Jack Nicholson


Actor
Jack Nicholson

About

Also Known As
John Joseph Nicholson
Birth Place
Neptune, New Jersey, USA
Born
April 22, 1937

Biography

Perhaps no other actor of his generation made more of a lasting impression than Jack Nicholson. Over the course of several decades, Nicholson delivered one sterling performance after another in films that have long been considered as being some of the greatest ever made. Though he got his start with low-budget king Roger Corman in the late-1950s, the actor eventually made his mark with a...

Photos & Videos

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Premiere Brochure
Easy Rider - Lobby Cards
Carnal Knowledge - Movie Poster

Family & Companions

Sandra Knight
Wife
Divorced; mother of Nicholson's daughter Jennifer.
Mimi Machu
Companion
Susan Anspach
Companion
Actor. Co-starred in "Five Easy Pieces"; no longer together; she alleges that together they had a son, Caleb, who was born on September 26, 1970; claims have been made that Nicholson privately acknowledged the child but has refused to do so publicly.
Anjelica Huston
Companion
Actor. Had on-again, off-again relationship from c. 1973 until 1990.

Bibliography

"Jack Nicholson: The Life and Times of an Actor on the Edge"
Peter Thompson, Birch Lane Press (1997)
"Jack's Life"
Patrick McGillan

Notes

Nicholson has a major art collection.

Named a Commander des Arts et Lettres (received in Paris, September 10, 1990 from the French Minister of Culture).

Biography

Perhaps no other actor of his generation made more of a lasting impression than Jack Nicholson. Over the course of several decades, Nicholson delivered one sterling performance after another in films that have long been considered as being some of the greatest ever made. Though he got his start with low-budget king Roger Corman in the late-1950s, the actor eventually made his mark with a memorable supporting role in the iconic counterculture road film, "Easy Rider" (1969). Thanks to that Oscar-nominated performance, Nicholson embarked on a fruitful decade of work that ultimately cemented his place in cinematic history, starting with a shaded portrayal of a man searching for what went wrong with his life in "Five Easy Pieces" (1970). But it was his performance as the dogged private detective Jake Gittes in "Chinatown" (1974) that turned the already successful actor into a legend, which he followed with perhaps his most enduring film, "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (1975). From there, Nicholson became noted for his bombastic and over-the-top performances, which sometimes hampered the actor into being confined to "Jack" roles that limited his choices, as happened in "The Shining" (1980). This persona was put to excellent use in both "The Witches of Eastwick" (1987) and "Batman" (1990), while he managed to balance out such roles with a return to finer, more nuanced performances in "Terms of Endearment" (1987) and "As Good As It Gets" (1997), all of which underscored Nicholson's place in at the top of the Hollywood pantheon.

Born on Apr. 22, 1937 in Neptune, NJ (or New York, NY or Manasquan, NJ - sources differ) Nicholson was raised in a broken home that later proved to be not all that it seemed. Nicholson grew up believing that his grandmother, Ethel, was in fact his mother; around 1975, Nicholson learned that his alleged sister, June, was actually his mother - she was a chorus girl in New York who became pregnant with him in a time and place where having a child so young would have shamed the family. Why and how the rouse was maintained until after both had died remained a mystery to Nicholson, who later claimed to have been relieved when he found out. Meanwhile, he never knew for certain who his father was - showman Donald Furcillo and June's manager Eddie King eventually surfaced as candidates, but Nicholson was content to decline pursuing confirmation. Despite his complicated domestic situation, Nicholson grew up in a modest and stable home. He attended Manasquan High School, where he was voted class clown, and later both a theater and drama award were named after him.

Upon graduating high school, Nicholson rejected an engineering scholarship and went to Los Angeles, where June had relocated, staying after landing a job as a mail room gofer for Hanna-Barbera at MGM. He also began taking acting classes with Jeff Corey, where he met fellow up-and-coming actors Sally Kellerman, James Coburn and Robert Towne, future scribe of "Chinatown." He soon made his film debut in the Roger Corman-produced crime thriller, "Cry Baby Killer" (1958), playing a young delinquent who kills a thug out to do him harm, who then flees to a local drive-in where he takes hostages and eventually creates a media firestorm. He continued his collaboration with Corman, who directed him in three early horror films, including "The Little Shop of Horrors" (1961), "The Raven" (1963) and "The Terror" (1963) - the latter two being filmed within days of each other, and using the same sets. Not content with just acting, Nicholson shared his first screenwriting credit with Don Devlin on Jack Leewood's political thriller "Thunder Island" (1963). Nicholson returned to acting in Monte Hellman's World War II actioner "Back Door to Hell" (1964), then scripted the director's Philippine adventure yarn about two divergent men surviving the jungle after a plane crash in "Flight to Fury" (1966).

