Billy Bob Thornton
Billy Bob Thornton was born in Hot Springs, Arkansas, United States on August 4th, 1955 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 69, Billy Bob Thornton biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.
At 69 years old, Billy Bob Thornton has this physical status:
Billy Bob Thornton (born August 4, 1955) is an American actor, filmmaker, singer, songwriter, and singer. Thornton wrote, directed, and starred in the 1992 thriller One False Move, receiving international attention for writing, directing, and starring in the independent drama film Sling Blade (1996), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor.
In the 1990s, he appeared in numerous major film roles, including Oliver Stone's neo-noir U Turn (1997), political comedy Prima Colors (1998), the highest-grossing film of the year, and crime drama A Simple Plan (1998), which earned him his third Oscar nomination. Thornton's Ball (2001), The Man Who Wasn't There (2001), and Friday Night Lights (2004); Comedies Bandits (2001), Intolerable Cruelty (2003) and Bad Santa (2003); and action films Eagle Eye (2008) and Faster (2010).
Thornton appeared in the first season of the anthology film Fargo in 2014, receiving a nomination for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or TV Film at the Emmy Awards and Best Actor in a Miniseries or TV Movie at the 72nd Golden Globe Awards.
He appeared in a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama in 2016. Thornton has expressed his distaste for celebrity culture, deciding to keep his life out of the public eye.
However, in some circumstances, the media has been unavoidable, with Angelina Jolie's marriage to Angelina Jolie being a notable example.
Thornton has written several films, most set in the Southern United States and mainly co-written with Tom Epperson, including A Family Thing (1996) and The Gift (2000).
He produced several other films after Sling Blade, including Daddy and Them (2001), All the Pretty Horses (2004), and Jayne Mansfield's Car (2012). Thornton has been given the President's Award by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, a National Board of Review Award, and a Hollywood Walk of Fame honorer.
He has also been nominated for an Emmy Award, four Golden Globes, and three Screen Actors Guild Awards.
Thornton began his career as a singer-songwriter in addition to film work.
He has recorded four solo albums and is the vocalist of the blues rock band The Boxmasters.
Early life
Thornton was born in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and the son of Virginia Roberta (née Faulkner), a self-proclaimed psychic, and William Raymond "Billy Ray" Thornton (November 1929 – August 1974), a high school history teacher and basketball coach. Jimmy Don (April 1958 – October 1988) wrote a number of songs; Thornton released two of them ("Island Avenue" and "Emily") on his solo albums. He is of part of the Irish lineage. He has another brother, John David.
Thornton lived in many places in Arkansas during his childhood, including Alpine, Malvern, and Mount Holly. He was raised in a shack that had no electricity or plumbing. In 1973, he graduated from Malvern High School. He tried to play for the Kansas City Royals but was forced to leave due to a back injury. He started attending Henderson State University to study psychology after a short time as the Arkansas State Transportation Department's asphalt layoff, but he was forced to leave after two semesters.
Thornton and his future writing partner Tom Epperson married in Los Angeles in the mid-1980s to pursue his career as an actor. He had a difficult time establishing himself as an actor and spent time in telemarketing, offshore wind farming, and fast food service, which were all aspiring for acting positions. Jack Hammer, a South African rock band, has also played the drums and performed with the South African rock band. Billy Wilder, a film director and screenwriter, served as a waiter for a company function. He started a conversation with Wilder, who advised Thornton to consider a career as a screenwriter.
Personal life
Thornton has been married six times. He has four children by three women.
He was married to Melissa Lee Gatlin from 1978 to 1980, who in her divorce petition cited "incompatibility and adultery on his part." Amanda (Brumfield), a 19-year-old daughter of her friend's one-year-old daughter, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for the murder of her friend's one-year-old daughter in 2008. Amanda was released in 2020 after a plea was struck with prosecutors prior to an evidentiary hearing to obtain medical and scientific evidence proving her innocence.
Toni Lawrence was married in 1986 by Thornton, who divorced the following year and divorced in 1988.
He was married to actress Cynda Williams, who appeared in his first writing debut in 1992.
Thornton married Playboy model Pietra Dawn Cherniak, with whom he had two sons Harry James and William. Cherniak accused Thornton of spousal assault, which was often in front of his children.
Thornton intended to marry actress Laura Dern, but he married actress Angelina Jolie, who appeared in Pushing Tin (1999) and who was 20 years his junior. The couple's strange displays of love, which included wearing vials of each other's blood around their necks, were later revealed to be two small lockets, each containing just a single drop of blood. In March 2002, Thornton and Jolie announced the adoption of a child from Cambodia, but later revealed that Jolie had adopted the child as a single parent. They divorced the following year after being separated in June 2002.
