Robert De Niro is an acclaimed American actor known for his collaborations with director Martin Scorsese. Some of his most notable roles include Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull, for which he won an Oscar, and Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver. Over his career spanning nearly 50 years, De Niro has appeared in over 90 films and received numerous accolades, cementing his status as one of the greatest actors of his generation.
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The films of Robert De Niro - Photo 6 - Pictures
1. The films of Robert De Niro - Photo 6 - Pictures
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r of the Tribeca Film Festival Robert De Niro at the 2010 Doha Tribeca Film Festival, October 30,
2010 in Doha, Qatar.
Born in New York City in 1943 to two accomplished painters, Robert De Niro grew up in Little Italy
and was attracted to acting from a very young age. He studied with Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg,
and at age 20 made his first movie with director Brian De Palma, "The Wedding Party," which was
not released until 1969.
He has since appeared in nearly 100 films, winning two Academy Awards, while earning the
accolade of the finest actor of his generation.
By CBSNews.com senior editor David Morgan
Credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images for DTFF
One of Robert De Niro's earliest starring roles was in the comedy "Hi, Mom" (1970), directed by
Brian De Palma and co-starring Jennifer Salt.
Credit: Sigma III Corp.
One of Robert De Niro's most acclaimed performances was as a dying baseball player in "Bang the
Drum Slowly" (1973). Michael Moriarty co-starred as the pitcher who tries to conceal his teammate's
struggle against Hodgkin's Disease.
Credit: Paramount Pictures
2. Harvey Keitel, Amy Robinson and Robert De Niro in "Mean Streets" (1973), Martin Scorsese's
electrifying story of New York criminals that put all the filmmaker and his stars onto the world
cinema map.
Keitel plays Charlie, an ambitious young mobster whose rise is hampered both by his devout
Catholicism and his friendship with the flailing young punk Johnny Boy, played by De Niro.
Credit: Warner Brothers
Robert De Niro as Johnny Boy in Scorsese's "Mean Streets."
The actor told CBS News' Lee Cowan that his attraction to the profession may have come in part
from his reserve. "Yeah, part of me is shy, I guess," he said. "You know the old story that actors are
shy, then they get behind the character they play, you know? There's truth to that."
Credit: Warner Brothers
For the 1974 sequel "The Godfather Part II," De Niro stepped into the character created by Marlon
Brando in the original "Godfather," a young Vito Corleone, who in the film's flashback sequences is
seen slowly building what will become a criminal empire.
A curious piece of trivia: De Niro had auditioned for the role of Sonny Corleone, and was hired to
play "button man" Paulie Gatto, but he asked to be let out of his contract when Al Pacino's role in
"The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight" became available (because Pacino had been hired to play
Sonny Corleone). By not playing a character in "The Godfather," De Niro was free to take the role in
the sequel.
Credit: Paramount Pictures
Robert De Niro as Vito Corleone, murdering the "Black Hand" mobster Fanucci, in "The Godfather
Part II."
Accepting the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for De Niro, director Francis Ford Coppola
said, "I think this is a very richly-deserved award. I think Robert De Niro is an extraordinary actor,
and he is going to enrich films that are made for years to come."
Credit: Paramount Pictures
De Niro reteamed with Martin Scorsese for one of his most indelible characters, cabbie Travis Bickle
in "Taxi Driver" (1976). Written by Paul Schrader, the film was a violent character study of a
troubled loner who strives to find a purpose to his life.
The film's shocking violence and nihilism witnessed or perpetrated by Bickle turned off many, but
the film was immediately hailed as a cinematic masterpiece of urban isolation, winning top prize at
the Cannes Film Festival.
Credit: Columbia Pictures
Harvey Keitel as the pimp Sport, and Robert De Niro in "Taxi Driver."
Credit: Columbia Pictures
3. Director Martin Scorsese portrayed one particularly disturbing passenger in the cab of Robert De
Niro's Travis Bickle in "Taxi Driver."
Credit: Columbia Pictures
Dominique Sanda and Robert De Niro in Bernard Bertolucci's historical epic "1900," about the
political turmoil in Italy in the first decades of the 20th century. The film also starred Donald
Sutherland, Gerard Depardieu and Burt Lancaster.
Credit: Paramount Pictures
Director Elia Kazan (left) directs Ingrid Boulting and Robert De Niro in "The Last Tycoon," a
Hollywood drama based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's last, uncompleted novel.
