Celebrities » Ryan O'Neal » Biography
Birthday:
Apr 20, 1941
Birthplace:
Los Angeles, California, USA

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Ryan O'Neal Biography

Though his early career seemed to hold the promise of major stardom for actor Ryan O'Neal, matters didn't pan out and he has become more famous for his long-term live-in relationship with 1970s poster girl-turned-movie star-of-the-week actress Farrah Fawcett than any of his '80s and '90s films. Still, O'Neal is an appealing actor and his clean-cut good looks and reddish- blond hair give him an exuberant boyishness that belies his age. His first major role was that of Rodney Harrington on the television soap opera Peyton Place (1964-1969). O'Neal is the son of screenwriter Charles O'Neal and actress Patricia Callaghan O'Neal. A California native, he spent much of his childhood living abroad. As a young man, O'Neal sometimes got into trouble and at one point served a 51-day jail sentence for assault and battery after getting into a fight at a New Year's party. Before becoming an actor, O'Neal was a lifeguard and an amateur boxer who was a one-time Golden Gloves contender. In film and television, O'Neal started out as a stunt man on Tales of the Vikings, a German television series. His parents were working on the same show. Upon his return to the States, O'Neal continued finding work in small parts on television shows, getting his first regular acting job on the Western Empire (1962). Following the demise of Peyton Place, O'Neal made his feature debut in The Big Bounce (1969), but did not get his big break until he was chosen from 300 auditioners to play Oliver Barrett opposite Ally McGraw in Arthur Hiller's maudlin adaptation of Erich Seagal's best-seller Love Story- (1970). The film was a smash hit and landed O'Neal an Oscar nomination. Two more starring roles followed this success but it was not until he played an uptight professor who finds himself beleaguered by a free-spirited, love-struck Barbra Streisand in Peter Bogdanovich's What's Up Doc? (1972) that he rivaled the success of Love Story. It has been in light, romantic fare such as this that O'Neal has excelled. His next popular role was that of an exasperated con man in Paper Moon, the charming comedy that netted his co-star and real-life daughter, Tatum O'Neal, an Oscar. O'Neal then played the title role in Stanley Kubrick's slow-paced epic Barry Lyndon (1975). By the late '70s, O'Neal's career had gone into decline and he had begun appearing in such dismal outings as Oliver's Story (the 1978 sequel to his first big hit) and The Main Event (1979) which reteamed him with Streisand. The '80s were even tougher for O'Neal, even though he appeared regularly onscreen. In 1989, O'Neal turned up in the wrenching made-for-TV-movie Small Sacrifices, which starred his lover Fawcett. Two years later, he and Fawcett starred in the short-lived television sitcom Good Sports. Before hooking up with her in the early '80s, O'Neal was married to actresses to Joanna Moore and Leigh Taylor-Young. His children from those marriages, Tatum and Griffin O'Neal, are both actors as is his brother Kevin O'Neal. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Quotes from Ryan O'Neal's Characters

    1. Oliver Barrett IV: What can you say about a 25 year old girl who died? That she was beautiful. And brilliant. That she loved Mozart and Bach. And the Beatles. And me.
    From Love Story. Submitted by rick b (38 days ago)
    1. Addie Loggins: I want my two hundred dollars.
    2. Cafe Waitress: What do you say, Daddy? Why don't we give Precious a little dessert if she eats her dog?
    3. Trixie Delight: Hurry up, Doctor. This baby gots to go winky tinky!
    4. Moses Pray: Well, she ain't my grown-up and I ain't plannin' no more to sit in the back. Not for no cow!
    5. Leroy: Will you keep your voice down? And Miss Delight ain't no cow. She's a proper woman. She has a high school diploma. And right now she's got to go to the bathroom, so you get on down to the car!
    6. Trixie Delight: I just don't understand it, Daddy, but this little baby has got to go winky tinky all the time.
    7. Addie Loggins: said to Moses: No, I don't know what it is, but if you got 'em, it's a sure bet they belong to somebody else!
    From Paper Moon. Submitted by rick b (51 days ago)
    1. Moses Pray: Don't you think I have any scruples?
    2. Addie Loggins: Well, if you do, it's a sure bet they belong to someone else!
    From Paper Moon. Submitted by Deborah H (3 months ago)
    1. Howard Bannister: What are you doing? This is a one way street!
    2. Judy Maxwell: We're only going one way.
    From What's Up, Doc?. Submitted by David E (3 months ago)
    1. Judy Maxwell: I know I'm different, but from now on I'm going to try and be the same.
    2. Howard Bannister: The same as what?
    3. Judy Maxwell: The same as people who aren't different.
    From What's Up, Doc?. Submitted by David E (3 months ago)
    1. Moses Pray: Eat you're Coney Island!
    From Paper Moon. Submitted by Joe A (9 months ago)
    1. Judy Maxwell: But you know something Steve? Love means never having to say you're sorry.
    2. Howard Bannister: That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
    From What's Up, Doc?. Submitted by Mauricio R (10 months ago)
    1. Redmond Barry (Barry Lyndon): "but I am not sorry and shall not apologize, and I'll soon go to Dublin as to Hell."
    From Barry Lyndon. Submitted by April W (14 months ago)
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