George Clooney is recognized as much for his global humanitarian efforts as he is for his accomplishments in the entertainment industry. Clooney’s achievements as a performer and a filmmaker have earned him an Academy Award®, two Golden Globes and an Emmy, as well as four other Oscar® nominations, six additional Golden Globe nominations, and numerous SAG, BAFTA, Emmy and Critics’ Choice Awards. In 2006 he received the American Cinematheque Award and the Modern Master Award from the Santa Barbara Film Festival.
When Clooney received his Oscar® for Best Supporting Actor for Syriana in 2006, he also earned Academy Award nominations for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for Good Night, and Good Luck. It was the first time in Academy history that an individual had received acting and directing nominations for two different films in the same year.
In addition, he won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor for Syriana and was nominated for SAG, BAFTA and Critics’ Choice Awards for his work in that film.
In 2009, Clooney received an Academy Award® nomination, a Golden Globe nomination, a SAG nomination and a BAFTA nomination for Best Actor for his performance in the critically acclaimed film Up in the Air. He also won National Board of Review and New York Film Critics Circle Awards for Up in the Air and another New York Film Critics Circle Award that same year for his voice performance in the hit animated feature Fantastic Mr. Fox.
Clooney made his directorial debut in 2002 with Confessions of a Dangerous Mind for Miramax, winning the Special Achievement in Film Award from the National Board of Review.
In addition to Oscar® nominations for writing and directing his second directorial project – Good Night, and Good Luck. – Clooney received the Paul Selvin Award from the Writers Guild of America and the Freedom Award from the Broadcast Film Critics Association. The film also earned Clooney nominations for two Golden Globes, two BAFTA Awards, a SAG Award, an Independent Spirit Award, two Critics’ Choice Awards, a WGA Award and a DGA Award.
Clooney received critical acclaim for the award-winning drama Three Kings and the Oscar-nominated Out of Sight. His other performing credits include Solaris, The Peacemaker, Batman & Robin, One Fine Day, From Dusk ‘Til Dawn, and Burn After Reading. This last film reunited him for the third time with the Coen brothers. He also worked with them on O Brother, Where Art Thou?, which earned him a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, and on Intolerable Cruelty (Clooney refers to the three films as “my trilogy of idiots”).
In 2009, Clooney starred in and produced The Men Who Stare at Goats, which was a Smokehouse Production, the company he formed with Grant Heslov. Smokehouse’s initial project was the romantic comedy Leatherheads, which Clooney also directed and starred in for Universal.
Heslov and Clooney first worked together at Section Eight, a company in which Clooney was partnered with Steven Soderbergh. Section Eight productions included Ocean’s Eleven, Ocean’s Twelve, Ocean’s Thirteen, Michael Clayton, The Good German, Good Night, and Good Luck., Syriana, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, The Jacket, Full Frontal, and Welcome to Collinwood.
Clooney’s recent film credits include Focus Features’ dramatic thriller The American, in which he starred and also served as a producer. He will be seen later this year in Fox’s Searchlight’s The Descendants.
On television, Clooney starred in several series earlier in his career, becoming best known to TV audiences for his five years on the hit NBC drama “ER.” His portrayal of Dr. Douglas Ross earned him Golden Globe, SAG, People’s Choice and Emmy Award nominations. In 2009, Clooney returned for one final episode in which his character was reunited with his longtime love.
For Section Eight’s television division, Clooney was an executive producer and directed five episodes of “Unscripted,” a reality-based show that debuted on HBO. He also was executive producer and cameraman on “K Street,” also for HBO.
Clooney was executive producer and co-star of the live television broadcast of “Fail-Safe,” an Emmy-winning telefilm developed through his Maysville Pictures. “Fail-Safe” was nominated for a 2000 Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television. The telefilm was based on the early 1960s novel of the same name.
The son of an anchorman, Clooney is a strong First Amendment advocate with a deep commitment to humanitarian causes. In 2006, Clooney and his father, Nick, went to drought-stricken Darfur, Africa, to film the documentary “Journey to Darfur.” Clooney’s work on behalf of Darfur relief led to his addressing the United Nations Security Council. He also narrated the Darfur documentary “Sand and Sorrow.”
In 2007, Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Don Cheadle and Jerry Weintraub co-founded Not On Our Watch, an organization whose mission is to focus global attention and resources to stop and prevent mass atrocities in Darfur.
Among the many honors received as a result of his humanitarian efforts in Darfur was the 2007 Peace Summit Award, given at the eighth World Summit of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates at their annual meeting in Rome. Also taking part in the ceremony were Rome’s Mayor Walter Veltroni, Lech Walesa, Mikhail Gorbachev and the Dalai Lama. In 2008, Clooney was designated a U.N. Messenger of Peace, one of eight individuals chosen to advocate on behalf of the U.N. and its peacekeeping efforts.
In January of 2010, Clooney, along with Joel Gallen and Tenth Planet Productions, produced the “Hope for Haiti Now!” telethon, which raised more than $66 million, setting a new record for donations made by the public through a disaster-relief telethon.
The Academy of Television Arts and Sciences awarded Clooney the Bob Hope Humanitarian Award at the 2010 Primetime Emmys. He was the fourth recipient of this prestigious award.
Later that year, Clooney received the Robert F. Kennedy Ripple of Hope Award for his dedication to humanitarian efforts in Sudan and Haiti.
In December of 2010, Clooney along with the United Nations, Harvard University and Google, launched “The Satellite Sentinel Project,” an effort to monitor violence and human-rights violations between Southern and Northern Sudan. Not on Our Watch funded new monitoring technology, which allows private satellites to take photographs of any potential threats to civilians, detect bombs, observe the movement of troops and note any other evidence of possible mass violence.
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