Credit: Paramount Pictures
Liza Minnelli and Robert De Niro in "New York, New York" (1977), a post-war musical drama that
Martin Scorsese saw as an escape from the gritty realism of his previous movies. The downer ending
didn't help the picture find an audience, and the film was cut down and re-released.
In 1981 the film was reissued with deleted scenes restored, including for the first time the complete
musical number "Happy Endings."
Credit: United Artists
Robert De Niro as a Pennsylvania steel worker who goes off to war in Vietnam, encountering
captivity and the deaths of friends, in Michael Cimino's Oscar-winning drama "The Deer Hunter"
(1978). The film co-starred Best Supporting Actor Oscar-winner Christopher Walken, John Cazale,
John Savage and Meryl Streep.
Credit: Universal Pictures
De Niro in "The Deer Hunter." The film's harrowing depiction of a prisoner of war camp and the
soldier's re-assimilation back home were among Hollywood's first serious instances tackling the
experiences of Vietnam War veterans. De Niro received his third Academy Award nomination, for
Best Actor.
Credit: Universal Pictures
Martin Scorsese's "Raging Bull" (1980), about boxer Jake LaMotta, was a meticulously crafted
character study of a violent man who could not keep the violence within the boxing ring.
De Niro showed tremendous ability as a fighter in his boxing scenes, and just as realistically gained
an enormous amount of weight for scenes depicting LaMotta as an aged, overweight has-been. The
performance won him an Oscar for Best Actor.
Credit: United Artists
De Niro told CBS News' Lee Cowan that the production set aside time in shooting of about three to
four months, during which he transformed himself into the older LaMotta, which was not easy.
4. "It wasn't. The first 15-20 pounds, you know, you eat and overindulge, to say the least. And then
after that, it's just pure drudgery," De Niro said.
Credit: United Artists
From left: Best Actor Oscar-winner Robert De Niro ("Raging Bull"); Best Actress Sissy Spacek ("Coal
Miner's Daughter"); and Ronald L. Schwary and Robert Redford, the producer and director of the
Oscar-winner "Ordinary People," backstage at the Academy Awards in Los Angeles, March 31, 1981.
Credit: AP Photo
In the murder mystery "True Confessions" (1981), directed by Ulu Grosbard, Robert De Niro played
a Los Angeles monsignor caught up in the investigation of a murdered woman. Robert Duvall co-
starred as his brother, a homicide detective.
Credit: United Artists
Robert De Niro's Rupert Pupkin, a celebrity hound and wanna-be standup comic, fantasizes
appearing on the late-night talk show hosted by his idol, Jerry Langford (Jerry Lewis), in Martin
Scorsese's "The King of Comedy" (1983).
Credit: 20th Century Fox
Director Sergio Leone, renowned for his spaghetti Westerns of the 1960s, helmed the epic gangster
saga "Once Upon a Time in America" (1984), tracing the lives of New York street toughs as they
grow into leaders of criminal syndicates and politics. Co-starring with Robert De Niro was James
Woods (right) and Elizabeth McGovern.
Credit: Warner Brothers
Robert De Niro and Meryl Street star as two married New Yorkers who meet and begin a romance in
the 1984 drama "Falling in Love."
Credit: Paramount Pictures
Robert De Niro as heating engineer Harry Tuttle in Terry Gilliam's dark comedy "Brazil" (1985).
Credit: Universal Pictures
In Roland Jaffe's "The Mission" (1986), a story of missionaries in 18th century South America, Robert
De Niro plays a mercenary and slave trader who seeks penance as a member of the Jesuit order.
Credit: Warner Brothers
In "Angel Heart" (1987), Mickey Rourke plays a private eye hired by a mysterious client with a
Satanic air (Robert De Niro).
Credit: TriStar Pictures
5. For Brian DePalma's "The Untouchables" (1987), Robert De Niro was memorable as Chicago mob
boss Al Capone, who maintained control over the Windy City through bribery and violence, including
a deftly-wielded baseball bat.
Credit: Paramount Pictures
The action-comedy "Midnight Run" (1988), by writer-director Martin Brest, starred Charles Grodin
as an accountant being transported by Robert De Niro's bounty hunter, all the while being chased by
competing interests from the FBI and the mob.
Credit: Universal Pictures
Jane Fonda and Robert De Niro starred in the romantic drama, "Stanley & Iris" (1989), directed by
Martin Ritt.
Credit: MGM
Robert De Niro and Ed Harris as Vietnam veterans in "Jacknife" (1989), an emotional, low-key drama
written by Stephen Metcalfe and directed by David Jones.
