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Philip Seymour Hoffman

Philip Seymour Hoffman (July 23, 1967 – February 2, 2014) was an American actor. Known for his distinctive supporting and character roles—lowlifes, eccentrics, underdogs, and misfits—he acted in many films and theatrical productions, including leading roles, from the early 1990s until his death in 2014. He received numerous accolades including an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, and a Golden Globe Award as well as nominations for two Primetime Emmy Awards and three Tony Awards. In 2022, Empire magazine listed Hoffman as one of 50 Greatest Actors Of All Time.[1]

Philip Seymour Hoffman
Hoffman in 2011
Born
Philip Hoffman

(1967-07-23)July 23, 1967
DiedFebruary 2, 2014(2014-02-02) (aged 46)
Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Cause of deathAcute mixed drug intoxication
Alma materNew York University
Occupations
  • Actor
  • producer
  • theatre director
Years active1991–2014
WorksOn screen and stage
Partner(s)Mimi O'Donnell
(1999–2013)
Children3, including Cooper
RelativesGordy Hoffman (brother)
AwardsFull list

Having studied acting at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts he gained recognition for his supporting work, notably in Scent of a Woman (1992), Twister (1996), Boogie Nights (1997), Patch Adams (1998), The Big Lebowski (1998), Magnolia (1999), The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), and Almost Famous (2000). He received the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Truman Capote in Capote (2005). Other Oscar-nominated roles include the frank CIA officer in Charlie Wilson's War (2007), a Catholic priest accused of pedophilia in Doubt (2008), and the charismatic cult leader in The Master (2012). Other notable roles include Twister (1996), Flawless (1999), Along Came Polly (2004), Mission: Impossible III (2006), The Savages (2007), Synecdoche, New York (2008) and in the Hunger Games series (2013–2015). He directed Jack Goes Boating (2010).

Hoffman was also an accomplished theater actor and director. He joined the off-Broadway LAByrinth Theater Company in 1995, where he directed, produced, and appeared in numerous stage productions. For his performances in three Broadway plays, he received three Tony Award nominations for Sam Shephard's True West in 2000, Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night in 2003, and Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman in 2012.

Hoffman struggled with drug addiction as a young adult and relapsed in 2012 after many years of abstinence. In February 2014, he died of combined drug intoxication. Remembered for his fearlessness in playing reprehensible characters, and for bringing depth and humanity to such roles, Hoffman was described in his New York Times obituary as "perhaps the most ambitious and widely admired American actor of his generation".[2]

Early life

Philip Hoffman was born on July 23, 1967, in the Rochester suburb of Fairport, New York.[2] His mother, Marilyn O'Connor (née Loucks), came from nearby Waterloo and worked as an elementary school teacher[3] before becoming a lawyer and eventually a family court judge.[2][4] His father, Gordon Stowell Hoffman, was a native of Geneva, New York, and worked for the Xerox Corporation. Along with one brother, Gordy, Hoffman had two sisters, Jill and Emily.[3] His ancestry included German and Irish.[5][6]

 
The village of Fairport, New York, Hoffman's hometown

Hoffman was baptized a Catholic and attended Mass as a child, but did not have a heavily religious upbringing.[7] His parents divorced when he was nine, and the children were raised primarily by their mother.[4] Hoffman's childhood passion was sports, particularly wrestling and baseball,[4] but at age 12, he attended a stage production of Arthur Miller's All My Sons and was transfixed. He recalled in 2008, "I was changed—permanently changed—by that experience. It was like a miracle to me".[8] Hoffman developed a love for the theater, and proceeded to attend regularly with his mother, who was a lifelong enthusiast.[9] He remembered that productions of Quilters and Alms for the Middle Class, the latter starring a teenaged Robert Downey, Jr., were also particularly inspirational.[10] At the age of 14, Hoffman suffered a neck injury that ended his sporting activity, and he began to consider acting.[8][11] Encouraged by his mother, he joined a drama club, and initially committed to it because he was attracted to a female member.[4][8]

Acting gradually became a passion for Hoffman: "I loved the camaraderie of it, the people, and that's when I decided it was what I wanted to do."[11] At the age of 17, he was selected to attend the 1984 New York State Summer School of the Arts in Saratoga Springs, where he met his future collaborators Bennett Miller and Dan Futterman.[12] Miller later commented on Hoffman's popularity at the time: "We were attracted to the fact that he was genuinely serious about what he was doing. Even then, he was passionate."[8] Hoffman applied for several drama degree programs and was accepted to New York University's (NYU) Tisch School of the Arts.[8] Between graduating from Fairport High School and beginning the program, he continued his training at the Circle in the Square Theatre's summer program.[2] Hoffman had positive memories of his time at NYU, where he supported himself by working as an usher. With friends, he co-founded the Bullstoi Ensemble acting troupe.[11] He received a drama degree in 1989.[4]

Career

1991–1995: Early career

After graduating, Hoffman worked in off-Broadway theater and made additional money with customer service jobs.[10][11] He made his screen debut in 1991, in a Law & Order episode called "The Violence of Summer", playing a man accused of rape.[13] His first cinema role came the following year, when he was credited as "Phil Hoffman" in the independent film Triple Bogey on a Par Five Hole. After this, he adopted his grandfather's name, Seymour, to avoid confusion with another actor.[14] More film roles promptly followed, with appearances in the studio production My New Gun, and a small role in the comedy Leap of Faith, starring Steve Martin.[15][16] Following these roles, he gained attention playing a spoiled student in the Oscar-winning Al Pacino film Scent of a Woman (1992). Hoffman auditioned five times for his role, which The Guardian journalist Ryan Gilbey says gave him an early opportunity "to indulge his skill for making unctuousness compelling".[17] The film earned US$134 million worldwide[18] and was the first to get Hoffman noticed.[19] Reflecting on Scent of a Woman, Hoffman later said, "If I hadn't gotten into that film, I wouldn't be where I am today."[13] At this time, he abandoned his job in a delicatessen to become a professional actor.[14][20]

Hoffman continued playing small roles throughout the early 1990s. After appearing in Joey Breaker and the critically panned teen zombie picture My Boyfriend's Back,[21] he had a more notable role playing John Cusack's wealthy friend in the crime comedy Money for Nothing.[22] In 1994, he portrayed an inexperienced mobster in the crime thriller The Getaway, starring Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger,[23] and he subsequently appeared with Andy García and Meg Ryan in the romantic drama When a Man Loves a Woman. He then played an uptight police deputy who gets punched by Paul Newman—one of Hoffman's acting idols—in the drama Nobody's Fool.[13][24]

Still considering stage work to be fundamental to his career,[19][25] Hoffman joined the LAByrinth Theater Company of New York City in 1995.[22] This association lasted the remainder of his life; along with appearing in multiple productions, he later became co-artistic director of the theater company with John Ortiz, and directed various plays over the years.[25] Hoffman's only film appearance of 1995 was in the 22-minute short comedy The Fifteen Minute Hamlet, which satirized the film industry in an Elizabethan setting. He played the characters of Bernardo, Horatio, and Laertes alongside Austin Pendleton's Hamlet.[26]

1996–1999: Rising star

Between April and May 1996, Hoffman appeared at the Joseph Papp Public Theater in a Mark Wing-Davey production of Caryl Churchill's The Skriker.[27] Following this, based on his work in Scent of a Woman, he was cast by writer–director Paul Thomas Anderson to appear in his debut feature Hard Eight (1996).[17] Hoffman had only a brief role in the crime thriller, playing a cocksure young craps player, but it began the most important collaboration of his career.[17][a] Before cementing his creative partnership with Anderson, Hoffman appeared in one of the year's biggest blockbusters,[28] Twister, playing a grubby, hyperactive storm chaser alongside Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton. According to a People survey of Twitter and Facebook users, Twister is the film with which Hoffman is most popularly associated.[29] He then reunited with Anderson for the director's second feature, Boogie Nights, about the Golden Age of Pornography. The ensemble piece starred Mark Wahlberg, Julianne Moore, and Burt Reynolds; Hoffman played a boom operator, described by David Fear of Rolling Stone as a "complete, unabashed loser",[22] who attempts to seduce Wahlberg's character. Warmly received by critics, the film grew into a cult classic,[13][30] and has been cited as the role in which Hoffman first showed his full ability. Fear commended the "naked emotional neediness" of the performance, adding that it made for compulsive viewing.[22][31] Hoffman later expressed his appreciation for Anderson when he called the director "incomparable".[32]

That wasn't easy. It's hard to sit in your boxers and jerk off in front of people for three hours. I was pretty heavy, and I was afraid that people would laugh at me. Todd said they might laugh, but they won't laugh at you. He saw what we were working for, which was the pathos of the moment. Sometimes, acting is a really private thing that you do for the world.

– Hoffman on his role in Happiness (1998)[8]

Continuing with this momentum, Hoffman appeared in five films in 1998. He had supporting roles in the crime thriller Montana and the romantic comedy Next Stop Wonderland, both of which were commercial failures,[33][34] before working with the Coen brothers in their dark comedy The Big Lebowski. Hoffman had long been a fan of the directors, and relished the experience of working with them.[35] Appearing alongside Jeff Bridges and John Goodman, Hoffman played Brandt, the smug personal assistant of the titular character. Although it was only a small role, he claimed it was one for which he was most recognized, in a film that has achieved cult status and a large fan base.[35] Between March and April 1998, Hoffman made 30 appearances on stage at the New York Theatre Workshop in a production of Mark Ravenhill's Shopping and Fucking, portraying an ex-heroin addict.[36]

Hoffman took an unflattering role in Todd Solondz's Happiness (1998),[37] a misanthropic black comedy about the lives of three sisters and those around them. He played Allen, a strange loner who makes crude phone calls to women; the character furiously masturbates during one conversation, producing what film scholar Jerry Mosher calls an "embarrassingly raw performance".[37] Jake Coyle of the Associated Press rated Allen as one of the creepiest characters in American cinema,[38] but critic Xan Brooks highlighted the pathos that Hoffman brought to the role.[39] Happiness was controversial but widely praised,[40] and Hoffman's role has been cited by critics as one of his best.[38][41] His final 1998 release was more mainstream, as he appeared as a medical graduate in the Robin Williams comedy Patch Adams. The film was critically panned, but one of the highest-grossing of Hoffman's career.[42][43]

