Russell Crowe


Russell Ira Crowe is a New Zealand-born actor and film director. His work on screen has earned him various accolades, including an Academy Award, two Golden Globe Awards, and a British Academy Film Award. Known for his intense performances, his films have grossed over $5.3 billion worldwide.
Crowe was born in New Zealand, moving to Australia at the age of four and residing there permanently by the age of 21. He began acting in Australia and had his break-out role in Romper Stomper for which he won the AACTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. He gained international recognition in the late 1990s for his starring roles in L.A. Confidential and The Insider. Crowe gained wider stardom for playing the title role of Gladiator, which earned him the Academy Award for Best Actor, having been previously nominated for The Insider. Further acclaim came for portraying real-life mathematician John Forbes Nash Jr. in A Beautiful Mind, for which he was nominated for a third Academy Award.
Other films he starred in include Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, Cinderella Man, 3:10 to Yuma, American Gangster, Robin Hood, Les Misérables, Man of Steel, Noah, The Nice Guys ''Thor: Love and Thunder, and The Pope's Exorcist. In 2014, he made his directorial debut with the drama The Water Diviner'', in which he also starred. Aside from acting, Crowe has been the co-owner of the National Rugby League team South Sydney Rabbitohs since 2006.

Early life

Crowe was born in Strathmore Park, a suburb of Wellington, New Zealand, on 7 April 1964, the son of film set caterers Jocelyn Yvonne and John Alexander Crowe. John also managed a hotel. Jocelyn's father, Stan Wemyss, was a cinematographer who was awarded an MBE for filming footage of World War II as a member of the New Zealand Film Unit. Crowe is Māori and identifies with Ngāti Porou through a maternal great-great-grandmother. John's father, John Doubleday Crowe, was a Welshman from Wrexham, while another of Crowe's grandparents was Scottish. Crowe's other ancestry includes English, German, Irish, Italian, Norwegian and Swedish. He is a cousin of former New Zealand national cricket captains Martin and Jeff Crowe and the nephew of cricketer Dave Crowe.
At the age of four, Crowe moved to Australia with his family, settling in Sydney, where John and Jocelyn pursued their career in film set catering. Jocelyn's godfather was the producer of the Australian television series Spyforce, and Crowe was hired for a line of dialogue in one episode of the series at the age of five or six, opposite series star Jack Thompson. Later, in 1994, Thompson would play the supportive father of Crowe's gay character in the film The Sum of Us. Crowe also appeared briefly in the series The Young Doctors. In Australia, he was educated at Vaucluse Public School and Sydney Boys High School before moving back to New Zealand with his family in 1978. He continued his secondary education in Auckland, attending Auckland Grammar School and Mount Roskill Grammar School before leaving school to pursue his ambitions as a performer.
In 2015, it was reported that Crowe had applied for Australian citizenship in 2006 and again in 2013 but was rejected because he failed to fulfill the residency requirements. However, Australia's Immigration Department said it had no record of any such application by Crowe.

Acting career

New Zealand

Under guidance from his good friend Tom Sharplin, Crowe began his performing career as a musician in the early 1980s performing under the stage name "Russ Le Roq". He released several New Zealand singles, including "I Just Wanna Be Like Marlon Brando", "Pier 13", and "Shattered Glass", none of which charted. He managed an Auckland music venue called "The Venue" in 1984. When he was 18, he was featured in A Very Special Person..., a promotional video for the theology/ministry course at Avondale University, a Seventh-day Adventist tertiary education provider in New South Wales, Australia.

Australia

In 1985, Crowe left New Zealand and returned to Australia when he was 21, intending to apply to the National Institute of Dramatic Art. He said, "I was working in a theatre show, and talked to a guy who was then the head of technical support at NIDA. I asked him what he thought about me spending three years at NIDA. He told me it'd be a waste of time. He said, 'You already do the things you go there to learn, and you've been doing it for most of your life, so there's nothing to teach you but bad habits.'" From 1986 to 1988, he was given his first professional role by director Daniel Abineri, in a New Zealand production of The Rocky Horror Show. He played the role of Eddie/Dr Scott. He repeated this performance in a further Australian production of the show, which also toured New Zealand. In 1987, Crowe spent six months busking when he could not find other work. In the 1988 Australian production of Blood Brothers, Crowe played the role of Mickey. He was also cast again by Daniel Abineri in the role of Johnny, in the stage musical Bad Boy Johnny and the Prophets of Doom in 1989.
After appearing in the TV series Neighbours and Living with the Law, Crowe was cast by Faith Martin in his first film, The Crossing, a small-town love triangle directed by George Ogilvie. Before production started, a film-student protégé of Ogilvie, Steve Wallace, hired Crowe for the 1990 film Blood Oath, which was released a month earlier than The Crossing, although actually filmed later. In 1992, Crowe starred in the first episode of the second series of Police Rescue. Also in 1992, Crowe starred in Romper Stomper, an Australian film which followed the exploits and downfall of a racist skinhead group in blue-collar suburban Melbourne, directed by Geoffrey Wright and co-starring Jacqueline McKenzie. For the role, Crowe won an Australian Film Institute award for Best Actor, following up from his Best Supporting Actor award for Proof in 1991.

