Warren Beatty - Turner Classic Movies

Warren Beatty


Actor, Director, Producer
Warren Beatty

About

Also Known As
Henry Warren Beaty
Birth Place
Richmond, Virginia, USA
Born
March 30, 1937

Biography

Though his romantic adventures as the womanizer du-jour for over four decades occasionally overshadowed his creative endeavors, star Warren Beatty was an actor and Academy Award-winning director and writer who starred in and made some of the most ambitious and influential films of the 1960s on through the 1990s. His list of credits may have come up shorter than some of his more celebrate...

Photos & Videos

Shampoo - Movie Poster
Bonnie and Clyde - Publicity Still
Splendor in the Grass - Movie Posters

Family & Companions

Joan Collins
Companion
Actor. Together from the late 1950s to c. 1961; were engaged when Beatty began affair with Natalie Wood.
Natalie Wood
Companion
Actor. Had affair during making of "Splendor in the Grass".
Julie Christie
Companion
Actor. Together in the 1970s; no longer together; acted together in "McCabe & Mrs. Miller", "Shampoo" and "Heaven Can Wait".
Michelle Phillips
Companion
Singer, actor.

Bibliography

"Shirley and Warren"
James Spada, Macmillan (1985)

Notes

He was named as the Harvard Hasty Pudding Man of the Year in 1975.

"Beatty may not have had Brando's fire, or Dean's ethereality, or Gable's gruff machismo, but he had humor, athletic grace, and something, in quantity, that all the great ones have had: mystery. Looks and talent will take you a long way in Hollywood, but if you seem to withhold some crucial part of yourself--whether it exists or not--you may enter the pantheon at will. Add salient sexuality and the mixture becomes combustible." --James Kaplan in Entertainment WeeklY December 20, 1991.

Biography

Though his romantic adventures as the womanizer du-jour for over four decades occasionally overshadowed his creative endeavors, star Warren Beatty was an actor and Academy Award-winning director and writer who starred in and made some of the most ambitious and influential films of the 1960s on through the 1990s. His list of credits may have come up shorter than some of his more celebrated peers, but few could boast such films as "Bonnie and Clyde" (1967), "McCabe and Mrs. Miller" (1971), "Shampoo" (1975), "Reds" (1981) and "Bugsy" (1991) as their own. In truth, his list of romantic conquests probably exceeded his film credits, with the likes of Jane Fonda, Diane Keaton, Carly Simon, Madonna, Diane Sawyer, Natalie Wood, Cher, Julie Christie and Michelle Phillips all making the rounds with Beatty. But ultimately it was actress Annette Bening who tamed the wild man and claimed him as her husband after meeting on the set of "Bugsy." Beatty settled down into marriage shortly after, while his career eased to a crawl after directing and starring in the political satire "Bulworth" (1998). After the flop "Town & Country" (2001), Beatty retreated from filmmaking altogether for over a decade, seemingly content with watching Bening earn accolades for one stellar performance after another. His deep involvement in liberal politics sparked rumors of a run for office - governor or perhaps even president - but Beatty always brushed aside such talk. It was, in fact, a return to filmmaking that excited his fans the most, although the film that broke his prolonged silence -- Old Hollywood romantic comedy-drama "Rules Don't Apply" (2017), in which Beatty co-starred as Howard Hughes in addition to writing and directing -- turned out to be a critical and commercial disappointment. Indeed, the film was overshadowed by perhaps the biggest shock in Academy Awards history, when Beatty and "Bonnie and Clyde" co-star Faye Dunaway were accidentally given the wrong envelope before announcing the 2017 Best Picture Oscar, leading to Dunaway accidentally announcing that "La La Land" (2016) had won over the true winner "Moonlight" (2016).

