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Michael Kirk Douglas
Actor,
producer, director. Born Michael Kirk Douglas, on September 25,
1944, to actor Kirk Douglas and mother Diana Dill. He is the
brother of Joel, Peter, and Eric.
Douglas studied drama at the University of California, Santa
Barbara, and in New York at the Neighborhood Playhouse and the
American Place Theatre. He began his Hollywood career as an
assistant director on some of father Kirk Douglas’ 1960s films.
After roles in several TV dramas, he gained notoriety by
costarring with Karl Malden in the 1970s television series The
Streets of San Francisco (ABC, 1972-77). He also directed two
episodes of the show. In 1975, Douglas was executive producer
for Milos Forman’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, which won
five Academy Awards including Best Picture. In 1979 he
coproduced and starred with Jane Fonda and Jack Lemmon in The
China Syndrome.
Douglas landed his first leading man role in Romancing the Stone
(1984), portraying Jack Colton, an Indiana Jones-type
adventurer. This successful teaming of Douglas with Danny DeVito
and Kathleen Turner led to a sequel, The Jewel of the Nile
(1985). The three worked again in The War of the Roses (1989), a
black comedy about an ugly divorce.
He made two films in 1987 which reflected a much darker side:
Fatal Attraction, in which he played an adulterer stalked by an
ex-lover (played by Glenn Close); and costarred in Oliver
Stone’s Wall Street as the corporate raider Gordon Gekko, whose
trademark slogan is “Greed is good.” Douglas won a Best Actor
Academy Award for this role. In 1992 he continued
exploring his dark side by costarring with Sharon Stone in the
thriller Basic Instinct.
In 1988, Douglas formed a production company, Stonebridge
Entertainment, Inc., which produced Joel Schumacher’s Flatliners
(1990) and Richard Donner’s Radio Flyer (1992). In 1993 he
produced Made in America, then starred as a sexually harassed
man in Michael Crichton’s Disclosure (1994), and as the titular
Chief Executive Officer in Rob Reiner’s The American President
(1995), costarring Annette Bening.
He signed a development deal at Paramount in 1994, which
included The Ghost and the Darkness (1996), The Game (1997) and
A Perfect Murder (1998). He executive-produced The Rainmaker
(1997) starring Matt Damon, and John Woo’s action film Face/Off
(1997). Douglas earned critical acclaim for his starring role as
a rumpled novelist and English professor in Wonder Boys (2000).
In the fall of 2001, Douglas headlined the thriller Don't Say a
Word. In 2003, Douglas starred in It Runs in the Family
alongside his dad Kirk, his mom Diana and his son Cameron. The
film, which faired poorly at the box office, told the story of a
multi-generation clan trying to get along. The following year,
Douglas followed in his father's footsteps as the recipient of
the Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Cecil B. DeMille Award
for his “outstanding contribution to the entertainment field.”
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