In 1999, Hoffman starred opposite Robert De Niro as drag queen Rusty Zimmerman in Joel Schumacher's drama Flawless. Hoffman considered De Niro the most imposing actor with whom he had appeared, and he felt that working with the veteran performer profoundly improved his own acting.[10] Hoffman's ability to avoid clichés in playing such a delicate role was noted by critics,[22][44] and Roger Ebert said it confirmed him as "one of the best new character actors".[45] He was rewarded with his first Screen Actors Guild Award nomination.[46] Hoffman then reunited with Paul Thomas Anderson, where he was given an atypically virtuous role in the ensemble drama Magnolia.[17] The film, set over one day in Los Angeles, features Hoffman as a nurse who cares for Jason Robards' character. The performance was approved of by the medical industry,[47] and Jessica Winter of the Village Voice considered it Hoffman's most indelible work, likening him to a guardian angel in his caring for the dying father.[47] Magnolia has been included in lists of the greatest films of all time,[48][49] and it was a personal favorite of Hoffman's.[32]

One of the most critically and commercially successful films of Hoffman's career was The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999),[43][50] which he considered "as edgy as you can get for a Hollywood movie".[51] He played a "preppy bully" who taunts Matt Damon's Ripley in the thriller, a character which Jeff Simon of The Buffalo News called "the truest upper class twit in all of American movies".[10] Hoffman's performance caught the attention of Meryl Streep, another of his cinematic idols: "I sat up straight in my seat and said, 'Who is that?' I thought to myself: My God, this actor is fearless. He's done what we all strive for—he's given this awful character the respect he deserves, and he's made him fascinating."[19] In recognition of his work in Magnolia and The Talented Mr. Ripley, Hoffman was named the year's Best Supporting Actor by the National Board of Review.[52]

2000–2004: Established star

 
Hoffman at Cannes in 2002 promoting Punch-Drunk Love

Following a string of roles in successful films in the late 1990s, Hoffman had established a reputation as a top supporting player who could be relied on to make an impression with each performance.[53] His film appearances were likened by David Kamp of GQ to "discovering a prize in a box of cereal, receiving a bonus, or bumping unexpectedly into an old friend".[19] According to Jerry Mosher, as the year 2000 began, "it seemed Hoffman was everywhere, poised on the cusp of stardom".[54]

Hoffman had begun to be recognized as a theater actor in 1999, when he received a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor for the off-Broadway play The Author's Voice.[55][56] This success continued with the 2000 Broadway revival of Sam Shepard's True West, where Hoffman alternated roles nightly with co-star John C. Reilly,[b] making 154 appearances between March and July 2000.[57][37] Ben Brantley of The New York Times felt that it was the best stage performance of Hoffman's career, calling him "brilliant",[58] and the actor earned a Tony Award nomination for Best Actor in a Play.[55] The following year, Hoffman appeared with Meryl Streep, Natalie Portman, and John Goodman in a Delacorte Theater production of Chekhov's The Seagull—although Brantley felt that this performance was less fully realized.[59] As a stage director, Hoffman received two Drama Desk Award nominations for Outstanding Director of a Play: one for Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train in 2001, and another for Our Lady of 121st Street in 2003.[60] In a 2008 interview, Hoffman opined that "switching hats" between acting and directing helped him improve in both roles.[61]

David Mamet's comedy State and Main, about the difficulties of shooting a film in rural New England, was Hoffman's first film role of 2000 and had a limited release.[62] He had a more prominent supporting role that year in Almost Famous, Cameron Crowe's popular coming-of-age film set in the 1970s music industry.[38] Hoffman portrayed the enthusiastic rock critic Lester Bangs, a task by which he felt burdened,[63] but he managed to convey the real figure's mannerisms and sharp wit after watching him in a BBC interview.[64] The following year, Hoffman featured as the narrator and interviewer in The Party's Over, a documentary about the 2000 U.S. elections. He assumed the position of a "politically informed and alienated Generation-Xer" who seeks to be educated in U.S. politics, but ultimately reveals the extent of public dissatisfaction in this area.[65]

In 2002, Hoffman was given his first leading role (despite joking at the time "Even if I was hired into a leading-man part, I'd probably turn it into the non-leading-man part")[66] in Todd Louiso's tragicomedy Love Liza (2002). His brother Gordy wrote the script, which Hoffman had seen at their mother's house five years earlier, about a widower who starts sniffing gasoline to cope with his wife's suicide. He considered it the finest piece of writing he had ever read, "incredibly humble in its exploration of grief",[14] but critics were less enthusiastic about the production. A review for the BBC wrote that Hoffman had finally been given a part that showed "what he's truly capable of",[67] but few witnessed this as the film had a limited release and earned only US$210,000.[68]

 
Director Paul Thomas Anderson, who cast Hoffman in five of his first six films

Later in 2002, Hoffman starred opposite Adam Sandler and Emily Watson in Anderson's critically acclaimed fourth picture, the surrealist romantic comedy-drama Punch-Drunk Love (2002), where he played an illegal phone-sex "supervisor".[69] Drew Hunt of the Chicago Reader saw the performance as a fine example of Hoffman's "knack for turning small roles into seminal performances" and praised the actor's comedic ability.[70] In a very different film, Hoffman was next seen with Anthony Hopkins in the high-budget thriller Red Dragon, a prequel to The Silence of the Lambs, portraying the meddlesome tabloid journalist Freddy Lounds.[71] His fourth appearance of 2002 came in Spike Lee's drama 25th Hour, playing an English teacher who makes a devastating drunken mistake.[72] Both Lee and the film's lead Edward Norton were thrilled to work with Hoffman, and Lee confessed that he had long wanted to do a picture with the actor, but had waited until he found the right role.[73] Hoffman considered his character, Jakob, to be one of the most reticent characters he had ever played, a straight-laced "corduroy-pants-wearing kind of guy."[14] Roger Ebert promoted 25th Hour to one of his "Great Movies" in 2009,[74] and along with A. O. Scott,[75] considered it to be one of the best films of the 2000s.[76]

The drama Owning Mahowny (2003) gave Hoffman his second lead role, starring opposite Minnie Driver as a bank employee who embezzles money to feed his gambling addiction. Based on the true story of Toronto banker Brian Molony, who committed the largest fraud in Canadian history, Hoffman met with Molony to prepare for the role and help him play the character as accurately as possible.[77] He was determined not to conform to "movie character" stereotypes,[68] and his portrayal of addiction won approval from the Royal College of Psychiatrists.[77] Roger Ebert assessed Hoffman's performance as "a masterpiece of discipline and precision,"[78] but the film earned little at the box office.[79]

Hoffman's second 2003 appearance was a small role in Anthony Minghella's successful Civil War epic Cold Mountain.[80] He played an immoral preacher, a complex character that Hoffman described as a "mass of contradictions".[81] The same year, from April to August, he appeared with Vanessa Redgrave, Brian Dennehy, and Robert Sean Leonard in a Broadway revival of Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night.[82] Director Robert Falls later commented on the dedication and experience that Hoffman brought to his role of alcoholic Jamie Tyrone: "Every night he ripped it up to an extent that he couldn't leave [the role]. Phil carried it with him."[83] Hoffman received his second Tony Award nomination, this time for Best Featured Actor in a Play.[55] In 2004, he appeared as the crude, has-been actor friend of Ben Stiller's character in the box-office hit Along Came Polly.[84] Reflecting on the role, People said it proved that "Hoffman could deliver comedic performances with the best of them".[29]

2005–2009: Critical acclaim

 
Hoffman won many awards for his portrayal of the writer Truman Capote (pictured in 1959) in Capote (2005).

A turning point in Hoffman's career came with the biographical film Capote (2005), which dramatized Truman Capote's experience of writing his true crime novel In Cold Blood (1966).[85] Hoffman took the title role for a project that he co-produced and helped bring to fruition.[86][87] Portraying the idiosyncratic writer proved highly demanding, requiring significant weight loss and four months of research—such as watching video clips of Capote to help him affect the author's effeminate voice and mannerisms. Hoffman stated that he was not concerned with perfectly imitating Capote's speech, but he did feel a great duty to "express the vitality and the nuances" of the writer.[88][89] During filming, he stayed in character constantly so as not to lose the voice and posture: "Otherwise," he explained, "I would give my body a chance to bail on me."[89] Capote was released to great acclaim, particularly regarding Hoffman's performance.[90] Many critics commented that the role was designed to win awards,[91] and indeed Hoffman received an Oscar, Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild Award, BAFTA, and various other critics' awards.[92] In 2006, Premiere listed his role in Capote as the 35th-greatest movie performance of all time.[93] After the film, several commentators began to describe Hoffman as one of the finest, most ambitious actors of his generation.[87]

Hoffman received his only Primetime Emmy Award nomination for his supporting role in the HBO miniseries Empire Falls (2005), about life in a New England town. He ultimately lost to castmate Paul Newman.[94] In 2006, he appeared in the summer blockbuster Mission: Impossible III, playing the villainous arms dealer Owen Davian opposite Tom Cruise. A journalist for Vanity Fair stated that Hoffman's "black-hat performance was one of the most delicious in a Hollywood film since Alan Rickman's in Die Hard ",[57] and he was generally approved of for bringing gravitas to the action film. With a gross of nearly US$400 million, it exposed Hoffman to a mainstream audience.[95]

Returning to independent films in 2007, Hoffman began with a starring role in Tamara Jenkins's The Savages, where Laura Linney and he played siblings responsible for putting their dementia-ridden father (Philip Bosco) in a care home. Jake Coyle of the Associated Press stated that it was "the epitome of a Hoffman film: a mix of comedy and tragedy told with subtlety, bone-dry humor, and flashes of grace".[38] Hoffman received a Golden Globe nomination for his performance in The Savages.[96] He next appeared in Before the Devil Knows You're Dead, the final film by veteran director Sidney Lumet, where he played a realtor who embezzles funds from his employer to support his drug habit. Mosher comments that the character was one of the most unpleasant of Hoffman's career, but that his "fearlessness again revealed the humanity within a deeply flawed character" as he appeared naked in the opening sex scene.[97] The film was received positively by critics as a powerful and affecting thriller.[98]

Mike Nichols's political film Charlie Wilson's War (2007) gave Hoffman his second Academy Award nomination, again for playing a real individual—Gust Avrakotos, the CIA agent who conspired with Congressman Charlie Wilson (played by Tom Hanks) to aid Afghani rebels in their fight against the Soviet Union. Todd McCarthy wrote of Hoffman's performance: "Decked out with a pouffy '80s hairdo, moustache, protruding gut and ever-present smokes ... whenever he's on, the picture vibrates with conspiratorial electricity."[99] The film was a critical and commercial success,[100] and along with his Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor, Hoffman was nominated for a BAFTA and a Golden Globe Award.[92]

 
Hoffman at the 81st Academy Awards in February 2009, where he was nominated for Doubt

