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Vincent D-onofrio - Biography
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Last Editor: tillam
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Vincent D-onofrio Biography -
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| Name : | Vincent D-onofrio |
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Birth Name :
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Vincent Phillip D'Onofrio
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Date of Birth :
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June 30, 1959
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Place of Birth :
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Brooklyn, New York, USA
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Height :
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6' 4''
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Education :
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American Stanislavski Theatre in New York, New York.
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Nationality :
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American
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Profession :
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Actor
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Sometimes Called :
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Vincent Philip D'Onofrio Vincent Phillip D'Onofrio
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Nickname :
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The Human Chameleon
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Vincent D-onofrio Trivia -
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- Played the character of "Bill Newman" in both JFK (1991) and Malcolm X (1992).
- Last name is pronounced Duh-noff-ree-o.
- He bleached his hair blonde for his part in Adventures in Babysitting (1987).
- Gained a world record 70 pounds for his role in Full Metal Jacket (1987).
- Vincent's sister, actress Elizabeth D'Onofrio, teaches acting in Asheville, North Carolina.
- Gained 45 pounds for his role in The Salton Sea (2002).
- One of the founders of the River Run Film Festival (Winston-Salem, North Carolina), along with his sister, Elizabeth D'Onofrio, and their father, Gene D'Onofrio.
- Daughter: Leila George D'Onofrio, born in March 1992. Her mother is actress Greta Scacchi.
- Son: Elias D'Onofrio, born in 2000. His mother is Carin van der Donk.
- Unhappy with his impression of Orson Welles, director Tim Burton had D'Onofrio's voice dubbed, in the film Ed Wood (1994). The near perfect Orson Welles impression was supplied by voice-over artist Maurice LaMarche.
- Renée Zellweger thanked him in her Oscar acceptance speech when she won 'Best Actress in a Supporting Role' for Cold Mountain (2003).
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Vincent D-onofrio Detailed Biography -
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Born in Brooklyn, NY, on June 30, 1959, Vincent D'onofrio was raised in the diverse locales of Hawaii, Colorado, and Miami's Hialeah section. Vincent D'onofrio's career as an actor began on the stage, with study under Sonia Moore of New York's American Stanislavski Theatre and Sharon Chatten at the Actors Studio. An actor whose hulking presence belies his ability to slip quietly into an astonishing variety of roles, Vincent D'Onofrio is one of Hollywood's most unpredictable and compelling performers. Vincent D'onofrio can boast a body of work that has allowed him to play a diverse range of characters, ranging from Full Metal Jacket's fatally unhinged army recruit to a wholly convincing Orson Welles in Ed Wood to a bisexual porn star in The Velocity of Gary. Vincent D'onofrio's early years in the theater were filled with an obligatory helping of obscurity and miniscule paychecks (so miniscule that he worked for a time as a bouncer to help pay the bills). Vincent D'onofrio's fortunes began to shift in 1984, when he joined the American Stanislavski Theatre as a performer. There, Vincent D'onofrio appeared in such well-regarded productions as Of Mice and Men and David Mamet's Sexual Perversity in Chicago, and also made his Broadway debut in Open Admissions.
Vincent D'onofrio debuted onscreen in the straight-to-oblivion 1983 comedy The First Turn-On!, but it was not until his haunting portrayal of Pvt. Pyle (a role for which the actor gained 70 pounds) four years later in Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket that he earned much-deserved notice for his work. Defying easy categorization, Vincent D'onofrio next appeared in the romantic comedy Mystic Pizza (1988), slimming down to his normal weight and giving a convincing portrayal as Lily Taylor's lovestruck boyfriend. Having thus given audiences a glimpse of his remarkable versatility, Vincent D'onofrio spent the next few years making his presence felt in such films as JFK (1991), in which he played assassination witness Bill Newman; The Player (1992), which cast him in the pivotal role of ill-fated screenwriter David Kahane; and Nancy Savoca's Household Saints (1993), which, through a particularly odd feat of casting, had him playing the father of Lily Taylor. Although Vincent D'onofrio worked at a prolific pace, it was not until he portrayed Conan the Barbarian author Robert E. Howard in the 1996 The Whole Wide World that he really had his screen breakthrough. A low-key romantic drama about the relationship between Howard and a schoolteacher (Renee Zellweger), the film allowed Vincent D'onofrio to take center stage, rather than lend support to better-known co-stars. Critics roundly applauded his performance, but although the actor kept working steadily, he was by no means a Hollywood fixture. Eschewing the limelight, he turned in particularly memorable performances in Feeling Minnesota (1996) as Cameron Diaz's cuckolded fiancé and in the 1997 blockbuster Men in Black, which cast him as the film's resident bad guy.
Vincent D'onofrio had a host of projects lined up in 2000, lending support to the thrillers Imposter and The Cell, and starring as Marisa Tomei's endearingly freakish boyfriend in Brad Anderson's Happy Accidents. Vincent D'onofrio also had one of his biggest roles to date in Steal This Movie!, in which he starred as legendary 1960s activist Abbie Hoffman.
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