Freddie
Prinze Jr.:
Tja eigenlijk
is er nie zo veel over te
vertellen...
gewoon kijken en genieten
:o)) Voorwat
dient hij anders??? Een
grapke
hoor... Hier volgt wa meer nieuws
over Freddie'ke
:o))
Biografie:
Freddie Prinze, Jr. was
born on March 8th, 1976 in
Albuquerque, New Mexico,
USA. He attended three
different schools during
his childhood, these were
Eldorado, Sandia and
La Cueva.
focus on an acting career
and immediately garnered
featured roles on several
episodic series. One of
these was "Family Mat
After graduating in 1994,
Freddie moved to LA toters"
in which Freddie had a
four-line part in the
episode "The Gun". He played a
punk kid who brought
a gun to school.
"That was my big break,
and I thought it was huge,"
says Freddie. He then
went on to appear in a few
after-school specials
including "Too Soon For Jeff",
and "Detention: Siege
At Johnson High" costarring
Rick Schroeder and Henry
Winkler.
Films:
Head Over Heels (2000)
Wing Commander (1999)
.... Christopher 'Maverick'
Blair
She's All That (1999) .... Zach Siler
Down to You (1999) .... Al Connelly
Vig (1998) (TV) .... Tony
I Still Know What You
Did Last Summer (1998) ....
Ray Bronson
Sparkler (1998) .... Brad
I Know What You Did Last
Summer (1997) .... Ray
Bronson
Detention: The Siege at
Johnson High (1997) (TV) ....
Aaron Sullivan
House of Yes, The (1997) .... Anthony
To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday (1996) .... Joey Bost
Foto's:
Robert
de Niro:
Ancien
in het vak acteren. Ik heb er
altijd
al bewondering voor gehad en
dat zal
altijd zo blijven. De Niro is één
van de
beste acteurs ooit... en ik hoop
dat jullie
hiermee akkoord zijn. :o))
Bibliografie:
"ARE you talkin'
to me? You talkin' to me?" Robert De Niro taunts himself in a mirror. He
is Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver. Travis Bickle is trying to become a tough
guy, a somebody. De Niro is trying to become somebody too: a crazy person,
Travis Bickle. De Niro has likely spent many hours in front of the mirror
trying to become someone else—and his time hasn't been wasted. He totally
inhabits each character he assumes, and, as a result, he is impenetrable
to the media and even his co-stars. An anecdote: Michael Moriarty, De Niro's
co-star in Bang the Drum Slowly, was watching a scene for Taxi Driver being
shot. A production assistant offered to take Moriarty over to see De Niro.
"Don't bother," Moriarty told him. "I don't know that guy at all. I knew
Bruce Pearson [De Niro's character in Bang]. I don't know Travis Bickle
or Bob De Niro." De Niro's intense immersion in his roles has won him a
reputation as the greatest actor of his generation.
Robert De Niro Jr. was
born to a family of artists. His mother, Virginia Admiral, was a painter,
and father Robert was a painter, sculptor, and poet. De Niro's childhood
was unique in its freedom, perhaps less so in its loneliness. He was known
around his Little Italy neighborhood in New York as "Bobby Milk" because
of his scrawniness and pallor. He was a shy child who preferred paperbacks
to playmates. He was able to overcome his timidity at age ten for his first
stage role—the cowardly lion in The Wizard of Oz. De Niro spent most of
his early teen years on the streets, where he whiled away his time with
a small-time gang. Acting called him back, and his first paycheck came
at sixteen with a touring performance in Chekhov's The Bear. From there,
De Niro embarked on a fifteen-year tour through dinner theatres and off-Broadway
stages. Like most successful actors of the era, he studied with Stella
Adler and Lee Strasberg, the chief proponents of Method acting. De Niro's
first screen effort, The Wedding Party, is notable only because of his
participation and that of director Brian De Palma. Shot in 1963, it was
not released until 1969, and it went unnoticed. His next two films were
also with De Palma: Greetings and Hi, Mom! were satires looking at sex,
the draft, and the counterculture. But it wasn't until 1973 that De Niro
really began turning heads in Hollywood. His portrayal of dying baseball
player Bruce Pearson in Bang the Drum Slowly won him the New York Film
Critcs award for Best Actor. The same year, De Niro appeared in Martin
Scorsese's Mean Streets, beginning a longtime collaboration that has spawned
a total of eight films, including Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, and GoodFellas.