Born Henry Warren Beatty in Richmond, VA on March 30, 1937, his career choice may have been set for him at an early age. Beatty's mother Kathlyn was a drama teacher, and his older sister, Shirley (who later adopted her middle name, MacLean, for her stage name, Shirley MacLaine) had found success on Broadway in "The Pajama Game." Beatty made a name for himself on the high school football field, but his sister's fame inspired him to try his hand at acting as well. After a stint as a stagehand at the National Theater in Washington, D.C., Beatty rejected numerous football scholarships to study drama at Northwestern University. His tenure there would last only a year; Beatty dropped out after his freshman year to study with Stella Adler at the Actors Conservatory in New York City. Beatty's good looks and build made him a natural for television casting agents looking for virile young leading men, so it was no surprise he began marking time on numerous live television dramas in the late 1950s, including "Studio One" (CBS, 1948-1958) and "Playhouse 90" (CBS, 1956-1961). He made brief inroad onto a network series with the popular teen comedy "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis" (CBS, 1959-1963), for which he played wealthy Milton Armitage, contender for the hand of Dobie's dream girl Thalia Menninger (Tuesday Weld). Beatty found the show insipid and departed for the legitimate theater. The move proved a difficult one, but Beatty logged time in some 40-plus productions before making his mark on Broadway in William Inge's "A Loss of Roses," for which he received a Tony nomination in 1960 - proving MacLaine was no longer the sole star of the family.

Beatty's film debut came the following year in the racy-for-its-time "Splendor in the Grass" (1961), directed by Elia Kazan and starring Natalie Wood. The film was a success, netting Beatty a Golden Globe nomination for his performance, but critics were not quite sold on his abilities, citing his pretty-boy looks as a distraction. An affair with his co-sta, Wood - then married to Robert Wagner - did little to endear him to fans who now considered him a homewrecker. Unfortunately, Beatty's next roles seemed to be geared more towards his appearance than his acting talent. He was a young Italian lover who romances lonely widow Vivien Leigh in the film version of Tennessee Williams' novella "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone" (1961), the caddish older brother of a wealthy family in "All Fall Down" (1962) for "Playhouse 90" director John Frankenheimer; and a psychiatrist who is seduced by his patient (Jean Seberg) in Robert Rossen's controversial "Lilith" (1964). One role which failed to come to fruition was that of John F. Kennedy in the film version of "PT-109" (1963), about JFK's experiences in World War II. Kennedy apparently wanted Beatty to portray him in the film after hearing Elia Kazan recommend the actor for the part. However, Beatty rejected the role due to the film's weak script. However, he and Kennedy remained friendly until the President's assassination in November 1963.

Beatty tried to break this streak of romantic heroes and heels by starring as a nightclub comic on the run from mobsters in Arthur Penn's semi-experimental drama "Mickey One" (1965). The picture found few champions in the press for its grotesque characters and downbeat tone, but did signal Beatty's interest in tackling offbeat projects. He returned to Hollywood in the comedy "Promise Her Anything" (1965), with a script by William Peter Blatty, but the picture earned more headlines for the romance between Beatty and his married co-star Leslie Caron. Having moved on from and broken Wood's heart - which reportedly caused the fragile actress to attempt suicide - Beatty was now being named as a co-defendant in Caron's subsequent divorce from director Peter Hall and was even forced to pay court costs. The latter scandal firmly established Beatty's reputation as one of Hollywood's leading Lotharios, a label he reinforced by squiring such movieland beauties as Ann-Margret, Joan Collins, Catherine Deneuve and countless others during the 1960s.

Beatty was slated to play the womanizing hero of Woody Allen's comedy "What's New, Pussycat?" (1967) - reportedly, Beatty also came up with the title, which was his standard greeting to his female companions - but pre-production conflicts with Allen and producer Charles K. Feldman forced him to abandon the film. Frustrated that his career seemed mired in the same one-dimensional role, he decided to produce his next movie and oversee every aspect of its production from start to finish. He reunited with "Mickey One" director Arthur Penn and tapped a newcomer, Robert Benton, to write a script based loosely on the short life and career of Depression Era gangsters Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. Beatty himself would play Barrow, while Faye Dunaway was tapped to play Bonnie, with Gene Hackman, Estelle Parsons, Michael J. Pollard, and a young Gene Wilder filling out the remainder of the cast. The result - 1967's "Bonnie and Clyde" - hit Hollywood like a bombshell. Heavily influenced by the French New Wave, the picture attempted to reinterpret the romantic Hollywood notion of the gangster film and comment on the current wave of political and social unrest in the country by upping the film's violence to disturbing levels. In fact, the finale, in which Bonnie and Clyde are killed by lawmen, showed the actors cut to pieces in a hail of bullets. Mainstream critics were appalled, but audiences turned out in droves, and the film grossed some $70 million for Beatty who earned a windfall as producer due to Warner Bros.' lack of faith in the film. Rather than paying him a standard fee, he was given 40 percent of the gross - not the last time the savvy and uncompromising Beatty would beat studios at their own game. The actor was also nominated for an Academy Award along with Penn and most of the cast. "Bonnie and Clyde" had also helped usher in the "New Hollywood" period of the early Seventies - cinema's second "Golden Age" - in which filmmakers like Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg and Francis Ford Coppola were afforded a nearly unlimited degree of creative freedom with their films.

