Karl Malden Net Worth
Karl Malden Net Worth is
$7 Million
Karl Malden Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018
Karl Malden (born Mladen George Sekulovich; March 22, 1912 – July 1, 2009) was an American actor. In a career that spanned more than seven decades, he performed in such classic films as A Streetcar Named Desire, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor; On the Waterfront; and One-Eyed Jacks. Among other notable film roles were Archie Lee Meighan in Baby Doll, Zebulon Prescott in How the West Was Won, and General Omar Bradley in Patton. His best-known role, though, was on television as Lt. Mike Stone on the 1970s crime drama, The Streets of San Francisco. During the 1970s and 1980s, he was also the spokesman for American Express. Full Name | Karl Malden |
Date Of Birth | March 22, 1912, Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Died | July 1, 2009, Brentwood, Los Angeles, California, United States |
Place Of Birth | Chicago, Illinois, USA |
Height | 6' 1½" (1.87 m) |
Profession | Actor, Soundtrack, Director |
Education | Wirt-Emerson Visual and Performing Arts High Ability Academy, DePaul University |
Spouse | Mona Greenberg (m. 1938–2009) |
Children | Carla Malden, Mila Malden |
Parents | Petar Sekulovich, Minnie Sebera |
Awards | Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie, Satellite Mary Pickford Award |
Nominations | Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture – Drama, Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actor, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Tele... |
Movies | A Streetcar Named Desire, On the Waterfront, Patton, Baby Doll, One-Eyed Jacks, The Cincinnati Kid, How the West Was Won, Birdman of Alcatraz, I Confess, Cheyenne Autumn, Fear Strikes Out, Nevada Smith, Dead Ringer, Pollyanna, The Cat o' Nine Tails, The Gunfighter, Billion Dollar Brain, The Hanging ... |
TV Shows | Skag, The Streets of San Francisco, Fatal Vision |
Star Sign | Aries |
# | Trademark |
---|---|
1 | His strong, Czech, commanding voice. |
2 | His expansive manner. |
3 | Bulbous, mis-shapen nose - he broke it twice playing sports as a teenager |
Title | Salary |
---|---|
Pilot (1980) | $75,000 per 1 hour episode |
# | Quote |
---|---|
1 | (On Anthony Perkins in Fear Strikes Out (1957)) He couldn't throw a ball. They had to hire a real pro, Tommy Holmes, to go out there and teach him how to throw, and he still couldn't do it. He was afraid of what he had to do, run and physically climb that fence. So he just had to let himself go and what happened, happened. It rubbed him out. Though he didn't know the first thing about the game and had to be taught how to throw a ball from the outfield, "he ended up turning in a stunning performance. |
2 | [Who said in 1962 about studying a script carefully long before he stepped in the role]: I not only figure out my own interpretation of the role, but try to guess other approaches that the director might like. I prepare them, too. That way, I can switch in the middle of a scene with no sweat. There's no such thing as an easy job, not if you do it right. |
3 | [on his friends's and his own experience working in the steel mills]: He said, 'You're a fool. You realized there are people here, who aren't working, and having worked in 3 in 4 to 5 years, and you got a job, you're the one of the lucky ones, you got a job, and now you're going to leave.' From where he came, he felt this is the greatest thing that could've ever happened to him. This country gave him his job, he could feed his family, he had a home, and that's about all he could expect. And maybe I thought, I should've expect. |
4 | [Who said why he quit his steel job in 1934 to attend acting in college]: Because I wasn't getting anywhere in the mills. When I told my father, he said, 'Are you crazy? You want to give up a good job in the middle of the Depression?' Thank God for my mother. She said to give it a try. |