Credit: Cineplex-Odeon Films
In Irwin Winkler's drama "Guilty by Suspicion," set during the years of the Hollywood blacklist,
Robert De Niro starred as a director who finds he will only be allowed to work if he implicates
colleagues as Communists.
Credit: Warner Brothers
"Goodfellas" (1990), based on on Nicholas Pileggi's book "Wiseguy," told the true story of Henry Hill
(Ray Liotta), a member of New York's Lucchese crime family who was involved in the 1978
Lufthansa heist that netted about $5 million. Hill ultimately turned state's evidence against Jimmy
Conway (De Niro), thus ignoring the mob's creed: "Never rat on your friends. Hill's prize? The
federal witness protection program.
Credit: Warner Brothers
Based on a memoir by Dr. Oliver Sachs, "Awakenings" (1990) is the true story of a neurologist's
successful treatment of patients who are "awakened" after years spent in a catatonic state. Robert
De Niro earned an Academy Award nomination as a man who is given a new lease on life, and then
fights against the restrictions of his hospital confinement.
Credit: Columbia Pictures
Robert De Niro as an arson investigator in Ron Howard's "Backdraft" (1991).
Credit: Universal Pictures
Robert De Niro as Max Cady, an ex-con who returns to exact revenge on Sam Bowden (Nick Nolte),
the lawyer he holds responsible for his imprisonment years earlier, in Martin Scorsese's 1991
remake of the thriller "Cape Fear."
6. Credit: Universal Pictures
The cast of "Cape Fear": Robert De Niro, Jessica Lange and Nick Nolte.
Although De Niro has portrayed a wide spectrum of personalities on screen, he is most acclaimed for
his work with Scorsese. De Niro's portrayal of Max Cady drew comparisons to their earlier
collaborations, particularly Travis Bickle from "Taxi Driver." But Cady does not stand apart from
others, pretending to be unaffected by the horror and degradation that surrounds him, something on
which Bickle prided himself.
"There's no doubt De Niro and I are attracted to similar characters that we've dealt with before,"
Scorsese told David Morgan. "They're similar -- they're not the same. There're different angles in
each one. It's almost like trying to find out how many more sides you can find to a character like
Travis or Max, or Jake LaMotta, or Jimmy Doyle."
Credit: Universal Pictures
In the 1992 remake of Jules Dassin's "Night and the City," Robert De Niro played Harry Fabian, a
lawyer of little repute who seeks to recreate himself as a boxing promoter. His "Rocky"-like quest for
success supplants the original's film noir theme involving a test of one's moral strength.
Screenwriter Richard Price described Fabian as someone convinced he deserves heretofore elusive
success -- that he believes in a sort of Destiny (or at least a payback), but it is a selfish Destiny, one
that merely suits himself.
"The character De Niro plays is very different than the character he plays in 'Mad Dog and Glory,"
said Price, who also wrote that 1993 film. "In 'Mad Dog' he plays a guy who's a loner and
introverted, kind of plodding and methodical; Here he's basically playing a mouse who thinks he's a
cat. It's like a very different metabolism."
Credit: 20th Century Fox
Robert De Niro, Uma Thurman and Bill Murray starred in the comedy-drama "Mad Dog and Glory"
(1993), about a Chicago police officer and a mob boss, and the young lady caught between them.
Credit: Universal Pictures
Leonardo diCaprio and Robert De Niro starred in "This Boy's Life" (1993), based on the memoir by
Tobias Wolff, about a young boy and his abusive prospective stepfather.
Credit: Warner Brothers
Robert De Niro's directorial debut was the 1993 "A Bronx Tale," adapted from Chazz Palminteri's
one-man stage play about growing up under the sway of a local underworld figure in New York City.
De Niro played a bus driver and father of young Calogero Anello, who is earning tips from Sonny
LoSpecchio (Palminteri), setting up a confrontation between the criminal figure and a concerned
dad.
In 1993 De Niro told David Morgan that getting backing for the project might have been easier had
he played the mob part, but opted instead for the father. "It's a good part for me to play, because I'd
never done that type of thing; you always expect me to do the part that Chazz is playing."
7. He said he has conferred with other actors, like Jack Nicholson and Danny DeVito, who had taken on
directing chores, "so I could get a better idea from them about what their problems were, what they
were surprised by, or not surprised by. . . . When you're acting in something, you have to be a little
more concentrated in another way. So that adds another kind of pressure."
