Celebrities » Frank Langella » Biography
Birthday:
Jan 1, 1938
Birthplace:
Bayonne, New Jersey, USA

Top Contributors for Frank Langella

No contributors for Frank Langella facts.

Frank Langella Biography

An imposing and highly memorable presence on the Broadway stage, actor Frank Langella has won only a fraction of the acclaim he's received in the theater for his film career; still, his brooding good looks and his ability to play both villains and comic foils with a touch of menace has made him a welcome (and increasingly familiar) fare to film buffs. Frank Langella was born in Bayonne, NJ, on New Year's Day, 1940. Langella caught the acting bug when he was 11, after playing an elderly man in a school play on the life of Abraham Lincoln, and he went on to earn a degree in Theater from Syracuse University. After studying acting with Elia Kazan, Langella began working with regional theater companies in the East Coast and the Midwest, and in 1963, made his New York stage debut when he landed the leading role in an off-Broadway revival of The Immoralist. Between 1964 and 1966, Langella would win three Obie awards for his work in off-Broadway theater, and in 1969, he received a Drama Desk award for his work in the drama A Cry of Players. In 1974, he made his Broadway debut in Edward Albee's Seascape, and, the following year, won another Drama Desk award as well as a Tony for his performance. Langella made his film debut in 1970 with a supporting role in Diary of a Mad Housewife, and later that same year, scored a larger part in The Twelve Chairs, written and directed by Mel Brooks. While Langella landed occasional television and film roles through much of the 1970s, he was still busiest as a stage actor. In 1977, Langella was cast in the leading role of a Broadway revival of Dracula, and his con brio performance as the bloodthirsty count earned rave reviews, turning the production into an unexpected hit. Langella was tapped to reprise his performance for a film version of Dracula released in 1979, but he was forced to tone down his unique take on the role for the screen, and what would have seemingly been the perfect screen vehicle for his talents became a critical and box-office disappointment. However, Langella maintained a busy schedule of stage work, and in the 1990s, finally scored a breakthrough screen role in the comedy Dave as the deceitful political puppet master Bob Alexander. A busy schedule of character roles in such films as Junior, Lolita, and The Ninth Gate followed, though Langella still remained a frequent and distinguished presence in the New York theatrical community. He worked steadily at the beginning of the twenty-first century in films as diverse as the romantic drama Sweet November, and David Duchovny's directorial debut House of D. He scored an artistic and critical success in 2005 playing William Paley in George Clooney's historical docudrama about Edward R. Murrow Good Night, and Good Luck. He was then tapped by Bryan Singer to embody Daily Planet editor Perry White in the 2006 summer blockbuster Superman Returns. In 2007, Langella earned strong reviews and some awards buzz for his starring role in Starting Out in the Evening, but it was actually the next year, 2008 when he captured a Best Actor Academy Award nomination, a well as a SAG nomination, for his portrayal of disgraced former president Richard Nixon in Ron Howard's big-screen adaptation of Frost/Nixon. ~ Rovi

Frank Langella Trivia

No trivia approved yet.

Quotes from Frank Langella's Characters

    1. Reverend Duncan: What color green is that?
    2. Tommy: Al Green.
    From House of D. Submitted by Chuck C (5 months ago)
    1. Jack Brennan: The third part of the interview will be titled, 'Nixon, the Man.'
    2. Richard Nixon: As opposed to what, 'Nixon, the Horse?'
    From Frost/Nixon. Submitted by Jason D (7 months ago)
    1. Dawg Brown: You plannin' to fight me with that little stick?
    2. Morgan Adams: No, Uncle. With this! [Morgan reveals a loaded cannon and lights it, aiming it at Dawg]
    3. Morgan Adams: Bad Dawg!
    From Cutthroat Island. Submitted by Pepper W (7 months ago)
    1. Skeletor: Everything comes to he who waits. And I have waited so very long for this moment.
    From Masters of the Universe. Submitted by Emil Å (7 months ago)
    1. Skeletor: People of Eternia! I stand before the Great Eye of the galaxy. Chosen by destiny by the powers of Greyskull! This inevitable moment will transpire before your eyes, even as He-Man himself bears witness to it. Now. I, Skeletor, am Master of the Universe! YES! Yes. I feel it, the power... fills me. Yes, I feel the universe within me! I am... I am a part of the cosmos! The power flows. Flows through me! Of what consequence are you now? This planet, these people. They are NOTHING to me! The universe is power! Real, unstoppable POWER! and I am that force! I am that power! KNEEL BEFORE YOUR MASTER! Fool! You are no longer my EQUAL! I am more than man! MORE THAN LIFE! I am... a... GOD! Now. You... will... KNEEEEEL! KNEEEEL!
    From Masters of the Universe. Submitted by Byron L (9 months ago)
    1. David Frost: Are you really saying the President can do something illegal?
    2. Richard Nixon: I'm saying that when the President does it, it's *not* illegal!
    3. David Frost: I'm sorry?
    From Frost/Nixon. Submitted by Alejandro O (9 months ago)
    1. Perry White: Lois, Pulitzer Prizes are like Academy Awards, nobody remembers what you got one for, just that you got one.
    From Superman Returns. Submitted by rob g (13 months ago)
    1. Arlington Steward: I hope you aren't playing detective. I have quite a few employees.
    From The Box. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Stanford Marks: She's never going to be one of us.
    2. David Marks: I know. Isn't that great?
    From All Good Things. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
Help | About | Jobs | Critics Submission | API | Licensing | Mobile