The year 2008 contained two significant Hoffman roles. In Charlie Kaufman's enigmatic drama Synecdoche, New York, he starred as Caden Cotard, a frustrated dramatist who attempts to build a scale replica of New York inside a warehouse for a play.[101] Hoffman again showed his willingness to reveal unattractive traits, as the character ages and deteriorates, and committed to a deeply psychological role.[102] Critics were divided in their response to the "ambitious and baffling" film.[103] Sonny Bunch of The Washington Times found it "impressionistic, inaccessible, and endlessly frustrating", likening Hoffman's character to "God, if God lacked imagination".[104] Conversely, Roger Ebert named it the best film of the decade and considered it one of the greatest of all time,[105] and Robbie Collin, film critic for The Daily Telegraph, believes Hoffman gave one of cinema's best performances.[106]

Hoffman's second role of the year came opposite Meryl Streep and Amy Adams in John Patrick Shanley's Doubt, where he played Father Brendan Flynn—a priest accused of sexually abusing a 12-year-old African-American student in the 1960s. Hoffman was already familiar with the play and appreciated the opportunity to bring it to the screen; in preparing for the role, he talked extensively to a priest who lived through the era.[107] The film had a mixed reception, with some critics such as Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian suspicious of it as Oscar bait,[108] but Hoffman gained second consecutive Best Supporting Actor nominations at the Oscars, BAFTAs, and Golden Globes, and was also nominated by the Screen Actors Guild.[92]

On stage in 2009, Hoffman played Iago in Peter Sellars' futuristic production of Othello (with the title role by John Ortiz), which received mixed reviews.[109] Ben Brantley, theatre critic of The New York Times, found it to be "exasperatingly misconceived", remarking that even when Hoffman is attempting to "manipulate others into self-destruction, he comes close to spoiling everything by erupting into genuine, volcanic fury".[110] Hoffman also did his first vocal performance for the claymation film Mary and Max, although the film did not initially have an American release.[111] He played Max, a depressed New Yorker with Asperger syndrome, while Toni Collette voiced Mary—the Australian girl who becomes his pen pal. Continuing with animation, Hoffman then worked on an episode of the children's show Arthur and received a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Performer In An Animated Program.[112] Later in the year, he played a brash American disc jockey opposite Bill Nighy and Rhys Ifans in Richard Curtis's British comedy The Boat That Rocked (also known as Pirate Radio)—a character based on Emperor Rosko, a host of Radio Caroline in 1966.[113] He also had a cameo role as a bartender in Ricky Gervais's The Invention of Lying.[114]

Reflecting on Hoffman's work in the late 2000s, Mosher writes that the actor remained impressive, but had not delivered a testing performance on the level of his work in Capote. The film critic David Thomson believed that Hoffman showed indecisiveness at this time, unsure whether to play spectacular supporting roles or become a lead actor who is capable of controlling the emotional dynamic and outcome of a film.[115]

2010–2014: Final years

Hoffman's profile continued to grow with the new decade, and he became an increasingly recognizable figure.[24] Despite earlier reservations about directing for the screen,[10] his first release of the 2010s was also his first as a film director. The independent drama Jack Goes Boating was adapted from Robert Glaudini's play of the same name, in which Hoffman had starred and directed for the LAByrinth Theater Company in 2007. He originally intended to only direct the film, but decided to reprise the main role of Jack—a lonely limousine driver looking for love—after the actor he wanted for it was unavailable.[116] The low-key film had a limited release, and was not a high earner,[117] though it received many positive reviews.[118][119] However, Dave Edwards of the Daily Mirror remarked that "Hoffman's directing debut delivers a film so weak I could barely remember what it was about as I left",[120] while critic Mark Kermode appreciated the cinematic qualities that Hoffman brought to the film, and stated that he showed potential as a director.[121] In addition to Jack Goes Boating, in 2010 Hoffman also directed Brett C. Leonard's tragic drama The Long Red Road for the Goodman Theatre in Chicago. Steven Oxman of Variety described the production as "heavy handed" and "predictable", but "intriguing and at least partially successful".[122]

 
Hoffman at the Moneyball premiere in September 2011

Hoffman next had significant supporting roles in two films, both released in the last third of 2011. In Bennett Miller's Moneyball, a sports drama about the 2002 season of the Oakland Athletics baseball team, he played the coach Art Howe. The film was a critical and commercial success, and Hoffman was described as "perfectly cast" by Ann Hornaday of The Washington Post, but the real-life Art Howe accused the filmmakers of giving an "unfair and untrue" portrayal of him.[123] Hoffman's second film of the year was George Clooney's political drama The Ides of March, in which he played the earnest campaign manager to the Democratic presidential candidate Mike Morris (Clooney). The film was well-received and Hoffman's performance, especially in the scenes opposite Paul Giamatti—who played the rival campaign manager—was positively noted.[124] Hoffman's work on the film earned him his fourth BAFTA Award nomination.[92]

In the spring of 2012, Hoffman made his final stage appearance, starring as Willy Loman in a Broadway revival of Death of a Salesman opposite Andrew Garfield. Directed by Mike Nichols, the production ran for 78 performances and was the highest-grossing show in the Ethel Barrymore Theatre's history.[125] Many critics felt that Hoffman, at 44, was too young for the role of 62-year-old Loman,[2] and Chris Jones of the Chicago Tribune felt that the character had been interpreted poorly.[126] Hoffman admitted that he found the role difficult,[32] but he nevertheless earned his third Tony Award nomination.[55]

Hoffman collaborated with Paul Thomas Anderson for the fifth time in The Master (2012), where he turned in what critic Peter Bradshaw considered the most memorable performance of his career.[127] Set in 1950s America, the film featured Hoffman as Lancaster Dodd, the charismatic leader of a nascent Scientology-type movement who brings a troubled man (Joaquin Phoenix) under his tutelage. Hoffman was instrumental in the project's development, having been involved with it for three years.[32] He assisted Anderson in the writing of the script by reviewing samples of it, and suggested making Phoenix's character, Freddie Quell, the protagonist instead of Dodd.[128] A talented dancer,[39] Hoffman was able to showcase his abilities by performing a jig during a surreal sequence; Bradshaw called it an "extraordinary moment" that "only Hoffman could have carried off."[127] The Master was praised as an intelligent and challenging drama,[129] and Drew Hunt of the Chicago Reader also felt that it contained Hoffman's finest work: "He's inscrutable yet welcoming, intimidating yet charismatic, villainous yet fatherly. He epitomizes so many things at once that it's impossible to think of [Dodd] as mere movie character".[70] Hoffman and Phoenix received a joint Volpi Cup Award at the Venice Film Festival for their performances, and Hoffman was also nominated for an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA Award and a SAG Award for the supporting role.[92]

 
Hoffman, Anton Corbijn and Grigoriy Dobrygin promoting A Most Wanted Man at the Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014, less than two weeks before his death

A Late Quartet was Hoffman's other film release of 2012, where he played a violinist in a string quartet whose members (played by Christopher Walken, Catherine Keener, and Mark Ivanir) face a crisis when one is diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. The drama received favorable reviews, and Stephen Holden of The New York Times called Hoffman's performance "exceptional".[130][131] In 2013, Hoffman joined the popular Hunger Games series in its second film, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, where he played gamemaker Plutarch Heavensbee. The film finished as the 10th-highest grossing in history to that point,[132] and Hoffman became recognizable to a new generation of film-goers.[127] In January 2014, shortly before his death, he attended the Sundance Film Festival to promote two films. In Anton Corbijn's A Most Wanted Man, a thriller based on John le Carré's novel, Hoffman played a German intelligence officer. His performance was praised by Xan Brooks as one of "terrific, lip-smacking relish: full of mischief, anchored by integrity."[133] The other was God's Pocket, the directorial debut of actor John Slattery, in which Hoffman played a thief.[134] In November 2014, nine months after his death, Hoffman was seen in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1.[135]

At the time of his death, Hoffman was filming The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, the fourth film in the series, and had already completed the majority of his scenes.[136] His two remaining scenes were rewritten to compensate for his absence,[137] and the film was released in November 2015.[138] Hoffman was also preparing for his second directorial effort, a Prohibition-era drama titled Ezekiel Moss, which was to star Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal.[139] In addition, he had filmed a pilot episode for the Showtime series Happyish, in which he played the lead role of an advertising executive, but plans for a full season were put on hold following his death.[140] The role was later passed on to Steve Coogan.[141]

Personal life

 
Hoffman at a Hudson Union Society event in September 2010

Hoffman rarely mentioned his personal life in interviews, stating in 2012 that he would "rather not because my family doesn't have any choice. If I talk about them in the press, I'm giving them no choice. So I choose not to."[142] For 14 years, he was in a relationship with costume designer Mimi O'Donnell, whom he had met in 1999 when they were both working on the Hoffman-directed play In Arabia We'd All Be Kings.[143] They lived in New York City and had a son, Cooper, and two daughters.[144] While some reports stated Hoffman and O'Donnell separated in the fall of 2013,[145] O'Donnell later said she and Hoffman were both committed to their relationship, but he had moved out of their longtime residence to a nearby apartment to protect their children from the effects of his relapse into substance abuse.[146]

Hoffman was also discreet about his religious and political beliefs, but it is known that he voted for the Green Party candidate Ralph Nader in the 2000 presidential election.[7][142] He felt that keeping his personal life private was beneficial to his career: "The less you know about me the more interesting it will be to watch me do what I do".[20]

In a 2006 interview with 60 Minutes, Hoffman revealed he had engaged in drug and alcohol misuse during his time at New York University, saying he had used "anything I could get my hands on. I liked it all."[147] Following his graduation in 1989, he entered a drug rehabilitation program aged 22, and remained sober for 23 years. However, he relapsed in 2013, and admitted himself to drug rehabilitation for about ten days in May 2013.[2][147]

Death

On February 2, 2014, Hoffman was found dead in the bathroom of his Manhattan apartment by his friend, the playwright and screenwriter David Bar Katz.[148] He was 46 years old.[149] Although friends stated that Hoffman's drug use was under control at the time,[145] detectives searching the apartment found heroin and prescription medication at the scene and revealed that he had a syringe in his arm.[150] Hoffman's death was officially ruled an accident caused by "acute mixed drug intoxication, including heroin, cocaine, benzodiazepines, and amphetamine".[151] Michael Schwirtz of The New York Times said, "Whether Hoffman had taken all of the substances on the same day, or whether any of the substances had remained in his system from earlier use, was not reported."[152]

A funeral Mass was held at St. Ignatius Loyola Church in Manhattan on February 7, 2014, and was attended by many of his former co-stars including Amy Adams, Cate Blanchett, Ellen Burstyn, Louis C.K., Ethan Hawke, Laura Linney, Julianne Moore, Mike Nichols, Joaquin Phoenix, Chris Rock, Diane Sawyer, Jerry Stiller, Meryl Streep, Marisa Tomei, and Michelle Williams. Hoffman was cremated.[153][154] He left his fortune of around $35 million to Mimi O'Donnell in his October 2004 will, trusting her to distribute money to their children.[155]

