Al Pacino

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Al Pacino

April 25

East Harlem, New York

Al Pacino is an eight-time Academy Award® nominee. After receiving Best Actor nominations for …And Justice for All, The Godfather Part II, Dog Day Afternoon and Serpico (which earned him a Golden Globe Award), he won a Best Actor Oscar and a Golden Globe for Scent of a Woman. Pacino received Oscar nominations for Best Supporting Actor for The Godfather, Dick Tracy and Glengarry Glen Ross. TV accolades include Emmy, Golden Globe and SAG Award wins for HBO’s You Don’t Know Jack and Angels in America.

Pacino’s more than 40 feature films also include: Stand Up Guys, The Son of No One, Righteous Kill, 88 Minutes, Ocean’s Thirteen, Two for the Money, The Merchant of Venice, Insomnia, Simone, The Insider, Any Given Sunday, Donnie Brasco, The Devil’s Advocate, Two Bits, Heat, City Hall, Carlito’s Way, People I Know, The Recruit, Frankie & Johnny, The Godfather Part III, Sea of Love, Revolution, Scarface, Author! Author!, Bobby Deerfield and Scarecrow. He made his film debut in 1971 with The Panic in Needle Park and most recently starred in HBO’s Phil Spector.

The two-time Tony Award winner most recently appeared on stage in David Mamet’s Broadway revival of Glengarry Glen Ross. He directed the documentary Wilde Salome, and Looking for Richard, which won the DGA’s Outstanding Directorial Achievement for a Documentary award. Other honors includes: the IFP’s Lifetime Achievement Award, the Cecil B. DeMille Award from the HFPA, the American Cinematheque Award and the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award.

3 Nominations
2 Emmys
Outstanding Lead Actor In A Miniseries Or A Movie - 2013
Al Pacino, as Phil Spector
HBO
Levinson/Fontana Productions in association with HBO Films
Outstanding Lead Actor In A Miniseries Or A Movie - 2010
Al Pacino, as Dr. Jack Kevorkian
HBO
Bee Holder, Cine Mosaic and Levinson/Fontana Productions in association with HBO Films
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