Basic Information About Robert Altman
Category | Celebrities βΊ Directors |
---|---|
Professions | Film Director, Film Producer, Screenwriter, Writer, Television Director, Television Producer, Actor, Film Editor |
Net worth | $60,000,000 |
Date of birth | 1925-02-20 |
Place of birth | Kansas City |
Date of death | 2006-11-20 (aged 81) |
Nationality | United States of America |
Curiosities and Trademarks | His movies often contain overlapping dialogue, where several characters speak at once. In his films, we often see and hear characters from outside a window, or from a distance. Frequently directs large ensemble pieces Social commentary themes Using zoom lenses. |
Spouse | Kathryn Reed - (1 AprilΒ 1959 - 20 NovemberΒ 2006)Β (his death)Β (2 children) Lotus Corelli - (21 NovemberΒ 1952 - 1959)Β (divorced)Β (2 children) 8 June - LaVonne Elmer (Β 1946 - 1951)Β (divorced)Β (1 child) |
Gender | Male |
Height | 6 ft (1.83 m) |
Social Media | βοΈ Wikipedia βοΈ IMDb |
Famous Network of Celebrities with Similar Net Worth
What Movie Awards did Robert Altman win?
Oscar |
Golden Globe |
Golder Raspberry |
BAFTA |
Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 49 |
Robert Altman awards
Award Name | State | Movie / Series Name | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Palme d'Or - | Winner | M*A*S*H | 1970 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | Nominee | M*A*S*H | 1971 |
NYFCC Award - Best Director | Nominee | M*A*S*H | 1970 |
Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film - | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Movies for Grownups Award - Best Director | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
AFI Award - Director of the Year | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Honorable Mention - Best Foreign Film | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Best Foreign Film Award - | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Bodil - Best American Film (Bedste amerikanske film) | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2003 |
CFCA Award - Best Director | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2002 |
CΓ©sar - Best European Union Film (Meilleur film de l'Union EuropΓ©enne) | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2003 |
Robert - Best American Film (Γ rets amerikanske film) | Winner | Gosford Park | 2003 |
Evening Standard British Film Award - Best Film | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Golden Globe - Best Director - Motion Picture | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Goya - Best European Film (Mejor PelΓcula Europea) | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2003 |
Silver Ribbon - Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Premio Guarani - Best Foreign Film | Winner | Gosford Park | 2003 |
WGA Award (Screen) - Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium | Nominee | McCabe & Mrs. Miller | 1972 |
Oscar - Best Director | Nominee | The Player | 1993 |
ACCA - Best Director | Nominee | The Player | 1992 |
Bodil - Best Non-European Film (Bedste ikke-europæiske film) | Winner | The Player | 1993 |
BSFC Award - Best Director | Winner | The Player | 1992 |
CΓ©sar - Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film Γ©tranger) | Nominee | The Player | 1993 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | Nominee | The Player | 1993 |
Silver Ribbon - Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) | Winner | The Player | 1993 |
ALFS Award - Director of the Year | Winner | The Player | 1993 |
SEFCA Award - Best Director | Winner | The Player | 1993 |
Bodil - Best Non-European Film (Bedste ikke-europæiske film) | Winner | Nashville | 1977 |
Golden India Catalina - Best Director (Mejor Director) | Winner | Nashville | 1976 |
CΓ©sar - Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film Γ©tranger) | Nominee | Nashville | 1976 |
David - Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) | Winner | Nashville | 1976 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | Nominee | Nashville | 1976 |
Golden Train Award - Outstanding Artistic Contribution | Winner | Nashville | 1975 |
Silver Ribbon - Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) | Nominee | Nashville | 1976 |
