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Anthony Hopkins

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Not to be confused with Antony
Hopkins or A. G. Hopkins.
Sir Anthony Hopkins

Hopkins at the Toronto
International Film Festival,
September 2010.
Born Philip Anthony
Hopkins
31 December
1937 (age 76)
Port Talbot,
Glamorgan,
Wales
Alma mater Royal Welsh
College of
Music &
Drama, Royal
Academy of
Dramatic Art
Occupation Actor, composer
Years active 1960present
Spouse(s) Petronella
Barker
(19661972)
Jennifer Lynton
(19732002)
Stella Arroyave
(2003present)
Children Abigail Hopkins

This article is part of a
series on
Anthony Hopkins
Biography
Filmography
Awards
Sir Philip Anthony
Hopkins, CBE (born 31 December
1937) is a Welsh actor of film, stage,
and television, and a composer and
painter. After graduating from
the Royal Welsh College of Music &
Drama in 1957, he trained at
the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in
London, and was then spotted
by Laurence Olivier who invited him
to join the Royal National Theatre. In
1968, he got his break in film in The
Lion in Winter playing Richard I.
Considered to be one of the greatest
living actors,
[1][2][3]
Hopkins is well
known for his portrayal of Hannibal
Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs,
for which he won the Academy
Award for Best Actor, its
sequel Hannibal, and the
prequel Red Dragon. Other notable
films include The Mask of Zorro, The
Bounty, Meet Joe Black, The
Elephant Man, Magic, 84 Charing
Cross Road, Bram Stoker's
Dracula, Legends of the
Fall, Thor, The Remains of the
Day, Amistad, Nixon, The World's
Fastest Indian, Instinct, and Fracture.
Along with his Academy Award,
Hopkins has also won three BAFTA
Awards, two Emmys and the Cecil B.
DeMille Award. In 1993, Hopkins
was knighted by Queen Elizabeth
II for services to the arts.
[4]
He
received a star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame in 2003, and was
made a Fellow of the British
Academy of Film and Television
Arts in 2008.
[5][6]

Contents
[hide]
1 Early life
2 Career
o 2.1 Roles
o 2.2 Acting style
o 2.3 Hannibal Lecter
3 Personal life
4 Other work
5 Filmography
6 Awards and nominations
7 References
8 External links
Early life[edit]
Hopkins was born in Margam, Port
Talbot, Wales, on 31 December
1937, the son of Muriel Anne (ne
Yeats) and Richard Arthur Hopkins, a
baker.
[7]
His schooldays were
unproductive; he found that he would
rather immerse himself in art, such as
painting and drawing, or playing the
piano, than attend to his studies. In
1949, to instill discipline, his parents
insisted he attend Jones' West
Monmouth Boys' School in
Pontypool, Wales. He remained there
for five terms and was then educated
at Cowbridge Grammar Schoolin
the Vale of Glamorgan, Wales.
[8]

Hopkins was influenced and
encouraged to become an actor by
Welsh compatriot Richard
Burton (who was also born in Port
Talbot), whom he met briefly at the
age of 15. To that end, he enrolled at
the Royal Welsh College of Music &
Drama in Cardiff, Wales, from which
he graduated in 1957.
[4]
After two
years in the British Army doing
his national service, he moved to
London, where he trained at
the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.
[9]

Career[edit]
Roles[edit]
Hopkins made his first professional
stage appearance in the Palace
Theatre, Swansea, in 1960 with
Swansea Little Theatre's production
of Have a Cigarette.
[10]