North America

1993–1999: Breakthrough

After initial success in Australia, Crowe first starred in a Canadian production in 1993, For the Moment, before concentrating on American films. In 1993, he was favoured for the role of Joshua Chamberlain in the epic film Gettysburg but was passed over for Jeff Daniels. In 1995, he appeared in four Hollywood films, this included the science fiction film Virtuosity where he co-starred with Denzel Washington; unfortunately it received poor reviews and failed commercially. His other roles that year saw him work with Sharon Stone in the western The Quick and the Dead, comedy Rough Magic with Bridget Fonda, and his first starring role in the industry as an FBI agent in No Way Back.
He had his breakthrough playing a short-tempered LAPD officer having an affair with a call girl working in the stable of a shady millionaire who used prostitutes to blackmail powerful politicians and businessmen in 1997's neo-noir hit L.A. Confidential. His co-stars included Kevin Spacey, Guy Pearce, Kim Basinger, among others. He starred in Breaking Up, a romantic drama with Salma Hayek. After headlining the ice hockey centered Mystery, Alaska, he portrayed Jeffrey Wigand in Michael Mann's The Insider, based on Wigand's life. This film opened to highly positive reviews and earned Crowe his first nomination for an Academy Award. He was cast as Wolverine for the first X-Men film, but he instead offered the part to Hugh Jackman which launched the latter's film career.

2000–2005: Stardom

In 2000, Crowe starred in his career-defining film Gladiator. Directed by Ridley Scott, the epic historical film was met with major commercial success and acclaim, catapulting Crowe to worldwide stardom and winning him the Best Actor award at 73rd Academy Awards, BAFTA Awards, Golden Globe Awards, Critics Choice Awards, and various more. Crowe was also awarded the Centenary Medal in 2001 for "service to Australian society and Australian film production." In a later interview, Crowe stated the film forever changed his life. He recounted visiting an Italian store where a large crowd gathered outside, yelling his character's first name, Maximus. Many of his lines from the film are considered iconic. Gladiator is widely regarded among the greatest films of all time.
The next year, he played the leading role in another notable film in his filmography, A Beautiful Mind, delivering a successive acclaimed performance as the Nobel prize winning economist and schizophrenic patient John Nash. Crowe, once again, won multiple accolades. By this point in his career, he received three consecutive best actor Oscar nominations, for The Insider, Gladiator, and A Beautiful Mind. All three films were also nominated for Best Picture, and both Gladiator and A Beautiful Mind won the award. Crowe became the first actor to star as the lead in back-to-back Best Picture winners since Walter Pidgeon. Crowe declined the role of Aragorn in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings trilogy since he felt studios were pressuring filmmakers to cast him due to his recent successes.
Within the six-year stretch from 1997 to 2003, Crowe also starred in two other best picture nominees, L.A. Confidential and Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World. In Master and Commander, Crowe delivered another acclaimed performance as Jack Aubrey, a character from the Aubrey–Maturin series of nautical historical novels, upon which the film was based. The movie garnered ten Oscar nominations and various other awards, including a Golden Globe Best Actor nomination for Crowe. It continues to receive positive retrospective reviews despite moderate box office returns at the time of release. In 2005, he re-teamed with A Beautiful Mind director Ron Howard for the biographical boxing drama Cinderella Man, which went down in history as one of the best in its genre. The film chronicles James J. Braddock's pursuit of the world heavyweight championship amidst the Great Depression. Consistent with Crowe's previous projects, it received many nominations and accolades, while earning Crowe Australia's highest film award for the third time.