Oscar - Best Director | Nominee | Short Cuts | 1994 |
Bodil - Best American Film (Bedste amerikanske film) | Winner | Short Cuts | 1995 |
BSFC Award - Best Screenplay | Winner | Short Cuts | 1993 |
CΓ©sar - Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film Γ©tranger) | Nominee | Short Cuts | 1995 |
Silver Ribbon - Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) | Winner | Short Cuts | 1994 |
LAFCA Award - Best Director | Nominee | Short Cuts | 1993 |
Critics Award - Best Foreign Film (Melhor Filme Estrangeiro) | Winner | Short Cuts | 1995 |
Turia Award - Best Foreign Film | Winner | Short Cuts | 1995 |
FIPRESCI Prize - Competition | Winner | Short Cuts | 1993 |
Golden Seashell - Best Film | Nominee | The Long Goodbye | 1973 |
Palme d'Or - | Nominee | Aria | 1987 |
Stinker Award - What Were They Thinking and Why? | Winner | PrΓͺt-Γ -Porter | 1994 |
WGA Award (Screen) - Best Drama Written Directly for the Screen | Nominee | Images | 1973 |
Primetime Emmy - Outstanding Individual Achievement in Directing in a Variety or Music Program | Nominee | Great Performances | 1993 |
Grammy - Best Long Form Music Video | Nominee | Great Performances | 1999 |
Audience Award - Best Documentary | Winner | Great Performances | 1997 |
Robert Altman roles
Movie / Series | Role |
---|---|
M*A*S*H | Director |
Gosford Park | Director |
Gosford Park | Writer |
Popeye | Director |
Endless Love | Hotel Manager |
McCabe & Mrs. Miller | Director |
McCabe & Mrs. Miller | Writer |
The Player | Director |
Nashville | Director |
Short Cuts | Director |
Short Cuts | Writer |
The Long Goodbye | Director |
The Long Goodbye | Ambulance Driver (uncredited) |
California Split | Director |
3 Women | Director |
3 Women | Writer |
Aria | Director |
Aria | Writer |
PrΓͺt-Γ -Porter | Director |
PrΓͺt-Γ -Porter | Writer |
Images | Director |
Images | Writer |
Saturday Night Live | Director |
Surfside 6 | Director |
Route 66 | Director |
The Dick Cavett Show | Self - Guest 2 episodes, 1971-1972 |
Combat! | Director |
Combat! | Writer |
Late Night with Conan O'Brien | Self - Guest 1 episode, 1996 |
Robert Altman's Movie/Shows Salary
Movie / Series | Salary |
---|---|
M*A*S*HΒ (1970) | $75,000 |
Robert Altman's Quotes
- What is a cult? It just means not enough people to make a minority.
- I fiddle in the corner where they throw the coins. Where I can get my work done.
- I've about had it - the agencies, the winking, the networks, the ratings. Anyone who thinks TV is an art medium is crazy - it's an advertising medium.
- [interview in the London Times, 1/22/02] When I see an American flag flying, it's a joke.
- [about his relationship with mainstream Hollywood] We're not against each other. They sell shoes and I make gloves.
Interesting Facts about Robert Altman
- He came up with a scheme to "Identi-Code" pets. He would tattoo a number on the cat or dog. Somehow, he managed to tattoo President Harry S. Truman's dog.
- He designed a watch called "Time to Reflect" for Swatch in 1995 to commemorate the centenary of the birth of cinema.
- His son, Mike Altman, wrote the lyrics for "Suicide is Painless," the theme song for M*A*S*H (1970), when he was only 14 years old.
- Stepdaughter, Konni Corriere (with Reed), born 1946.
- Son, Robert Reed Altman, with Kathryn Reed, was born in 1960.
- Son, Matthew R. Altman was adopted at birth in 1966.
- Son, Stephen Altman, with Lotus Corelli, was born in 1957.
- Son, Mike Altman, with Lotus Corelli, was born in 1955.
- Daughter, Christine Altman, with LaVonne Elmer, was born in 1947.
- Was voted the 17th Greatest Director of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
- Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985". Pages 29-39. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
- Worked with (the late) Vic Morrow on the TV series Combat! (1962), with Vic's daughter, Jennifer Jason Leigh in several films including Short Cuts (1993), and with Vic's ex-wife (and Jennifer's mother) Barbara Turner on The Company (2003).
- Like the late Richard Hooker, author of the book "MASH" (on which his film M*A*S*H (1970) was based), Altman greatly disliked the TV series that followed and said that it didn't make the same anti-war point that his film made.