Credit: Savoy Pictures
Following the success of Francis Ford Coppola's "Bram Stoker's Dracula," remakes of horror classics
were the rage. Kenneth Branagh directed the 1994 version of "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein," in
which he starred as the scientist who creates a monster (Robert De Niro). It did not fare well with
critics.
Credit: TriStar Pictures
Robert De Niro as Sam "Ace" Rothstein, sent by the mob to run its Las Vegas operations, in Martin
Scorsese's 1995 drama "Casino." The film was based on Nicholas Pileggi's non-fiction book about
Vegas underworld figure Frank Rosenthal, who ran several casinos in the 1970s and 1980s.
Credit: Universal Pictures
Although Michael Mann's crime thriller "Heat" (1995) had many qualities, it was most heralded for
its first-ever pairings on-screen of Al Pacino and Robert De Niro. Pacino played a Los Angeles
detective on a personal mission to take down the master thief played by De Niro.
HANNA (Pacino): "We're sitting here like a coupla regular fellas. You do what you do. I do what I
gotta do. What happens if I am there and I got to put you away? (pause) I won't like it. But, if it's
between you and some poor bastard whose wife you're going to make into a widow, brother, you are
gonna go down. 'Cause you don't have to be there. You coulda gone and been a... a mailman."
McCAULEY (De Niro): "There's a flip side to that coin. What if you got me boxed in and I gotta put
you down? 'Cause no matter what, you will not get in my way. But now that we been face to face, I
would not feel good about that. But I won't hesitate. Not for one second."
Credit: Warner Brothers
Meryl Streep and Robert De Niro starred in the family drama "Marvin's Room" (1997), which also
featured Diane Keaton and Leonardo DiCaprio. It was the third film in which Streep and De Niro
appeared together.
Credit: Miramax Films
Barry Levinson's 1997 comedy "Wag the Dog" starred Anne Heche and Robert De Niro as political
consultants who hire a Hollywood producer (Dustin Hoffman) to orchestrate a fake war (with
Albania!) in order to divert media attention from a looming White House scandal. Hoffman and co-
writers Hilary Henkin and David Mamet received Oscar nominations.
Credit: New Line Cinema
Robert De Niro and Samuel L. Jackson plays former cellmates in Quentin Tarantino's crime drama
"Jackie Brown" (1997), adapted from Elmore Leonard's "Rum Punch."
8. Credit: Miramax Films
Jeremy James Kissner as young Finn, and Robert De Niro as Arthur Lustig in a contemporary
dramatization of Charles Dickens' "Great Expectations" (1998), transposed to 1990s New York.
Credit: 20th Century Fox
A return to form for suspense director John Frankenheimer, "Robin" (1998) starred Robert De Niro
as the leader of a team of mercenaries paid to retrieve a mysterious package, with no small arsenal
getting in their way.
Credit: MGM/UA
Just as Tony Soprano first began spilling his guts to a psychiatrist in the HBO drama "The Sopranos,"
Robert De Niro played a mobster who seeks help for his panic attacks from Billy Crystal in the
comedy "Analyze This" (1999).
Of De Niro's eight Golden Globe nominations, three were in the category of comedy, including
"Analyze This," "Midnight Run" and "Meet the Parents."
Credit: Warner Brothers
Robert De Niro plays a conservative cop and Philip Seymour Hoffman is his drag queen-neighbor in
"Flawless" (1999).
Credit: MGM
The 2000 comedy "The Adventures of Rocky & Bullwinkle" mixed animation with live action in
bringing the immortal 1960s cartoon stars to the big screen. Playing the bad guys: Robert De Niro
as Fearless Leader, Jason Alexander as Boris Badenov, and Rene Russo as Natasha Fatale.
Credit: Universal Pictures
Robert De Niro as a Navy diver in "Men of Honor" (2000).
Credit: 20th Century Fox
For the younger generation of moviegoers, De Niro is perhaps best known for his role as Jack
Byrnes, Ben Stiller's militant father-in-law in the "Fockers" franchise. At left: De Niro, a retired CIA
officer, questions his daughter's boyfriend in "Meet the Parents."
De Niro scoffed at critics who lamented such roles were beneath an actor of his stature. "They can
criticize whatever and they could be right -- why this, why that. You can't please everybody all the
time, or even part of the time."
Credit: Universal/DreamWorks
Nearly three decades after they played the same character in different films, Robert De Niro and
Marlon Brando appeared together on screen, in "The Score" (2001), about a safecracker hired for a
$4 million job.
