44th Annual Accolade to be Presented During the 14th Annual Screen
Actors Guild Awards® Simulcast on TNT and TBS on Sunday, Jan. 27, 2008
Los Angeles, California (September 24, 2007) – Screen Actors Guild
(SAG) announced today that Charles Durning, the quintessential character actor
and highly decorated World War II veteran, will receive the Guild’s most
prestigious tribute—the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award for career
achievement and humanitarian accomplishment. Durning will be presented the
Award, given annually to an actor who fosters the “finest ideals of the acting
profession,” at the 14th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards®,
which premieres live on TNT and TBS Sunday, Jan. 27, 2008, at 8 p.m. ET/PT, 7
p.m. CT and 6 p.m. MT.
In making today’s announcement, SAG
President Alan Rosenberg said, “Charles Durning is the perfect choice for the
Life Achievement Award as Screen Actors Guild celebrates its 75th anniversary.
Throughout his career, he has epitomized the art and grace of acting and
brought something special to every role. He is above all things a great actor
with the talent to which we all aspire: the power to create indelible
characters.”
That talent has earned Durning numerous
accolades during his more than 50 years as a performer. He was honored with an
Oscar® nomination in 1983 for his musical turn as the tap-dancing Texas
governor in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas and again in 1984 for
his lecherous Nazi Colonel Erhardt in the Brooksfilm remake of Ernst
Lubitsch’s To Be or Not To Be, a role which also brought him one
of his four Golden Globe® nominations. He made his film debut in 1965 in
Harvey Middleman, Fireman, followed by appearances in I Walk the Line
and two early Brian de Palma films, Hi, Mom (credited as Charles
Durnham) and Sisters. He achieved breakout status in 1972 when, after
seeing Durning on Broadway in Jason Miller’s That Championship Season
, George Roy Hill cast him as a corrupt police lieutenant in The Sting
. Durning’s nearly 100 feature roles include hostage negotiator Det. Moretti
in Dog Day Afternoon (for which he received his first Golden Globe®
nomination), the villainous frogs-leg restaurant magnate in The Muppet Movie
, Jessica Lange’s father in Tootsie and Holly Hunter’s father in
Home for the Holidays.
For the Coen Brothers, Durning
appeared in O Brother, Where Art Thou? and played the pivotal title
role The Hudsucker Proxy. In 2000, as a member of the ensemble cast of
David Mamet’s State and Main, he was honored by the National
Board of Review, the Online Film Critics Society and the Florida Film Critics
Circle. That same year he starred in another Mamet screenplay, Lakeboat
, along with Dennis Leary, whose father he has played for the past three years
in 23 episodes of the FX hit Rescue Me.
Other film
credits include North Dallas Forty, The Greek Tycoon, When a Stranger
Calls, Harry and Walter Go to New York, True Confessions, Twilight’s Last
Gleaming, The Final Countdown, The Choirboys, An Enemy of the People, Far
North, The Man With One Red Shoe, Death and Texas, One Fine Day, V.I.
Warshawski and comic-strips-brought-to-life Brenda Starr and
Dick Tracy, among many others.
In 1975, Durning was
honored with the first of eight Emmy® nominations for his romantic turn
opposite Maureen Stapleton in the television movie Queen of the Stardust
Ballroom. Nominations followed for his performances in the miniseries
Captains and the Kings (which also earned him a Golden Globe® nomination)
and the telefilms Attica and Death of a Salesman, the latter
opposite Dustin Hoffman, whom he had earlier romanced in Tootsie.
Durning was twice nominated for supporting actor Emmys® during his
1990-1994 run as Dr. Harlan Elldridge in the comedy Evening Shade,
which starred his friend and frequent collaborator Burt Reynolds. The two
co-starred in the features Stick, Starting Over, Sharkey’s Machine, The
Best Little Whorehouse in Texas and Forget About It, as well as the
Hard Time series of telefilms. The Television Academy also nominated
Durning twice for guest performances: in 1995 for Homicide: Life on the
Street and in 2005 for NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigative Service.
Durning starred as Supreme Court Justice Henry Hoskins in the television
series First Monday, in the short-lived series Orleans, Eye to Eye
and The Cop and the Kid, as well as early in his career in the daytime
drama Another World. His dozens of television guest-starring roles
include his March 2007 appearance on Monk, seven appearances as Father
Hubley on Everybody Loves Raymond and character arcs on Everwood
, Family Guy, The Practice and Cybil. His more than 50
television movies include The Best Little Girl in the World, Crisis at
Central High, The Rivalry, The Girls in their Summer Dresses and Other
Stories by Irwin Shaw, four outings as Santa Claus, one as the Pope, one
as Casey Stengel and roles in the televised versions of such classics as
Look Homeward Angel, Mister Roberts, Dinner at Eight and Studs Lonigan
. He received a CableACE nomination for his performance as a southern prison
camp warden in The Man Who Broke 1,000 Chains.
