Basic Information About Sydney Pollack
Category | Celebrities βΊ Directors |
---|---|
Professions | Film Producer, Film director, Actor, Television producer, Television Director, Voice Actor |
Net worth | $18,000,000 |
Date of birth | 1934-07-01 |
Place of birth | Lafayette |
Date of death | 2008-05-26 (aged 73) |
Nationality | United States of America |
Curiosities and Trademarks | Frequently casts Robert Redford |
Spouse | Claire Griswold - (22 SeptemberΒ 1958 - 26 MayΒ 2008)Β (his death)Β (3 children) |
Gender | Male |
Height | 5 ft 11 in (1.82 m) |
Social Media | βοΈ Wikipedia βοΈ IMDb |
Famous Network of Celebrities with Similar Net Worth
What Movie Awards did Sydney Pollack win?
Oscar |
Golden Globe |
Golder Raspberry |
BAFTA |
Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 24 |
Sydney Pollack awards
Award Name | State | Movie / Series Name | Year |
---|---|---|---|
LAFCA Award - Best Supporting Actor | Nominee | Death Becomes Her | 1992 |
PGA Award - Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures | Nominee | Cold Mountain | 2004 |
Oscar - Best Picture | Winner | Out of Africa | 1986 |
CΓ©sar - Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film Γ©tranger) | Nominee | Out of Africa | 1987 |
David - Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) | Winner | Out of Africa | 1986 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | Nominee | Out of Africa | 1986 |
Video Premiere Award - Best DVD Audio Commentary | Nominee | Out of Africa | 2001 |
Guild Film Award - Gold - Foreign Film (AuslΓ€ndischer Film) | Winner | Out of Africa | 1987 |
Silver Ribbon - Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) | Winner | Out of Africa | 1986 |
Yoga Award - Worst Remake | Winner | Sabrina | 1997 |
Bodil - Best Non-European Film (Bedste ikke-europæiske film) | Winner | Tootsie | 1983 |
CΓ©sar - Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film Γ©tranger) | Nominee | Tootsie | 1984 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | Nominee | Tootsie | 1983 |
Readers' Choice Award - Best Foreign Language Film | Winner | Tootsie | 1984 |
NYFCC Award - Best Director | Winner | Tootsie | 1982 |
Palme d'Or - | Nominee | Jeremiah Johnson | 1972 |
Bronze Wrangler - Theatrical Motion Picture | Winner | Jeremiah Johnson | 1972 |
PGA Award - Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures | Nominee | Michael Clayton | 2008 |
Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film - | Nominee | Sliding Doors | 1999 |
Special David - | Winner | Three Days of the Condor | 1976 |
DGA Award - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | Nominee | They Shoot Horses, Don't They? | 1970 |
Silver Ribbon - Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) | Nominee | They Shoot Horses, Don't They? | 1971 |
Golden Charybdis - | Winner | They Shoot Horses, Don't They? | 1970 |
Audience Award - City of Donostia Audience Award | Nominee | Amazing Grace | 2019 |
Christopher Award - Film | Winner | Iris | 2002 |
Sydney Pollack roles
Movie / Series | Role |
---|---|
Death Becomes Her | E.R. Doctor (uncredited) |
Eyes Wide Shut | Victor Ziegler |
Out of Africa | Director |
The Firm | Director |
Sabrina | Director |
Tootsie | Director |
Tootsie | George Fields |
The Way We Were | Director |
The Player | Dick Mellen |
Made of Honor | Thomas Sr. |
Jeremiah Johnson | Director |
Michael Clayton | Marty Bach |
Three Days of the Condor | Director |
The Majestic | Studio Executive (voice) |
The Interpreter | Director |
The Interpreter | Jay Pettigrew (uncredited) |
The Swimmer | Director |
Changing Lanes | Stephen Delano |
They Shoot Horses, Don't They? | Director |
The Electric Horseman | Director |
The Electric Horseman | Man Who Makes Pass at Alice (uncredited) |
A Civil Action | Al Eustis |
Husbands and Wives | Jack |
Will & Grace | George Truman 5 episodes, 2000-2006 |
The Sopranos | Warren Feldman 1 episode, 2007 |
Arrest and Trial | Director |
Just Shoot Me! | Sydney Pollack 1 episode, 2000 |
The Fugitive | Director |
Frasier | Holden Thorpe 1 episode, 1994 |
Entourage | Sydney Pollack 1 episode, 2007 |
Dr. Kildare | Director |
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour | Director |
King of the Hill | Grant Trimble 1 episode, 2000 |
Mad About You | Dr. Sydney Warren 1 episode, 1998 |
Ben Casey | Director |
Ben Casey | 1 episode, 1962 |
Sydney Pollack's Quotes
- [on his favorite area of the filmmaking process] Editing, because I'm alone and there isn't the necessity of having to organize so many people. Editing feels almost like sculpting or a form of continuing the writing process.