- Directed 6 different actresses in Oscar-nominated performances: Sally Kellerman, Julie Christie, Ronee Blakley, Lily Tomlin, Helen Mirren and Maggie Smith.
- Close friends with actress Julie Christie and Sally Kellerman.
- While working on McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971), he and Warren Beatty hated each other so much that Beatty later admitted that, had he produced the film himself, he would have killed Altman.
- He is a member of the NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) Advisory Board.
- In the recent past, the New York Film Critics Circle Awards (founded in 1935) were second in prestige only to the Academy Awards (and some actors and filmmakers such as double Oscar-winner Glenda Jackson considered it a superior honor) and were a major influence on subsequent Oscar nominations. The Golden Globe Awards, which were plagued by scandals related to its small, unrepresentative voting body and to self-dealing with subsequent awardees, had been forced off the air by the Federal Communications Commission and were regarded as something of a joke by more serious cinephiles. During the 1976 presidential election year, Robert Altman's masterpiece Nashville (1975) won Best Picture and Supporting Actress (Lily Tomlin), and Altman was named the top director by the NYFCC. All failed to repeat at the Academy Awards (though Keith Carradine won an Oscar for Best Song.) Altman -- discussing Nashville (1975)'s loss of the Best Picture Oscar to One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) earlier that year -- characterized the NYFCC Awards as the 'New York primary' leading up to the Oscar 'election'. Continuing with the metaphor in his August 1976 Interview with Bruce Williamson in "PLAYBOY Magazine" (Vol. 23, Iss. 8), Altman said that "Cuckoo's Nest" had had an inside advantage as it had won the 'California primary' (the Golden Globes). At the time, the Golden Globes, though a joke in terms of their integrity, were still a potent predictor of eventual Oscar success (and would come to be the second-most important bellwether of the Academy Awards by the 1980s and '90s).
- Made his London theatrical debut in early 2006 directing Arthur Miller's play "Resurrection Blues" at the Old Vic under the aegis of Kevin Spacey, the Artistic Director of the venerable London company. Altman chose an eclectic cast for the Miller play featured, including Maximilian Schell, James Fox (who replaced John Wood before previews), and American movie actors Matthew Modine and Jane Adams. The English critics panned "Resurrection Blues", partly due to the clash in acting styles of the disparate cast. Adams walked out after a matinΓ©e on April 5, 2006, and was replaced by her understudy for subsequent performances. No explanation was given for her departure from the production. The play was scheduled to close a week early in mid-April due to poor ticket sales. Altman claimed after the poor debut of the play that he was not very familiar with the script, and didn't really understand the play. Critics said that his confusion obviously affected the cast, many of whom seemed not to understand the play, and some of whom seemed to have trouble remembering lines. While not an outright debacle, the play is another relative failure characterizing Spacey's troubled tenure as Old Vic chief.
- Upon receiving an honorary Oscar at the 2006 Academy Awards, Altman revealed that he had been the recipient of a heart transplant approximately 10 years prior, and hadn't gone public out of fear that it would hinder his ability to get work.
References & Fact Checks β
- 1/ Filename: robert-altman-1976-9HJ4U9FE.jpg
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- Checked: β Yes (2023-07-02 03:08:44)
- Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Robert_Altman_-_1976.jpg
- Original Source:
ebay - Author: AP
- Date taken: 1976
- 2/ Filename: robert-altman-cannes-mSw8134Y.jpg
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- Checked: β Yes (2023-07-02 03:08:45)
- Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Robert_Altman_Cannes.jpg
- Original Source:
Own work - Author: Georges Biard
- Licence: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
- Date taken: 1992
- 3/ Filename: robert-altman-1983-29cvDK7R.jpg
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- Checked: β Yes (2023-07-02 03:08:46)
- Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Robert_Altman_-_1983.jpg
- Original Source:
ebay - Author: Associate Press Newsfeatures (see first upload of this image)
- Date taken: 1983
- 4/ Filename: robert-altman-handprint-y8Oc32sA.jpg
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- Checked: β Yes (2023-07-02 03:08:47)
- Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Robert_Altman_Handprint.jpg
- Original Source:
Own work - Author: Marco Bernardini
- Licence: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
- Date taken: 9 September 2009