9. Credit: Paramount Pictures
Directed by Michael Caton-Jones, "City By the Sea" (2002) stars De Niro as a veteran cop who
struggles to save his drug-addicted son who is caught in a web of violence. The film also starred
James Franco and Frances McDormand.
Credit: Warner Brothers
After the 9/11 attacks, Robert De Niro helped found the Tribeca Film Festival as a means to aid the
economic and cultural revitalization of Lower Manhattan.
Left: Ewan McGregor shakes hands with Robert De Niro, as Bono (2nd from right), Renee Zellweger,
and American Express Vice President John Hayes look on, during opening ceremonies for the
Tribeca Film Festival in lower Manhattan, New York, May 6, 2003.
Credit: HENNY RAY ABRAMS/AFP/Getty Images
The 2004 film "The Bridge of San Luis Rey" was the third feature based on Thornton Wilder's novel
about the aftermath of a disaster in the Peruvian mountains. Robert De Niro starred as the
Archbishop of Lima, head of a council investigating the victims of the tragedy.
Credit: First Line Features
Robert De Niro directed the 2006 spy film "The Good Shepherd," loosely based on true events, about
the Central Intelligence Agency's history of counter-intelligence. De Niro played William "Bill"
Sullivan (based on William Donovan). Also starring were Matt Damon, Angelina Jolie, Alec Baldwin,
Keir Dullea, Timothy Hutton, William Hurt and Joe Pesci.
Credit: Universal Pictures
In the romantic fantasy "Stardust" (2007), Claire Danes starred as Yvaine, a beauty conjured from a
fallen star. Robert De Niro played Captain Shakespeare, a pirate who helps her in her journey. With
Ricky Gervais.
Credit: Paramount Pictures
In Barry Levinson's "What Just Happened" (2008), Robert De Niro starred as a fading Hollywood
producer trying to get another film off the ground. At left: De Niro with costar Kristen Stewart.
Credit: Magnolia Pictures
Robert De Niro and Drew Barrymore in the drama "Everybody's Fine" (2009), about a father whose
visits with his children may stir up painful secrets.
Credit: Miramax Films
Adrien Brody (left) and Robert De Niro during the presentation of the Academy Award for Best
Actor, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, Calif., February 22, 2009.
Credit: AMPAS/Darren Decker
10. President Barack Obama shakes hands with singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen, as actor-directo-
-producer Robert De Niro looks on, during a reception for the Kennedy Center Honorees December
6, 2009 in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C.
Credit: MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images
Robert De Niro starred with Bradley Cooper in the thriller "Limitless," adapted from Alan Glynn's
"The Dark Fields," about a young man whose consumption of an experimental drug expands his
mind, turning him into a financial wizard -- and a political threat.
Credit: Relativity Media
Robert De Niro, president of the jury, poses with his wife Grace Hightower on the red carpet at the
64th Cannes Film Festival, May 14, 2011 in Cannes.
Credit: VALERY HACHE/AFP/Getty Images
Actor and president of the jury Robert De Niro and actress Uma Thurman pose on the red carpet
before the opening ceremony and the screening of "Midnight in Paris," at the 64th Cannes Film
Festival on May 11, 2011 in Cannes. De Niro and Thurman co-starred in "Mad Dog and Glory."
Credit: ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP/Getty Images
Paul Dano and Robert De Niro star as a young man reunited with his father, a delusional, once-
promising writer, in Paul Weitz's "Being Flynn" (2012), based on Nick Flynn's memoir.
Credit: Focus Features
Robert De Niro and Bradley Cooper were re-teamed in David O. Russell's "Silver Linings Playbook,"
about a father's efforts to cope with his emotionally disturbed son, newly-released from a mental
institution.
De Niro and Cooper both received Academy Award nominations for their performances, as did
costars Jennifer Lawrence and Jacki Weaver.
Credit: Weinstein Company
Actor Robert De Niro and Russell Crowe attend the Australian Academy Of Cinema And Television
Arts' 2nd AACTA International Awards, at Soho House in West Hollywood, Calif., January 26, 2013.
Credit: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for AIF
Robert De Niro, right, presents Jennifer Lawrence with the Screen Actors Guild Award for Best
Actress for "Silver Linings Playbook," onstage during the 19th Annual SAG Awards, at The Shrine
Auditorium on Jan. 27, 2013, in Los Angeles.
By CBSNews.com senior editor David Morgan
Credit: Mark Davis/Getty Images
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