GENE HACKMAN (William B. Tensy) is one of film's most distinguished, honored and versatile actors. Most recently seen in The Replacements, Under Suspicion and Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven, Hackman is a two-time Academy Award® winner: as Best Actor for his classic portrayal of Popeye Doyle in The French Connection and Best Supporting Actor as the intransigent sheriff Little Bill in Eastwood's Unforgiven. He will next be seen in The Heist, Behind Enemy Lines and The Royal Tenenbaums.
Hackman's other recent films include starring roles opposite Will Smith in Enemy of the State, with Paul Newman and Susan Sarandon in Twilight, with Hugh Grant in Extreme Measures, and opposite Clint Eastwood in Absolute Power. He's also starred with Robin Williams and Nathan Lane in Mike Nichols' The Birdcage, opposite Sharon Stone in the western The Quick and the Dead, with Denzel Washington in Crimson Tide, Chris O'Donnell in The Chamber, and with John Travolta and Danny DeVito in Barry Sonnenfeld's Get Shorty, as well as appearing in two big-scale westerns, Walter Hill's Geronimo. An American Legend and Lawrence Kasdan's Wyatt Earp.
Hackman's teaming with Tom Cruise as a smooth-as-silk corporate lawyer in The Firm (his follow-up to Unforgiven) gave him two back-to-back $100 million winners at the U.S. box office. Even a brief list of Hackman's film recalls his virtuosity: Bonnie and Clyde, Scarecrow, The Conversation, Night Moves, Under Fire, All Night Long, Reds, No Way Out, Mississippi Burning, Class Action, Hoosiers, Another Woman, The Package, Postcards From the Edge, Uncommon Valor, Bat 21 and Narrow Margin, just to name a few.
Diversity has always been a Hackman hallmark, established early in his career by the contrast between two Oscar®-nominated performances: as Melvyn Douglas' tortured son in I Never Sang For My Father and the brutal Popeye Doyle in The French Connection. These were shortly followed by two of his most respected and most dangerously offbeat portrayals: the raucous and trigger-tempered panhandler in Scarecrow and the pathologically withdrawn eavesdropper in Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation.
Hackman was born in Riverside, California, and brought up in Danville, Illinois, where his father was a newspaper printer. Lying about his age. he joined the Marines at the age of 16 and became a radio operator, which led to the beginning of his show business career. He was stationed in Tsingtzu, China, when the unit's radio announcer was injured and Hackman volunteered to take his place. After his discharge from the service, Hackman moved from radio to television and worked at various small-town TV stations all over the United States. He eventually returned to the West Coast and enrolled at the Pasadena Playhouse, where he and another student, Dustin Hoffman, were considered the two least likely to succeed. It was at the Playhouse that Hackman made his stage debut with Zazu Pitts in "The Curious Mrs. Caraway."
After a period of summer stock, Hackman finally moved to New York. He studied with George Morrison and began getting small parts in television and stage productions. He then won the Clarence Derwent Award for his performance in Irwin Shaw's "Children at Their Games," even though the play only lasted one night. His first starring role on Broadway was with Sandy Dennis in the comedy hit "Any Wednesday," and he returned in the 1 990s with Glenn Close and Richard Dreyfliss in Mike Nichols' production of "Death and the Maiden."
He made his screen debut in Robert Rossen's 1964 film Lilith with Warren Beatty. Three years later when Beatty was casting Bonnie and Clyde he remembered Hackman's talent and offered him the role of Clyde Barrow's slow-witted brother, Buck, a performance that brought him his first Academy Award® nomination. Over a decade later he worked again with Beatty in Reds, another of Hackman's searing cameo performances.
In the meantime, Hackman appeared in Hawaii, The Gypsy Moths, Downhill Racer and Marooned before he won a second Oscar®-nomination for I Never Sang For My Father. 1971 brought his landmark performance in The French Connection (which he would repeat in the well regarded sequel French Connection II) which made him a superstar. Subsequent films confirmed his international reputation in quick succession, starting with the record- setting box office success The Poseidon Adventure. Hackman's comedic abilities have been well demonstrated with his cameo as the Blind Hermit in Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein, as Lex Luthor in Superman. Superman II and Superman IV: The Quest for Peace. and more recently in The Birdcage. Following his work on Heartbreakers Hackman immediately segued into two other productions. Heist and Behind Enemy Lines, the latter also produced by John Davis.
Hackman is an avid film collector and a dedicated painter who has also pursued interest in flying and racing automobiles in prestigious events like Sebring and Riverside. He has three children and currently maintains a home in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Even further diversifying his talents, Hackman's first novel, Wake of the Perdido Star (written with Daniel Lenihan), was published in November 1999 by Newmarket Press to critical acclaim and public success.