Paul Newman AKA Paul Leonard Newman
Born: 26-Jan-1925 Birthplace: Shaker Heights, OH Died: 26-Sep-2008 Location of death: Westport, CT Cause of death: Cancer - Lung Remains: Cremated
Gender: Male Religion: Jewish [1] Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Actor, Philanthropist, Film Director Party Affiliation: Democratic Nationality: United States Executive summary: Salad dressing magnate Military service: US Navy Air Corps (1943-46) Paul Newman's father owned a sporting goods store, and young Newman was always interested in performing. He served in the South Pacific during WWII as a radioman for the U.S. Navy Air Corps, and took over the family business after his father's death. The business bored him, though, and Newman began taking local stage roles. He soon sold his interest in the family business to his brother, went to college and majored in drama. With his handsome looks and easy, everyman delivery, Newman was soon able to earn a living on stage.
Newman's first television role was on the long-running sitcom The Aldrich Family, a show that started on radio, then ran on CBS-TV for several years. Newman joined the cast in 1952, in a small, recurring role. When the series was canceled, he made his Broadway debut in the original cast of Picnic, with Eileen Heckart and Ruth McDevitt. He also starred in Broadway's Desperate Hours with Karl Malden, but when Hollywood made the play into a movie, Newman and Malden were replaced by Humphrey Bogart and Fredric March.
Newman made his motion picture debut in The Silver Chalice, opposite Virginia Mayo. The film flopped, but two years later, Newman made the most of his second chance, playing Rocky Graziano in Somebody Up There Likes Me to rave reviews. He starred in The Sting and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, both with Robert Redford, and was the rebel prisoner in Cool Hand Luke, the pool shark in The Hustler with Jackie Gleason and its sequel 25 years later, The Color of Money with Tom Cruise. He played "the man with the barbed-wire soul" in Hud with Melvyn Douglas and Patricia Neal, battled Elizabeth Taylor in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and mentored Tom Hanks in the ways of crime in Road to Perdition. He played an evil corporate schemer in The Hudsucker Proxy, a drunken lawyer in The Verdict, and a tough private investigator in Harper.
He pursued auto racing as an off-screen hobby beginning in the mid-1960s, and drove in Le Mans and at Daytona, and until his death he remained involved with Newman/Haas Racing, the racing team he founded in 1983 with Carl Haas. In 1982, he founded Newman's Own, a food company that donates all its profits to charity. Newman's Own has since become famous for its salsa, salad dressings, popcorn, and myriad other products, all with Newman's face on the label. The company's sales have generated more than $150,000,000 for worthy causes.
Newman was also the unknowing model for DC Comics' "Green Lantern" superhero. The comic book legend's creator, Gil Kane, envisioned Jordan as a dashing, handsome, high society playboy -- much like the characters Newman was playing in the movies -- and as a result, he drew his hero as if he were drawing Paul Newman. Especially in Green Lantern's earliest adventures, the resemblance is unmistakable.
Newman also directed and produced films, beginning with Rachel, Rachel in 1968, which was Oscar-nominated for Best Picture. He directed and starred in Sometimes A Great Notion, based on Ken Kesey's novel and co-starring Henry Fonda. He produced They Might Be Giants with George C. Scott, and directed an adaptation of Tennessee Williams' Glass Menagerie, starring his wife Joanne Woodward and John Malkovich. In 2007 he announced his retirement from acting.
[1] Newman self-identified as Jewish, "because it's more of a challenge", per Earl Blackwell (1991). His mother was Roman Catholic, his father Jewish.