In 1965, after several years in
repertory, he was spotted by Sir
Laurence Olivier, who invited him to
join the Royal National
Theatre.
[4]
Hopkins became
Olivier's understudy, and filled in
when Olivier was struck
with appendicitis during a production
of August Strindberg's The Dance of
Death. Olivier later noted in his
memoir, Confessions of an Actor,
that "A new young actor in the
company of exceptional promise
named Anthony Hopkins was
understudying me and walked away
with the part of Edgar like a cat with a
mouse between its teeth."
[11]
Despite
his success at the National, Hopkins
tired of repeating the same roles
nightly and yearned to be in films. He
made his small-screen debut in a
1967 BBC broadcast of A Flea in Her
Ear. In 1968, he got his break in The
Lion in Winter playing Richard I,
along with Peter O'Toole, Katharine
Hepburn, and future James
Bond starTimothy Dalton.
Although Hopkins continued in
theatre (most notably at the National
Theatre as Lambert Le Roux
in Pravda by David Hare and Howard
Brenton and as Antony in Antony and
Cleopatra opposite Judi Dench as
well as in the Broadway production
of Peter Shaffer's Equus, directed
by John Dexter) he gradually moved
away from it to become more
established as a television and film
actor. His Pierre Bezukhov for the
BBC War and Peace (1972) was
particularly memorable. In 1972 he
portrayed WWI British Prime
MinisterDavid Lloyd George in Young
Winston, and in 1977 he played
British Army officer John
Frost in Richard Attenborough's
WWII film A Bridge Too Far. He has
since gone on to enjoy a long career,
winning many plaudits and awards
for his performances. In 1980 he
starred in The Elephant Man as the
English doctor Sir Frederick Treves,
who attends toJoseph
Merrick (portrayed by John Hurt), a
severely deformed man in 19th
century London. That year he also
starred opposite Shirley
MacLaine in A Change of
Seasons and famously said she was
the most obnoxious actress I have
ever worked with."
[12]
In 1984 he
starred opposite Mel Gibson in The
Bounty as William Bligh, captain of
the Royal Navy ship
the HMS Bounty, in a retelling of
the mutiny on the Bounty.
Hopkins was made a Commander of
the British Empire (CBE) in 1987, and
a Knight Bachelor in 1993.
[13][14]
In
1988, Hopkins was made an
Honorary D.Litt and in 1992 was
awarded Honorary fellowship from
the University of Wales,
Lampeter.
[15]
A few years later in
a The Tonight Show with Jay
Leno appearance, Hopkins humbly
admitted that he liked his American
fans and friends to call him "Tony".
Hopkins was Britain's highest paid
performer in 1998, starring in The
Mask of Zorro and Meet Joe Black,
and also agreed to reprise his role as
Dr Hannibal Lecter for a fee of 15
million.
[16]
Hopkins received a star on
the Hollywood Walk of Fame in
2003.
[5]

Hopkins has stated that his role
as Burt Munro, whom he portrayed in
his 2005 film The World's Fastest
Indian, was his favourite. He also
asserted that Munro was the easiest
role that he had played because both
men have a similar outlook on
life.
[17]
In 2006, Hopkins was the
recipient of the Golden Globe Cecil
B. DeMille Award for lifetime
achievement.
[18]
In 2008, he received
the BAFTA Academy Fellowship
Award, the highest award the British
Film Academy can bestow.
[6]

Hopkins portrayed Odin, the Allfather
or "king" of Asgard, in the film
adaptation of Marvel
Comics' Thor.
[19]
On 24 February
2010, it was announced that Hopkins
had been cast in the supernatural
thriller The Rite, which was released
on 28 January 2011. He played a
priest who is "an expert in exorcisms
and whose methods are not
necessarily traditional".
[20]
Hopkins,
who is quoted as saying "I don't know
what I believe, myself personally",
reportedly wrote a line--"Some days I
don't know if I believe in God or
Santa Claus or Tinkerbell"into his
character in order to identify with
it.
[21]
On the other hand, in other
sources from the same time, he is
quoted as saying that he did believe
in God and had done so for
decades.
[22]
On 21 September
2011, Peter R. de Vries named
Hopkins in the role of
the Heineken owner Freddy
Heineken in a future film about his
kidnapping.
Hopkins portrayed Alfred
Hitchcock in Sacha Gervasi's
biopic Hitchcock, following his career
while making Psycho. The film was
released on 23 November 2012. In
2013, he reprised his role as Odin
in Thor: The Dark World. In 2014, he
portrayed Methuselah in Darren
Aronofsky's Noah.
Acting style[edit]