Hoffman's death was lamented by fans and the film industry and was described by several commentators as a considerable loss to the profession.[70][106][127][156][157] On February 5, 2014, the LAByrinth Theatre Company honored his memory by holding a candlelight vigil, and Broadway dimmed its lights for one minute.[158] Three weeks after Hoffman's death, Katz established the American Playwriting Foundation in Hoffman's memory. With the money received from a libel lawsuit against the National Enquirer which inaccurately claimed that Hoffman and Katz were lovers, the foundation awards an annual prize of $45,000 to the author of an unproduced play. Katz named this the "Relentless Prize" in honor of Hoffman's dedication to the profession.[159][160] He would later remember Hoffman with a poem published in The Guardian in December 2014.[161] At the 90th Academy Awards, Sam Rockwell dedicated his win for Best Supporting Actor to Hoffman.[162] In another tribute, actress Cate Blanchett dedicated her BAFTA trophy to Hoffman when she received the award for Blue Jasmine on February 16.[163]

Reception and acting style

Hoffman was held in high regard within both the film and theater industries, and he was often cited in the media as one of the finest actors of his generation.[2][142][164] With a pudgy build and lacking matinée idol looks, he was not a typical movie actor;[39][165] however, Hoffman claimed that he was grateful for his appearance, as it made him believable in a wide range of roles.[71] Joel Schumacher once said of him in 2000, "The bad news is that Philip won't be a $25-million star. The good news is that he'll work for the rest of his life".[115] The Aiken Standard of South Carolina referred to him as an "anti-star", whose real identity remained "amorphous and unmoored".[166] Hoffman was acutely aware that he was often too unorthodox for the Academy voters. He remarked, "I'm sure that people in the big corporations that run Hollywood don't know quite what to do with someone like me, but that's OK. I think there are other people who are interested in what I do."[14]

Most of Hoffman's notable roles came in independent films, including particularly original ones, but he also featured in several Hollywood blockbusters.[2][17] He generally played supporting roles, appearing in both dramas and comedies,[167] but was noted for his ability to make small parts memorable.[12][17] Peter Bradshaw, film critic for The Guardian, felt that "Almost every single one of his credits had something special about it".[127] David Fear of Rolling Stone wrote that Hoffman "added heft to low-budget art films, and nuance and unpredictability to blockbuster franchises. He was a transformative performer who worked from the inside out, blessed with an emotional transparency that could be overwhelming, invigorating, compelling, devastating."[22]

Hoffman was praised for his versatility and ability to fully inhabit any role,[13][39] but specialized in playing creeps and misfits: "his CV was populated almost exclusively by snivelling wretches, insufferable prigs, braggarts and outright bullies" writes the journalist Ryan Gilbey.[17] Hoffman was appreciated for making these roles real, complex and even sympathetic;[2][17][22] while Todd Louiso, director of Love Liza, believed that Hoffman connected to people on screen because he looked like an ordinary man and revealed his vulnerability.[168] Xan Brooks of The Guardian remarked that the actor's particular talent was to "take thwarted, twisted humanity and ennoble it".[39] "The more pathetic or deluded the character," writes Gilbey, "the greater Hoffman's relish seemed in rescuing them from the realms of the merely monstrous."[17] When asked in 2006 why he undertook such roles, Hoffman responded, "I didn't go out looking for negative characters; I went out looking for people who have a struggle and a fight to tackle. That's what interests me."[169]

Work ethic

The journalist Jeff Simon described Hoffman as "probably the most in-demand character actor of his generation",[10] but Hoffman claimed never to take it for granted that he would be offered roles.[73] Although he worked hard and regularly,[14] he was humble about his acting success, and when asked by a friend if he was having any luck he quietly replied, "I'm in a film, Cold Mountain, that has just come out."[9] Patrick Fugit, who worked with Hoffman on Almost Famous, recalled the actor was intimidating but an exceptional mentor and influence in "a school-of-hard-knocks way", remarking that "there was a certain weight that came with him".[170] Hoffman admitted that he sometimes appeared in big-budget studio films for the money, but said, "ultimately my main goal is to do good work. If it doesn't pay well, so be it."[171] He kept himself grounded and invigorated as an actor by attempting to appear on stage once a year.[171]

Hoffman occasionally changed his hair and lost or gained weight for parts,[12] and he went to great lengths to reveal the worst in his characters.[54] But in a 2012 interview, he confessed that performing to a high standard was a challenge: "The job isn't difficult. Doing it well is difficult."[17] In an earlier interview with The New York Times, he explained how deeply he loved acting but added, "that deep kind of love comes at a price: for me, acting is torturous, and it's torturous because you know it's a beautiful thing ... Wanting it is easy, but trying to be great—well, that's absolutely torturous."[8] This struggle was confirmed by the author John le Carré, who met Hoffman during the adaptation of his novel A Most Wanted Man. While praising the actor's intelligence and intuition, le Carré acknowledged the burden that Hoffman felt: "It was painful and exhausting work, and probably in the end his undoing. The world was too bright for him to handle."[172]

Filmography and awards

Hoffman appeared in 55 films and one miniseries during his screen career spanning 22 years. He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for Capote (2005), and was nominated three times for Best Supporting Actor for Charlie Wilson's War (2007), Doubt (2008), and The Master (2012). He also received five Golden Globe Award nominations (winning one), five BAFTA Award nominations (winning one), four Screen Actors Guild Awards (winning one), and won the Volpi Cup at the Venice Film Festival.[92] Hoffman remained active in theater throughout his career, starring in ten and directing 19 stage productions (predominantly in New York). He received three Tony Award nominations for his Broadway performances: two for Best Leading Actor, in True West (2000) and Death of a Salesman (2012), and one for Best Featured Actor in Long Day's Journey into Night (2003).[55]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Hoffman continued to collaborate with Anderson, appearing in all but one of the director's first six films. The others were Boogie Nights, Magnolia, Punch-Drunk Love, and The Master.[17]
  2. ^ John C. Reilly co-starred with Hoffman in Anderson's films Hard Eight, Boogie Nights, and Magnolia, and the pair were already well-acquainted with each other as actors.