5 | It was a fun time when you were with them, it was just nothing but craziness. And Zera be working in Cafe Society, and finished around 1:30-2:00 A.M., the last show, and never failed. They would come to our apartment, which is on 6th Avenue, 4 flights up, waked us up and said to Mona, 'Alright, scramble some eggs, toast, make us some coffee, and at 2:00-3:00 A.M., we will be having some toast, coffee and scrambled eggs. |
6 | [Who was tall enough to play basketball]: While I was waiting for you to arrive, I was sitting here thinking about that 1930-31 basketball season of my senior year. We were playing Hammond High School, and we were just down by one point as the final seconds of the game were ticking away. I shot the winning basket. I'll never forget what it felt like at that moment. |
7 | I never believed that politics had a place in art, that is to say, not in artistic relationships. |
8 | [on his friendship with Elia Kazan that led him to the feud of Mostel]: Zera couldn't stand seeing a guy, like Kazan, do what he did, and therefore, he even took it out on me and Mona. For a couple of years, this is what happened in New York, at that time, it split people who became close. |
9 | [on actors who have moved on to their own film careers, with the exception of himself]: And then they talk to you about frustration. The first play I was in, Golden Boy, from that play, John Garfield, went to Hollywood, became a big star. Three years went by, and I did another play with another handsome actor, Gregory Peck, who left that play and went to Hollywood, became a big star, and here I am, plowing away, working away, this is years going by. |
10 | [on being a professional actor, who knew what it was like when he worked with his bare hands]: If you look in those mills, and you do it long enough, you never forget that, that's there to stay because you feel you've being used for, not for what you have here, but what you have in your body, in your muscle. It's demeaning in a way because you're a human being. |
11 | During that McCarthy period, I was a frightened young man. I was working, but I was frightened. |
12 | [When he traveled to Chicago and needed to ask if Goodman School had acting classes]: They asked me how much money I had, and I told them I had saved my every dime from working in the mills, which was about $300. Well, they told me the school tuition for a year was $900. But the man in charge of the school made me an offer I'll never forget it. He asked me if I was a gambler. He said if I paid the $300, he would take me on and if I worked hard and proved I had talent, somehow he'd find the rest of the tuition money for me. |
13 | Working in the mills was hard work, but it was good money, I started out as a laborer making $3.49 a day and later, got moved to an even harder position as a bricklayer that had better pay for $5 a day. And for three long and hard years I wondered to myself if this was where I was going to end up for the rest of my life. Finally, I decided I couldn't stay. |
14 | [In 2007]: I don't go to the movies. There's nothing I want to see. My wife will go out with friends to see a movie now and then, but there's nothing I want to see. |
15 | I never thought I was salable. I learned in my second year of drama school that I was not a leading man -- I was a character actor. So I thought, I'd better be the best character actor around. |
16 | I have an open-hearth face. |
17 | I am thrilled to be honored by the Screen Actors Guild because I've been with it for such a long time. The Screen Actors Guild is sort of a highfalutin name for a union, and this union was always wonderful to work for. For the rank-and-file of the union to honor me is the best compliment I can receive. |
18 | People have told me that I came to this industry at its Golden Age. But when I was there, it was just an age. |
19 | I'm a workaholic. I love every movie I've been in, even the bad ones, every TV series, every play, because I love to work. It's what keeps me going. |
20 | [on his early days] "My father was a milkman. So, I delivered milk." |
# | Fact |
---|---|
1 | Appeared in four films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), On the Waterfront (1954), How the West Was Won (1962) and Patton (1970). Of those, On the Waterfront (1954) and Patton (1970) are winners in the category. |
