Jeff Bridges (True Grit)

Jeff Bridges (as Rooster Cogburn in True Grit) is one of Hollywood's most successful actors and a five-time Academy Award nominee.

His performance in Crazy Heart garnered the iconic performer his first Oscar for Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role.

Bridges earned his first Oscar nod in 1971 for Best Supporting Actor in Peter Bogdanovich's The Last Picture Show, co-starring Cybill Shepherd. Three years later, he received his second Best Supporting Actor nomination for his role in Michael Cimino's Thunderbolt and Lightfoot. By 1984, he landed top kudos with a Best Actor nomination for Starman; that performance also earned him a Golden Globe nomination.

In 2001, he was honored with another Golden Globe nomination and his fourth Oscar nomination for his role in The Contender, Rod Lurie's political thriller, co-starring Gary Oldman and Joan Allen, in which Bridges played the President of the United States.

Jeff Bridges starred in TRON: Legacy.

Prior to Crazy Heart, he was seen in the war comedy The Men Who Stare at Goats, playing Bill Django, a free-spirited military intelligence officer, who is the leader of a secret group of warriors in the army. The Peter Straughan screenplay (based on the Jon Ronson book and directed by Grant Heslov) is based on a true story about a reporter in Iraq, who meets a former member of the US Army's First Earth Battalion, a unit that employs paranormal powers in their missions. He stars opposite George Clooney (also a producer), Ewan McGregor and Kevin Spacey.

He could also be seen starring opposite Justin Timberlake in The Open Road as Kyle Garrett, a legendary ballplayer trying to reconnect with his son while coming to terms with who they are and what kind of men they should be. The film is written and directed by Michael Meredith. Additionally, he starred in A Dog Year for HBO Films/Picturehouse, based on the memoir by Jon Katz and directed by George LaVoo (who also wrote the screenplay); as well as opposite Robert Downey, Jr. in the Paramount Pictures/Marvel Studios blockbuster Iron Man , playing the character of Obadiah Stane.

He starred opposite Shia LaBeouf as Geek, a cantankerous and washed-up surfer penguin, in the Academy Award-nominated Surf's Up, from Sony Pictures Animation. The same year he appeared in The Amateurs, a comedy written and directed by Michael Traeger, in which citizens of a small town, under the influence of a man in the midst of a mid-life crisis (Bridges), come together to make an adult film.

Prior to that, he was in his second film for director Terry Gilliam, entitled Tideland, where he played Noah, a drug addicted, has-been, rock guitarist; as well as in Stick It for Touchstone Pictures, playing the coach of a team of rule-abiding gymnasts.

The actor's multi-faceted career has cut a wide swathe across all genres. He has starred in numerous box office hits, including Gary Ross' Seabiscuit, Terry Gilliam's offbeat comedic drama The Fisher King (co- starring Robin Williams), the multi-award-nominated The Fabulous Baker Boys (costarring his brother Beau Bridges and Michelle Pfeiffer), The Jagged Edge (opposite Glenn Close), Francis Ford Coppola's Tucker: The Man and His Dream, Blown Away (co-starring his late father Lloyd Bridges and Tommy Lee Jones), Peter Weir's Fearless (with Isabella Rossellini and Rosie Perez), and Martin Bell's American Heart (with Edward Furlong, produced by Bridges' company, AsIs Productions). That film earned Bridges an IFP/Spirit Award in 1993 for Best Actor.

In the summer of 2004, he appeared opposite Kim Basinger in the critically acclaimed The Door in the Floor for director Todd Williams and Focus Features, which earned him an IFP/Spirit Award nomination for Best Actor.

He played a major featured role in The Muse (an Albert Brooks comedy starring Brooks, Sharon Stone and Andie MacDowell); appeared in the suspense thriller Arlington Road (co-starring Tim Robbins and Joan Cusack, directed by Mark Pellington); and starred in Simpatico, the screen version of Sam Shepard's play (with Nick Nolte, Sharon Stone and Albert Finney). In 1998, he starred in the Coen brothers' cult comedy The Big Lebowski. Before that, he starred in Ridley Scott's White Squall, Walter Hill's Wild Bill, John Huston's Fat City and Barbara Streisand's romantic comedy The Mirror Has Two Faces.

Some of Bridges' other acting credits include How to Lose Friends and Alienate People, K-PAX, Masked and Anonymous, Stay Hungry, Fat City, Bad Company, Against All Odds, Cutter's Way, The Vanishing, Texasville, The Morning After, Nadine, Rancho Deluxe, See You in the Morning, Eight Million Ways to Die, TRON, The Last American Hero and Heart of the West.

In 1983, Jeff founded the End Hunger Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to feeding children around the world. Jeff produced the End Hunger televent, a three-hour live television broadcast focusing on world hunger. The televent featured Gregory Peck, Jack Lemmon, Burt Lancaster, Bob Newhart, Kenny Loggins and other leading film, television and music stars in an innovative production to educate and inspire action.

Through his company, As Is Productions, he produced "Hidden in America," which starred his brother Beau. That television movie, produced for Showtime, received a Golden Globe nomination in 1996 for Best TV/Cable Film and garnered a Screen Actors Guild nod for Best Actor for Beau Bridges. The film was also nominated for two Emmy Awards.

One of Jeff's true passions is photography. While on the set of his movies, Jeff takes behind-thescenes pictures of the actors, crew and locations. After completion of each motion picture, he edits the images into a book and gives copies to everyone involved. Jeff's photos have been featured in several magazines, including Premiere and Aperture, as well as in other publications worldwide. He has also had gallery exhibits of his work in New York (at the George Eastman House), Los Angeles, London and San Diego. The books, which have become valued by collectors, were never intended for public sale, but in the fall of 2003, powerHouse Books released Pictures: Photographs by Jeff Bridges, a hardcover book containing a compilation of photos taken on numerous film locations over the years, to much critical acclaim. Proceeds from the book are donated to the Motion Picture & Television Fund, a nonprofit organization that offers charitable care and support to film-industry workers. Several years ago, Jeff fulfilled a life-long dream by releasing his first album, "Be Here Soon," on Ramp Records, the Santa Barbara, CA label he co-founded with Michael McDonald and producer/singer/songwriter Chris Pelonis. The CD features guest appearances by vocalist/keyboardist Michael McDonald, Grammy-nominated Amy Holland and country-rock legend David Crosby. Ramp Records also released Michael McDonald's album, "Blue Obsession."

Jeff, his wife Susan and their three children divide their time between their home in Santa Barbara, California, and their ranch in Montana.

 

True Grit Movie Review

This remake restores all the grit removed in the first version. In 1870s Arkansas, 14-year-old Mattie Ross guides an Old Testament eye-for-an-eye search for her father's killer. Jeff Bridges plays one-eyed Civil War veteran Rooster Cogburn well, and Hailee Steinfeld is a real find as Mattie

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83rd Academy Awards: Jeff Bridges - Best Lead Actor Oscar Nominee | The Oscars