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philip, seymour, hoffman, july, 1967, february, 2014, american, actor, known, distinctive, supporting, character, roles, lowlifes, eccentrics, underdogs, misfits, acted, many, films, theatrical, productions, including, leading, roles, from, early, 1990s, until. Philip Seymour Hoffman July 23 1967 February 2 2014 was an American actor Known for his distinctive supporting and character roles lowlifes eccentrics underdogs and misfits he acted in many films and theatrical productions including leading roles from the early 1990s until his death in 2014 He received numerous accolades including an Academy Award a BAFTA Award and a Golden Globe Award as well as nominations for two Primetime Emmy Awards and three Tony Awards In 2022 Empire magazine listed Hoffman as one of 50 Greatest Actors Of All Time 1 Philip Seymour HoffmanHoffman in 2011BornPhilip Hoffman 1967 07 23 July 23 1967Fairport New York U S DiedFebruary 2 2014 2014 02 02 aged 46 Manhattan New York U S Cause of deathAcute mixed drug intoxicationAlma materNew York UniversityOccupationsActorproducertheatre directorYears active1991 2014WorksOn screen and stagePartner s Mimi O Donnell 1999 2013 Children3 including CooperRelativesGordy Hoffman brother AwardsFull listHaving studied acting at New York University s Tisch School of the Arts he gained recognition for his supporting work notably in Scent of a Woman 1992 Twister 1996 Boogie Nights 1997 Patch Adams 1998 The Big Lebowski 1998 Magnolia 1999 The Talented Mr Ripley 1999 and Almost Famous 2000 He received the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Truman Capote in Capote 2005 Other Oscar nominated roles include the frank CIA officer in Charlie Wilson s War 2007 a Catholic priest accused of pedophilia in Doubt 2008 and the charismatic cult leader in The Master 2012 Other notable roles include Twister 1996 Flawless 1999 Along Came Polly 2004 Mission Impossible III 2006 The Savages 2007 Synecdoche New York 2008 and in the Hunger Games series 2013 2015 He directed Jack Goes Boating 2010 Hoffman was also an accomplished theater actor and director He joined the off Broadway LAByrinth Theater Company in 1995 where he directed produced and appeared in numerous stage productions For his performances in three Broadway plays he received three Tony Award nominations for Sam Shephard s True West in 2000 Eugene O Neill s Long Day s Journey into Night in 2003 and Arthur Miller s Death of a Salesman in 2012 Hoffman struggled with drug addiction as a young adult and relapsed in 2012 after many years of abstinence In February 2014 he died of combined drug intoxication Remembered for his fearlessness in playing reprehensible characters and for bringing depth and humanity to such roles Hoffman was described in his New York Times obituary as perhaps the most ambitious and widely admired American actor of his generation 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 1991 1995 Early career 2 2 1996 1999 Rising star 2 3 2000 2004 Established star 2 4 2005 2009 Critical acclaim 2 5 2010 2014 Final years 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Reception and acting style 5 1 Work ethic 6 Filmography and awards 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life EditPhilip Hoffman was born on July 23 1967 in the Rochester suburb of Fairport New York 2 His mother Marilyn O Connor nee Loucks came from nearby Waterloo and worked as an elementary school teacher 3 before becoming a lawyer and eventually a family court judge 2 4 His father Gordon Stowell Hoffman was a native of Geneva New York and worked for the Xerox Corporation Along with one brother Gordy Hoffman had two sisters Jill and Emily 3 His ancestry included German and Irish 5 6 The village of Fairport New York Hoffman s hometown Hoffman was baptized a Catholic and attended Mass as a child but did not have a heavily religious upbringing 7 His parents divorced when he was nine and the children were raised primarily by their mother 4 Hoffman s childhood passion was sports particularly wrestling and baseball 4 but at age 12 he attended a stage production of Arthur Miller s All My Sons and was transfixed He recalled in 2008 I was changed permanently changed by that experience It was like a miracle to me 8 Hoffman developed a love for the theater and proceeded to attend regularly with his mother who was a lifelong enthusiast 9 He remembered that productions of Quilters and Alms for the Middle Class the latter starring a teenaged Robert Downey Jr were also particularly inspirational 10 At the age of 14 Hoffman suffered a neck injury that ended his sporting activity and he began to consider acting 8 11 Encouraged by his mother he joined a drama club and initially committed to it because he was attracted to a female member 4 8 Acting gradually became a passion for Hoffman I loved the camaraderie of it the people and that s when I decided it was what I wanted to do 11 At the age of 17 he was selected to attend the 1984 New York State Summer School of the Arts in Saratoga Springs where he met his future collaborators Bennett Miller and Dan Futterman 12 Miller later commented on Hoffman s popularity at the time We were attracted to the fact that he was genuinely serious about what he was doing Even then he was passionate 8 Hoffman applied for several drama degree programs and was accepted to New York University s NYU Tisch School of the Arts 8 Between graduating from Fairport High School and beginning the program he continued his training at the Circle in the Square Theatre s summer program 2 Hoffman had positive memories of his time at NYU where he supported himself by working as an usher With friends he co founded the Bullstoi Ensemble acting troupe 11 He received a drama degree in 1989 4 Career Edit1991 1995 Early career Edit After graduating Hoffman worked in off Broadway theater and made additional money with customer service jobs 10 11 He made his screen debut in 1991 in a Law amp Order episode called The Violence of Summer playing a man accused of rape 13 His first cinema role came the following year when he was credited as Phil Hoffman in the independent film Triple Bogey on a Par Five Hole After this he adopted his grandfather s name Seymour to avoid confusion with another actor 14 More film roles promptly followed with appearances in the studio production My New Gun and a small role in the comedy Leap of Faith starring Steve Martin 15 16 Following these roles he gained attention playing a spoiled student in the Oscar winning Al Pacino film Scent of a Woman 1992 Hoffman auditioned five times for his role which The Guardian journalist Ryan Gilbey says gave him an early opportunity to indulge his skill for making unctuousness compelling 17 The film earned US 134 million worldwide 18 and was the first to get Hoffman noticed 19 Reflecting on Scent of a Woman Hoffman later said If I hadn t gotten into that film I wouldn t be where I am today 13 At this time he abandoned his job in a delicatessen to become a professional actor 14 20 Hoffman continued playing small roles throughout the early 1990s After appearing in Joey Breaker and the critically panned teen zombie picture My Boyfriend s Back 21 he had a more notable role playing John Cusack s wealthy friend in the crime comedy Money for Nothing 22 In 1994 he portrayed an inexperienced mobster in the crime thriller The Getaway starring Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger 23 and he subsequently appeared with Andy Garcia and Meg Ryan in the romantic drama When a Man Loves a Woman He then played an uptight police deputy who gets punched by Paul Newman one of Hoffman s acting idols in the drama Nobody s Fool 13 24 Still considering stage work to be fundamental to his career 19 25 Hoffman joined the LAByrinth Theater Company of New York City in 1995 22 This association lasted the remainder of his life along with appearing in multiple productions he later became co artistic director of the theater company with John Ortiz and directed various plays over the years 25 Hoffman s only film appearance of 1995 was in the 22 minute short comedy The Fifteen Minute Hamlet which satirized the film industry in an Elizabethan setting He played the characters of Bernardo Horatio and Laertes alongside Austin Pendleton s Hamlet 26 1996 1999 Rising star Edit Between April and May 1996 Hoffman appeared at the Joseph Papp Public Theater in a Mark Wing Davey production of Caryl Churchill s The Skriker 27 Following this based on his work in Scent of a Woman he was cast by writer director Paul Thomas Anderson to appear in his debut feature Hard Eight 1996 17 Hoffman had only a brief role in the crime thriller playing a cocksure young craps player but it began the most important collaboration of his career 17 a Before cementing his creative partnership with Anderson Hoffman appeared in one of the year s biggest blockbusters 28 Twister playing a grubby hyperactive storm chaser alongside Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton According to a People survey of Twitter and Facebook users Twister is the film with which Hoffman is most popularly associated 29 He then reunited with Anderson for the director s second feature Boogie Nights about the Golden Age of Pornography The ensemble piece starred Mark Wahlberg Julianne Moore and Burt Reynolds Hoffman played a boom operator described by David Fear of Rolling Stone as a complete unabashed loser 22 who attempts to seduce Wahlberg s character Warmly received by critics the film grew into a cult classic 13 30 and has been cited as the role in which Hoffman first showed his full ability Fear commended the naked emotional neediness of the performance adding that it made for compulsive viewing 22 31 Hoffman later expressed his appreciation for Anderson when he called the director incomparable 32 That wasn t easy It s hard to sit in your boxers and jerk off in front of people for three hours I was pretty heavy and I was afraid that people would laugh at me Todd said they might laugh but they won t laugh at you He saw what we were working for which was the pathos of the moment Sometimes acting is a really private thing that you do for the world Hoffman on his role in Happiness 1998 8 Continuing with this momentum Hoffman appeared in five films in 1998 He had supporting roles in the crime thriller Montana and the romantic comedy Next Stop Wonderland both of which were commercial failures 33 34 before working with the Coen brothers in their dark comedy The Big Lebowski Hoffman had long been a fan of the directors and relished the experience of working with them 35 Appearing alongside Jeff Bridges and John Goodman Hoffman played Brandt the smug personal assistant of the titular character Although it was only a small role he claimed it was one for which he was most recognized in a film that has achieved cult status and a large fan base 35 Between March and April 1998 Hoffman made 30 appearances on stage at the New York Theatre Workshop in a production of Mark Ravenhill s Shopping and Fucking portraying an ex heroin addict 36 Hoffman took an unflattering role in Todd Solondz s Happiness 1998 37 a misanthropic black comedy about the lives of three sisters and those around them He played Allen a strange loner who makes crude phone calls to women the character furiously masturbates during one conversation producing what film scholar Jerry Mosher calls an embarrassingly raw performance 37 Jake Coyle of the Associated Press rated Allen as one of the creepiest characters in American cinema 38 but critic Xan Brooks highlighted the pathos that Hoffman brought to the role 39 Happiness was controversial but widely praised 40 and Hoffman s role has been cited by critics as one of his best 38 41 His final 1998 release was more mainstream as he appeared as a medical graduate in the Robin Williams comedy Patch Adams The film was critically panned but one of the highest grossing of Hoffman s career 42 43 In 1999 Hoffman starred opposite Robert De Niro as drag queen Rusty Zimmerman in Joel Schumacher s drama Flawless Hoffman considered De Niro the most imposing actor with whom he had appeared and he felt that working with the veteran performer profoundly improved his own acting 10 Hoffman s ability to avoid cliches in playing such a delicate role was noted by critics 22 44 and Roger Ebert said it confirmed him as one of the best new character actors 45 He was rewarded with his first Screen Actors Guild Award nomination 46 Hoffman then reunited with Paul Thomas Anderson where he was given an atypically virtuous role in the ensemble drama Magnolia 17 The film set over one day in Los Angeles features Hoffman as a nurse who cares for Jason Robards character The performance was approved of by the medical industry 47 and Jessica Winter of the Village Voice considered it Hoffman s most indelible work likening him to a guardian angel in his caring for the dying father 47 Magnolia has been included in lists of the greatest films of all time 48 49 and it was a personal favorite of Hoffman s 32 One of the most critically and commercially successful films of Hoffman s career was The Talented Mr Ripley 1999 43 50 which he considered as edgy as you can get for a Hollywood movie 51 He played a preppy bully who taunts Matt Damon s Ripley in the thriller a character which Jeff Simon of The Buffalo News called the truest upper class twit in all of American movies 10 Hoffman s performance caught the attention of Meryl Streep another of his cinematic idols I sat up straight in my seat and said Who is that I thought to myself My God this actor is fearless He s done what we all strive for he s given this awful character the respect he deserves and he s made him fascinating 19 In recognition of his work in Magnolia and The Talented Mr Ripley Hoffman was named the year s Best Supporting Actor by the National Board of Review 52 2000 2004 Established star Edit Hoffman at Cannes in 2002 promoting Punch Drunk Love Following a string of roles in successful films in the late 1990s Hoffman had established a reputation as a top