Beatty's new higher profile afforded him a better range of material, which in turn allowed him to pursue more personal projects. Though he turned down leads in "The Godfather" (1972), "The Sting" (1973), and "The Great Gatsby" (1974) to serve as an advisor to George McGovern's presidential campaign, he did star as an enterprising brothel owner who runs afoul of big business in Robert Altman's anti-Western, "McCabe and Mrs. Miller" (1971), a bank employee who partners with a hooker (Goldie Hawn) to rob a large European bank in "$" (1971), and a reporter caught up in a conspiracy surrounding the murder of a senator in Alan J. Pakula's thriller "The Parallax View" (1973). Beatty then partnered with director Hal Ashby and writer Robert Towne to produce and star in "Shampoo" (1975), a wry and bitter look at the death of Sixties idealism and the rise of the self-centered Seventies as seen through the jaded eyes of a successful hairstylist (Beatty). The picture was a considerable success, and netted several Academy Award nominations. Beatty had carried on relationships with both of his "Shampoo" co-stars, Goldie Hawn and Julie Christie, as well as continuing his womanizing streak by dating countless other celebrities during the 1970s, including Jane Fonda, Bianca Jagger and Carly Simon; the latter was rumored to have penned her hit single "You're So Vain" about him, but it was Christie who proved to be one of his greatest loves. The couple had come together while Christie was shooting "Petulia" in 1968, and remained a twosome until after the release of "Shampoo" in 1976. She ended the relationship over differing ideas for their future, but remained close to him over the subsequent decades.

Beatty's next blockbuster was a remake of "Heaven Can Wait" (1978), with Beatty as a former football player accidentally spirited away to heaven by an overeager angel (Buck Henry) and then deposited in the body of a deceased millionaire. The picture marked Beatty's directorial debut (though he split the duties with Henry) and he also co-wrote the script with Elaine May. "Heaven Can Wait" was one of the biggest hits of the year, and earned a Best Picture nomination, with Beatty himself receiving nods for Best Director and Best Actor. Its success allowed Beatty to pursue his next project - an epic film version of author John Reed's coverage of the Russian Revolution in 1917. The film "Reds" (1981) took several years to complete, but the final product - which starred Beatty as Reed, Diane Keaton as his lover Louise Bryant, Maureen Stapleton as Emma Goldman, and Jack Nicholson as playwright Eugene O'Neill, was a critical success, and solidified Beatty's status as a committed and adventurous filmmaker. For his efforts, he won the Best Director Oscar and was also nominated for Best Actor and Best Original Script. Beatty's remarkable run of the Seventies left him in the company of Orson Welles as one of the only filmmakers to earn Academy Award nominations for acting, writing, producing and directing in the same year. Unlike Welles, however, Beatty did it twice. On top of that, he began dating another great love - not surprisingly, his co-star, Diane Keaton.

Beatty knew that a picture of the scale and scope of "Reds" would be a hard act to follow, and he remained inactive for much of the 1980s, though he reportedly turned down the role of Gordon Gekko in Oliver Stone's "Wall Street" (1987). When he did return to filmmaking, the results were unexpectedly disastrous. "Ishtar" (1987), directed by Elaine May and starring Beatty (who co-produced) and Dustin Hoffman as untalented lounge pianists who become involved in a Middle Eastern coup d'etat, was an expensive flop. Beatty defended the picture and May to the legions of critics and pundits who lined up to savage it (and him), but the film became a synonym for box office failure; later critics partially vindicated Beatty by noting that it was a clever piece of social satire burdened by an unnecessarily bloated budget.