2 | Release of his autobiography, "When Do I Start?: A Memoir" by Karl with Carla Malden. [1997] |
3 | Is one of 8 actors who have received an Oscar nomination for their performance as a priest. The others, in chronological order, are: Spencer Tracy for San Francisco (1936) and Boys Town (1938); Charles Bickford for The Song of Bernadette (1943); Bing Crosby for Going My Way (1944) and The Bells of St. Mary's (1945); Barry Fitzgerald for Going My Way (1944); Gregory Peck for The Keys of the Kingdom (1944); Jason Miller for The Exorcist (1973); and Philip Seymour Hoffman for Doubt (2008). Tracy, Crosby and Fitzgerald all won Oscars for their performances. |
4 | Acting mentor and friend of Michael Douglas. |
5 | Met Harry Morgan in the play of 'Golden Boy.' They would later be friends for over 70 years until Malden's death in 2009. |
6 | Father-in-law of Laurence Starkman. |
7 | Remained good friends with Michael Douglas, during and after The Streets of San Francisco (1972). |
8 | After a young Dick York who was coming into the hallway, out of the men's washroom, Malden was looking for him to play the role in Tea and Sympathy. He thought York was right for the role, which eventually paid off. |
9 | Best remembered on TV for his starring role as Lt. Mike Stone on The Streets of San Francisco (1972). |
10 | Was also good friends with the late Telly Savalas. |
11 | His wife graduated from Roosevelt High School in Emporia, Kansas, where she attended Kansas State Teachers College (now Emporia St. University). He and Mona visited the campus in 1959, and was impressed by the ESU Summer Theatre. He returned in the summer of 1964, to teach, working with the actors in the company. Prior to leaving, he gave his honorarium to established the Karl Malden Scholarship, which is still given today. |
12 | After his father's death, six years later, he traveled to his father's real-life hometown of Yugoslavia, there, he helped produce the film Twilight Time (1982), a private movie. |
13 | Graduated from Chicago Art Institute in 1937, and came back to Gary, Indiana, without work or money. |
14 | Before he was a successful actor, he worked in the steel mills. |
15 | Served as a noncommissioned officer in the 8th Air Force. |
16 | His father, Petar Sekulovich, worked in the steel mills and as a milkman, his mother, Minnie Sekulovich, was a seamstress. |
17 | Started acting when he was only 15. |
18 | The eldest of three sons born to Serbian immigrants Petar and Minnie Sekulovich, he was raised in the Serbian community of Gary, Indiana, where his father worked as a milkman. |
19 | In high school he played basketball and was president of his class. He broke his nose twice playing sports as a teenager. |
20 | Was offered a scholarship to attend Chicago's Goodman Theater, where he met his future wife, Mona Malden (nee Mona Greenberg), a fellow scholarship student. They wed in 1938 and remained married for over 70 years until Karl's death in 2009. |
21 | At the urging of Elia Kazan, he change his name from Mladen Sekulovich to Karl Malden, taking his maternal grandfather's given name for his first name, and switching a couple of letters of his own first name for his last name. Malden remained a strong friend of Kazan's after the famed director was chastised by the Hollywood community for naming names before the House of Un-American Activities Committee in 1952. He strongly supported Kazan's controversial "lifetime achievement" Oscar honor, claiming that politics should have no place when it comes to awarding artistic merit. |
22 | A pitchman for American Express commercials for decades, his slogan ("Don't leave home without them") became a national catchphrase. |
23 | Was a spokesperson for American Express Traveler's Checks, from 1968 to 1989. |
24 | Graduated from Emerson High School in Gary, Indiana, in 1931, with high grades. |
25 | The most controversial film he starred in was Baby Doll (1956), which he played a dullard husband whose child bride is exploited by a businessman. The film was condemned by the Catholic Legion of Decency for what was termed its "carnal suggestiveness." It was written by Tennessee Williams. |