Journeying to the Utah desert to make back-to-back films, Nicholson starred in a pair Hellman's existential Westerns "The Shooting" (1966) and "Ride the Whirlwind" (1966), the latter of which he also co-wrote and served as a producer on. Though not yet a household name, the actor was fast becoming a prominent force both in front of and behind the camera. After he wrote Corman's psychedelic odyssey, "The Trip" (1967), a psychological drama about a commercial director who ingests LSD, he teamed up with first-time director Bob Rafelson to produce and co-write "Head" (1968), a plotless, but nonetheless visually interesting satirical look at the music industry as seen by The Monkees. But it was his supporting role as George Hanson, a hard-drinking Southern lawyer, in the iconic road movie "Easy Rider" (1969) that earned Nicholson widespread attention. Replacing actor Rip Torn - who abandoned the part written for him after a heated argument with director-star Dennis Hopper that ended with a the latter allegedly drawing a knife - Nicholson firmly established himself as an actor of caliber with a performance that earned several critic's awards and a nomination for Best Supporting Actor at the Academy Awards.

Following his triumph with "Easy Rider," Nicholson entered the 1970s poised to become a major star. Arguably the best decade of his career, Nicholson embarked on a series of iconic films that forever cemented him in the pantheon of Hollywood's finest actors. He started with "Five Easy Pieces" (1970), a low-budget, European-style psychological drama that depicted Nicholson as a former musical prodigy-turned-oil rig worker who goes on a journey of self-discovery by traveling with his needy girlfriend (Karen Black) to his father's house after learning he has fallen ill. Nicholson delivered one of his finest and most nuanced performances of his career in playing a disaffected and emotionless man frustrated with life's responsibilities, earning himself his first Oscar nomination for Best Leading Actor. Most importantly, the film connected with a large audience, becoming a substantial hit and turning Nicholson into a star. He followed with "Carnal Knowledge" (1971), Mike Nichols' sex comedy of errors about two lifelong friends (Nicholson and Art Garfunkel) and their romantic relationships over the course of a 25-year period that spans their college days in the 1940s to middle-adulthood in the early 1970s.

In between "Five Easy Pieces" and "Carnal Knowledge," Nicholson directed his first film, "Drive, He Said" (1971), an examination of a sexually-promiscuous college basketball star (William Tepper) who likes to explore his prowess both on the court and in the bedroom; particularly the latter with his professor's wife (Karen Black). Despite several fine performances, critics knocked his directorial debut for being dated and too confusing. Back to acting, a surprisingly introverted Nicholson starred in "The King of Marvin Gardens" (1972), playing a late-night radio talk show host in Philadelphia whose brother (Bruce Dern) calls out of the blue to inform him of his plan to open a Hawaiian resort, which ultimately leads to disillusionment and alienation. Nicholson then gave another sterling performance, this time playing "Badass" Buddusky in "The Last Detail" (1973), Hal Ashby's darkly comic tale about Navy lifers (Nicholson and Otis Young) whose job transporting a military prisoner (Randy Quaid) turns into a week-long object lesson in fighting, drinking and getting laid. Nicholson's raucous performance as the foul-mouthed Buddusky earned him a second Oscar nod for Best Leading Actor.

Perhaps no other role in Nicholson's career was more revered or referenced than his portrayal of the Chandleresque gumshoe, Jake Gittes, in Roman Polanski's ode to film noir, "Chinatown" (1974). In the director's lush, cynical and serpentine story set in 1930s Los Angeles, Nicholson's portrayal of a dogged private dick who hunts down the murderer of a water department official was a complex, deeply-nuanced turn that cemented the actor as one of Hollywood's top actors. Nicholson's Gittes is hired by a woman claiming to be the wife of the chief engineer with L.A.'s water department, who turns up dead in a water runoff pipe. When the real wife, Evelyn Mulwray (Faye Dunaway), suddenly shows up, however, Gittes is pulled into much darker and more sordid scandal that he could ever have imagined. Written for him by longtime friend Robert Towne, the Gittes character incorporated the collective Nicholson and elevated it to a fever pitch, allowing Polanski to use him as the straw to stir a very heady mix that also included director John Huston. The fact that Nicholson had recently begun seeing Huston's daughter, Anjelica, added subtext menace when, as Noah Cross, Huston ominously slurred, "Are you sleeping with her?" A spicy combination of fact and fiction, "Chinatown" recalled the swindles and corruption that helped transform small town Los Angeles into a modern metropolis, while earning numerous awards and nominations, including another Best Actor nod for Nicholson at the Academy Awards.

Though not honored by the Academy for his portrayal of Gittes, Nicholson finally won an Oscar for starring in Milos Forman's superb ensemble showcase, "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (1975), based on author Ken Kesey's acclaimed novel of the same name. Nicholson played R.P. McMurphy, an unruly convict sent to a mental institution, where his pranksterish antics endear him to a cadre of depressed patients while he also runs afoul with the authoritarian Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher). As an allegory for societal oppression upon man's natural inclination towards freedom, "Cuckoo's Nest" served as a sharp indictment of the Establishment's unending need for conformity, with the rebellious McMurphy waging an ultimately futile battle, though he manages to pass on his message of escape to another prisoner (Will Sampson), assuring that his spirit will never die. Earlier that year, Nicholson starred in Michelangelo Antonioni's "The Passenger" (1975), the actor's only European movie, in which he played an alienated journalist in North Africa who - while desiring another life - assumes the identity of a dead man he stumbles upon, only find himself embroiled in gun-running on behalf of a terrorist group.

