Saturday 2 March 2024

Tom Hanks Full Real Life Story :

    Tomas Jaffrey Hanks


Thomas Jeffrey Hanks was born on July 9, 1956, in Concord, California. After graduating high school in Oakland, Hanks attended junior college before transferring into the theater program at California State University.



The Journey of Life :

When Reader's Digest did a poll in 2013 to find out who are the 100 Most Trusted People in America, Tom Hanks came out as No. 1. It's no surprise that the much-beloved star of such hits as Big, Forrest Gump, Castaway, and Toy Story is one of the most powerful and well-respected actors in Hollywood. His accessibility and charisma have earned him comparisons with such screen legends as Jimmy Stewart, Cary Grant and Gary Cooper. Tom Hanks is the "everyman" whose portrayals make us reconsider our own moral choices. 



Watching him on screen :

 we think about what we would do--and have done. "And that's why we all love you so much," said Oprah in a 2001 interview with Hanks. "We recognize ourselves in your characters." 


After graduating :

 High school in Oakland, Hanks attended junior college before transferring into the theater program at California State University. He spent his summers acting and working at the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival in Ohio until 1980 when he dropped out of college and moved to New York City. That same year, Hanks was cast as Kip Wilson on the sitcom Bosom Buddies, one of two advertising executives who dress in drag in order to rent an apartment in an all-female building. The exposure led to guest roles on Happy Days, Taxi, The Love Boat, and Family Ties.




Ron Howard : 

Remembered Hanks from his guest stint on Happy Days, and the actor starred in Howard's 1984 hit Splash opposite Daryl Hannah. Tom Hanks and Ron Howard would go on to work together on Apollo 13, The Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons.




In 1988 : 

Penny Marshall cast Hanks in a star-making role in Big. his performance earned him his first Academy Award nomination for Best Actor and established his reputation as a box-office draw as well as a talented actor. Hanks' portrayal in Nora Ephron's 1993 hit Sleepless in Seattle with co-star Meg Ryan ensured him a place among the premier romantic-comedy stars of his generation. But it was his courageous performance of a lawyer fired from his high-paying firm because he has AIDS in Philadelphia that won him an Academy Award for Best Actor. Hanks followed in 1994 with the phenomenal box office success Forrest Gump and brought home his second-straight Best Actor Oscar, becoming only the second actor to have accomplished the feat after Spencer Tracy.



Hanks moved from in front of the camera to behind it, making his directorial and screenwriting debut in 1996 with That Thing You Do!. On the Emmy-winning HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon, Hanks produced, directed, wrote and acted in various episodes. "I don't have instinctive talents for directing. It's stuff that I picked up from watching other people," Hanks said in a July 2014 interview.




Childhood & Early Life :

1 - Tom Hanks  Amos Mefford Hanks, an itinerant cook, and Janet Marilyn, a hospital worker, in Concord, California. His siblings are Sandra, Larry, and Jim.

2 - His parents divorced in 1960. Tom, Sandra, and Larry were raised by his father while Jim, his youngest brother was brought up by his mother.

3 - As a young boy, he had to cope with the continuous change in places, before his father finally settled in Oakland.

4 - He completed high school at Skyline High School, Oakland, and graduated from the institute in 1974.

5 - He enrolled at Chabot College in Hayward, California, but he switched to California State University, Sacramento to pursue acting.

6 - He quit his studies in 1977, accepting an internship offer from the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival in Lakewood, Ohio.

He forged an important :

Relationship with Steven Spielberg when he starred in the director's gruesomely accurate World War II drama Saving Private Ryan. The two collaborated on Catch Me If You Can and The Terminal, as well as the miniseries Band of Brothers and its companion piece The Pacific, and Cold War spy thriller Bridge of Spies. Spielberg gave tribute to Hanks during his AFI Life achievement Award, saying "Tom Hanks' achievements in film are very many, but perhaps his greatest contribution so far is that he instills a great hope in us all for a world where ordinary people have a voice."



Hanks has received numerous accolades, including being the youngest actor ever to earn the American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award. For his Broadway debut in Lucky Guy, Hanks garnered a 2013 Tony Award nomination. But his achievements extend beyond film. The Space Foundation awarded Hanks the Douglas S. Morrow Public Outreach Award given annually to an individual or organization that has made significant contributions to public awareness of space programs. Hanks was the first actor to be inducted as an honorary member of the United States Army Rangers Hall of Fame. He served as the national spokesperson for the World War II Memorial Campaign and was an honorary chairperson of the D-Day Museum Capital Campaign.