26 | Long before Michael Douglas, worked with him, Malden's friendship with Douglas' father began in 1940, when a 23-year-old unfamiliar actor, Kirk Douglas, attended New York Summer Stock with him, prior to Kirk's summer vacation from college. This association led Kirk's son to having a co-starring role opposite Kirk's classmate in The Streets of San Francisco (1972), at the time Michael's father said to him that he was about to learn a lot from his father's classmate. |
27 | He had not saved enough money to pay for one semester of schooling at the Goodman Theatre, the dramatic arm of the Chicago Art Institute, despite his working in the steel mills for a few years. He made a deal with the director of the program, hence, he gambled what little money he had agreeing that if he impressed the staff during his first semester, he would be given a full scholarship. |
28 | While working at an acting workshop in New York, he brought Eva Marie Saint, whom he knew. |
29 | He quit working in the steel mills at 22 to study acting at the Goodman Theatre because he wasn't getting anywhere in the mills. |
30 | He always practised meticulous preparation, studying a script carefully long before he stepped into the role. |
31 | On December 12, 2008, just six days before his 70th wedding anniversary, Malden was inducted into the Wall of Legends, at St. Sava Church in San Gabriel, California, where Milan Opacich paid tribute to a wonderful man who was a great benefactor of a Serbian Ortodox church. |
32 | His family moved to Gary, Indiana, when he was 5. |
33 | As a teenager, he joined the Karageorge Choir. |
34 | His father, Petar Sekulovich, produced Serbian plays at his church. |
35 | After he graduated from high school at the top of his class, he briefly left Gary, Indiana, to move to Arkansas, where he'd hoped to get a college athletics scholarship. The college turned him down due to his refusal to play football, other than basketball, hence, he returned to his hometown of Gary, Indiana. |
36 | On November 11, 2004, his ex-The Streets of San Francisco (1972), co-star, Michael Douglas, presented him with the Monte Cristo Award of the Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center in Waterford, Connecticut, for the Lifetime Achievement Award. Among the recipients besides Malden were Jason Robards, Zoe Caldwell, Edward Albee, August Wilson and Brian Dennehy. |
37 | On November 12, 2005, the Los Angeles Barrington Station renamed the building, after him, in Los Angeles, California, in honor of his proud achievements. This was followed by a passage of a bill founded by U.S. Congressman, Henry Waxman. |
38 | Was best friends with: Norman Lloyd, Harry Morgan, Lee J. Cobb, Angela Lansbury, Telly Savalas, Jane Wyman, Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Robert Wagner, Shelley Winters, Eva Marie Saint, Marlon Brando, Elia Kazan, Vivien Leigh, Eli Wallach, Kirk Douglas, Natalie Wood, Montgomery Clift, Arthur Kennedy, Richard Widmark and Carroll Baker. |
39 | In 2001, he received an honorary degree, Doctor of Humane Letters, from Valparaiso University. |
40 | Of Serbian and Czechoslovakian descent. |
41 | Raised in the same city as Michael Jackson. |
42 | Received both of his Oscar-nominations for movies also starring Marlon Brando. |
43 | Has two daughters, Mila Malden and Carla Malden. Carla co-authored his autobiography "When Do I Start". |
44 | Member of the jury at the Berlin International Film Festival in 1963 |
45 | President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences from 1989 to 1992 |
46 | Was a close friend of The Magnificent Seven (1960) star Brad Dexter. who was also of Serbian descent. |
47 | The Maldens married in 1938 and stayed married until his death in 2009, making theirs the third longest marriage in Hollywood history surpassing the 69 years of Bob Hope and Dolores Hope (1934 until his death in 2003) and just behind Art Linkletter and Lois Foerster (married 1935-2010) with 74 years, and Norman Lloyd and Peggy Lloyd, who hold the record with 75 years. |