In 1974, Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather, Part II turned De Niro into
a superstar. His role as the young Vito Corleone won him the Best Supporting
Actor Oscar—his portrayal of the young Godfather cemented his reputation
as the next Marlon Brando. He demonstrated his dedication to his craft
by gaining sixty pounds to play aging boxer Jake La Motta in Raging Bull,
for which he won the Best Actor Oscar.
De Niro has fiercely
protected his private life. At the beginning of his career, he gave interviews—then
he abruptly
decided that his personal
life had absolutely nothing to do with his film career. He married sometime
actress Diahnne Abbott in 1976 and had a son, Raphael. They separated after
several years; rumor was that they had an open marriage, but rumors are
aplenty around De Niro. Another involves child support over twins he had
with former girlfriend Toukie Smith (through a surrogate mother, no less).
Smith claims De Niro was merely a sperm donor, but . . . well, why bother?
De Niro's life is a favorite grist for gossip columnists because he's not
prone to correcting them or answering their calls. In 1997, the actor wed
his longtime girlfriend, former flight attendant Grace Hightower, in a
top-secret wedding ceremony. Some of De Niro's mid-'90s films put a series
of chinks in his iron method. Roles in films like We're No Angels and Mary
Shelley's Frankenstein made critics question his motivation, and a popular
theory promulgated was that De Niro was trying to raise funds for his Tribeca
Film Center, a company dedicated to promoting New York film production.
These critics needed no further proof after seeing The Fan, a terrible
piece of work in which De Niro seemed to be channeling bits of every cocksure
psycho he has played. Such failures have been overshadowed to some degree
by more recent successes: Heat and Casino (both 1995) confirmed that De
Niro can still climb into the skin of assorted unsavories better than anyone;
Sleepers and Marvin's Room (both 1996) illustrated his equal facility at
playing kinder, gentler characters; and Jackie Brown and Wag the Dog (both
1997) gave full reign to his quirkier side. Though his 1998 vehicles —
the off-target literary update Great Expectations and the turgid John Frankenheimer
thriller Ronin — proved unsatisfactory, De Niro got off to a good start
the 1999 year with the Harold Ramis mobster-meets-analyst comedy Analyze
This.
Films:
1965
Three Rooms in Manhattan
1968
Greetings
1969
Sam'S Song
aka The Swap
The Wedding Party
1970
Hi Mom!
aka Blue Manhattan
aka Confessions of a Peeping John
Bloody Mama
1971
Jennifer on My Mind
Born To Win
aka Addict
The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight
1973
Bang the Drum Slowly
Mean Streets
1974
The Godfather, Part II 4
1976
Taxi Driver 4
The Last Tycoon
Novocento
aka 1900 (U.S. title)
aka Nineteen Hundred
1977
New York, New York
1978
The Deer Hunter
1980
Raging Bull
1981
True Confessions
1983
The King of Comedy
1984
Once Upon a Time in America
Falling in Love
1985
Brazil 4
1986
The Mission
1987
Angel Heart
The Untouchables
1988
Midnight Run
1989
Jacknife
We're No Angels
1990
Stanley and Iris
GoodFellas
Awakenings
1991
Guilty by Suspicion
Backdraft
Cape Fear
1992
Mad Dog and Glory
Night and the City
Mistress
1993
This Boy's Life
A Bronx Tale
1994
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
1995
A Hundred and One Nights
aka A Hundred and One Nights of Simon Cinema
aka Les Cent et une Nuits
Casino 4
Heat
1996
The Fan
Sleepers
Marvin's Room
1997
Cop Land
Jackie Brown 4
Wag the Dog 4
1998
Great Expectations
1999
Analyze This
Flawless
2000
The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle
15 Minutes
Navy Diver