Undaunted, Beatty launched into another high-profile project for his next picture - the long-gestating film version of the comic strip "Dick Tracy" (1990). Beatty corralled an impressive collection of stars to fill out the gallery of grotesques created by Chester Gould, including Al Pacino, James Caan, Dustin Hoffman, and Henry Silva, as well as netted pop music superstar Madonna to add sex appeal as femme fatale Breathless Mahoney. Not surprisingly, Beatty's off-screen involvement with Madonna was duly covered by the press and in her feature documentary, "Truth or Dare" (1991), in which it was painfully apparent that the Beatty/Madonna combo was a mismatched couple from the start. The picture, which was noted for its impressive photography by Vittorio Storaro, its use of only six primary colors in its imagery, and for the wall-to-wall promotional campaign carried out in the summer of 1990, resulted in massive returns at the box office, making it the ninth highest grossing film of that year and the recipient of several Oscar nominations. By the accounts of several participants, including Disney chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg and composer Danny Elfman, the shoot was a difficult one, resulting in Beatty choosing not to direct another picture until 1998's "Bulworth." A legal battle over "Dick Tracy" would later erupt in 2005 when Beatty filed suit against Tribune Media Services over ownership of the rights to Dick Tracy on film and television, which the actor claimed he legally received in 1985.

Beatty segued from lawman Dick Tracy to notorious real-life gangster Bugsy Siegel in Barry Levinson's "Bugsy" (1991). The film, which he also produced, earned countless Oscar nominations - including a Best Actor nod for Beatty - and a Golden Globe for Best Picture, also became notable as the project on which Beatty met Annette Bening, an acclaimed stage actress and Oscar nominee for her dazzling turn in Stephen Frears' "The Grifters" (1990). As with so many of his female co-stars, Beatty began a romance with Bening, but unlike his commitment-phobic tendencies in the past, the inveterate bachelor surprised Hollywood by marrying her in 1992. Four children (three daughters and a son) followed between 1992 and 2000, with the couple considered almost Hollywood royalty.

Flush with newfound domestic happiness and onscreen success, Beatty began work on several new projects - the first of which was "Love Affair" (1994), a remake of the 1957 Cary Grant-Deborah Kerr romance "An Affair To Remember" (1957). Beatty and Bening took the leads, and despite the presence of a rare (and final) screen appearance by Katherine Hepburn, the film failed to ignite any heat with audiences. Undaunted, Beatty began work on "Town and Country" (2001) in 1998. The costly comedy, which co-starred former flame Diane Keaton and Garry Shandling, quickly ran into production troubles, most notably from producer Beatty himself, who insisted on countless retakes. Shooting ran on into 1999, and several cast members (including Keaton and Shandling) had to take leave of the film to work on other projects. By 2000, reshoots were required (which added significantly to the budget), as well as a whole new script (by Buck Henry, who was the last in a long line of new writers for the film). When the picture arrived in theaters in 2001, the negative advance notice helped to crush any hopes of ticket sales. Its final tally was just over $10 million - some $80 million shy of its production costs.

No matter the troubles during the turbulent birthing of "Town and Country," Beatty soon managed to turn out one of his most ambitious films to date. In "Bulworth" (1998), which he directed, co-wrote, and co-produced, he told the story of a faded Democratic senator (Beatty) who decides to have himself killed in order for his family to claim a sizable insurance policy. An exceptionally risky and delicate project on nearly every front - from the casting of poet and political activist Amiri Baraka, to the romance between Beatty and African-American actress Halle Berry, to Bulworth's adoption of hip-hop rhymes and dress to deliver his message - "Bulworth" managed to connect with audiences, who admired Beatty's bravado and willingness to put forward a bold political statement on film which would foreshadow the future of politics. Academy voters also acknowledged his gutsy move by nominating its screenplay in 1999.

Politics had always been part of Beatty's personality - in addition to his relationships with J.F.K. and George McGovern, Beatty had also campaigned tirelessly for Robert F. Kennedy during the late 1960s, and helped introduce the idea of the "benefit concert" by bringing together Barbra Streisand, James Taylor and Simon and Garfunkel to raise funds for McGovern's campaign in 1972. Later, Beatty would lend his name and words to presidential runs for McGovern's former campaign manager, Senator Gary Hart, in 1984 and 1988. In 1999, Beatty made what sounded like overtures to a run for the Presidency when he expressed disappointment in Democratic candidates Bill Bradley and Vice President Al Gore. A flurry of press activity followed Beatty's consultation with various political advisors, but by September of that year, he announced that he would not seek the candidacy. However, the Reform Party, which was reeling over radical conservative Pat Buchanan's switch from Republican to their camp, pressed Beatty to reconsider. Despite pressure from everyone from Donald Trump to Ariana Huffington, Beatty remained steadfast in his decision not to run. In 2005, Beatty again surfaced as a possible political candidate in a special election launched by California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to pass several ballot measures on political spending, energy regulation, and parental notification for teens seeking abortions. Beatty campaigned against the election in person and on radio, and when the measures were defeated in 2005, speculation grew that he would run against Schwarzenegger in the 2006 election. Beatty quickly nixed the notion, but added that he would consider a run for office if he could add to the debate in a positive manner.

