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Congratulations
on your Oscar for Best Actor!
Denzel
Washington
One
of Hollywood's hottest leading men, Denzel Washington
is an actor whose poise and sexy intelligence permeate
whatever film he is in, be it socially conscious drama,
comedy, or suspense thriller.
The
son of a Pentecostal minister and a hairdresser, Washington
was born in Mount Vernon, New York on December 28, 1954.
His parents' professions shaped Washington's early ambition
to go into show business: from his minister father he
learned the power of performance, while hours spent in
his mother's salon listening to stories gave him a love
of storytelling. Unfortunately, when Washington was fourteen,
his parents' marriage took a turn for the worse, and he
and his older sister were sent away to boarding school
so that they would not be exposed to their parents' eventual
divorce.
Washington
went on to college, attaining a B.A. in Journalism from
Fordham University in 1977. He still found time to pursue
his interest in acting, and after graduation he went to
San Francisco, where he won a scholarship to the American
Conservatory Theatre. Washington stayed with the ACT for
a year, and, after his time there, he began acting in
various television movies and made his film debut in the
1981 Carbon Copy. Although he had a starring role as the
illegitimate son of a rich white man, Washington didn't
find real recognition until he joined the cast of the
long-running TV series St. Elsewhere in 1982. He won critical
raves and audience adoration for his portrayal of Dr.
Phillip Chandler, and he began to attract Hollywood notice.
In 1987, he starred as anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko
in Richard Attenborough's Cry Freedom, and his powerful
performance earned him a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination.
Two
years later, Washington won that award for his turn as
an embittered yet courageous runaway slave in the Civil
War drama Glory. The honor effectively put him on the
Hollywood A-List, a place Washington managed to retain
even as he appeared in films of wildly varying quality
over the subsequent years. Some of his more notable work
came from his collaboration with director Spike Lee; over
the course of the 1990s, Washington starred in three of
his films, playing a jazz trumpeter in Mo' Better Blues
(1990), the title role in Lee's epic 1992 biopic Malcolm
X (for which he received a Best Actor Oscar nomination),
and the convict father of a high school basketball star
in He Got Game (1998).
Washington
also turned in powerful performances in a number of other
films, such as Mississippi Masala (1991), in which he
played a man in love with an Indian woman; Philadelphia
(1993), in which he portrayed a homophobic lawyer who
takes on the cause of an AIDS-stricken man (Tom Hanks);
and Devil in a Blue Dress (1994), which cast him as a
1940s private detective. Washington also proved himself
believable as an action star, with the success of such
thrillers as The Pelican Brief (1993), Crimson Tide (1995),
and The Siege (1998) attesting to his capabilities. In
1999, Washington starred in another thriller, The Bone
Collector, playing a paralyzed forensics expert who joins
forces with a young policewoman (Angelina Jolie) to track
down a serial killer. That same year, he starred in the
title role of Norman Jewison's The Hurricane. Based on
the true story of a boxer wrongly accused of murdering
three people in 1966, the film featured stellar work by
Washington as the wronged man, further demonstrating his
remarkable capacity for telling a good story. His performance
earned him a number of honors, including a Best Actor
Golden Globe and a Best Actor Oscar nomination.
After
giving another strong performance as a high school football
coach in Boaz Yakin's Remember the Titans, Washington
went against type to play a corrupt policeman in Training
Day, Antoine Fuqua's gritty cop drama. Washington surprised
both audiences and critics with his change of direction,
although more than a few noted this change of direction
made him a more compelling screen presence than ever.
After
giving another strong performance as a high school football
coach in Boaz Yakin's Remember the Titans, Washington
went against type to play a corrupt policeman in Training
Day, Antoine Fuqua's gritty cop drama. Washington surprised
both audiences and critics with his change of direction,
although more than a few noted this change of direction
made him a more compelling screen presence than ever in
addition to earning him an Oscar nod. -- Rebecca Flint
Source:
AllMusicGuide.com -->
Denzel-Washington.com
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