As the 1970s began winding down, Nicholson began abandoning his more subtle shadings for over-the top ham-handedness and occasionally even self-parody. But buried beneath such excesses, one always found signs of what had made him a great actor. He teamed with Marlon Brando - also at the time suffering from the same malady - for the disastrous "Missouri Breaks" (1976), an eclectic Western that veered from broad comedy one minute and unrelenting violence in the next, creating an uneven and ultimately convoluted take on a steadfast genre. Then in 1977, the actor's name was dragged through the mud when friend and collaborator Roman Polanski was arrested for statutory rape of a 13-year-old girl, which occurred at Nicholson's Mulholland Drive home. But like any other negative press that came his way, Nicholson was able to avoid any permanent scars. Meanwhile, after playing a horse thief saved from the noose by marrying a frontierswoman (Mary Steenburgen) in "Goin' South" (1978), Nicholson returned to form in "The Shining" (1980), Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Stephen King's famed horror novel. As the rapidly diminishing Jack Torrence, an unsuccessful writer who takes on the job of caretaker at the remote Overlook Hotel with his wife (Shelley Duvall) and son (Danny Lloyd), Nicholson delivered one of his more over-the-top performances as a man whose isolation and frustrations descend into violence. Though no awards were forthcoming, Nicholson was nonetheless memorable in a role that spawned the infamous line, "Here's Johnny!"

Nicholson entered the 1980s a different actor than the one who emerged onto the scene with subtle, nuanced performances like he gave in "Five Easy Pieces" and "Easy Rider." In its place was a new Nicholson who enjoyed mugging for the camera with arched eyebrows, as he did playing a simpleminded and selfish murderer in Bob Rafelson's disappointing noir "The Postman Always Rings Twice" (1981). He did, however, craft a fine portrayal as the cynically romantic playwright Eugene O'Neill in "Reds" (1981), actor-director Warren Beatty's landmark epic about the true-to-life romance between journalist and revolutionary Jack Reed (Beatty) and writer-artist Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton), set against the backdrop of World War I and the Russian Revolution. Nicholson delivered his finest - and most underappreciated - performances of the decade, earning another Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. After playing a border guard who accepts payoffs to allow illegal immigrants to cross from Mexico in "The Border" (1982), Nicholson was a boisterous and boozy ex-astronaut who doggedly pursues his widowed neighbor (Shirley MacLaine) in "Terms of Endearment" (1983). Eschewing bombastic theatrics, Nicholson once again delivered the kind of performance that had catapulted him to stardom, earning him his second Oscar as Best Supporting Actor.

Nicholson's win for "Terms of Endearment" was a high-water mark in a string of Academy Award nominations he received in the 1980s - in fact, it was his only win of the decade in four tries. He was nominated again for Best Actor when he played a not-so-honorable Mafia hit man in "Prizzi's Honor" (1985), one of director John Huston's final films. Following a not very memorable leading turn in the Mike Nichols romantic comedy, "Heartburn" (1986), Nicholson found himself in the Oscar running once again for his performances as a washed-up baseball player wallowing in misery and alcohol in the acclaimed period drama, "Ironweed" (1987). In "The Witches of Eastwick" (1987), Nicholson delivered one of his more deliriously over-the-top performances playing the mysterious Darrell Van Horn, who uses his strange allure to seduce three female friends (Cher, Michelle Pfeiffer and Susan Sarandon). His frenzied theatrics were put to good use as The Joker in Tim Burton's version of "Batman" (1990). Nicholson's lighter take on the Joker dominated the film, which served as the perfect backdrop for his perpetually posturing and leering psychotic villain always fond of a dark, twisted joke.

After 16 years since the release of "Chinatown," Nicholson stepped behind the camera for a third time to direct "The Two Jakes" (1990), the sequel to the first film that depicted a more subdued and beaten-down Jake Gittes who becomes involved in a murder and conspiracy scheme stemming from a real estate deal that was part of the original film's story. Nicholson and writer Robert Towne attempted a sequel in the mid-1980s, but failed to get the project off the ground. When they finally did, the long friendship shared between the two collaborators suffered, causing irreparable harm. Prior to filming "The Two Jakes," Nicholson subverted his relationship with Anjelica Huston when she discovered that he had impregnated actress and model Rebecca Broussard, ending what ultimately proved to be the actor's longest romantic entanglement. Back to acting, Nicholson was in top form as the commanding officer covering up a murder on his Cuban military base in Rob Reiner's "A Few Good Men" (1992). Nicholson's famed line, "You can't handle the truth!" helped him earn yet another Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Despite a valiant effort, Nicholson failed to save Danny De Vito's unnecessarily convoluted biopic, "Hoffa" (1992), which traced the rise and mysterious fall of the controversial founder of the Teamsters Union.