Beatty's film career went dormant after "Town and Country" and "Bulworth," though he was courted for several high-profile projects, including Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill" (2005), in which he was slated to play uber-pimp and killer Bill, but soon departed. His suggestion that Tarantino cast David Carradine in the role led to the latter's career revival. He was also considered for the role of president in Tim Burton's "Mars Attacks" (1995), but was replaced by longtime friend Jack Nicholson; Jack Horner in "Boogie Nights" (1995), but Burt Reynolds took the role; and two turns as Richard Nixon - in Oliver Stone's "Nixon" (1995) and Ron Howard's "Frost/Nixon," (2008). As befitting a filmmaker of his stature, he was honored with several top awards by the creative community, including the Irving Thalberg Award in 2000, the Kennedy Center Honors in 2004, honorary chairman status of the Stella Adler Studio (replacing Marlon Brando) in 2006, the Cecil B. DeMille Award from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association at the 2007 Golden Globes, and the recipient of the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008. Meanwhile, word spread in 2011 that Beatty was returning to the director's chair for the pseudo-biopic "Rules Don't Apply," in which he planned on playing mogul Howard Hughes during the time he spent as a Hollywood producer. The film, co-starring Bening, Lily Collins, and Alden Ehrenreich, was released in 2016 to mixed reviews and poor box office, and was quickly overshadowed by an unexpected controversy at the 2017 Academy Awards. Reunited with Dunaway on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of "Bonnie and Clyde," the pair were tapped to present the Best Picture award to close the night. Before proceeding onsage, Beatty was mistakenly handed a backup envelope for Best Actress in a Leading Role, which had already been won by Emma Stone for "La La Land" (2016). Unsure what to do when he opened the envelope and discovered the error, Beatty stalled for time and showed the card to Dunaway; misunderstanding his intent, the actress announced that the Best Picture Oscar went to "La La Land." During producer Jordan Horowitz's acceptance speech, he was informed that the actual Best Picture winner was "Moonlight" (2016). During the onstage chaos that ensued, Beatty delivered a heartfelt explanation and apology for the snafu while undergoing good-natured ribbing from host Jimmy Kimmel.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

The Rules Don't Apply (2016)
Director
Bulworth (1998)
Director
Dick Tracy (1990)
Director
Reds (1981)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

The Rules Don't Apply (2016)
One Bright Shining Moment (2005)
The Book That Wrote Itself (2001)
Town & Country (2001)
Forever Hollywood (1999)
Himself
Bulworth (1998)
Love Affair (1994)
Bugsy (1991)
Madonna: Truth or Dare (1991)
Himself
Dick Tracy (1990)
Ishtar (1987)
50 Years of Action! (1986)
Himself
Reds (1981)
John Reed
Shampoo (1975)
George Roundee
The Fortune (1975)
The Parallax View (1974)
$ (1971)
Joe Collins
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971)
John McCabe
The Only Game in Town (1970)
Joe Grady
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
Clyde Barrow
Promise Her Anything (1966)
Harley Rummel
Kaleidoscope (1966)
Barney Lincoln
Mickey One (1965)
Mickey One
Lilith (1964)
Vincent Bruce
All Fall Down (1962)
Berry-Berry Willart
The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961)
Paolo di Leo
Splendor in the Grass (1961)
Bud Stamper

Writer (Feature Film)

The Rules Don't Apply (2016)
Screenplay
The Rules Don't Apply (2016)
Story By
Down to Earth (2001)
From Story
Down to Earth (2001)
Story By
Bulworth (1998)
From Story
Bulworth (1998)
Screenplay
Bulworth (1998)
Story By
Love Affair (1994)
Screenplay
Reds (1981)
Screenplay
Shampoo (1975)
Screenwriter

Producer (Feature Film)