Hanks' roles :

Are unforgettable, whether undergoing a striking physical transformation as in Castaway, playing a washed-up baseball legend turned manager in A League of Their Own or the real life portrayal of Captain Phillips.




To think I've reflected the audience's lives somehow, though it's in this big, false, glamorous arena of movies," said Hanks. "I hope people see themselves somehow up on the screen. Shakespeare said it best: 'Hold the mirror up to nature. Human behavior is worthy of examination and celebration.'"



Tom Hanks
(One of the Most Popular Film Stars Worldwide, Known for Both His Comedic.

California United States :

Tom Hanks is a popular American actor and is one of the highest-paid all-time box office stars. He stole the limelight through his performance in ‘Splash’, a romantic comedy directed by Ron Howard. With his role as Robert Langdon in the movies ‘The Da Vinci Code’ and ‘Angels & Demons’, he earned widespread commercial success and became one of the highest-paid actors in Hollywood. His charm and upbeat attitude earned him instant stardom and he was also frequently compared to the likes of Cary Grant, 


Henry Fonda
, Jimmy Stewart, and Gary Cooper—all of whom were Hollywood legends. He has established himself not only as an actor but also as a writer and director with films like ‘That Thing You Do!’ and ‘Larry Crowne’. He has produced many films and documentaries like ‘From the Earth to the Moon’, ‘Band of Brothers’, and ‘The Pacific’. Over the years he has earned a number of awards and accolades for his phenomenal works, including seven 'Primetime Emmy Awards,' two 


'Academy Awards,' a 'Tony Award,' 'Legion of Honor,' and a 'Kennedy Centre Honor.' He also earned the 'Presidential Medal of Freedom.' He was awarded the 'Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award' in 2020. He is an active humanitarian and has also boldly voiced his opinions on same-sex marriages


As an environmentalist, he realizes the need for alternative fuels for which he has expressed his interest to invest a handsome sum of money to promote electric vehicles. His original intention of becoming an astronaut has made him a fervent supporter of NASA’s manned space program.


Stallone and Questlove turn :
out for Tommy Hilfiger
Quick Facts
Also Known As: Thomas Jeffrey Hanks

Age: 67 Years, 67 Year Old Males


Family
:

Spouse/Ex-: Rita Wilson (M. 1988), Samantha Lewes 1978–1987), Samantha Lewes 1978–1987)

Father: Amos Mefford Hanks

Mother: Janet Marylyn Frager

Siblings: Jim Hanks, Larry Hanks, Sandra Hanks

Children: Chet Hanks, Colin Hanks, Elizabeth Ann Hanks, Truman Hanks, Truman Theodore Hanks

Born Country: United States

Quotes By Tom Hanks Actors

Ancestry : British American, Portuguese American, Greek American

Notable Alumni : Chabot College, California State University, Sacramento

U.S. State: California

Personality: ENTP


Career :

In 1978, his performance as ‘Proteus’ in Shakespeare’s ‘The Two Gentlemen of Verona’ won him the Best Actor award at the Cleveland Critics Circle.

From 1978 to 1980, he acted in various summer productions of Shakespeare’s plays, and in winter, he worked for a theater company in Sacramento.

In 1979, he moved to New York with the dream of performing on Broadway. In 1980, he made his onscreen debut in the low-budget horror movie, ‘He Knows You're Alone’.


The same year, he got a chance to perform in the television sitcom ‘Bosom Buddies’ which earned him critical acclaim.

In 1982, his guest appearance on the TV episode of ‘Happy Days’, impressed co-actor Ron Howard who invited him to star in the supporting role in ‘Splash’, a comic film in 1984, which became a great hit.


His performance as a 13-year-old boy trapped in the body of a 35-year-old man in Penny Marshall’sBig’ (1988), was lauded and he soon began appearing in blockbuster hits.

His notable performance in ‘Punchline’ which was released in 1988, won him a Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award.


His major breakthrough came in 1993 when he played the role of an attorney with AIDS in Jonathan Demme’s film, ‘Philadelphia’. He reduced 37 pounds for the film and his performance won him an Oscar and an MTV Movie Award.

In 1994, he played the lead role in the movie ‘Forrest Gump’, an epic romantic-comedy-drama, based on the eponymous novel by Winston Groom. He won the Academy Award for his role in the movie.


1
- In 1998, he teamed up with Steven Spielberg for the first time and performed a challenging role in ‘Saving Private Ryan’ which got him his fourth nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor.