Nicholson's next turn, playing a book editor who gradually evolves into a werewolf in Mike Nichols' "Wolf" (1994), served as a metaphor for confronting mid-life crises. At the start of the film, before the wolf bites him, he is weak-willed and passive, but his transformation into the wolfman brings virility and growing confidence. Not surprisingly, Nicholson called into play many of his trademark mannerisms, offering a wry, sly commentary on his star power, proving once again there was no limit to how long he could get away with such hokum. Meanwhile, he made further headlines that year when he was involved in a road rage incident in which he allegedly smashed another driver's windshield with a golf club. Once again, he averted public embarrassment by quietly reconciling the situation. Then in Sean Penn's "The Crossing Guard" (1995), Nicholson once again essayed a bitter man confronting the wounds of the past. As a jeweler whose daughter has been killed by a hit-and-run driver, he delivered a nuanced portrait that was equal parts guilt and grief, while the scenes shared with real-life former lover Anjelica Huston - who played his ex-wife - mined an understandably rich vein of remembered feeling.

In 1996, Nicholson found himself reprising his Oscar-winning turn as Garrett Breedlove opposite Shirley MacLaine in "Evening Star," then played the dual role of the U.S. President and a sleazy Las Vegas promoter in Tim Burton's "Mars Attacks!" (1996), an ode to 1950s sci-fi flicks that delivered cheesy comedy perfect for the broad strokes of the vaunted Nicholson caricature. Meanwhile, he reunited again with Bob Rafelson for the competent thriller "Blood and Wine" (1997), which proved to be compelling to the few people that actually saw the film. Nicholson then reunited with James L. Brooks in an Oscar-winning turn as a curmudgeonly, obsessive compulsive and homophobic author who falls for a single mother (Helen Hunt) struggling to make ends meet as a waitress, while eventually developing a grudging friendship with his gay neighbor (Greg Kinnear) in the richly appealing dramatic comedy, "As Good as It Gets" (1997). For his undeniably sharp performance, Nicholson earned the third Academy Award of his career.

After a three year hiatus, Nicholson returned to the big screen as Jerry Black in the thriller feature "The Pledge" (2001), another harrowing directorial effort from his friend Sean Penn, in which Nicholson delivered a performance that was widely hailed by critics in an otherwise bleak film. In 2002, Nicholson made another comeback, teaming with writer-director Alexander Payne for "About Schmidt," an introspective, serio-comic about Warren Schmidt, an unhappy and retired salesman reflecting on his life, making a cross country trek to attend the wedding of his estranged daughter after the sudden death of his wife. His fresh, unexpected and surprisingly understated performance was rewarded with several award nominations and trophies, including the Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama and an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor, the twelfth nomination of his career, breaking his own record as the most nominated male actor in Oscar history.

Balancing his penchant for top-level acting with a bid for another major commercial success, Nicholson next teamed with popular comedy star Adam Sandler for "Anger Management" (2003), with both stars contributing to the screenplay. Taking his charismatic devilishness into uncharted territory, Nicholson played an unconventional anger management therapist who exacerbates - rather than cures - the rage of his patient (Sandler). The actor then took on another late-career-defining role when he starred opposite Diane Keaton in the romantic comedy "Something's Got to Give" (2003), playing an aging womanizer with a penchant for much-younger women who surprises himself by taking up with the mother (Keaton) of one of his beautiful dates (Amanda Peet) following a heart attack in her beach house. Although the film was uneven in the early and late stretches, at the heart of the story Nicholson and Keaton displayed a remarkable romantic chemistry buoyed by comedic frisson, making for a crowd-pleasing hit that earned the actor yet another Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.

After another brief hiatus from the big screen, Nicholson returned to join an all-star cast that included Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon and Mark Wahlberg for "The Departed" (2006), a slick cop thriller directed by Martin Scorsese - marking the first collaboration of the two legends - and loosely based on the excellent Hong Kong actioner "Infernal Affairs" (2002). Nicholson played the nefarious and sexually deviant Frank Costello, a mob boss whose syndicate is infiltrated by an undercover cop (Leonardo DiCaprio). But Costello has his own mole (Matt Damon) inside the South Boston police department, pitting the two institutions against each other in a cat-and-mouse game that seeks to undermine the other's operations while the two moles fight to expose each other. Nicholson then starred opposite Morgan Freeman in "The Bucket List" (2007), a comedy directed by Rob Reiner about two terminally ill men who break out of the hospital's cancer ward and go on a road trip to fulfill their wishes before they kick the bucket. Despite mixed reviews, the film proved itself to be an exceptional winner at the box office.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

The Two Jakes (1990)
Director
Goin' South (1978)
Director
Drive, He Said (1971)
Director
The Terror (1963)
Uncredited Director collab

Cast (Feature Film)

Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (2011)
Himself
How Do You Know (2010)
The Bucket List (2007)
Edward
The Departed (2006)
Anger Management (2003)
Something's Gotta Give (2003)
About Schmidt (2002)
Warren [R.] Schmidt
The Pledge (2001)
As Good As it Gets (1997)
Mars Attacks! (1996)
Blood and Wine (1996)
The Evening Star (1996)
The Crossing Guard (1995)
Wolf (1994)
Hoffa (1992)
A Few Good Men (1992)
Man Trouble (1992)
The Two Jakes (1990)
Batman (1989)
The Joker
Ironweed (1987)
Francis Phelan
The Witches of Eastwick (1987)
Daryl Van Horne
Broadcast News (1987)
Heartburn (1986)
Prizzi's Honor (1985)
Terms Of Endearment (1983)
Reds (1981)
Eugene O'Neill
The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981)
Frank Chambers
The Border (1981)
The Shining (1980)
Jack Torrance
Goin' South (1978)
The Last Tycoon (1976)
The Missouri Breaks (1976)
Tom Logan
The Passenger (1975)
David Locke
Tommy (1975)
Professione: reporter (1975)
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (1975)
The Fortune (1975)
Chinatown (1974)
The Last Detail (1973)
Buddusky Smi
Ride in the Whirlwind (1972)
Wes
The King of Marvin Gardens (1972)
David Staebler
Carnal Knowledge (1971)
Jonathan
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1970)
Tad Pringle
Rebel Rousers (1970)
"Bunny"
Five Easy Pieces (1970)
Robert Eroica Dupea
Easy Rider (1969)
George Hanson
Psych-Out (1968)
Stoney
The St. Valentine's Day Massacre (1967)
Gino
Hells Angels on Wheels (1967)
Poet
Flight to Fury (1966)
Jay Wickam
The Shooting (1966)
Billy Spear
Back Door to Hell (1964)
Burnett
Ensign Pulver (1964)
Dolan
The Raven (1963)
Rexford Bedlo
The Terror (1963)
Lieut. André Duvalier
The Broken Land (1962)
Will Broicous
Studs Lonigan (1960)
Weary Reilly
The Little Shop of Horrors (1960)
Wilbur Force
Too Soon to Love (1960)
Buddy
The Wild Ride (1960)
Johnny Varron
The Cry Baby Killer (1958)
Jimmy [Wallace]

Writer (Feature Film)

Ride in the Whirlwind (1972)
Writer
Drive, He Said (1971)
Screenwriter
Head (1968)
Screenwriter
The Trip (1967)
Screenwriter
Flight to Fury (1966)
Screenwriter
Thunder Island (1963)
Story-Screenplay

Producer (Feature Film)

Ride in the Whirlwind (1972)
Producer
Drive, He Said (1971)
Producer
Head (1968)
Producer
The Shooting (1966)
Producer

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (2011)
Other
Anger Management (2003)
Other
Anger Management (2003)
Screenplay (Uncredited)

Cast (Special)

The 61st Annual Golden Globe Awards (2004)
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Meryl Streep (2004)
Back in the U.S. (2002)
The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts (2001)
Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures (2001)
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Barbra Streisand (2001)
Performer
72nd Annual Academy Awards Presentation (2000)
Presenter
Gimme Some Truth: The Making of the "Imagine" Album (2000)
SAG Awards Show (2000)
Presenter
The 56th Annual Golden Globe Awards (1999)
The 71st Annual Academy Awards Presentation (1999)
Presenter
America's Millennium (1999)
American Film Institute Salute to Dustin Hoffman (1999)
Performer
The 70th Annual Academy Awards (1998)
Performer
The 67th Annual Academy Awards (1995)
Presenter
The American Film Institute Salute to Steven Spielberg (1995)
Performer
The American Film Institute Salute to Jack Nicholson (1994)
Performer
Celebrate Storytelling With Danny Glover (1994)
Narrator
The 65th Annual Academy Awards Presentation (1993)
Presenter
1991 Grammy Awards (1993)
Performer
An American Reunion: New Beginnings, Renewed Hope (1993)
Michael Landon: Memories With Laughter and Love (1991)
The 62nd Annual Academy Awards Presentation (1990)
Presenter
The American Film Institute Salute to John Huston (1983)
Performer

Misc. Crew (Special)

NFL Stories: Straight From the Heart (2000)
Other
Hometown Heroes (1998)
Film Clips
The 69th Annual Academy Awards (1997)
Archival Footage
NFL Head Coach: The Man Behind the Men (1996)
Other
The 68th Annual Academy Awards (1996)
Archival Footage
Joe Montana: The Fire Inside (1995)
Other
Six Days to Sunday (1995)
Other
The 67th Annual Academy Awards (1995)
Archival Footage

Cast (Short)

The Passenger (Trailer) (1975)

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

The Elephant's Child (1987)
Narration

Life Events

1958

Screen acting debut in "Cry Baby Killer"

1963

Screenwriting debut, "Thunder Island"; a low-budget political thriller

1966

Co-produced and acted in Monte Hellman's "The Shooting" and "Ride the Whirlwind" (also scripted)

1967

Wrote the screenplay for Roger Corman's "The Trip" co-starring Peter Fonda

1968

Initial collaboration with director Bob Rafelson (co-writing and co-producing with him), "Head"; starring the musical group, The Monkees

1969

Cast in a scene-stealing, star-making supporting role in Dennis Hopper's "Easy Rider"; earned first Oscar nomination as Best Supporting actor

1970

Solidified star status with leading role in "Five Easy Pieces"; produced and directed by Rafelson; earned first Best Actor Oscar nomination

1971

Acted in Mike Nichols' "Carnal Knowledge"

1971

Film directorial debut with "Drive, He Said" (also co-wrote and co-produced)