The Rules Don't Apply (2016)
Producer
Bulworth (1998)
Producer
Love Affair (1994)
Producer
Bugsy (1991)
Producer
Dick Tracy (1990)
Producer
Ishtar (1987)
Producer
The Pick-Up Artist (1987)
Executive Producer
Reds (1981)
Producer
Shampoo (1975)
Producer
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
Producer

Music (Feature Film)

Ishtar (1987)
Song Performer
Ishtar (1987)
Music
Ishtar (1987)
Song

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Forever Hollywood (1999)
Other
Madonna: Truth or Dare (1991)
Other
50 Years of Action! (1986)
Other

Cast (Special)

The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts (2001)
Presenter
The 7th Annual Blockbuster Entertainment Awards (2001)
72nd Annual Academy Awards Presentation (2000)
Performer
The Lives of Lillian Hellman (1999)
The AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars (1999)
SAG Awards Show (1999)
Presenter
American Film Institute Salute to Dustin Hoffman (1999)
Performer
Warren Beatty (1999)
Interviewee
The 70th Annual Academy Awards (1998)
Presenter
The American Film Institute Salute to Steven Spielberg (1995)
Performer
The First 100 Years: A Celebration of American Movies (1995)
The Late Show with David Letterman Video Special (1994)
The American Film Institute Salute to Jack Nicholson (1994)
An American Reunion: The 52nd Presidential Inaugural Gala (1993)
Warren Beatty Talking With David Frost (1992)
49th Annual Golden Globe Awards (1992)
Performer
Michael Landon: Memories With Laughter and Love (1991)
Victory & Valor: A Special Olympics All-Star Celebration (1991)
The 62nd Annual Academy Awards Presentation (1990)
Presenter
George Stevens: A Filmmaker's Journey (1984)
Himself

Misc. Crew (Special)

Hometown Heroes (1998)
Film Clips
George Stevens: A Filmmaker's Journey (1984)
Other

Life Events

1961

Made film debut under Elia Kazan's direction and opposite Natalie Wood in "Splendor in the Grass"; received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor

1962

Cast opposite Angela Lansbury and Eva Marie Saint in John Frankenheimer's "All Fall Down"

1971

First film with Goldie Hawn, the caper film "$"

1974

Starred (also produced) in Alan J. Pakula's political thriller "The Parallax View"

1975

Teamed with Jack Nicholson and Stockard Channing in Mike Nichols' "The Fortune"

1978

First film directing (co-directed with Buck Henry), "Heaven Can Wait"; also co-wrote (with Elaine May), produced and co-starred; third collaboration with Julie Christie; film nominated for 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Director and Best Screenplay

1987

Returned to films after a six year hiatus to co-star with Dustin Hoffman in the critically panned, "Ishtar"; regarded as one of the biggest box office bombs in film history

1991

Appeared in then off-screen love Madonna's documentary, "Madonna: Truth or Dare"

1991

Portrayed real-life gangster Bugsy Siegel in the critically acclaimed biopic "Bugsy"; co-starred with future wife Annette Bening; also produced; earned a Best Actor Oscar nomination

1994

Starred opposite off-screen love, Annette Bening in the remake of "Love Affair"; also co-write and produced

1998

Directed and starred in the political satire "Bullworth"; also co-wrote and co-produced; garnered a Best Screenplay Academy Award nomination

2001

Appeared in "Town and Country," in which he re-teamed with Diane Keaton and Goldie Hawn

Photo Collections

Shampoo - Movie Poster
Shampoo - Movie Poster
Bonnie and Clyde - Publicity Still
Here is a photo taken to help publicize Warner Bros' Bonnie and Clyde (1967), starring Warren Beatty, Faye Dunaway, and Gene Hackman. Publicity stills were specially-posed photos, usually taken off the set, for purposes of publicity or reference for promotional artwork.
Splendor in the Grass - Movie Posters
Here are a few original movie posters from Elia Kazan's Splendor in the Grass (1961), starring Natalie Wood and Warren Beatty.
All Fall Down - Movie Poster
Here is the American One-Sheet Movie Poster from All Fall Down (1962). One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.