supporting player who could be relied on to make an impression with each performance 53 His film appearances were likened by David Kamp of GQ to discovering a prize in a box of cereal receiving a bonus or bumping unexpectedly into an old friend 19 According to Jerry Mosher as the year 2000 began it seemed Hoffman was everywhere poised on the cusp of stardom 54 Hoffman had begun to be recognized as a theater actor in 1999 when he received a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor for the off Broadway play The Author s Voice 55 56 This success continued with the 2000 Broadway revival of Sam Shepard s True West where Hoffman alternated roles nightly with co star John C Reilly b making 154 appearances between March and July 2000 57 37 Ben Brantley of The New York Times felt that it was the best stage performance of Hoffman s career calling him brilliant 58 and the actor earned a Tony Award nomination for Best Actor in a Play 55 The following year Hoffman appeared with Meryl Streep Natalie Portman and John Goodman in a Delacorte Theater production of Chekhov s The Seagull although Brantley felt that this performance was less fully realized 59 As a stage director Hoffman received two Drama Desk Award nominations for Outstanding Director of a Play one for Jesus Hopped the A Train in 2001 and another for Our Lady of 121st Street in 2003 60 In a 2008 interview Hoffman opined that switching hats between acting and directing helped him improve in both roles 61 David Mamet s comedy State and Main about the difficulties of shooting a film in rural New England was Hoffman s first film role of 2000 and had a limited release 62 He had a more prominent supporting role that year in Almost Famous Cameron Crowe s popular coming of age film set in the 1970s music industry 38 Hoffman portrayed the enthusiastic rock critic Lester Bangs a task by which he felt burdened 63 but he managed to convey the real figure s mannerisms and sharp wit after watching him in a BBC interview 64 The following year Hoffman featured as the narrator and interviewer in The Party s Over a documentary about the 2000 U S elections He assumed the position of a politically informed and alienated Generation Xer who seeks to be educated in U S politics but ultimately reveals the extent of public dissatisfaction in this area 65 In 2002 Hoffman was given his first leading role despite joking at the time Even if I was hired into a leading man part I d probably turn it into the non leading man part 66 in Todd Louiso s tragicomedy Love Liza 2002 His brother Gordy wrote the script which Hoffman had seen at their mother s house five years earlier about a widower who starts sniffing gasoline to cope with his wife s suicide He considered it the finest piece of writing he had ever read incredibly humble in its exploration of grief 14 but critics were less enthusiastic about the production A review for the BBC wrote that Hoffman had finally been given a part that showed what he s truly capable of 67 but few witnessed this as the film had a limited release and earned only US 210 000 68 Director Paul Thomas Anderson who cast Hoffman in five of his first six films Later in 2002 Hoffman starred opposite Adam Sandler and Emily Watson in Anderson s critically acclaimed fourth picture the surrealist romantic comedy drama Punch Drunk Love 2002 where he played an illegal phone sex supervisor 69 Drew Hunt of the Chicago Reader saw the performance as a fine example of Hoffman s knack for turning small roles into seminal performances and praised the actor s comedic ability 70 In a very different film Hoffman was next seen with Anthony Hopkins in the high budget thriller Red Dragon a prequel to The Silence of the Lambs portraying the meddlesome tabloid journalist Freddy Lounds 71 His fourth appearance of 2002 came in Spike Lee s drama 25th Hour playing an English teacher who makes a devastating drunken mistake 72 Both Lee and the film s lead Edward Norton were thrilled to work with Hoffman and Lee confessed that he had long wanted to do a picture with the actor but had waited until he found the right role 73 Hoffman considered his character Jakob to be one of the most reticent characters he had ever played a straight laced corduroy pants wearing kind of guy 14 Roger Ebert promoted 25th Hour to one of his Great Movies in 2009 74 and along with A O Scott 75 considered it to be one of the best films of the 2000s 76 The drama Owning Mahowny 2003 gave Hoffman his second lead role starring opposite Minnie Driver as a bank employee who embezzles money to feed his gambling addiction Based on the true story of Toronto banker Brian Molony who committed the largest fraud in Canadian history Hoffman met with Molony to prepare for the role and help him play the character as accurately as possible 77 He was determined not to conform to movie character stereotypes 68 and his portrayal of addiction won approval from the Royal College of Psychiatrists 77 Roger Ebert assessed Hoffman s performance as a masterpiece of discipline and precision 78 but the film earned little at the box office 79 Hoffman s second 2003 appearance was a small role in Anthony Minghella s successful Civil War epic Cold Mountain 80 He played an immoral preacher a complex character that Hoffman described as a mass of contradictions 81 The same year from April to August he appeared with Vanessa Redgrave Brian Dennehy and Robert Sean Leonard in a Broadway revival of Eugene O Neill s Long Day s Journey into Night 82 Director Robert Falls later commented on the dedication and experience that Hoffman brought to his role of alcoholic Jamie Tyrone Every night he ripped it up to an extent that he couldn t leave the role Phil carried it with him 83 Hoffman received his second Tony Award nomination this time for Best Featured Actor in a Play 55 In 2004 he appeared as the crude has been actor friend of Ben Stiller s character in the box office hit Along Came Polly 84 Reflecting on the role People said it proved that Hoffman could deliver comedic performances with the best of them 29 2005 2009 Critical acclaim Edit Hoffman won many awards for his portrayal of the writer Truman Capote pictured in 1959 in Capote 2005 A turning point in Hoffman s career came with the biographical film Capote 2005 which dramatized Truman Capote s experience of writing his true crime novel In Cold Blood 1966 85 Hoffman took the title role for a project that he co produced and helped bring to fruition 86 87 Portraying the idiosyncratic writer proved highly demanding requiring significant weight loss and four months of research such as watching video clips of Capote to help him affect the author s effeminate voice and mannerisms Hoffman stated that he was not concerned with perfectly imitating Capote s speech but he did feel a great duty to express the vitality and the nuances of the writer 88 89 During filming he stayed in character constantly so as not to lose the voice and posture Otherwise he explained I would give my body a chance to bail on me 89 Capote was released to great acclaim particularly regarding Hoffman s performance 90 Many critics commented that the role was designed to win awards 91 and indeed Hoffman received an Oscar Golden Globe Screen Actors Guild Award BAFTA and various other critics awards 92 In 2006 Premiere listed his role in Capote as the 35th greatest movie performance of all time 93 After the film several commentators began to describe Hoffman as one of the finest most ambitious actors of his generation 87 Hoffman received his only Primetime Emmy Award nomination for his supporting role in the HBO miniseries Empire Falls 2005 about life in a New England town He ultimately lost to castmate Paul Newman 94 In 2006 he appeared in the summer blockbuster Mission Impossible III playing the villainous arms dealer Owen Davian opposite Tom Cruise A journalist for Vanity Fair stated that Hoffman s black hat performance was one of the most delicious in a Hollywood film since Alan Rickman s in Die Hard 57 and he was generally approved of for bringing gravitas to the action film With a gross of nearly US 400 million it exposed Hoffman to a mainstream audience 95 Returning to independent films in 2007 Hoffman began with a starring role in Tamara Jenkins s The Savages where Laura Linney and he played siblings responsible for putting their dementia ridden father Philip Bosco in a care home Jake Coyle of the Associated Press stated that it was the epitome of a Hoffman film a mix of comedy and tragedy told with subtlety bone dry humor and flashes of grace 38 Hoffman received a Golden Globe nomination for his performance in The Savages 96 He next appeared in Before the Devil Knows You re Dead the final film by veteran director Sidney Lumet where he played a realtor who embezzles funds from his employer to support his drug habit Mosher comments that the character was one of the most unpleasant of Hoffman s career but that his fearlessness again revealed the humanity within a deeply flawed character as he appeared naked in the opening sex scene 97 The film was received positively by critics as a powerful and affecting thriller 98 Mike Nichols s political film Charlie Wilson s War 2007 gave Hoffman his second Academy Award nomination again for playing a real individual Gust Avrakotos the CIA agent who conspired with Congressman Charlie Wilson played by Tom Hanks to aid Afghani rebels in their fight against the Soviet Union Todd McCarthy wrote of Hoffman s performance Decked out with a pouffy 80s hairdo moustache protruding gut and ever present smokes whenever he s on the picture vibrates with conspiratorial electricity 99 The film was a critical and commercial success 100 and along with his Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor Hoffman was nominated for a BAFTA and a Golden Globe Award 92 Hoffman at the 81st Academy Awards in February 2009 where he was nominated for Doubt The year 2008 contained two significant Hoffman roles In Charlie Kaufman s enigmatic drama Synecdoche New York he starred as Caden Cotard a frustrated dramatist who attempts to build a scale replica of New York inside a warehouse for a play 101 Hoffman again showed his willingness to reveal unattractive traits as the character ages and deteriorates and committed to a deeply psychological role 102 Critics were divided in their response to the ambitious and baffling film 103 Sonny Bunch of The Washington Times found it impressionistic inaccessible and endlessly frustrating likening Hoffman s character to God if God lacked imagination 104 Conversely Roger Ebert named it the best film of the decade and considered it one of the greatest of all time 105 and Robbie Collin film critic for The Daily Telegraph believes Hoffman gave one of cinema s best performances 106 Hoffman s second role of the year came opposite Meryl Streep and Amy Adams in John Patrick Shanley s Doubt where he played Father Brendan Flynn a priest accused of sexually abusing a 12 year old African American student in the 1960s Hoffman was already familiar with the play and appreciated the opportunity to bring it to the screen in preparing for the role he talked extensively to a priest who lived through the era 107 The film had a mixed reception with some critics such as Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian suspicious of it as Oscar bait 108 but Hoffman gained second consecutive Best Supporting Actor nominations at the Oscars BAFTAs and Golden Globes and was also nominated by the Screen Actors Guild 92 On stage in 2009 Hoffman played Iago in Peter Sellars futuristic production of Othello with the title role by John Ortiz which received mixed reviews 109 Ben Brantley theatre critic of The New York Times found it to be exasperatingly misconceived remarking that even when Hoffman is attempting to manipulate others into self destruction he comes close to spoiling everything by erupting into genuine volcanic fury 110 Hoffman also did his first vocal performance for the claymation film Mary and Max although the film did not initially have an American release 111 He played Max a depressed New Yorker with Asperger syndrome while Toni Collette voiced Mary the Australian girl who becomes his pen pal Continuing with animation Hoffman then worked on an episode of the children s show Arthur and received a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Performer In An Animated Program 112 Later in the year he played a brash American disc jockey opposite Bill Nighy and Rhys Ifans in Richard Curtis s British comedy The Boat That Rocked also known as Pirate Radio a character based on Emperor Rosko a host of Radio Caroline in 1966 113 He also had a cameo role as a bartender in Ricky Gervais s The Invention of Lying 114 Reflecting on Hoffman s work in the late 2000s Mosher writes that the actor remained impressive but had not delivered a testing performance on the level of his work in Capote The film critic David Thomson believed that Hoffman showed indecisiveness at this time unsure whether to play spectacular supporting roles or become a lead actor who is capable of controlling the emotional dynamic and outcome of a film 115 2010 2014 Final years Edit Hoffman s profile continued to grow with the new decade and he became an increasingly recognizable figure 24 Despite earlier reservations about directing for the screen 10 his first release of the 2010s was also his first as a film director The independent drama Jack Goes Boating was adapted from Robert Glaudini s play of the same name in which Hoffman had starred and directed for the LAByrinth Theater Company in 2007 He originally intended to only direct the film but decided to reprise the main role of Jack a lonely limousine driver looking for love after the actor he wanted for it was unavailable 116 The low key film had a limited release and was not a high earner 117 though it received many positive reviews 118 119 However Dave Edwards of the Daily Mirror remarked that Hoffman s directing debut delivers a film so weak I could barely remember what it was about as I left 120 while critic Mark Kermode appreciated the cinematic