1974

Achieved mainstream Hollywood success as Jake Gittes in Roman Polanski's noir classic "Chinatown"; received Best Actor Oscar nomination

1975

Portrayed an alienated American journalist in his one Euro-pic, Michelangelo Antonioni's "The Passenger"

1975

Solidified standing with Best Actor Oscar for Milos Forman's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"

1978

Directed "Goin' South," which offered James Belushi and Mary Steenburgen in their debut roles

1980

Starred opposite Shelley Duvall in Stanley Kubrick's "The Shining"

1981

Played Eugene O'Neill in Warren Beatty's "Reds"; nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Award

1983

Earned second Academy Award (Best Supporting Actor) for his portrayal of retired astronaut Garrett Breedlove in James Brooks' "Terms of Endearment"

1985

Acted opposite longtime lover Anjelica Huston in her father John Huston's "Prizzi's Honor"

1985

Formed T.E.N. Productions with Robert Towne and Robert Evans to make a sequel to "Chinatown"

1990

Portrayed The Joker in Tim Burton's "Batman"; blockbuster merchandising deal earned him well in excess of $20 million

1990

Directed the "Chinatown" sequel "The Two Jakes"; also reprised his role of Jake Gittes

1992

Played a marine colonel in Rob Reiner's "A Few Good Men"; nominated for Best Supporting Actor Oscar

1992

Acted the role of Jimmy Hoffa in "Hoffa"; earned a Golden Globe nomination

1994

Reteamed with Mike Nichols to star opposite Michelle Pfeiffer in "Wolf"

1996

Reprised his "Terms of Endearment" part in "Evening Star"

1996

Had dual role of US President and a Las Vegas car dealership owner in Tim Burton's campy "Mars Attacks!"

1997

Reunited with Rafelson for "Blood and Wine"

1997

Portrayed an obsessive-compulsive and homophopic writer in James L. Brooks' "As Good as It Gets"; received 11th Oscar nomination making him the most nominated male actor in the history of the award

2001

Cast as a retired detective investigating a child's murder in "The Pledge"; directed by Sean Penn

2002

Portrayed a retired salesman in Alexander Payne's "About Schmidt"; received BAFTA, SAG and Oscar leading role nominations

2003

Starred with Adam Sandler in the comedy "Anger Management"; he also contributed to the script

2003

Co-starred with Diane Keaton in "Something's Gotta Give"; earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor

2006

Portrayed an Irish gang boss in Martin Scorsese's "The Departed"; received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Supporting Role

2007

Co-starred with Morgan Freeman as dying men who must fulfill their list of goals in Rob Reiner's "The Bucket List"

2010

Co-starred with Reese Witherspoon, Paul Rudd and Owen Wilson in James L. Brooks' "How Do You Know"

Photo Collections

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Premiere Brochure
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Premiere Brochure
Easy Rider - Lobby Cards
Here are a few Lobby Cards from Easy Rider (1969), starring Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda, and Jack Nicholson. Lobby Cards were 11" x 14" posters that came in sets of 8. As the name implies, they were most often displayed in movie theater lobbies, to advertise current or coming attractions.
Carnal Knowledge - Movie Poster
Carnal Knowledge - Movie Poster
The Terror - Movie Poster
Here is the American one-sheet movie poster for Roger Corman's The Terror (1963). One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.
Five Easy Pieces - Movie Poster
Here is the American one-sheet movie poster for Five Easy Pieces (1970), starring Jack Nicholson. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.
Psych-Out - Movie Poster
Here is the American one-sheet movie poster for the exploitation picture Psych-Out (1968). One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.
Chinatown - Movie Poster
Here is an original release movie poster from Chinatown (1974), starring Jack Nicholson and directed by Roman Polanski.
Tommy - Movie Poster
Here is the American one-sheet movie poster for Tommy (1975), directed by Ken Russell and based on the rock opera by The Who. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.