2 - In 2001, he caught the attention of the public when he was cast in ‘Band of Brothers, an HBO mini-series, and ‘A Tribute to Heroes’.

3 - In 2004, he appeared in a number of films including the Coen Brothers' ‘The Ladykillers’, Spielberg’sThe Terminal’ and Robert Zemeckis’ ‘The Polar Express’.


4
- In 2006, he teamed up with Ron Howard and played the role of Robert Langdon in the film, ‘The Da Vinci Code’, an adaptation of Dan Brown’s novel of the same name.

5 - He co-produced ‘The Great Buck Howard’ (2008), where his son Colin Hanks co-starred with him.


6
- In 2009, he played the role of the famed Robert Langdon once again in ‘Angels and Demons’, a sequel to ‘The Da Vinci Code’ that catapulted him to fame.

7 - He was the executive producer of the 2012 film ‘Game Change’ which is about the 2008 presidential campaign. He next starred in films like ‘Captain Phillips’ (2013), ‘Saving Mr. Banks’ (2013), ‘Bridge of Spies’ (2015), ‘Ithaca’ (2015), and ‘A Hologram for the King’ (2016).


8
- In 2016, he portrayed Captain Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger in the American biographical drama film ‘Sully’ directed by Clint Eastwood. The film was based on the 2009 events surrounding US Airways Flight 1549 and received positive reviews from critics. It was also a major commercial success, grossing over $240.8 million on a budget of $60 million. That same year, Hanks also reprised his role as ‘Professor Robert Langdon’ in the Ron Howard-directed American action mystery thriller film ‘Inferno.’ The film was inspired by the eponymous 2013 novel by Dan Brown.

9 - He was next seen in films such as ‘The Circle’ (2017), ‘The Post’ (2017), ‘Toy Story 4’ (2019), ‘A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood’ (2019), ‘Greyhound’ (2020), ‘Borat Subsequent Movie Film’ (2020), ‘News of the World’ (2020), ‘Finch’ (2021), ‘Elvis’ (2022), ‘Pinocchio’ (2022), and ‘A Man Called Otto’ (2022).                                      


10
- He played the role of ‘Stanley Zak’ in the 2023 American comedy-drama film ‘Asteroid City’ written and directed by Wes Anderson. The film had its premiere at the 76th Cannes Film Festival and received mostly positive reviews from critics.

Major Works :

The 1999 animated film, ‘Toy Story 2’, where Hanks lent his voice for the character, Woody, the leader of the cowboy dolls, became a box-office hit making a record-breaking box-office sale of $80.8 million.

Apollo 13’ a film that deals with the lunar mission, released in 2002, in the IMAX format became a huge success, earning $500 million at the box office.

The Da Vinci Code’ filmed in 2006, based on the best-seller written by Dan Brown, earned over $750 million at the box office.


Awards & Achievements
He won two Academy Awards consecutively in 1994, and 1995, for his outstanding performance in the films ‘Philadelphia’ and ‘Forrest Gump’.

In 2002, he was the recipient of the American Film Institute's Life Achievement Award, presented by Steven Spielberg. He became the youngest recipient of this prestigious honor.

He was inducted into the United States Army Rangers Hall of Fame in 2006.
Personal Life & Legacy
In 1978, he married Samantha Lewes, an actress and producer. They were divorced in 1987. The couple has two children, Colin and Elizabeth.


He married Rita Wilson in 1988, an actress with whom he worked in the film ‘Volunteers’. The couple has two sons, Chester and Truman.

An asteroid “12818 Tom hanks” is named after him.

Trivia :

This actor who has played the role of Robert Langdon in one of the films has been voted as the ‘most trusted person in the US’ as per a poll published in Reader’s Digest.

This Hollywood actor loves to collect typewriters and has 80 of them in his collection.


This famous Hollywood actor is a distant relative of President Abraham Lincoln.

1. Saving Private Ryan (1998)
  (Drama, War)

2. Forrest Gump (1994)
  (Comedy, Romance, Drama)

3. The Green Mile (1999)
  (Mystery, Fantasy, Drama, Crime)

4. Cast Away (2000)
  (Adventure, Romance, Drama)

5. Catch Me If You Can (2002)
  (Drama, Crime, Biography)

6. Apollo 13 (1995)
  (Adventure, Drama, History)

7. Captain Phillips (2013)
  (Thriller, Biography, Drama)

8. Philadelphia (1993)
  (Drama)

9. Sully (2016)
  (Drama, Biography)

10. Bridge of Spies (2015)
  (History, Drama, Thriller)

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