qualities that Hoffman brought to the film and stated that he showed potential as a director 121 In addition to Jack Goes Boating in 2010 Hoffman also directed Brett C Leonard s tragic drama The Long Red Road for the Goodman Theatre in Chicago Steven Oxman of Variety described the production as heavy handed and predictable but intriguing and at least partially successful 122 Hoffman at the Moneyball premiere in September 2011 Hoffman next had significant supporting roles in two films both released in the last third of 2011 In Bennett Miller s Moneyball a sports drama about the 2002 season of the Oakland Athletics baseball team he played the coach Art Howe The film was a critical and commercial success and Hoffman was described as perfectly cast by Ann Hornaday of The Washington Post but the real life Art Howe accused the filmmakers of giving an unfair and untrue portrayal of him 123 Hoffman s second film of the year was George Clooney s political drama The Ides of March in which he played the earnest campaign manager to the Democratic presidential candidate Mike Morris Clooney The film was well received and Hoffman s performance especially in the scenes opposite Paul Giamatti who played the rival campaign manager was positively noted 124 Hoffman s work on the film earned him his fourth BAFTA Award nomination 92 In the spring of 2012 Hoffman made his final stage appearance starring as Willy Loman in a Broadway revival of Death of a Salesman opposite Andrew Garfield Directed by Mike Nichols the production ran for 78 performances and was the highest grossing show in the Ethel Barrymore Theatre s history 125 Many critics felt that Hoffman at 44 was too young for the role of 62 year old Loman 2 and Chris Jones of the Chicago Tribune felt that the character had been interpreted poorly 126 Hoffman admitted that he found the role difficult 32 but he nevertheless earned his third Tony Award nomination 55 Hoffman collaborated with Paul Thomas Anderson for the fifth time in The Master 2012 where he turned in what critic Peter Bradshaw considered the most memorable performance of his career 127 Set in 1950s America the film featured Hoffman as Lancaster Dodd the charismatic leader of a nascent Scientology type movement who brings a troubled man Joaquin Phoenix under his tutelage Hoffman was instrumental in the project s development having been involved with it for three years 32 He assisted Anderson in the writing of the script by reviewing samples of it and suggested making Phoenix s character Freddie Quell the protagonist instead of Dodd 128 A talented dancer 39 Hoffman was able to showcase his abilities by performing a jig during a surreal sequence Bradshaw called it an extraordinary moment that only Hoffman could have carried off 127 The Master was praised as an intelligent and challenging drama 129 and Drew Hunt of the Chicago Reader also felt that it contained Hoffman s finest work He s inscrutable yet welcoming intimidating yet charismatic villainous yet fatherly He epitomizes so many things at once that it s impossible to think of Dodd as mere movie character 70 Hoffman and Phoenix received a joint Volpi Cup Award at the Venice Film Festival for their performances and Hoffman was also nominated for an Academy Award a Golden Globe a BAFTA Award and a SAG Award for the supporting role 92 Hoffman Anton Corbijn and Grigoriy Dobrygin promoting A Most Wanted Man at the Sundance Film Festival on January 19 2014 less than two weeks before his death A Late Quartet was Hoffman s other film release of 2012 where he played a violinist in a string quartet whose members played by Christopher Walken Catherine Keener and Mark Ivanir face a crisis when one is diagnosed with Parkinson s disease The drama received favorable reviews and Stephen Holden of The New York Times called Hoffman s performance exceptional 130 131 In 2013 Hoffman joined the popular Hunger Games series in its second film The Hunger Games Catching Fire where he played gamemaker Plutarch Heavensbee The film finished as the 10th highest grossing in history to that point 132 and Hoffman became recognizable to a new generation of film goers 127 In January 2014 shortly before his death he attended the Sundance Film Festival to promote two films In Anton Corbijn s A Most Wanted Man a thriller based on John le Carre s novel Hoffman played a German intelligence officer His performance was praised by Xan Brooks as one of terrific lip smacking relish full of mischief anchored by integrity 133 The other was God s Pocket the directorial debut of actor John Slattery in which Hoffman played a thief 134 In November 2014 nine months after his death Hoffman was seen in The Hunger Games Mockingjay Part 1 135 At the time of his death Hoffman was filming The Hunger Games Mockingjay Part 2 the fourth film in the series and had already completed the majority of his scenes 136 His two remaining scenes were rewritten to compensate for his absence 137 and the film was released in November 2015 138 Hoffman was also preparing for his second directorial effort a Prohibition era drama titled Ezekiel Moss which was to star Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal 139 In addition he had filmed a pilot episode for the Showtime series Happyish in which he played the lead role of an advertising executive but plans for a full season were put on hold following his death 140 The role was later passed on to Steve Coogan 141 Personal life Edit Hoffman at a Hudson Union Society event in September 2010 Hoffman rarely mentioned his personal life in interviews stating in 2012 that he would rather not because my family doesn t have any choice If I talk about them in the press I m giving them no choice So I choose not to 142 For 14 years he was in a relationship with costume designer Mimi O Donnell whom he had met in 1999 when they were both working on the Hoffman directed play In Arabia We d All Be Kings 143 They lived in New York City and had a son Cooper and two daughters 144 While some reports stated Hoffman and O Donnell separated in the fall of 2013 145 O Donnell later said she and Hoffman were both committed to their relationship but he had moved out of their longtime residence to a nearby apartment to protect their children from the effects of his relapse into substance abuse 146 Hoffman was also discreet about his religious and political beliefs but it is known that he voted for the Green Party candidate Ralph Nader in the 2000 presidential election 7 142 He felt that keeping his personal life private was beneficial to his career The less you know about me the more interesting it will be to watch me do what I do 20 In a 2006 interview with 60 Minutes Hoffman revealed he had engaged in drug and alcohol misuse during his time at New York University saying he had used anything I could get my hands on I liked it all 147 Following his graduation in 1989 he entered a drug rehabilitation program aged 22 and remained sober for 23 years However he relapsed in 2013 and admitted himself to drug rehabilitation for about ten days in May 2013 2 147 Death EditOn February 2 2014 Hoffman was found dead in the bathroom of his Manhattan apartment by his friend the playwright and screenwriter David Bar Katz 148 He was 46 years old 149 Although friends stated that Hoffman s drug use was under control at the time 145 detectives searching the apartment found heroin and prescription medication at the scene and revealed that he had a syringe in his arm 150 Hoffman s death was officially ruled an accident caused by acute mixed drug intoxication including heroin cocaine benzodiazepines and amphetamine 151 Michael Schwirtz of The New York Times said Whether Hoffman had taken all of the substances on the same day or whether any of the substances had remained in his system from earlier use was not reported 152 A funeral Mass was held at St Ignatius Loyola Church in Manhattan on February 7 2014 and was attended by many of his former co stars including Amy Adams Cate Blanchett Ellen Burstyn Louis C K Ethan Hawke Laura Linney Julianne Moore Mike Nichols Joaquin Phoenix Chris Rock Diane Sawyer Jerry Stiller Meryl Streep Marisa Tomei and Michelle Williams Hoffman was cremated 153 154 He left his fortune of around 35 million to Mimi O Donnell in his October 2004 will trusting her to distribute money to their children 155 Hoffman s death was lamented by fans and the film industry and was described by several commentators as a considerable loss to the profession 70 106 127 156 157 On February 5 2014 the LAByrinth Theatre Company honored his memory by holding a candlelight vigil and Broadway dimmed its lights for one minute 158 Three weeks after Hoffman s death Katz established the American Playwriting Foundation in Hoffman s memory With the money received from a libel lawsuit against the National Enquirer which inaccurately claimed that Hoffman and Katz were lovers the foundation awards an annual prize of 45 000 to the author of an unproduced play Katz named this the Relentless Prize in honor of Hoffman s dedication to the profession 159 160 He would later remember Hoffman with a poem published in The Guardian in December 2014 161 At the 90th Academy Awards Sam Rockwell dedicated his win for Best Supporting Actor to Hoffman 162 In another tribute actress Cate Blanchett dedicated her BAFTA trophy to Hoffman when she received the award for Blue Jasmine on February 16 163 Reception and acting style EditHoffman was held in high regard within both the film and theater industries and he was often cited in the media as one of the finest actors of his generation 2 142 164 With a pudgy build and lacking matinee idol looks he was not a typical movie actor 39 165 however Hoffman claimed that he was grateful for his appearance as it made him believable in a wide range of roles 71 Joel Schumacher once said of him in 2000 The bad news is that Philip won t be a 25 million star The good news is that he ll work for the rest of his life 115 The Aiken Standard of South Carolina referred to him as an anti star whose real identity remained amorphous and unmoored 166 Hoffman was acutely aware that he was often too unorthodox for the Academy voters He remarked I m sure that people in the big corporations that run Hollywood don t know quite what to do with someone like me but that s OK I think there are other people who are interested in what I do 14 Most of Hoffman s notable roles came in independent films including particularly original ones but he also featured in several Hollywood blockbusters 2 17 He generally played supporting roles appearing in both dramas and comedies 167 but was noted for his ability to make small parts memorable 12 17 Peter Bradshaw film critic for The Guardian felt that Almost every single one of his credits had something special about it 127 David Fear of Rolling Stone wrote that Hoffman added heft to low budget art films and nuance and unpredictability to blockbuster franchises He was a transformative performer who worked from the inside out blessed with an emotional transparency that could be overwhelming invigorating compelling devastating 22 Hoffman was praised for his versatility and ability to fully inhabit any role 13 39 but specialized in playing creeps and misfits his CV was populated almost exclusively by snivelling wretches insufferable prigs braggarts and outright bullies writes the journalist Ryan Gilbey 17 Hoffman was appreciated for making these roles real complex and even sympathetic 2 17 22 while Todd Louiso director of Love Liza believed that Hoffman connected to people on screen because he looked like an ordinary man and revealed his vulnerability 168 Xan Brooks of The Guardian remarked that the actor s particular talent was to take thwarted twisted humanity and ennoble it 39 The more pathetic or deluded the character writes Gilbey the greater Hoffman s relish seemed in rescuing them from the realms of the merely monstrous 17 When asked in 2006 why he undertook such roles Hoffman responded I didn t go out looking for negative characters I went out looking for people who have a struggle and a fight to tackle That s what interests me 169 Work ethic Edit The journalist Jeff Simon described Hoffman as probably the most in demand character actor of his generation 10 but Hoffman claimed never to take it for granted that he would be offered roles 73 Although he worked hard and regularly 14 he was humble about his acting success and when asked by a friend if he was having any luck he quietly replied I m in a film Cold Mountain that has just come out 9 Patrick Fugit who worked with Hoffman on Almost Famous recalled the actor was intimidating but an exceptional mentor and influence in a school of hard knocks way remarking that there was a certain weight that came with him 170 Hoffman admitted that he sometimes appeared in big budget studio films for the money but said ultimately my main goal is to do good work If it doesn t pay well so be it 171 He kept himself grounded and invigorated as an actor by attempting to appear on stage once a year 171 Hoffman occasionally changed his hair and lost or gained weight for parts 12 and he went to great lengths to reveal the worst in his characters 54 But in a 2012 interview he confessed that performing to a high standard was a challenge The job isn t difficult Doing it well is difficult 17 In an earlier interview with The New York Times he explained how deeply he loved acting but added that deep kind of love comes at a price for me acting is torturous and it s torturous because you know it s a beautiful thing Wanting it is easy but trying to be great well that s absolutely torturous 8 This struggle was confirmed by the author John le Carre who met Hoffman during the adaptation of his novel A Most Wanted Man While praising the actor s intelligence and intuition le Carre acknowledged the burden that Hoffman felt It was painful and exhausting work and probably in the end his undoing The world was too bright for him to handle 172 Filmography and awards EditMain articles Philip Seymour Hoffman on screen and stage and List of awards and nominations