Videos

Movie Clip

Chinatown (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Hold It There, Kitty-Cat Looking to figure out who’s behind the surreptitious dumping of water from the reservoir, private eye Jake (Jack Nicholson) is back at the locks where he encounters director Roman Polanski, in his famous cameo, as a nameless goon with a switchblade, in Chinatown, 1974.
Chinatown (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Contrary To My Experience Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson), lunching with Evelyn Mulwray (Faye Dunaway) after having his nose sliced, feels strongly that she's holding back, in Roman Polanski's Chinatown, 1974.
Chinatown (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Open, She's No Good Atmospheric credits and the introduction of detective Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson) with an aggrieved client (Burt Young), the opening of Roman Polanski's Chinatown, 1974, also starring Faye Dunaway and John Huston.
Chinatown (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Do You Know Me? Jake (Jack Nicholson), reveling with his barber and assistant detectives (Richard Bakalyan, Joe Mantell), gets an unexpected visit from the real Mrs. Mulwray (Faye Dunaway) in Roman Polanski's Chinatown, 1974.
Chinatown (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Dying Of Thirst Lots of 1930's Los Angeles as detective Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson) tails water department boss Hollis Mulwray (Darrell Zwerling), early in Roman Polanski's Chinatonw, 1974.
Terms Of Endearment (1983) -- (Original Trailer) Original trailer for the celebrated feature from writer-director James L. Brooks, winner of five Academy Awards, from the Larry McMurtry novel, Terms Of Endearment, 1983, with Shirley MacLaine, Debra Winger, Jack Nicholson and Jeff Daniels.
Easy Rider (1969) -- (Movie Clip) Dude Means Nice Guy In the Las Vegas, New Mexico jail, Billy (director Dennis Hopper) and Wyatt (Peter Fonda) meet inebriate lawyer George (Jack Nicholson) and introduce him to some new terminology, in Easy Rider, 1969.
Carnal Knowledge (1971) -- (Movie Clip) A Special Quality Jonathan (Jack Nicholson) makes a play for his best friend's girl Susan (Candice Bergen) while on a contrived visit to Smith College in director Mike Nichols' Carnal Knowledge, 1971.
Carnal Knowledge (1971) -- (Movie Clip) Do You Have A Name Or Something? After a dialogue prologue under the credits, the car confirms the late 1940's period suggested by the music, as two Amherst men (Jack Nicholson and Art Garfunkel as Jonathan and Sandy) assess then approach Smith College co-ed Susan (Candice Bergen), in director Mike Nichols' Carnal Knowledge, 1971.
Carnal Knowledge (1971) -- (Movie Clip) What's In It For Her? In the shower at the dorm, Jonathan (Jack Nicholson) presses Sandy (Art Garfunkel) to get more aggressive with his girlfriend, with plenty cursing, in Carnal Knowledge, 1971, from Jules Feiffer's screenplay.
Carnal Knowledge (1971) -- (Movie Clip) You Have A Long Life Line... The first appearance of Bobbie (Ann-Margret) features her on a date with accountant Jonathan (Jack Nicholson), first in a dimly-lit restaurant, with a deliberate artificial technique by director Mike Nichols and cinematographer Giuseppe Rotunno, then in a Manhattan taxi, in Carnal Knowledge, 1971.
Carnal Knowledge (1971) -- (Movie Clip) Your Life's Work With an artful edit from director Mike Nichols, Jonathan (Jack Nicholson) and Sandy (Art Garfunkel) meet at Central Park about ten years after their college days and resume conversation about females in Carnal Knowledge, 1971, from Jules Feiffer's screenplay.

Trailer

Chinatown (1974) -- (Original Trailer) A Los Angeles P-I (Jack Nicholson) unwittingly sets up an innocent man for murder, then joins his widow (Faye Dunaway) to unearth the corruption behind the crime in Chinatown (1974), produced by Robert Evans, directed by Roman Polanski.
Terror, The (1963) -- (Original Trailer) Only Boris Karloff is named, though Jack Nicholson and Sandra Knight (Mrs. Nicholson at the time) are featured, in the trailer for The Terror, 1963, featuring scenes directed by Francis Ford Coppola and Monte Hellman, though producer Roger Corman alone is credited.
Last Detail, The - (Original Trailer) Two shore patrolmen decide to show a prisoner a good time on his way to the brig in The Last Detail (1973) starring Jack Nicholson and Randy Quaid.
Five Easy Pieces - (Re-release Trailer) Jack Nicholson's first major movie vehicle was Five Easy Pieces (1970), about a classical pianist pursuing a blue-collar life.
Few Good Men, A - (Original Trailer) Jack Nicholson and Tom Cruise star in the film version of A Few Good Men (1992) based on the play by Aaron Sorkin.
Easy Rider - (Original Trailer) A cross-country trip to sell drugs puts two hippie bikers on a collision course with small-town prejudices in the 60's classic Easy Rider (1969).
Trip, The - (Original Trailer) A commercial director (Peter Fonda) tries to get over a painful divorce with a dose of L.S.D. in Roger Corman's The Trip (1967).
As Good As It Gets - (Original Trailer) Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt both won Oscars for their performances in the romantic comedy As Good As It Gets (1997).
Reds -- (Original Trailer) Warren Beatty directed and co-starred, with Diane Keaton and Jack Nicholson in Reds, 1981, the story of John Reed, the American Communist who is buried in the Kremlin.
Missouri Breaks, The - (Original Trailer) Cattle thief Jack Nicholson vs. "regulator" Marlon Brando in Arthur Penn's The Missouri Breaks (1976).
Tommy - (Original Trailer) Tommy (1975), the deaf, dumb and blind kid who becomes a pinball wizard in Ken Russell's interpretation of The Who's rock opera.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - (Original Trailer) A small-time criminal (Jack Nicholson) fakes insanity in hopes of doing easy time in a mental hospital in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975).

