- NAME: Philip Seymour Hoffman
- OCCUPATION: Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor, Director
- BIRTH DATE: July 23, 1967
- DEATH DATE: February 02, 2014
- EDUCATION: New York State Summer School of the Arts, New York University
- PLACE OF BIRTH: Rochester, New York
- PLACE OF DEATH: New York, New York
SYNOPSIS
Born in 1967 in Rochester, New York, actor and
director Philip Seymour Hoffman was known for films such as Scent of a
Woman, Boogie Nights, The Big Lebowski and Capote, for which he won an Academy Award. He was also successful in
theater, winning three Tony Award nominations for True West, Long Day's Journey into Night and Death of a
Salesman. Hoffman died in New York City on February 2,
2014, at age 46.
EARLY LIFE
Philip Seymour Hoffman was born on July 23, 1967,
in Rochester, New York, the second of four children. His father worked for
Xerox and his mother was a lawyer. His mother liked to take him to see local
theatrical productions. Hoffman was especially moved by the play All My Sons, which he saw when he was 12. "When I saw All My Sons, I was changed—permanently changed—by that experience. It was like a
miracle to me," he later told The New York Times.At first,
Hoffman was more interested in athletics than acting. But he turned to theater
after he was sidelined by a wrestling injury in his teens. At the age of 17,
Hoffman was accepted into the New York State Summer School of the Arts. He
continued to study acting at New York University.
ACTING CAREER
In 1992, Hoffman landed one of his first major film
roles in Scent of a Woman, starring
opposite Al Pacino and Chris O'Donnell. His career began to take off, and he landed a number of supporting or
character parts in such films as Nobody's Fool(1994) with Paul Newman, Twister (1996) with Bill Paxton and Boogie Nights (1997) with Julianne Moore. Hoffman worked with a variety of directors, from Ethan and Joel Coen on The Big
Lebowski (1998) to Todd Solondz on Happiness (1998).
With his ability to be convincing in nearly any
part, Hoffman played a snide, upper-crust bully in The Talented
Mr. Ripley(1999), starring Jude Law and Matt Damon, and a male nurse to an ailing, eldery man (Jason Robards) in Magnolia (1999). The
following year, he showed his versatility as a performer on the Broadway stage,
appearing in a revival of Sam Shepard's True West with John C. Reilly. The two actors switched parts every other night,
and both received a Tony Award nomination for their work.
In 2005, Hoffman had a career breakthrough with the
film Capote, in which he played famed
writer Truman Capote. The film takes place in the early 1960s, when Capote was working on
his non-fiction best-seller In Cold Blood, about the 1959 killing of a Kansas family. Hoffman threw himself into
the role, but only after some initial trepidation. "I knew that it would
be great, but I still took the role kicking and screaming," Hoffman told The New York
Times. "Playing Capote took a lot of concentration.
I prepared for four and a half months. I read and listened to his voice and
watched videos of him on TV." All of his hard work paid off. Hoffman
earned widespread praise for his performance in the film, and took home the
coveted Academy Award for best actor.
Following Capote, Hoffman received
Academy Award nominations for supporting roles in Charlie
Wilson's War (2007) and Doubt (2008). In Doubt, Hoffman starred opposite
Meryl Streep as a priest who may or may not have had an inappropriate
relationship with a young male student at a Catholic school.
In 2012, Hoffman again proved himself as a lead
actor. He starred in a revival of Death of a Salesman as Willy
Loman, the patriarch in the dysfunctional family drama. Hoffman earned raves
for his work, including a Tony Award nomination. That same year, he starred in The Master, playing a leader of a quasi-religious organization.
Hoffman later landed a part in the second
installment of The Hunger Games trilogy, Catching Fire (2013), as
games designer Plutarch Heavensbee, co-starring with Jennifer Lawrence, Josh
Hutcherson and Liam Hemsworth.
DEATH
In his personal life, Philip Seymour Hoffman struggled with drug and
alchohol addiction. In 2013, he checked into a drug rehabilitation program for
10 days. Hoffman was found dead on February 2, 2014, at an apartment that he
was renting as an office in New York City's Greenwich Village. He was 46 years
old. Hoffman died from an apparent drug overdose and was found by a worried
friend, according to police. The actor was survived by longtime partner,
costume designer Mimi O'Donnell, with whom he had three children—son Cooper and
daughters Tallulah and Willa.

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