received by Philip Seymour HoffmanHoffman appeared in 55 films and one miniseries during his screen career spanning 22 years He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for Capote 2005 and was nominated three times for Best Supporting Actor for Charlie Wilson s War 2007 Doubt 2008 and The Master 2012 He also received five Golden Globe Award nominations winning one five BAFTA Award nominations winning one four Screen Actors Guild Awards winning one and won the Volpi Cup at the Venice Film Festival 92 Hoffman remained active in theater throughout his career starring in ten and directing 19 stage productions predominantly in New York He received three Tony Award nominations for his Broadway performances two for Best Leading Actor in True West 2000 and Death of a Salesman 2012 and one for Best Featured Actor in Long Day s Journey into Night 2003 55 References EditNotes Edit Hoffman continued to collaborate with Anderson appearing in all but one of the director s first six films The others were Boogie Nights Magnolia Punch Drunk Love and The Master 17 John C Reilly co starred with Hoffman in Anderson s films Hard Eight Boogie Nights and Magnolia and the pair were already well acquainted with each other as actors Citations Edit Empire s 50 Greatest Actors Of All Time List Revealed Empire Magazine Retrieved January 8 2023 a b c d e f g h i Weber Bruce Goodman J David February 2 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman Actor of Depth Dies at 46 The New York Times Archived from the original on July 8 2014 Retrieved February 2 2014 a b Shaw David L March 7 2006 Oscar Winner s Mother Was Born in Waterloo Syracuse Post Standard p 78 Archived from the original on June 28 2013 Retrieved February 2 2014 a b c d e Hattenstone Simon October 28 2011 Philip Seymour Hoffman I was moody mercurial it was all or nothing The Guardian Archived from the original on February 13 2014 Retrieved February 18 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman Munzinger Biographie www munzinger de Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved March 19 2019 Top ten American celebrities you may not know are Irish IrishCentral com July 16 2013 Archived from the original on March 18 2016 Retrieved October 19 2021 a b Kandra Greg February 6 2014 Why Philip Seymour Hoffman deserves a Catholic funeral CNN Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 18 2014 a b c d e f g Hirschberg Lynn December 19 2008 A Higher Calling The New York Times Archived from the original on February 7 2014 Retrieved February 18 2014 a b Aftab Kaleem June 1 2007 Interview The Talented Mr Hoffman The Belfast Telegraph Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved February 19 2014 via HighBeam Research subscription required a b c d e f Simon Jeff September 24 2000 Role Player Rochester s Philip Seymour Hoffman on Hollywood good films and the star factor The Buffalo News 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life of Philip Seymour Hoffman USA Today Archived from the original on February 7 2014 Retrieved February 17 2014 Webber Bruce February 2 2014 Actor Philip Seymour Hoffman dies from apparent drug overdose The Dallas Morning News Archived from the original on February 24 2014 Retrieved February 17 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k Gilbey Ryan February 3 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on March 29 2018 Retrieved February 17 2014 Scent of a Woman Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Retrieved February 17 2014 a b c d Mosher 2011 p 110 a b Palmer Martyn February 3 2014 first published October 2011 Philip Seymour Hoffman behind the spin Radio Times Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved February 28 2014 Pulliam amp Fonseca 2014 p 178 a b c d e f g Fear David February 2 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman 1967 2014 Rolling Stone Archived from the original on February 3 2014 Retrieved February 10 2013 The Getaway BBC 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2011 p 111 a b c d 5 Great Philip Seymour Hoffman Performances New York Post February 3 2014 Archived from the original on February 6 2014 Retrieved February 12 2014 a b c d e Brooks Xan February 3 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman was the one great guarantee of modern American cinema The Guardian Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 17 2014 Mulgrew John February 2 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman dies aged 46 Capote and Boogie Nights actor found dead The Belfast Telegraph Archived from the original on February 23 2014 Retrieved February 18 2014 Frizell Sam Grossman Samantha February 2 2014 Watch Philip Seymour Hoffman s 7 Greatest Movie Roles Time Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Retrieved February 18 2014 Pratt 2005 p 907 a b Philip Seymour Hoffman Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 18 2014 VanDerWerff Emily In Flawless Philip Seymour Hoffman gave warmth to a transgender stereotype A V Club Archived from 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2014 a b c Mottram James October 28 2012 Philip Seymour Hoffman You re not going to watch The Master and find a lot out about Scientology The Independent Archived from the original on March 31 2014 Retrieved February 16 2014 Rothman Michael February 3 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman Inside the Actor s Very Private Personal Life ABC Archived from the original on December 31 2014 Retrieved December 31 2014 Campbell Jon February 3 2014 Mimi O Donnell Supported By Kate Blanchett Justin Theroux Following Philip Seymour Hoffman s Death The Christian Post Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved February 28 2014 a b Selby Jenny February 3 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman dead Last months of actor s life paint a private struggle to cope with the breakdown of his personal life The Independent Archived from the original on February 16 2014 Retrieved February 16 2014 Green Adam December 13 2017 Mimi O Donnell Reflects on the Loss of Philip Seymour Hoffman and the Devastation of Addiction Vogue Archived from the original on June 19 2019 Retrieved June 19 2019 a b Aftab Kaleem February 2 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman dead It was anything I could get my hands on actor said of early drug misuse The Independent Archived from the original on March 2 2014 Retrieved February 28 2014 Selby Jenn February 26 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman David Bar Katz who found him dead condemns media for painting false picture of star in first video interview Independent Archived from the original on August 4 2018 Retrieved August 4 2018 Prokupecz Shimon Mullen Jethro Carrol Jason February 4 2014 Piecing together Philip Seymour Hoffman s final hours CNN Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 5 2014 Goodman J David Fitzsimmons Emma G February 4 2014 Four People Arrested as Part of Inquiry into Hoffman s Death The New York Times Archived from the original on February 5 2014 Retrieved February 5 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman Died From Drugs Mix Sky News Archived from the original on August 23 2016 Retrieved February 28 2014 Schwirtz Michael February 28 2014 Hoffman Killed By Toxic Mix Of Drugs Official Concludes The New York Times Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved March 1 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman s funeral CBS News Archived from the original on March 6 2019 Retrieved March 3 2019 Family actors mourn Philip Seymour Hoffman at private funeral Reuters February 8 2014 Retrieved July 14 2022 D Zurilla Christine July 21 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman didn t want trust fund kids filing says Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on July 22 2014 Retrieved July 21 2014 McRady Rachel February 2 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman Dead at 46 Celebrities React to Shocking Death US Weekly Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved February 22 2014 Rothman Michael February 2 2014 Twitter Reacts in Shock and Grief Over Death of Philip Seymour Hoffman ABC Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved February 22 2014 Carolan Michael February 16 2014 An actor who cut to audience s core Philip Seymour Hoffman relentless in the pursuit of the character Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved February 18 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman death Broadway dims its lights for theatre star BBC February 6 2014 Archived from the original on February 26 2014 Retrieved March 1 2014 Dwyer Jim February 25 2014 Truth and a Prize Emerge From Lies About Hoffman The New York Times Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved March 1 2014 The Relentless Award The American Playwriting Foundation 2015 Archived from the original on August 27 2020 Retrieved August 30 2020 Bar Kartz David December 21 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman remembered by David Bar Katz The Guardian Guardian News and Media Limited Archived from the original on August 4 2018 Retrieved August 4 2018 Kristopher Tapley March 4 2018 Sam Rockwell dedicates Oscar win to PSH Variety Mag Archived from the original on June 9 2018 Retrieved March 4 2018 Beaumont Thomas Ben February 16 2014 Baftas 2014 Cate Blanchett wins best actress for Blue Jasmine The Guardian Archived from the original on March 3 2014 Retrieved March 5 2014 Details of Philip Seymour Hoffman s will released The Guardian February 20 2014 Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved February 20 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman The Economist February 8 2014 Archived from the original on February 17 2014 Retrieved February 17 2014 A Look At The Many Faces of Philip Seymour Hoffman Aiken Standard November 3 2007 p 8 Archived from the original on December 28 2014 Retrieved December 27 2014 via Newspapers com Blair Elizabeth February 2 2014 Philip Seymour Hoffman often delivered unforgettable performances equally adept at comedy as he was drama Weekend All Things Considered Archived from the original on June 11 2014 via HighBeam Research subscription required Henerson Evan January 14 2003 Wanted Man As Philip Seymour Hoffman s Profile Rises He Continues Playing Adventurous Characters Daily News Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved February 19 2014 via HighBeam Research subscription required O Rourke Meghan January 31 2006 An interview with Philip Seymour Hoffman Slate Archived from the original on February 26 2014 Retrieved February 20 2014 Lewis Hilary February 2 2014 The young star of Cameron Crowe s 2000 film recalls what he learned by working with the intimidating actor who was found dead on Sunday The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved February 12 2014 a b Pearlman Cindy May 19 2003 Philip Seymour Hoffman Hollywood s hottest go to guy Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on June 11 2014 Retrieved February 19 2014 via HighBeam Research subscription required Le Carre John July 17 2014 Staring at the Flame The New York Times Archived from the original on November 2 2014 Retrieved January 7 2015 Bibliography Edit Ebert Roger 2010 Roger Ebert s Movie Yearbook 2011 Andrews McMeel Publishing ISBN 978 0 7407 9769 9 Archived from the original on November 1 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Frazier Charles Auiler Dan Minghella Anthony 2003 Cold Mountain The Journey from Book to Film Newmarket Press ISBN 978 1 55704 593 5 Archived from the original on November 20 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Hischak Thomas 2001 American Theatre A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama 1969 2000 A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama 1969 2000 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 535255 9 Archived from the original on November 20 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Horton Andrew Rapf Joanna E 2012 A Companion to Film Comedy John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 32785 2 Archived from the original on November 29 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Kellner Douglas M 2011 Cinema Wars Hollywood Film and Politics in the Bush Cheney Era John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4443 6049 3 Archived from the original on November 23 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Lundy Karen Saucier Janes Sharyn 2009 Community Health Nursing Caring for the Public s Health Jones amp Bartlett Learning ISBN 978 0 7637 1786 5 Archived from the original on October 6 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Mosher Jerry 2011 Philip Seymour Hoffman Jesus of Uncool In Pomerance Murray ed Shining in Shadows Movie Stars of the 2000s Rutgers University Press pp 108 27 ISBN 978 0 8135 5216 3 Archived from the original on October 3 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Pratt Doug 2005 Doug Pratt s DVD Movies Television Music Art Adult and More UNET 2 Corporation ISBN 978 1 932916 01 0 Archived from the original on August 20 2020 Retrieved August 22 2017 Pulliam June Michele Fonseca Anthony J eds 2014 Encyclopedia of the Zombie The Walking Dead in Popular Culture and Myth ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 4408 0389 5 Archived from the original on August 18 2020 Retrieved August 22 2017 External links EditListen to this article 1 hour and 4 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 14 September 2019 2019 09 14 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philip Seymour Hoffman Philip Seymour Hoffman at IMDb Philip Seymour Hoffman at the Internet Broadway Database Philip Seymour Hoffman at the Internet Off Broadway Database Philip Seymour Hoffman collected news and commentary at The New York Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philip Seymour Hoffman amp oldid 1133386797, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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