred
in Antony and Cleopatra and King Lear.
Hopkins also appeared in the feature adaptation of Stephen King’s
Hearts In Atlantis for director Scott Hicks, the action comedy
Bad Company, co-starring Chris Rock, and the box-office hit prequel
to Silence of the Lambs, Red Dragon, co-starring Ed
Norton, Ralph Fiennes and Emily Watkins.
Hopkins will next be seen in Miramax Films’ adaptation of the
Phillip Roth novel The Human Stain, opposite Nicole Kidman
and directed by Robert Benton.
Hopkins became a U.S. citizen in 2000.