Videos

Movie Clip

Mickey One -- (Movie Clip) Opening Sax solo by Stan Getz over original score by Eddie Sauter for the opening sequence, with Warren Beatty as a Detroit comedian partying with Donna Michelle, a Playboy Playmate Of The Year, with producer-director Arthur Penn citing direct French New Wave influences, in Mickey One, 1965.
Mickey One -- (Movie Clip) Brother Rat! Warren Beatty, a comic from Detroit who fled gambling debts, now using the name slapped on him by a Chicago day-labor boss, is sort-of back on his feet, entering a club where he makes friends with fellow stand-up Benny Dunn, in director-producer Arthur Penn's Mickey One, 1965.
Faye Dunaway: Live From The TCM Film Festival (2017) -- (Movie Clip) Not Coincidentally Ben Mankiewicz introduces Faye Dunaway before a live audience at the Montalban Theatre, from the 2016 TCM Classic Film Festival, in Faye Dunaway: Live From The TCM Classic Film Festival, 2017, produced by Anne McGill Wilson for TCM.
Only Game In Town, The (1970) -- (Movie Clip) But Not For Me After the credit sequence establishing Elizabeth Taylor as a weary Las Vegas showgirl, she enters a piano bar where co-star Warren Beatty is the act, George Stevens directing his last feature, from Frank Gilroy’s play and screenplay, in The Only Game In Town, 1970.
Only Game In Town, The (1970) -- (Movie Clip) How Long We Been Married? The morning after their first evening together, Las Vegas showgirl Fran (Elizabeth Taylor) and lounge pianist Joe (Warren Beatty) tangle a little then warm up, George Stevens directing from Frank D. Gilroy’s screenplay, in The Only Game In Town, 1970.
Only Game In Town, The (1970) -- (Movie Clip) You Never Thought I'd Make It Compulsive gambler and lounge pianist Joe (Warren Beatty) has won enough cash to finally leave Las Vegas, so he’s out celebrating with his new gal, showgirl Fran (Elizabeth Taylor), starting at his old gig, in The Only Game In Town, 1970, directed by George Stevens.
Shampoo (1975) -- (Movie Clip) Don't Let The Steam Out George (Warren Beatty) has just finished doing a cut for former girlfriend Jackie (Julie Christie) and decides to get friendly when Lester (Jack Warden), her current lover and his potential financier, who presumes he's gay, turns up, Hal Ashby directing, in Shampoo, 1975.
Shampoo (1975) -- (Movie Clip) I'm A Star At the Beverly Hills salon where he works for Norman (Jay Robinson), hairdresser George (co-writer and producer Warren Beatty), aiming to start his own salon, juggles wealthy client/girlfriend Felicia (Lee Grant) and actual girlfriend Jill (Goldie Hawn), who may have an offer to work abroad, in Shampoo, 1975.
Shampoo (1975) -- (Movie Clip) Don't Let Me Drink Too Much Escorting his ex-paramour Jackie (Julie Christie), along with current girlfriend Jill (Goldie Hawn), who’s officially with director Johnny (Tony Bill), hairdresser George (producer and co-writer Warren Beatty) at a Beverly Hills Republican election night party, November 1968, Jack Warden as high-roller Lester, Jackie’s sugar-daddy, who thinks George is gay, in Shampoo, 1975.
Shampoo (1975) -- (Movie Clip) Somebody's Gonna Get Me Called away from another tryst elsewhere in LA, November 4, 1968, hair stylist George (co-writer and producer Warren Beatty) visits needy Jill (Goldie Hawn, her first scene) at her Laurel Canyon pad, in director Hal Ashby's Shampoo, 1975.
Splendor In The Grass (1961) -- (Movie Clip) Down On My Knees Sudden leap into suggestive, gothic Midwestern weirdness as 1920's Kansas teens Wilma-Dean (Natalie Wood) and Bud (Warren Beatty) arrive at her house then have to dodge her mother, in Elia Kazan's Splendor In The Grass, 1961, from William Inge's screenplay.
Reds (1981) -- (Movie Clip) What Haven't We Covered? Portland, Oregon, 1915, a somewhat-contrived version of the meeting of the principals (writer-director Warren Beatty as journalist John "Jack" Reed, Diane Keaton as native Louise Bryant), M. Emmet Walsh the pompous orator at a local civic club, early in Reds, 1981.