Isabella Rossellini and Sir Anthony Hopkins
in Berlin to shoot scenes forThe
Innocent (1993).
Hopkins is renowned for his
preparation for roles. He has
indicated in interviews that once he
has committed to a project, he will go
over his lines as many times as is
needed (sometimes upwards of 200)
until the lines sound natural to him,
so that he can "do it without thinking".
This leads to an almost casual style
of delivery that belies the amount of
groundwork done beforehand. While
it can allow for some careful
improvisation, it has also brought him
into conflict with the occasional
director who departs from the script,
or demands what the actor views as
an excessive number of takes.
Hopkins has stated that after he is
finished with a scene, he simply
discards the lines, not remembering
them later on. This is unlike others
who usually remember their lines
from a film even years
later.
[23]
Richard Attenborough, who
has directed Hopkins on five
occasions, found himself going to
great lengths during the filming
of Shadowlands (1993) to
accommodate the differing
approaches of his two stars (Hopkins
and Debra Winger), who shared
many scenes. Whereas Hopkins,
preferring the spontaneity of a fresh
take, liked to keep rehearsals to a
minimum, Winger rehearsed
continuously. To allow for this,
Attenborough stood in for Hopkins
during Winger's rehearsals, only
bringing him in for the last one before
a take. The director praised Hopkins
for "this extraordinary ability to make
you believe when you hear him that it
is the very first time he has ever said
that line. It's an incredible gift."
[11]

Renowned for his ability to remember
lines, Hopkins keeps his memory
supple by learning things by heart
such as poetry, and Shakespeare. In
Steven Spielberg's Amistad, Hopkins
astounded the crew with his
memorisation of a seven-page
courtroom speech, delivering it in one
go. An overawed Spielberg couldn't
bring himself to call him Tony, and
insisted on addressing him as Sir
Anthony throughout the shoot.
[9]

Hopkins is a gifted mimic, adept at
turning his native Welsh accent into
whatever is required by a character.
He duplicated the voice of his late
mentor, Laurence Olivier, for
additional scenes in Spartacus in its
1991 restoration. His interview on the
1998 relaunch edition of the British
TV talk show Parkinson featured
an impersonation of
comedianTommy Cooper. Hopkins
has said acting "like a submarine"
has helped him to deliver credible
performances in his thriller movies.
He said, "It's very difficult for an actor
to avoid, you want to show a bit. But I
think the less one shows the
better."
[24]

Hannibal Lecter[edit]
Perhaps Hopkins' most famous role
is as the cannibalistic serial
killer Hannibal Lecter in The Silence
of the Lambs, for which he won
the Academy Award for Best Actor in
1991, opposite Jodie
Foster as Clarice Starling, who also
won for Best Actress. The film
won Best Picture, Best
Director and Best Writing (Adapted
Screenplay). It is one of the shortest
lead performances to win an Oscar,
as Hopkins only appears on screen
for little over 16 minutes, less than
14% of the film's running
time.
[8]
Hopkins reprised his role as
Lecter twice in Hannibal (2001)
and Red Dragon (2002). His original
portrayal of the character in The
Silence of the Lambs has been
labelled by the American Film
Institute as thenumber-one film
villain.
[25]
At the time he was offered
the role, Hopkins was making a
return to the London stage,
performing in M. Butterfly. He had
come back to Britain after living for a
number of years in Hollywood, having
all but given up on a career there,
saying, "Well that part of my life's
over; it's a chapter closed. I suppose
I'll just have to settle for being a
respectable actor poncing around the
West End and doing respectable
BBC work for the rest of my life."
[11]

Hopkins played the iconic villain in
adaptations of the first three of the
Lecter novels by Thomas Harris. The
author was reportedly very pleased
with Hopkins' portrayal of his
antagonist. However, Hopkins stated
that Red Dragon would feature his
final performance as the character,
and that he would not reprise even a
narrative role in the latest addition to
the series, Hannibal Rising.
Personal life[edit]


