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Actors - Charles Bronson


Charles Bronson (November 3, 1921 – August 30, 2003) was an American actor of "tough guy" roles. In most of his roles he starred as a brutal police detective, a western gunfighter, vigilante, boxer or a Mafia hitman. He was blunt, physically powerful, and had a look of danger well suited to such roles.

:Please note that he is not the same man as Charles Bronson (prisoner) who is a persistent violent criminal in the real world.

Early life

Bronson was born as Charles Dennis Buchinskas in the notorious Ehrenfeld, Pennsylvania coal mining neighborhood of Scooptown, near Pittsburgh, the eleventh of 15 children born to an American mother of Lithuanian extraction, and a Lithuanian emigrant father.

His father died when Charles was young and Charles went down to mine coal like his older brothers until he was drafted. He earned $1/ton of coal mined.

His family was so poor that, at one time, he had reportedly been forced to wear his sister's dress to school because he had no other clothes (see http://imdb.com/name/nm0000314/bio). This story has also been repeated in Celebrity Setbacks: 800 Stars who Overcame the Odds by Ed Lucaire (ISBN 0671850318) and in an edition of Ripley's Believe It or Not!

In 1943, Bronson was drafted into the United States Army Air Corps and served as a tail gunner onboard B29 bombers.

Bronson was a descendant of the Lipka Tatars of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth which caused many people to think that he looked like a Chicano or Mexican-American who was a Mestizo (mixture of Spanish and Indian ancestry). Thus, due to his looks Bronson sometimes played characters who were Mexican or who were part-Indian.

Acting career

After the war, he decided to pursue acting, not from any love of the subject, but rather, because he was impressed with the amount of money that he could potentially make in the business. Bronson was roommates with Jack Klugman
, another starving actor at the time. Klugman later said of Bronson that he was good at ironing clothes.

During the McCarthy hearings he changed his last name to Bronson as Slavic names were suspect. One of his earliest screen appearances under his new name was as Vincent Price
's henchman in 1953 horror classic House of Wax
.

Bronson made several appearances on television in the 1950s and 1960s, including three leading roles on Alfred Hitchcock Presents in the episodes "And So Died Riabouchinska" (1956), "There Was an Old Woman" (1956), and "The Woman Who Wanted to Live" (1962); he also stared alongside Elizabeth Montgomery
in The Twilight Zone episode "Two" (1961).

From 1958 to 1960, Bronson starred in the ABC detective series Man With A Camera. Bronson portrayed Mike Kovac, a former combat photographer, free-lancing in New York City. Frequently, Bronson's character was involved in assignments for the Police Department, which frequently put Bronson's character in danger. A number of the series episodes, which were all in black and white, are now available on DVD.

Although he began his career in the United States, Bronson first made a serious name for himself acting in European films. He became quite famous on that continent, and was known by two nicknames: The Italians called him "Il Brutto" ("The Ugly One") and to the French he was known as "le monstre sacré", the "sacred monster".

Even though he was not yet a headliner in America, his overseas fame earned him a 1971 Golden Globe as the "Most Popular Actor in the World". That same year, he wondered if he was "too masculine" to ever become a star in the United States.

Bronson's most famous films include The Great Escape
(1963), in which he played Danny Velinski, a prisoner of war nicknamed "The Tunnel King", and The Dirty Dozen
,
(1967) in which he played an Army death row convict conscripted into a World War II suicide mission.

In the westerns The Magnificent Seven
(1960) and the Sergio Leone epic Once Upon a Time in the West
,
(1968) he played heroic gunfighters, taking up the cause of the defenseless. Sergio Leone once called him "the greatest actor I ever worked with". In Hard Times
(1975), he played a street fighter making his living in illegal boxing matches in Louisiana.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Charles Bronson ]



Some related entries: Lewis Wilson | Philip Olivier | Rene Requiestas | Chloe Dior | Tao Liu | Andy Richter | Allie Sin | Jimmy Hanley | Jonathan Potts | Denholm Elliott | Mariya

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Charles Bronson; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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