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  Alan Arkin - Biography
Alan Arkin
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 Alan Arkin Biography 
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Name :Alan Arkin
Birth Name : Alan Wolf Arkin
Date of Birth : 26 March 1934
Place of Birth : New York, New York, USA
Height : 5'' 9''''
Nationality : American
Profession : Actor
Biography
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 Alan Arkin Trivia 
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  • One of only five actors to receive an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor for his first screen appearance.
  • Father of Adam Arkin, Matthew Arkin and Anthony Arkin.
  • Founding member, Second City improv troupe.
  • Wrote "The Lemming Condition," "Cassie Loves Beethoven" and "One Present for Flekman's."
  • He was originally slated to play Saul Bloom in Steven Soderbergh's remake of _Ocean's Eleven (2000)_ ; after dropping out of the production, he was replaced by Carl Reiner.
  • Two of his movies, Popi (1969) and Freebie and the Bean (1974), were later adapted into television series starring Hector Elizondo in the roles Arkin brought to the silver screen. Elizondo also co-starred in the television series "Chicago Hope" (1994) with Alan Arkin's son, Adam Arkin.
  • Biography in: "Who's Who in Comedy" by Ronald L. Smith. pg. 24-25. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387.
  • Father-in-law of Phyllis Lyons.
  • As a founding member of the folk group "The Tarriers," he co-composed the song "The Banana Boat Song" (also known as "Day-o"), which later became a mega-hit by Harry Belafonte.
  • In the forward for the Second City book, Arkin revealed that he was reluctant to head to Chicago. He credits his first paying job as an actor was in St. Louis, when he ran into a fellow who was starting up the Second City theater troupe in Chicago, and said to Arkin that if he were ever to come to Chicago, that he would hire him. Arkin halfheartedly agreed, thinking that it was just a joke and headed back to New York for another year as a struggling actor. Arkin called the man and asked if a position was still open. The man confirmed it and Arkin headed to Chicago, thinking that his life was over. But when he joined Second City, Arkin said that he realized he was with a group of people that fostered the kind of acting that he was involved in, and protected him from the fear of the world.
  • Although he usually plays quirky, fatherly types these days, back in the 60s and 70s, Arkin was known as a edgy, intense actor. His darkest role is almost certainly Harry Roat in Wait Until Dark (1967), that character being a viscous, intelligent psychopath who terrifies a seemingly defenseless blind woman (played by Audrey Hepburn).
  • Was cast in the title role of Inspector Clouseau (1968) after Peter Sellers declined to reprise the role a third time. It was the last Clouseau film until Sellers returned to the role in The Return of the Pink Panther (1975).
  • Won Broadway's 1963 Tony Award as Best Supporting or Featured Actor (Dramatic) for "Enter Laughing." In 1973, he was nominated as Best Director (Dramatic) for "The Sunshine Boys."

 Alan Arkin Detailed Biography 
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Multi-talented Alan Arkin is a distinguished actor of stage and screen as well as a stage director, songwriter, photographer, singer, and the author of a few children's books. Though primarily known for his high-energy, broadly comic roles, Alan Arkin is also a talented dramatic actor who brings a certain intelligence and believability to each performance. Although highly respected, he has never been considered a major star, partly due to his appearances in a number of films of widely varying quality that relegated him to the rank of supporting actor rather than bona fide star.

Born in Brooklyn to Jewish immigrants from Russia and Germany, Alan Arkin began his career as a folk singer while attending college. His group, the Tarriers, was modestly successful and Alan Arkin dropped out of college to perform. He then helped form the famed Chicago improvisational comedy troupe Second City, performing and directing a few sketches. Arkin returned to New York around 1963 to work both on and off-Broadway, making his Broadway debut in Carl Reiner's Enter Laughing. In 1964, he gained widespread acclaim for his portrayal of Harry Berlin in a Broadway production of Luv, and this success led to his auspicious Hollywood debut in Norman Jewison's gentle but hilarious sleeper The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming! (1966). Alan Arkin's portrayal of a Russian officer posing as a Norwegian sailor in a Nantucket town won him his first Oscar nomination. The following year, he demonstrated his versatility by offering a chilling portrayal of a villain in Terence Young's Wait Until Dark. Further acclaim greeted the actor in 1968 when received his second Oscar nomination for his portrayal of a deaf-mute in The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter. The role also won Alan Arkin a New York Film Critics Circle award. He continued riding high in 1970, when he played Yossarian, the part for which he is still best remembered, in Mike Nichols' serio-comic adaptation of Joseph Heller's Catch-22. Five years later, he earned a second New York Film Critics Circle award for his work in Hearts of the West.

Alan Arkin made his directorial debut with 1971's Little Murders. This stint behind the camera followed his work directing several stage productions. He continued to carry out behind-the-scenes duties for other films that decade, notably the 1979 comedy The In-Laws, for which he both starred and acted as executive producer. In 1981, Alan Arkin starred in Improper Channels, which featured a script co-written by his son Adam Arkin, who has since become a noted television actor. The following year, father and son appeared together in Larry Cohen's Full Moon High. Since then, Arkin has continued to play a wide variety of character and supporting roles. Alan Arkin's career enjoyed a second wind in the 1990s, with the actor appearing in substantial roles in a number of films. Some of the highlights included Edward Scissorhands (1990) in which he played Winona Ryder's father; Glengarry Glen Ross (1992) which cast him as a real-estate salesman; Grosse Pointe Blank (1997) in which he played John Cusack's exasperated psychiatrist; and The Slums of Beverly Hills (1998) for which he won raves for his portrayal of a divorced father struggling to keep his kids enrolled in the Beverly Hills school system. In 1999, Alan Arkin could be seen in Jakob the Liar, playing opposite Robin Williams in a film set during the Nazi occupation of Poland.

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