Hopkins at the Tuscan Sun
Festival, Cortona, August 2009.
As of 2007, Hopkins resides in Los
Angeles. He had moved to the United
States once before during the 1970s
to pursue his film career, but returned
to London in the late 1980s.
However, he decided to return to the
US following his 1990s success.
Retaining his British citizenship, he
became a naturalised US citizen on
12 April 2000, and celebrated with a
3,000-mile road trip across the
country.
[15][26]

Hopkins has been married three
times. His first two wives
were Petronella Barker (19661972)
and Jennifer Lynton (19732002). He
is now married to Colombian-
born Stella Arroyave. He has a
daughter from his first
marriage, Abigail Hopkins (b. 20
August 1968), who is an actress and
singer. On Christmas Eve 2012,
Hopkins celebrated his 10th wedding
anniversary by renewing his vows
at St David's Cathedral in
Pembrokeshire, Wales.
[27]

Hopkins has offered his support to
various charities and appeals,
notably becoming President of
the National
Trust's Snowdonia Appeal, raising
funds for the preservation of
the Snowdonia National Park in north
Wales, which in 1998 he donated 1
million towards, and to aid the Trust's
efforts to purchase parts
of Snowdon.
[16][28]
Prior to the
campaign, Hopkins authored Anthony
Hopkins' Snowdonia, which was
published in 1995.
[29]
Hopkins has
been a patron of the YMCA centre in
his hometown of Port Talbot, South
Wales for more than 20 years, having
first joined the YMCA in the
1950s.
[30]
Hopkins also takes time to
support other various philanthropic
groups. He was a Guest of Honour at
a Gala Fundraiser for Women in
Recovery, Inc., a Venice, California-
based non-profit organisation offering
rehabilitation assistance to women in
recovery from substance abuse.
Although he resides in Malibu,
California he is also a volunteer
teacher at the Ruskin School of
Acting in Santa Monica, California.


Anthony Hopkins Centre at theRoyal Welsh
College of Music & Drama, Cardiff
Hopkins is a recovering alcoholic; he
stopped drinking on 25 December
1975.
[31][32]
He said that a major help
in his recovery was his belief
in God.
[33]
He has also
criticised atheism, saying "being an
atheist must be like living in a closed
cell with no windows.
[34]
He quit
smoking using the Allen
Carr method.
[35]

As stated to TMZ in October 2010,
Hopkins is a vegetarian. In 2008, he
embarked on a weight loss
programme, and by 2010, he had lost
80 pounds.
[36]

The Anthony Hopkins Centre, a 2.3
million wing of the Royal Welsh
College of Music & Drama in Cardiff,
was named after him.
[37]

Hopkins is a prominent member of
environmental protection
group Greenpeace and as of early
2008 featured in a television
advertisement campaign, voicing
concerns about Japan's continuing
annual whale hunt.
[38]
Hopkins has
been a patron of RAPt (Rehabilitation
for Addicted Prisoners Trust) since its
early days and helped open their first
intensive drug and alcohol
rehabilitation unit at Downview (HM
Prison) in 1992.
He is an admirer of the
comedian Tommy Cooper. On 23
February 2008, as patron of the
Tommy Cooper Society, the actor
unveiled a commemorative statue in
the entertainer's home town
of Caerphilly, South Wales. For the
ceremony, Hopkins donned Cooper's
trademark fez and performed a comic
routine.
[39]

There is a wax replica of Hopkins,
seated, in Madame Tussauds Wax
Museum in Amsterdam.
Other work[edit]


Hopkins wax statue inMadame Tussauds,
October 2009
In 1986, he released a single called
"Distant Star", which peaked at No.
75 in the UK Singles Chart.
[40]
In
2007, he announced he would retire
temporarily from the screen to tour
around the world.
[41]
Hopkins has also
written music for the concert hall, in
collaboration with Stephen Barton as
orchestrator. These compositions
include The Masque of Time, given
its world premiere with the Dallas
Symphony Orchestra in October
2008, andSchizoid Salsa.
[42]

