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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 that fitted such roles.
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Charles Bronson (November 3, 1921 – August 30, 2003) was an American actor
of "tough guy"
Early life
He was born as Charles Dennis Buchinski in the notorious Ehrenfeld,
Pennsylvania neighborhood of Scooptown, near Pittsburgh, one of 15 children
of Polish immigrants. 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. [1] [2]
In 1943, Bronson was drafted into the United States Army Air Corps and
served as a tail gunner onboard B29 bombers.
Although Bronson was of Slavic descent, many people thought he looked like a
Chicano or Mexican-American who was Mestizo (mixture of Spanish and Indian
ancestry). Because of his look, Bronson sometimes played characters who were
Mexican or who were part Indian.
Acting career
After the war, he decided to pursue the profession of 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. In 1961 Bronson made an
appearance with Elizabeth Montgomery in The Twilight Zone, in the episode "Two."
From 1958-1960, Bronson starred in the ABC Television Network 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") 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 US.
Bronson's most famous films include The Great Escape, (1963) in which he
played Danny Velinski, a Polish 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.
He is also remembered for Death Wish (1974) which spawned several sequels (also
starring Bronson), In Death Wish he played a Paul Kersey, a prosperous
liberal New York architect until his wife was murdered and daughter raped.
He became a crime-fighting vigilante by night, a highly controversial role,
as his executions were cheered by crime-weary audiences. After the famous
1984 case of Bernhard Goetz, the actor recommended that people not imitate
his character.
Bronson was married to actress Jill Ireland from 1968 until her death in
1990. She was his second wife. He met her when she was still married to
actor David McCallum. At the time, Bronson (who shared the screen with
McCallum in The Great Escape) bluntly told McCallum: "I'm going to marry
your wife." Two years later, he made good on his boast and married Jill.
Bronson died of pneumonia while suffering from Alzheimer's disease at Cedars-Sinai
hospital in Los Angeles, California. At the time of his death, he was
survived by his wife Kim, four children, two stepchildren and two
grandchildren. A stepson, Jason McCallum Bronson, preceded him in death
after succumbing to a drug overdose in 1985. With his death, Robert Vaughn
is the only survivor of the seven main stars of The Magnificent Seven. |
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CHARLES BRONSON PICTURES |
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