Father: Arthur Simon Newman (German-Jewish, sporting goods store owner, b. 1894, d. 1950) Mother: Theresa Fetzer (Catholic, converted to Christian Scientist, b. 1896, d. 1982) Brother: Arthur Newman, Jr. (b. 1924) Wife: Jacqueline Witte (stage actress, m. 1949, div. 1958, one son, two daughters) Son: Scott Newman (actor, b. 23-Sep-1950, d. 20-Nov-1978, drug overdose) Daughter: Susan Kendall Newman (stage actress, b. 21-Feb-1953) Daughter: Stephanie Newman Wife: Joanne Woodward (m. 29-Jan-1958, three daughters) Daughter: Claire Newman Daughter: Elinor Teresa Newman ("Nell", b. 8-Apr-1959, runs Newman's Own Organics) Daughter: Melissa Newman (b. 17-Sep-1961)
High School: Shaker Heights High School, Cleveland, OH (1943) University: Kenyon College University: Ohio University, Athens (expelled) University: BA Economics, Kenyon College (1949) University: School of Drama, Yale University (attended postgraduate)
The Weinstein Company Advisor
Al Franken for Senate Center for Defense Information Board of Advisors Committee to Encourage Corporate Philanthropy Board of Directors Dean for America Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Friends of Hillary Hillary Clinton for President Hillary Rodham Clinton for US Senate Committee Institute for Policy Studies Jifunze Project Advisory Board
Nader 2000 National Leadership PAC Obama for America Oscar (honorary) 1986 Oscar for Best Actor 1987 for The Color of Money Golden Globe 1957 for Most Promising Newcomer, Male Golden Globe 1964 for World Film Favorite, Male Golden Globe 1966 for World Film Favorite, Male Golden Globe 1969 Best Director for Rachel, Rachel Four Freedoms Medal Kennedy Center Honor 1992 Hollywood Walk of Fame 7060 Hollywood Blvd. Expelled from School Nixon's Enemies List "Radic-lib causes. Heavy McCarthy involvement '68. Used effectively in nationwide T.V. commercials. '72 involvement certain." Ordained by the Universal Life Church Minister Jewish Ancestry Paternal
Risk Factors: Color Blindness, Lung Cancer
FILMOGRAPHY AS DIRECTOR The Glass Menagerie (19-Sep-1987) Harry and Son (2-Mar-1984) The Shadow Box (Sep-1980) The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (20-Dec-1972) Sometimes a Great Notion (19-Jan-1972) Rachel, Rachel (26-Aug-1968)
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR Cars 3 (10-Jun-2017) [VOICE] The Price of Sugar (11-Mar-2007) · Narrator Cars (14-Mar-2006) [VOICE] Roving Mars (27-Jan-2006) Empire Falls (28-May-2005) Tell Them Who You Are (11-Sep-2004) · Himself Road to Perdition (12-Jul-2002) · John Rooney Where the Money Is (14-Apr-2000) Message in a Bottle (12-Feb-1999) Twilight (6-Mar-1998) · Harry Ross Super Speedway (1997) · Himself [VOICE] Nobody's Fool (23-Dec-1994) · Sully Baseball (18-Sep-1994) · Himself The Hudsucker Proxy (11-Mar-1994) · Sidney J. Mussburger Mr. & Mrs. Bridge (23-Nov-1990) Blaze (13-Dec-1989) Fat Man and Little Boy (20-Oct-1989) · Gen. Leslie R. Groves The Color of Money (17-Oct-1986) · Eddie Harry and Son (2-Mar-1984) The Verdict (8-Dec-1982) · Frank Galvin Absence of Malice (19-Nov-1981) · Gallagher Fort Apache the Bronx (6-Feb-1981) The Day the World Ended (28-Mar-1980) Quintet (16-Feb-1979) · Essex Slap Shot (25-Feb-1977) · Reggie Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson (24-Jun-1976) Silent Movie (16-Jun-1976) · Himself The Drowning Pool (Jul-1975) The Towering Inferno (10-Dec-1974) · Doug Roberts The Sting (25-Dec-1973) · Henry Gondorff The Mackintosh Man (25-Jul-1973) The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (18-Dec-1972) Pocket Money (1-Feb-1972) Sometimes a Great Notion (19-Jan-1972) · Hank WUSA (19-Aug-1970) King: A Filmed Record... Montgomery to Memphis (24-Mar-1970) · Himself Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (23-Sep-1969) · Butch Cassidy Winning (22-May-1969) · Capua The Secret War of Harry Frigg (29-Feb-1968) Cool Hand Luke (1-Nov-1967) · Luke Hombre (21-Mar-1967) · John Russell Torn Curtain (14-Jul-1966) · Prof. Michael Armstrong Harper (23-Feb-1966) · Lew Harper Lady L (17-Dec-1965) · Armand Denis The Outrage (7-Oct-1964) · Juan Carrasco What a Way to Go! (12-May-1964) · Larry Flint The Prize (25-Dec-1963) · Andrew Craig A New Kind of Love (30-Oct-1963) Hud (28-May-1963) · Hud Bannon Adventures of a Young Man (18-Jul-1962) Sweet Bird of Youth (21-Mar-1962) · Chance Wayne Paris Blues (27-Sep-1961) · Ram Bowen The Hustler (25-Sep-1961) · Eddie Felson From the Terrace (15-Jul-1960) · Alfred Eaton Exodus (27-Mar-1960) · Ari Ben Canaan The Young Philadelphians (21-May-1959) · Anthony Judson Lawrence Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys! (23-Dec-1958) · Harry Bannerman Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (18-Sep-1958) · Brick Pollitt The Left Handed Gun (7-May-1958) · Billy the Kid The Long, Hot Summer (3-Apr-1958) Until They Sail (8-Oct-1957) · Capt. Jack Harding The Helen Morgan Story (2-Oct-1957) The Rack (2-Nov-1956) Somebody Up There Likes Me (3-Jul-1956) · Rocky Graziano The Silver Chalice (20-Dec-1954) · Basil
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