48 | In 1971, he accepted the Oscar for "Best Director" on behalf of Franklin J. Schaffner, who wasn't present at the awards ceremony |
49 | Born Mladen Sekulovich, he always regretted that in order to become an actor, he had to change his name. Since he was proud of his heritage, when he starred in a movie or on TV, he insisted that a character carry his family name: In On the Waterfront (1954), Fred Gwynne's character was named "Sekulovich". |
Actor
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
Fear Strikes Out | 1957 | John Piersall | |
Baby Doll | 1956 | Archie Lee Meighan | |
On the Waterfront | 1954 | Father Barry | |
Phantom of the Rue Morgue | 1954 | Dr. Marais | |
Take the High Ground! | 1953 | Sgt. Laverne Holt | |
I Confess | 1953 | Inspector Larrue | |
Ruby Gentry | 1952 | Jim Gentry | |
Operation Secret | 1952 | Maj. Latrec | |
Diplomatic Courier | 1952 | Sgt. Ernie Guelvada | |
The Sellout | 1952 | Capt. Buck Maxwell | |
Celanese Theatre | 1952 | TV Series | |
A Streetcar Named Desire | 1951 | Mitch | |
Halls of Montezuma | 1951 | Doc | |
Armstrong Circle Theatre | 1950 | TV Series | |
Where the Sidewalk Ends | 1950 | Lt. Thomas | |
The Gunfighter | 1950 | Mac | |
The Ford Theatre Hour | 1949 | TV Series | Friedrich Bhaer |
Kiss of Death | 1947 | Sgt. William Cullen | |
Boomerang! | 1947 | Det. Lt. White (uncredited) | |
13 Rue Madeleine | 1946 | Jump Master (uncredited) | |
Winged Victory | 1944 | Adams (as Cpl. Karl Malden) | |
They Knew What They Wanted | 1940 | Red | |
The Streets of the Invisibles | 2011 | Short | Mike Stone (voice) |
The West Wing | 2000 | TV Series | Father Thomas Cavanaugh |
The Lionhearts | 1998 | TV Series | |
Biography | 1995 | TV Series documentary | P.T. Barnum |
They've Taken Our Children: The Chowchilla Kidnapping | 1993 | TV Movie | Ed Ray |
Back to the Streets of San Francisco | 1992 | TV Movie | Mike Stone |
Absolute Strangers | 1991 | TV Movie | Fred Zusselman |
Call Me Anna | 1990 | TV Movie | Doctor Harold Arlen |
The Hijacking of the Achille Lauro | 1989 | TV Movie | Leon Klinghoffer |
My Father, My Son | 1988 | TV Movie | Elmo Zumwalt Jr. |
Nuts | 1987 | Arthur Kirk | |
Billy Galvin | 1986 | Jack Galvin | |
Alice in Wonderland | 1985 | TV Movie | The Walrus |
With Intent to Kill | 1984 | TV Movie | Thomas E. Nolan |
Fatal Vision | 1984 | TV Mini-Series | Freddy Kassab |
The Sting II | 1983 | Gus Macalinski | |
Twilight Time | 1982 | Marko Sekulovic | |
Miracle on Ice | 1981 | TV Movie | Herb Brooks |
Word of Honor | 1981 | TV Movie | Mike McNeill |
Meteor | 1979 | Harry Sherwood | |
Beyond the Poseidon Adventure | 1979 | Wilbur Hubbard | |
Captains Courageous | 1977 | TV Movie | Disko Troop |
The Streets of San Francisco | 1972-1977 | TV Series | Detective Lt. Mike Stone Detective Lieutenant Mike Stone |
Summertime Killer | 1972 | Captain John Kiley | |
Wild Rovers | 1971 | Walter Buckman | |
The Cat o' Nine Tails | 1971 | Franco Arnò | |
Patton | 1970 | Gen. Omar N. Bradley | |
Hot Millions | 1968 | Carlton J. Klemper | |
Blue | 1968 | Doc Morton | |
Billion Dollar Brain | 1967 | Leo Newbigen | |
The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin | 1967 | Judge Higgins | |
Hotel | 1967 | Keycase Milne | |
Murderers' Row | 1966 | Julian Wall | |
Nevada Smith | 1966 | Tom Fitch | |
The Cincinnati Kid | 1965 | Shooter | |
Cheyenne Autumn | 1964 | Capt. Wessels | |
Dead Ringer | 1964 | Sgt. Jim Hobbson | |
Come Fly with Me | 1963 | Walter Lucas | |
Gypsy | 1962 | Herbie Sommers | |
How the West Was Won | 1962 | Zebulon Prescott | |
Birdman of Alcatraz | 1962 | Harvey Shoemaker | |
All Fall Down | 1962 | Ralph Willart | |
Parrish | 1961 | Judd Raike | |
One-Eyed Jacks | 1961 | Sheriff Dad Longworth | |
The Great Impostor | 1961 | Father Devlin | |
Pollyanna | 1960 | Reverend Paul Ford | |
The Hanging Tree | 1959 | Frenchy Plante | |
Bombers B-52 | 1957 | MSgt. Chuck V. Brennan | |
Time Limit | 1957 | Prisoner (uncredited) |
Soundtrack
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
Alice in Wonderland | 1985 | TV Movie performer: "The Walrus and the Carpenter" | |