Trailer

Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone, The - (Original Trailer) A fading star (Vivien Leigh) hires a gigolo (Warren Beatty) in Tennessee Williams' The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961).
McCabe and Mrs. Miller - (Original Trailer) A gambler (Warren Beatty) and a prostitute (Julie Christie) become business partners in a remote Old West mining town in Robert Altman's McCabe and Mrs. Miller (1971).
Parallax View, The - (Textless Trailer) A reporter (Warren Beatty) uncovers a corporation that manages political assassinations in The Parallax View (1974).
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.
Mickey One - (Original Trailer) Warren Beatty and director Arthur Penn, later to make Bonnie And Clyde (1967), first worked together on the experimental film Mickey One (1965).
Heaven Can Wait (1978) - (Original Trailer) When a football player dies early, he gets a second chance in the body of a crooked industrialist in Heaven Can Wait (1978) starring Warren Beatty and Julie Christie.
All Fall Down - (Original Trailer) A young drifter's romance with an older woman is threatened by his possessive mother in All Fall Down (1962) starring Warren Beatty and Eva Marie Saint.
Shampoo -- (Original Trailer) Warren Beatty plays a Hollywood hairdresser who does clients as well as hairdos during the late 1960's in Shampoo, 1975, with Julie Christie and Lee Grant in an Academy Award-winning role.
Splendor in the Grass - (Original Trailer) Warren Beatty made his screen debut in Elia Kazan's Splendor In The Grass (1961) co-starring Natalie Wood.

Family

Ira O Beaty
Father
Professor. Taught psychology; also served as superintendent of Richmond High School in Richmond, Virginia; died c. 1987.
Kathlyn Beaty
Mother
Teacher. Died c. 1994.
Shirley MacLaine
Sister
Actor. Born on April 24, 1934.
Kathlyn Elizabeth Bening Beatty
Daughter
Born on January 8, 1992; mother, Annette Bening; born by Caesarean section.
Benjamin Beatty
Son
Born on August 23, 1994; mother, Annette Bening.
Isabel Ira Ashley Beatty
Daughter
Born on January 11, 1997; mother, Annette Bening.
Ella Corinne Beatty
Daughter
Born on April 8, 2000; mother, Annette Bening.

Companions

Joan Collins
Companion
Actor. Together from the late 1950s to c. 1961; were engaged when Beatty began affair with Natalie Wood.
Natalie Wood
Companion
Actor. Had affair during making of "Splendor in the Grass".
Julie Christie
Companion
Actor. Together in the 1970s; no longer together; acted together in "McCabe & Mrs. Miller", "Shampoo" and "Heaven Can Wait".
Michelle Phillips
Companion
Singer, actor.
Diane Sawyer
Companion
TV news anchor.
Diane Keaton
Companion
Actor. Dated in the early 1980s around the time of the making of "Reds"; no longer together.
Isabelle Adjani
Companion
Actor.
Madonna
Companion
Singer; actor. Dated in the late 1980s, early 1990s; no longer together.
Annette Bening
Wife
Actor. Met during filming of "Bugsy"; married on March 12, 1992; mother of Beatty's children.

Bibliography

"Shirley and Warren"
James Spada, Macmillan (1985)

Notes

He was named as the Harvard Hasty Pudding Man of the Year in 1975.

"Beatty may not have had Brando's fire, or Dean's ethereality, or Gable's gruff machismo, but he had humor, athletic grace, and something, in quantity, that all the great ones have had: mystery. Looks and talent will take you a long way in Hollywood, but if you seem to withhold some crucial part of yourself--whether it exists or not--you may enter the pantheon at will. Add salient sexuality and the mixture becomes combustible." --James Kaplan in Entertainment WeeklY December 20, 1991.

"The legend began early. The columns began toting up the women Beatty kept company with--Natalie Wood, Joan Collins, Elizabeth Taylor, just to name some early brunets--and the public took notice. The men of Hollywood, who respect such things, had already noticed. (His catch phone-phrase to women--"What's new, pussycat?"--became a movie title and song.)" --From Entertainment Weekly, December 20, 1991.

"The only man to get to the mirror faster than me." --former fiancee Joan Collins

Named a Commander of the French Order of Arts and Letters in 1992.

"Prior to meeting Bening, Beatty has been quoted as saying to ["Bugsy" director], Barry Levinson, 'The thing about Bugsy Siegel ... he was very promiscuous throughout his life, until he met Virginia Hill [the role Bening was to play] ... When they got together, he never went after another woman ... He found someone who accepted him for what he was.'" --From an interview with Dominick Dunne in Vanity Fair, September 1994.