Famous Network of Actors with Similar Net Worth
What Movie Awards did John Hawkes win?
Oscar |
Golden Globe |
Golder Raspberry |
BAFTA |
Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 35 |
John Hawkes awards
Award Name | State | Movie / Series Name | Year |
---|---|---|---|
CIFCC Award - Best Ensemble Cast | Winner | Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri | 2017 |
Golden Carp Film Award - International - Best Ensemble Performance | Winner | Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri | 2018 |
PFCS Award - Best Ensemble Acting | Nominee | Contagion | 2011 |
Gotham Independent Film Award - Best Ensemble Performance | Nominee | Martha Marcy May Marlene | 2011 |
ICP Award - Best Supporting Performance | Winner | Winter's Bone | 2010 |
ICS Award - Best Supporting Actor | Nominee | Winter's Bone | 2011 |
INOCA - Best Supporting Actor | Nominee | Winter's Bone | 2011 |
SFFCC Award - Best Supporting Actor | Winner | Winter's Bone | 2010 |
Virtuoso Award - | Winner | Winter's Bone | 2011 |
SLFCA Award - Best Supporting Actor | Nominee | Winter's Bone | 2010 |
Actor - Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
EDA Special Mention Award - Best Depiction of Nudity, Sexuality, or Seduction | Winner | The Sessions | 2013 |
Critics Choice Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
COFCA Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
CFCA Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
Chlotrudis Award - Best Actor | Winner | The Sessions | 2013 |
DFWFCA Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
DFCS Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
DFCS Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
Independent Spirit Award - Best Male Lead | Winner | The Sessions | 2013 |
Dorian Award - Film Performance of the Year - Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
Gold Derby Award - Lead Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
Golden Globe - Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
Hollywood Breakthrough Award - Breakthrough Actor | Winner | The Sessions | 2012 |
HFCS Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
IFC Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
NFCS Award - Best Actor | Winner | The Sessions | 2012 |
NCFCA Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
OFCS Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
PFCS Award - Best Actor in a Leading Role | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
SDFCS Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
UFCA Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
VFCC Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2013 |
VVFP Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
WAFCA Award - Best Actor | Nominee | The Sessions | 2012 |
Actor - Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series | Nominee | Deadwood | 2007 |
John Hawkes roles
Movie / Series | Role |
---|---|
From Dusk Till Dawn | Pete Bottoms, Liquor Store Clerk |
Hard Ball | Ticky Tobin |
Police Academy | Driver of Teskey Truck (uncredited) |
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri | Charlie |
Rush Hour | Stucky |
Identity | Larry |
The Peanut Butter Falcon | Duncan |
Congo | Bob Driscoll |
Everest | Doug Hansen |
Contagion | Roger |
American Gangster | Freddie Spearman |
Martha Marcy May Marlene | Patrick |
Lincoln | Robert Latham |
The Perfect Storm | Mike 'Bugsy' Moran |
Miami Vice | Alonzo Stevens |
Winter's Bone | Teardrop |
Blue Streak | Eddie |
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer | Dave |
Life of Crime | Louis Gara |
Freaked | Cowboy |
The Sessions | Mark |
Johnny Be Good | Pizza Boy #1 |
S. Darko | Phil |
Wristcutters: A Love Story | Yan |
End of Sentence | Frank Fogle |
Eastbound & Down | Dustin Powers 16 episodes, 2009-2013 |
Lost | Lennon 3 episodes, 2010 |
Northern Exposure | Jason 1 episode, 1992 |
The X Files | Phillip Padgett 1 episode, 1999 |
Wings | Mark the Waiter 2 episodes, 1993-1994 |
The Practice | Stuart Donovan 3 episodes, 2000 |
Made in Hollywood | Self 3 episodes, 2011-2014 |
ER | P.A. 1 episode, 1997 |
Pacific Blue | Paul Brent 1 episode, 1997 |
Monk | Matthew Teeger 1 episode, 2008 |
Psych | Rollins 1 episode, 2009 |
The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. | Utah Johnny Montana's Assistant 1 episode, 1993 |
Promised Land | Jake 1 episode, 1996 |
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | Terry Wicker 1 episode, 2007 |
The Magnificent Seven | Morris 1 episode, 1999 |
24 | Greg Penticoff 2 episodes, 2001 |
Buffy the Vampire Slayer | George 1 episode, 1998 |
Nash Bridges | Vaughn 1 episode, 1997 |
The Crow: Stairway to Heaven | Jake Thompson 1 episode, 1998 |
Millennium | Mike Bardale 1 episode, 1996 |
Brimstone | Frederick Wilcot 'Willy' Graver 1 episode, 1998 |
The Big Easy | Wild Bill 1 episode, 1997 |
Rebel Highway | Crazy / ... 2 episodes, 1994 |
John Hawkes's Quotes
- [on being an actor]: You never really forget who you are. If you did, you'd need to seek some professional help.