Gypsy | 1962 | performer: "Together, Wherever We Go" 1959 - uncredited | |
How the West Was Won | 1962 | performer: "Home in the Meadow" 1962 |
Director
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
The Hanging Tree | 1959 | from 29 July to 30 Aug. 1958, uncredited | |
Time Limit | 1957 |
Thanks
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
The Life and Times of Kirk Douglas | 2000 | Video documentary short special thanks |
Self
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Michael Douglas | 2009 | TV Movie | Himself |
Who Is Norman Lloyd? | 2007 | Documentary | Himself |
Brando | 2007 | TV Movie documentary | Himself |
A Man Named Brando | 2006 | Video documentary short | Himself |
A Streetcar in Hollywood | 2006 | Video documentary short | Himself |
A Streetcar on Broadway | 2006 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Baby Doll: See No Evil | 2006 | Video short | Himself |
Censorship and Desire | 2006 | Video documentary short | Himself |
Hollywood Greats | 2006 | TV Series documentary | Himself |
... A Father... A Son... Once Upon a Time in Hollywood | 2005 | TV Movie documentary | Himself |
Imagine | 2004 | TV Series documentary | Himself |
Larry King Live | 2004 | TV Series | Himself |
10th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards | 2004 | TV Special | Himself - Honoree |
Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There | 2003 | Documentary | Himself |
The 75th Annual Academy Awards | 2003 | TV Special | Himself - Past Winner |
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Thrills: America's Most Heart-Pounding Movies | 2001 | TV Special documentary | Himself |
Biography | 1999-2000 | TV Series documentary | Himself |
5th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards | 1999 | TV Special | Himself |
The 70th Annual Academy Awards | 1998 | TV Special | Himself - Past Winner |
Late Night with Conan O'Brien | 1997 | TV Series | Himself |
The 22nd Annual People's Choice Awards | 1996 | TV Special | Himself - Presenter: Special Award to Michael Douglas |
Barbra: The Concert | 1995 | TV Special documentary | Himself - Concert Attendee (uncredited) |
Reflections on the Silver Screen | 1993 | TV Series | Himself |
Bob Hope: The First 90 Years | 1993 | TV Movie documentary | Himself |
Oscar's Greatest Moments | 1992 | Video documentary | Himself / Host |
Earth and the American Dream | 1992 | Documentary | Reader (voice) |
One on One with John Tesh | 1992 | TV Series | Himself |
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Kirk Douglas | 1991 | TV Special documentary | Himself |
The 63rd Annual Academy Awards | 1991 | TV Special | Himself |
The 43th Annual Directors Guild Awards | 1991 | TV Special | Himself |
Warner Bros. Celebration of Tradition, June 2, 1990 | 1990 | TV Movie documentary | Host |
The 42th Annual Directors Guild of America Awards | 1990 | TV Special | Himself |
Steve McQueen: Man on the Edge | 1990 | Video documentary | Himself |
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Jack Lemmon | 1988 | TV Special documentary | Himself (uncredited) |
Unsolved Mysteries | 1987 | TV Series documentary | Himself - Host |
The 59th Annual Academy Awards | 1987 | TV Special | Himself - Presenter: Honorary Award to Ralph Bellamy |
The 3th Annual American Cinema Awards | 1986 | TV Special | Himself |
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Gene Kelly | 1985 | TV Special documentary | Himself (uncredited) |
Il mondo dell'orrore di Dario Argento | 1985 | Documentary | Himself |
The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts | 1984 | TV Movie | Himself |
Natalie - A Tribute to a Very Special Lady | 1982 | TV Movie documentary | Himself |
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to James Stewart | 1980 | TV Special documentary | Himself / Speaker (uncredited) |
The Annual Friars Club Tribute Presents a Salute to Milton Berle | 1980 | TV Movie | Himself |
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson | 1968-1980 | TV Series | Himself / Himself - Guest |
Dinah! | 1975-1979 | TV Series | Himself |
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Henry Fonda | 1978 | TV Special documentary | Himself (uncredited) |