In 1990, Hopkins directed "Dylan
Thomas: Return Journey" which was
his directing debut for the screen. In
1996, he directed August, an
adaptation of Chekhov's Uncle
Vanya set in Wales. His first
screenplay, an experimental drama
called Slipstream, which he also
directed and scored, premiered at
the Sundance Film Festival in 2007.
In 1997, Hopkins narrated BBC
natural documentary series, Killing
for a Living, which showed predatory
behaviour in nature. He narrated
episode 1 through 3 before being
replaced by John Shrapnel.
Hopkins is a fan of the BBC
sitcom Only Fools and Horses, and
once remarked in an interview how
he would love to appear in the series.
Writer John Sullivan saw the
interview, and with Hopkins in mind
created the character Danny Driscoll,
a local villain. However, filming of the
new series coincided with the filming
of The Silence of the Lambs, making
Hopkins unavailable. The role instead
went to Roy Marsden.
[43]

On 31 October 2011, Andr
Rieu released an album for which
Hopkins composed a waltz called
"And the Waltz Goes On". The album
was given the same name as the
song.
In January 2012, Hopkins released
an album of classical music,
entitled Composer, performed by
the City of Birmingham Symphony
Orchestra released by Decca.
Filmography[edit]
Main article: Anthony Hopkins
filmography
Awards and
nominations[edit]
Main article: List of awards and
nominations received by Anthony
Hopkins
References[edit]
1. Jump up^ "Hopkins
'greatest British actor'".
London: BBC. 16 August
2005. Archived from the
original on 7 December
2008. Retrieved 29
October 2008.
2. Jump up^ "Anthony
Hopkins Biography".
Tiscali.co.uk. 29 October
2008. Retrieved 29
October 2008.
3. Jump up^ "Anthony
Hopkins". The
Guardian (UK). Retrieved
29 October 2008.
4. ^ Jump up to:
a

b

c
Sir
Anthony Hopkins
portrait The
Telegraph Retrieved
Thursday 6 January 2011
5. ^ Jump up to:
a

b
Happy
birthday Sir Anthony
Hopkins The Daily
Telegraph (Sydney).
Retrieved 5 February
2011
6. ^ Jump up to:
a

b
Bafta
Film Awards 2008: The
winners BBC News (10
February 2008)
7. Jump up^ Stated in
interview on Inside the
Actors Studio, 2007
8. ^ Jump up to:
a

b
Anthony
Hopkins: My life in
pictures Daily
Mail Retrieved 6 January
2011
9. ^ Jump up to:
a

b
A dark
and stormy knight The
Guardian Retrieved 6
January 2011
10. Jump up^ "Sir
Anthony Hopkins
Biography". Bio. (UK).
Retrieved 14 November
2011.
11. ^ Jump up
to:
a

b

c
Falk, Quentin
(2004). Anthony Hopkins:
The Biography (4th ed.).
Virgin Books.ISBN 0-
7535-0999-7.
12. Jump up^ Films and
filming. Hansom Books. 1
January 1989. Retrieved
5 June 2011.
13. Jump up^ BBC
Wales Arts Top 10
Welsh actors: Anthony
Hopkins BBC Retrieved 2
January 2010
14. Jump up^ Actor
Anthony Hopkins
Knighted By Queen
Elizabeth Chicago
Tribune (23 February
1993)
15. ^ Jump up to:
a

b
BBC
Wales Arts Anthony
Hopkins
biography BBC Retrieved
2 January 2010
16. ^ Jump up
to:
a