- [2010, on filming Congo (1995)] The best part of the job, I think, was the other actors. A lot of people I admired a great deal and got to know and hang with. I didn't have much to do in the movie, and the main thing I had to do - which was die - we did it in Los Angeles, simulating the African jungle. Then we went to Costa Rica, which was why I took the job. We went to Costa Rica for nearly a month to do the rest of the movie. For myself and Taylor Nichols and Bruce Campbell, our function in Costa Rica for three months was to work about five days total, and that was mainly just shots of us hiking along with backpacks, heading into the jungle. We had a ton of time off there, so Bruce Campbell and I would rent cars, and his wife was there for a while, but when she went back to America, he and I toured around the country and went to pay phones every couple of days and called the production office and said, "Do you need us yet?" And they'd say, "No". And we would drive somewhere else and hang out. He was such a funny, funny man, Bruce. I've lost touch with him over the years, but we had a ball. That was a lot of fun. Tim Curry was in that cast, who was a hero of mine from his stage and screen work and the Rocky Horror stuff. And Ernie Hudson and Laura Linney. They were all really nice people. I was kind of intimidated, being on a big Hollywood movie like that and not having much to do, but those people were... It's one of those times where you realize that these are just normal people, and they're also really kind to their underlings, which I thought was pretty nice. So yeah, not much to do on the acting side of it, but more the experience of going to Costa Rica and hanging out. It's a lovely country.
- [2010, on making The Perfect Storm (2000)] That was a big deal for me, because that was a good part in a Hollywood blockbuster. And yeah, I died, but so did everyone. At least, I got to stay to the end. The actress, Rusty Schwimmer, and I met at an audition, and they put us in touch and said, "We want to screen-test you guys for the parts". So, she and I went and had a beer or two and worked on the scene without anyone knowing we were doing it. We went in the next day, and it was one of those rare occasions where two actors screen-test together and both get the part. She was terrific. Again, there were a lot of people on that movie who I really admire. Mark Wahlberg, I didn't know what to expect, although I'd seen him be good in The Basketball Diaries (1995). I'm not really a fan of those pop-music videos he was doing, but man, what a dedicated, sincere, just really quietly supportive person to those around him, and a really, really dedicated and hard worker. George Clooney was a practical joker who nailed us all several times. Very funny. And John C. Reilly, William Fichtner, who are wonderful actors. It was cool being invited into the club, just for starters. To start playing better roles. Not bigger movies-I wasn't so interested in that. Although that one made sure I didn't have to have a day job. I was in pretty good shape after that. But for a studio movie, it was an amazing set, a lot of work, and really great.
- [2010, on Deadwood (2004)] I think that was the best job I've ever had... It was just an unbelievably great job. I don't have anything but positive things to say about that cast and that whole experience. Great cast and great stories and great crew. The Perfect Storm (2000) was an impressive set - and I've worked on a lot of Hollywood movies with bloated budgets and big sets - but "Deadwood" was a set unto its own. It was several blocks of deer carcasses hanging and bleeding, and horseshit everywhere. People would come to the set to visit, and if they wanted to watch a scene, they had to walk through mud and urine. A lot of people made short visits. It was just fantastic. We shot, I think, 25 miles north of L.A. on the old Gene Autry Melody Ranch, and I never once drove onto that set without a smile on my face.
- [2010, on his small part in Lost (2004)] I never knew much about the show. When I got cast, I thought, "Well, I should watch it", but then I realized it was like 99 hours of television, and I didn't really have that kind of time, so I approached it more like a movie and just read the script and played the character. I still haven't even... I've seen just one of the episodes that I was in. And that was only because I was visiting my father in Texas, and we had a family thing, and I didn't really watch it. I was just coming in as a guest. It was a big machine, I'll put it that way. I was helping turn the cogs...It was a money gig, really. I'm sorry if you're a huge fan of the show, but I just don't really know it at all. I heard it was like Gilligan's Island (1964), and I really loved "Gilligan's Island", so I figured...No, no. But yeah, man, it's tough for an actor. It's not always autographs and sunglasses, as they say. A lot of times, you just don't get the jobs you want to get. You try for them, and you don't get them, or you don't have a chance to try for them. It was slow here in town, honestly, for a while. I look at my favorite actors, like Robert Duvall and Gene Hackman, and those guys didn't partway through their careers start guest-starring on TV shows, but sometimes you just have to suck it up and do it.
Interesting Facts about John Hawkes
- Graduate of Jefferson High School (Alexandria, Minnesota), 1977.
- Cites Robert Duvall as the actor he most admires.
- In an interview in Fade In magazine, Hawkes revealed that while hitch-hiking around America, he would play various characters when he was getting a ride.
- When Hawkes was cast as Sol Star, a Jewish merchant, on Deadwood (2004), he frankly told the show's creator, David Milch, upon their first meeting, that there was one catch: "I'm not Jewish". "David asked me, 'Have you ever felt shame or sadness or ostracized?' I said, 'Every day.' And David said, 'Then you're Jewish.'".
- Inducted into the Texas Film Hall of Fame on March 10, 2011 in Austin, TX.
- He has English, Irish, Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish ancestry.
- Does not have any formal Acting training and never attended Drama school.
- Got his first major starring role as Sol in Deadwood (2004) at 45 years old.
- Turned down the role of The Governor in the television series The Walking Dead (2010).
- Was previously in the bands Meat Joy and King Straggler, and is now working on a solo album.
- As of 2018, he has been in 3 films that were Oscar nominated for Best Picture: Winter's Bone (2010), Lincoln (2012), and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017).