Durning
was born in Highland Falls, N.Y., on Feb. 28, 1923. Widowed when Durning was
12, his mother worked as a laundress at the U.S. Military Academy in nearby
West Point. As a teenage usher in a burlesque house, Durning was hired to
replace a drunken “second banana” on stage, then hoofed his way through
upstate New York as half of ballroom dancing act for 11 years. Durning’s early
career was punctuated by stints as an elevator operator, Western Union
delivery boy, cab driver, bartender, night watchman, boxer and construction
worker.
His heroic yet horrifying experiences during World
War II loomed large in shaping his 20s. He was in the first wave to land on
Omaha Beach during the D-Day Normandy invasion on June 6, 1944, killing seven
German gunners and suffering serious machine gun wounds to his right leg and
shrapnel wounds over his body in that bloody battle. Later, he was stabbed
eight times with a bayonet by a young German soldier, whom he killed with a
rock in hand-to-hand combat. Taken prisoner during the Battle of the Bulge, he
was one of a few survivors of the infamous attack on American POWs at Malmedy,
Belgium, and was the sole survivor of 40 men who took out a German machine gun
nest. For his valor he was honored with three Purple Hearts and a Silver Star.
Although he had starred as a World War II veteran in the 1985 film Stand
Alone, Durning did not speak publicly about his war experiences until the
50th anniversary of D-Day, when it was suggested by Durning’s Evening
Shade co-star Ossie Davis (SAG’s 2000 Life Achievement Award recipient)
that he appear in the National Memorial Day Concert, which Davis was hosting.
Durning has since made the concert an annual appearance. For the anniversary,
Durning also narrated The Discovery Channel’s Normandy: The Great Crusade and
read Ernest Hemmingway’s account of the invasion in a CBS Reports D-Day
special.
Durning employed dance, speech and acting studies as
part of his post-war recovery. In 2007, he was recognized as a “Legend” by the
American Academy of Dramatic Arts, where he studied in the late 1940s.
By the 1960s Durning had become a prolific actor on the New York stage and in
regional and touring companies. He performed in some 35 productions with
Joseph Papp’s New York Shakespeare Festival, both in the Bard’s work and in
such contemporary mid-‘70s premieres as “In the Boom Boom Room” and “The Au
Pair Man,” opposite Julie Harris.
For his work on
Broadway, Durning has been honored with Tony and Drama Desk awards for the
role of Big Daddy in the 1990 Broadway revival of Tennessee Williams’
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, starring Kathleen Turner; the Drama League
Distinguished Performance Award for the 1997 revival of The Gin Game,
which reunited him with Julie Harris; and a 1972 Drama Desk Award for That
Championship Season. More recently, he starred in the 1996 revival of
Inherit the Wind, opposite George C. Scott, and the 2000 revival of Gore
Vidal’s The Best Man.
He received the 2006
Lucille Lortell Award for Outstanding Featured Actor for Wendy Wasserstein’s
Third at Lincoln Center and played the title role in Trumbo: Red White
and Blacklisted Off-Broadway in 2003. His numerous Off-Broadway and
regional theatre credits include On Golden Pond, Sweet Bird of Youth,
Prelude to a Kiss, Brigadoon and Glengarry Glen Ross.
His upcoming films include Deal, his seventh film opposite Burt
Reynolds; Polycarp, which premiered at the 2007 Hoboken Film Festival;
and a starring role in Chatham.
The 14th Annual
Screen Actors Guild Awards® are produced by Jeff Margolis Productions
in association with Screen Actors Guild. Jeff Margolis is the executive
producer and Kathy Connell is the producer. Yale Summers, Daryl Anderson,
Shelley Fabares, Paul Napier and JoBeth Williams are producers for SAG. Gloria
Fujita O’Brien and Mick McCullough are supervising producers. Benn Fleishman
is executive in charge of production.
Screen Actors Guild is
the nation’s largest labor union representing working actors. Established in
1933, SAG has a rich history in the American labor movement, from standing up
to studios to break long-term engagement contracts in the 1940s to fighting
for artists’ rights amid the digital revolution sweeping the entertainment
industry in the 21st century. With 20 branches nationwide, SAG represents
nearly 120,000 actors who work in motion pictures, television, commercials,
industrials, video games, Internet and all new media formats. The Guild exists
to enhance actors’ working conditions, compensation and benefits and to be a
powerful, unified voice on behalf of artists’ rights. Headquartered in Los
Angeles, SAG is a proud affiliate of the AFL-CIO. More information is
available online at www.sag.org.
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