DANIEL DAY-LEWIS
Birth Name: Daniel Michael Blake Day-Lewis
Date of Birth: April 29, 1957
English-born Daniel Day-Lewis was raised in London by an actress mother and
a father who was Poet Laureate of England. Educated at Sevenoaks School in
Kent, which he despised, Day-Lewis went on to study at the more progressive
Bedales in Petersfield, which he adored. At 13, he landed an uncredited role in the
film Sunday, Bloody Sunday (1971) as a child vandal.
Hooked by his first taste of acting, he went on to study the art at the
Bristol Old Vic, which he joined as an ensemble member and appeared in works
by Shakespeare, Farquer and Marlowe. There he learned to immerse himself
into his characters, which sometimes led to affecting physical changes to
make his performances more truthful. "I suppose I have a highly
developed capacity for self-delusion, so it's no problem for me to believe
I'm somebody else."
He enjoyed early success on the London stage, displaying strong performances
at both the Bristol Old Vic and with the Royal Shakespeare Company. He did
not appear on screen again until 1982 when he landed his first adult role in
Gandhi (1982). Alternating between theater and film, he toured as Romeo in a
production of Romeo and Juliet and then played a sailor who remains loyal to
Anthony Hopkins's Captain Bligh in The Bounty (1984). Day-Lewis startled
moviegoers as a homosexual tough boy in My Beautiful Laundrette (1985) in 1985,
quickly followed by playing an upper-class twit in A Room With A View,
displaying the enormous range in characters he could perform.
In 1989, Day-Lewis gave a stunning performance as quadruplegic Irish artist Christy Brown in the feature My Left Foot (1989), which garnered him an Oscar for Best Actor. He returned to theater to perform in Hamlet, only to return to the screen as a surprisingly muscular tomahawk-and-flintlock wielding Hawkeye in The Last of the
Mohicans (1992). Before the mid-'90s, he gave two more outstanding performances in the films The Age of Innocence (1993) and In the Name of the Father (1993), the latter which earned him a second Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. For his work in There Will Be Blood (2008), Day-Lewis picked up his first Golden Globe Award and his second Academy Award.
Following an affair with French actress Isabelle Adjani which lasted five years and produced a son, Day-Lewis married actress/daughter of playwright Arthur Miller, Rebecca Miller. They have two children together.
FILMOGRAPHY:
There Will Be Blood (2008)
The Ballad of Jack and Rose (2005)
Gangs Of New York (2002)
The Boxer (1997)
The Crucible (1996)
The Age of Innocence (1993)
In the Name of the Father (1993)
The Last of the Mohicans (1992)
Eversmile, New Jersey (1989)
My Left Foot (1989)
Stars and Bars (1988)
The Unbearable Lightness of Being (1988)
A Room with a View (1986)
Nanou (1986)
My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)
The Bounty (1984)
How Many Miles to Babylon? (1982)
Gandhi (1982)
Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971) (uncredited)