b
Anthony Hopkins
gives pounds 1m to
Snowdon Independent.
Retrieved 19 October
2011
17. Jump up^ "The
World's Fastest Indian".
Solarnavigator.net. Archi
ved from the original on 9
June 2007. Retrieved 21
May 2007.
18. Jump up^ Lifetime
honour for Sir
Anthony BBC News (17
November 2005)
19. Jump up^ Michael
Fleming (30 October
2009). "Anthony Hopkins
cast in
'Thor'". Variety.Archived f
rom the original on 1
November 2009.
Retrieved 31 October
2009.
20. Jump up^ "Anthony
Hopkins takes demonic
forces in 'The Rite'". The
Hollywood Reporter. 24
February 2010. Retrieved
28 February 2010.
21. Jump up^ Anthony
Hopkins reveals the
secret atheist message
he put into The Rite
22. Jump up^ Anthony
Hopkins Talks about
Finding God, Alcohol
Addiction.
Christianpost.com (2011-
02-07). Retrieved on
2013-10-23.
23. Jump up^ "Anthony
Hopkins: Lecter and
Me" Red Dragon DVD
interview
24. Jump up^ "Sir
Anthony Hopkins acts
'like a submarine'".
London: BBC News. 12
February 2010. Retrieved
7 March 2010.
25. Jump up^ "AFI's 100
Years...100 Heroes &
Villains". AFI.com.
Archived from the
original on 7 May 2007.
Retrieved 21 May 2007.
26. Jump up^ "Anthony
Hopkins A role to sink
his teeth into". Retrieved
11 February 2010. "I
have dual citizenship, it
just so happens I live in
America."
27. Jump up^ "Hannibal
star Sir Anthony Hopkins
makes a trek back to his
childhood home in
Margam". South Wales
Evening Post. Retrieved
8 January 2013
28. Jump up^ Hopkins
gives a million to save
Snowdon BBC. Retrieved
19 October 2011
29. Jump up^ Hopkins,
Anthony (1995). Anthony
Hopkins' Snowdonia.
Colin Baxter
Photography, 1995
30. Jump up^ Drama
returns to YMCA where
Sir Anthony Hopkins
started BBC Wales (20
July 2010)
31. Jump up^ Close (5
December
1998). "Unlimited: A dark
and stormy knight". The
Guardian(London).
Retrieved 17 October
2009.
32. Jump
up^ http://www.walesonli
ne.co.uk/news/wales-
news/new-book-tells-
wales-famous-2120728
33. Jump up^ Close (7
February 2011). "Anthony
Hopkins Talks about
Finding God, Alcohol
Addiction". The Christian
Post. Retrieved 27 June
2012.
34. Jump up^ Close (11
February 2011). "Sir
Anthony Hopkins: I
couldnt be an atheist".
CatholicHerald.co.uk.
Retrieved 27 June 2012.
35. Jump
up^ http://allencarr.com/4
0/celebrity-endorsements
36. Jump up^ "Silence
of the Lamb Chops
Anthony Hopkins Loses
80 Pounds". Motley
Health(London). Archived
from the original on 24
October 2010. Retrieved
11 November 2010.
37. Jump up^ "Royal
Welsh College of Music &
Drama". The
Indeoendent. Retrieved
24 December 2013
38. Jump up^ "Green
Peace anti-whaling
video". Greenpeace. 17
March
2003. Archived from the
original on 5 October
2009. Retrieved 17
October 2009.
39. Jump up^ "Tommy
Cooper statue is
unveiled". London: BBC
News. 23 February 2008.
Retrieved 17 October
2009.
40. Jump up^ Roberts,
David (2006). British Hit
Singles & Albums (19th
ed.). London: Guinness
World Records Limited.
p. 259. ISBN 1-904994-
10-5.
41. Jump up^ "De gira
como pianista".
Associated Press. 3
December 2007.
42. Jump up^ Turner,
Robin (20 October
2008). "Raucous
approval for Sir Anthony
Hopkins music". Western
Mail (Media Wales).
Retrieved 11 October
2012.
43. Jump up^ Clark,
Steve (1998). The Only
Fools and Horses Story.
BBC Books.
p. 125. ISBN 0-563-
38445-X.
External links[edit]

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