Family

John Nicholson
Grandfather
Sign painter. An itinerant alcoholic whom Nicholson believed was his father until a <i>Time</i> magazine researcher revealed otherwise while preparing an August 12, 1974 cover story on the star; he never learned his father's true identity.
Ethel May Nicholson
Grandmother
Beautician. Raised Nicholson as her son; he believed her to be his mother until he was 37 years old (she had already died).
June Nicholson
Mother
Dancer, secretary. Spent a decade in chorus lines before marrying Murray Hawley, but when he left her, returned to her family in Neptune City, New Jersey; diagnosed with cervical cancer at age 43 (c. 1962) and died without telling Jack she was his mother; he had always believed she was his older sister.
Lorraine Nicholson
Aunt
Nicholson believed her to be his older sister; according to Lorraine, Jack had learned the truth prior to the TIME cover story of August 12, 1974 from a 15-page letter written by a man purporting to have fathered him with June; Lorraine told Jack that the man was only one of the suspects June had dated at the time.
Pamela Hawley Liddicoat
Half-Sister
Born c. 1946; murdered on February 28, 1994.
Jennifer Nicholson
Daughter
Fashion designer. Born c. 1964; mother, Sandra Knight; worked as design assistant on "The Two Jakes"; featured in the Nicholson-financed film, "Blue Champagne" (1991); gave birth to Nicholson's first grandson Sean on February 20, 1996; married Mark Norfleet on August 31, 1997.
Lorraine Broussard Nicholson
Daughter
Born on April 16, 1990; mother, Rebecca Broussard.
Raymond Nicholson
Son
Born on February 20, 1992 in Los Angeles; mother, Rebecca Broussard.

Companions

Sandra Knight
Wife
Divorced; mother of Nicholson's daughter Jennifer.
Mimi Machu
Companion
Susan Anspach
Companion
Actor. Co-starred in "Five Easy Pieces"; no longer together; she alleges that together they had a son, Caleb, who was born on September 26, 1970; claims have been made that Nicholson privately acknowledged the child but has refused to do so publicly.
Anjelica Huston
Companion
Actor. Had on-again, off-again relationship from c. 1973 until 1990.
Rebecca Broussard
Companion
Former waitress, model, actor. Born c. 1963; met while she was waitressing at Helena's in Los Angeles, a restaurant in which Nicholson was an investor; played Nicholson's secretary in "The Two Jakes"; featured in "Blue Champagne" (lensed 1991), "Cannes Man" (1996) and "Point of Betrayal" (1996); married to record producer Richard Perry from 1987 to 1989.
Lara Flynn Boyle
Companion
Actor. Had on-again, off-again romantic relationship from summer 1999.

Bibliography

"Jack Nicholson: The Life and Times of an Actor on the Edge"
Peter Thompson, Birch Lane Press (1997)
"Jack's Life"
Patrick McGillan

Notes

Nicholson has a major art collection.

Named a Commander des Arts et Lettres (received in Paris, September 10, 1990 from the French Minister of Culture).

He received star number 2077 on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in December 1996.

Nicholson is a rabid fan of the Los Angeles Laker basketball team.

In 1994, he allegedly hit the windshield of a car with a golf club during a traffic dispute; misdemeanor charges of assault and vandalism were dismissed when a lawsuit brought by the motorist was settled out of court.

In 1996, Nicholson paid a settlement of $32,500 to Catherine Sheehan, a woman who alleged that the actor attacked her after a paid sexual encounter. Four years later, Sheehan sought to have the settlement overturned because of reported medical problems that resulted from the incident had driven her into debt.

"Because of Robert's [Towne] influence, it's ["The Two Jakes"] a very literary piece. No car chases, no dead innocent bystanders while I'm supposed to worry if they catch the Russian dope addict. I hate those movies. I mean, back in the [Corman] days, Monte Hellman was the first guy that showed the dead body on the screen. They used to just drop out of the bottom of the frame like death didn't count, and I think that can be culturally degrading. Just like guys driving through the fruit stands and up on the sidewalk, cars are blowing up left and right, and we're supposed to care about the people in the script, I don't buy it."---Jack Nicholson quoted in Premiere, September 1990.

"I lived with Anjelica. Of course I lied to her. It's the other woman I would never lie to. You only lie to two people in your life, your girlfriend and the police. Everybody else you tell the truth to."---Nicholson on whether he ever lied to Anjelica Houston in Vanity Fair, April 1994.

"I'll tell you the truth; when I think about Ray's adolescence, I just feel lucky if I'm alive. That's quite a ways in the future. I'll figure it out by then. Ray will only have one problem with women, and that will be an overabundance."---Nicholson, when asked how he will enlighten young son Ray about women as he hits adolescence, to Us, July 1994.

"Here's a good definition of fame. You call up a restaurant at six on a Saturday night and ask for a table for six and you get the table. Great to be famous. You get to the door and you don't have to wait on line. You get seated right away. Great to be famous. But from that point on you're going to be working. You're going to be the mayor of the room and will have to say hello to everyone who comes by. That's not so good."---Nicholson quoted to Entertainment Weekly, January 3, 2003.

"Jack is a textbook actor who's very intuitive. He is absolutely brilliant at going as far as you can go, always pushing to the edge, but still making it seem real."---Tim Burton, his director for "Batman" to Empire, September 2004.

"I prefer the company of woman. I'm buzzed by the female mystique. I always tell you young men, there are three rules: they hate us, we hate them; they're stronger, they're smarter; and most important, they don't play fair."---Jack Nicholson's advice to younger men as quoted in Empire, September 2004.