The Annual National Sports Awards | 1974 | TV Special | Himself - Presenter |
This Is Your Life | 1971 | TV Series | Himself |
The 43rd Annual Academy Awards | 1971 | TV Special | Himself - Accepting Best Director Award for Franklin Schaffner |
The Joey Bishop Show | 1969 | TV Series | Himself |
The 40th Annual Academy Awards | 1968 | TV Special | Himself - Audience Member |
Today | 1968 | TV Series | Himself |
Caine Below Zero | 1967 | Documentary short | Himself / Leo Newbigen |
The 37th Annual Academy Awards | 1965 | TV Special | Himself - Presenter: Best Actress in a Supporting Role |
The 35th Annual Academy Awards | 1963 | TV Special | Himself - Presenter: Best Film Editing |
Here's Hollywood | 1960-1962 | TV Series | Himself |
The 27th Annual Academy Awards | 1955 | TV Special | Himself - Nominee: Best Actor in a Supporting Role & Presenter: Best Writing, Screenplay |
Archive Footage
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
Marlon Brando tuli Suomeen | 2011 | TV Movie documentary | Himself (uncredited) |
The 82nd Annual Academy Awards | 2010 | TV Special | Himself - In Memoriam |
16th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards | 2010 | TV Special | Himself - Memorial Tribute |
The 61st Primetime Emmy Awards | 2009 | TV Special | Himself - In Memoriam |
President Hollywood | 2008 | TV Movie documentary | Father Thomas Cavanaugh (uncredited) |
La tele de tu vida | 2007 | TV Series | Detective Lt. Mike Stone |
American Masters | 1989-2003 | TV Series documentary | Father Barry / Himself |
Sir John Mills' Moving Memories | 2000 | Video documentary | Himself |
60 Minutes Wednesday | 1999 | TV Series documentary | Himself - Actor (segment "Classic: Arthur Miller") |
America at the Movies | 1976 | Documentary | Zebulon Prescott (uncredited) |
Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color | 1963-1971 | TV Series | Judge Higgins / Reverend Ford |
Won Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Life Achievement Award | Screen Actors Guild Awards | ||
2002 | Mary Pickford Award | Satellite Awards | ||
1998 | Lifetime Achievement Award | Temecula Valley International Film Festival | ||
1997 | Golden Boot | Golden Boot Awards | ||
1985 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Special | Fatal Vision (1984) |
1979 | Bambi | Bambi Awards | TV Series International | The Streets of San Francisco (1972) |
1960 | Star on the Walk of Fame | Walk of Fame | Motion Picture | On 8 February 1960. At 6231 Hollywood Blvd. |
1952 | Oscar | Academy Awards, USA | Best Actor in a Supporting Role | A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) |
Nominated Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series | The Streets of San Francisco (1972) |
1976 | Golden Globe | Golden Globes, USA | Best Actor in a Television Series - Drama | The Streets of San Francisco (1972) |
1976 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series | The Streets of San Francisco (1972) |
1975 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series | The Streets of San Francisco (1972) |
1974 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Best Lead Actor in a Drama Series | The Streets of San Francisco (1972) |
1967 | Golden Laurel | Laurel Awards | Male Supporting Performance | Hotel (1967) |
1963 | Golden Globe | Golden Globes, USA | Best Actor - Comedy or Musical | Gypsy (1962) |
1957 | Golden Globe | Golden Globes, USA | Best Actor - Drama | Baby Doll (1956) |
1957 | BAFTA Film Award | BAFTA Awards | Best Foreign Actor | Baby Doll (1956) |
1955 | Oscar | Academy Awards, USA | Best Actor in a Supporting Role | On the Waterfront (1954) |
2nd Place Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|---|---|---|---|
1971 | Golden Laurel | Laurel Awards | Best Supporting Performance, Male | Patton (1970) |
1963 | Golden Laurel | Laurel Awards | Top Male Supporting Performance | Gypsy (1962) |
3rd Place Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|---|---|---|---|
1959 | Golden Laurel | Laurel Awards | Top Male Supporting Performance | The Hanging Tree (1959) |