- I don't value a film I've enjoyed making. If it's good, it's damned hard work.
- [on working with Al Pacino on Bobby Deerfield (1977)] He's always asking questions. He's very hard on a director. In a nightclub scene he wanted to know, "Is this the first or second time we've been here?" He wants to know what day of the week it is for a scene. He wants to know the entire background to the relationship with the character played by Anny Duperey: "Did I pick her up? Did she pick me up?"
- [on Paul Newman] There's stillness in his acting now that is quite magnetic. You can feel his intelligence, you can see him thinking. He has the depth of a clear pool of water.
- [on Meryl Streep] The danger I'm talking about here is that she tends to sound boring because she's so perfect.
Interesting Facts about Sydney Pollack
- He brought a lawsuit against Danish TV after screening Three Days of the Condor (1975) in pan-and-scan in 1991. (April 1997) The court ruled that the pan scanning conducted by Danish television was a 'mutilation' of the film Three Days of the Condor (1975) and a violation of Pollacks 'Droit Moral', his legal right as an artist to maintain his reputation by protecting the integrity of his work. Nonetheless, the court ruled in favor of the defendant on a technicality. [January 1997]
- Brother of Bernie Pollack
- Winner of year 2000 John Huston Award, presented by Tom Cruise on behalf of Directors Guild of America, as a "defender of artists' rights...a warrior."
- Among the 100 best American love movies ranked by American Film Institute in June, 2002, Pollack is the only director credited with two films near the top of list. His The Way We Were (1973) is ranked #6 and Out of Africa (1985) is ranked #13.
- Three children: a son, Steven Pollack, born in 1959 (died 1993); daughter, Rebecca Pollack, born in 1964; daughter, Rachel Pollack, born in 1969.
- Pollack's son Steven was one of three occupants of a light plane killed when the aircraft crashed into the carport of an apartment building in Santa Monica, California, on November 26, 1993.
- Pollack's daughter, Rebecca Pollack, served as vice president of film production at United Artists during the late 1990s.
- He directed 12 different actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Jane Fonda, Gig Young, Susannah York, Barbra Streisand, Paul Newman, Melinda Dillon, Jessica Lange, Dustin Hoffman, Teri Garr , Meryl Streep, Klaus Maria Brandauer and Holly Hunter. Young and Lange won Oscars for their performances in one of Pollacks movies.
- President of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 1986
- Member of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 1973
- Lifelong friends with Robert Redford, both men having made their feature film acting debuts in War Hunt (1962).
- Was the original choice to direct Dirty Harry (1971).
- Was first choice to direct The Saint (1997).
- Owns and flies a Cessna Citation 750 jet, N138SP.
- Battled cancer for almost nine months at the time of his death.
- In 2000, co-founder, with Anthony Minghella, of "Mirage Enterprises" to produce films.
- Kate Winslet dedicated her first Oscar win to Sydney Pollack and his partner in Mirage Enterprises, Anthony Minghella, following their deaths.
- Pollack directed (and won an Oscar for) Out of Africa (1985), which is based on a book by Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen) which starts, "I had a farm in Africa, at the foot of the Ngong Hills". He also executive produced The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency (2008), which is based on a series of books by Alexander McCall Smith, the first of which starts, "Mma Ramotswe had a detective agency in Africa, at the foot of the Kgale Hill". Smith's opening line is a deliberate literary reference to the opening line of Isak Dinesen's classic memoir about Kenya.
- Filmed Aretha Franklin's acclaimed gospel album "Amazing Grace" live in 1972.
- He supervised the English-language version of Visconti's "The Leopard", in which Burt Lancaster and the British actor Leslie French dubbed themselves. Many well-known American actors, including Howard Da Silva, Everett Sloane and Thomas Gomez dubbed various European actors.