Thornton started a friendship with makeup effects crew member Connie Angland, with whom he has a daughter Bella. Despite the fact that he once said he would not marry again because marriage "doesn't work" for him, his representatives confirmed that he and Angland were married on October 22, 2014 in Los Angeles.
Thornton was admitted to a hospital and diagnosed with myocarditis, a heart disease brought on by hunger in Los Angeles. He has since stated that he follows a vegan diet and is "extremely health," and that he avoids wheat and dairy products.
Thornton has an obsessive-compulsive disorder. In interviews with Thornton, various idiosyncratic behaviors have been chronicled; among them is a fear of antique furniture, which was displayed by Dwight Yoakam's character Doyle Hargraves in the Thornton-penned Sling Blade and by Thornton's own character in the 2001 film Bandits. In addition, Grotowski has expressed concern about certain types of silverware, a characteristic portrayed by his appearance in 2001's Monster's Ball, in which Grotowski insists on a plastic spoon for his daily bowl of ice cream.
Thornton related that in a 2004 interview with The Independent, Thornton said.
Thornton is a baseball fan and a St. Louis Cardinals fan. One of his demands in film is a television in his trailer with a satellite dish so he can watch the Cardinals play. He narrated The 2006 World Series Film, the year-end retrospective DVD chronicling the Cardinals' championship season. He is also a devoted fan of the Indianapolis Colts football team.
Thornton is a self-described Brony, a male fan of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic.
Career
Thornton appeared on television in 1988 South of Reno, where he appeared briefly as a counterman in a restaurant. In the 1987 Matlock episode "The Photographer," he also appeared as a pawn store clerk. In 1989, Adam Sandler's debut film Going Overboard was another one of his early screen appearances as a cast member on CBS sitcom Hearts Afire, and in 1989 he appeared as an enraged heckler. His appearance in 1992's One False Move, which he also co-wrote, attracted critics. He appeared in the 1990s films Indecent Proposal, On Deadly Ground, Bound by Honor, and Tombstone. In the 1996 independent film Sling Blade, he wrote, produced, and starred. The film, which was an extension of the short film Some Folks Call It A Sling Blade, told the tale of a mentally ill man incarcerated for a horrific and seemingly inexplicable murder.
Sling Blade received international acclaim. Thornton's screenplay received him an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, a Writers Guild of America Award, and an Edgar Award, as well as an Edgar Prize, while his performance received Oscar and Screen Actor Guild nominations for Best Actor. In 1998, Thornton portrayed Richard Jemmons, a James Carville-like character in Primary Colors. He turned the book All the Pretty Horses into a 2000 film with the same name. The bad experience (he was made to cut more than an hour of footage) resulted in his decision not to produce another film; Daddy and Them, a subsequent release, had been shot earlier. Also in 2000, an early script that he and Tom Epperson wrote together was turned into The Gift.
Thornton appeared in Travis Tritt's music video for the album "Modern Day Bonnie and Clyde" in 2000. The newspaper has characterized his screen persona as that of a "tattooed, hirsute man's man." Following the success of Sling Blade, he appeared in several major film roles, including 1998's Armageddon and A Simple Plan. When gaining starring roles in three Hollywood films, including Monster's Ball, Bandits, and The Man Who Wasn't There, for which he received numerous accolades, he directed Daddy and Them in 2001.
Thornton played a corrupt mall Santa in 2003, a black comedy that attracted big audiences and established him as a leading comedian, and also established him as a leading comic actor, and in the British romantic comedy film Love Actually, he played a womanizing President of the United States. Following Bad Santa's popularity, he said that fans "want to see him play that kind of guy" and that "casting directors call him up when they need an asshole." "It's just that simple... you know how narrow the imagination in this industry can be." He referred to this when he said, "You know how narrow the imagination in this industry can be."
In 2004, Thornton appeared in The Alamo as David Crockett. On the Hollywood Walk of Fame in later this year, he became a celebrity. He appeared in the 2006 comedy film School for Scoundrels. In the film, he plays a self-help doctor, which was not intended for him. More recent films include 2007's The Astronaut Farmer and the comedies Mr. Woodcock, in which he played a sadistic gym instructor. He appeared in the comedy film Eagle Eye in September 2008. He has also expressed an interest in producing another film, perhaps a period piece about cave explorer Floyd Collins, based on the book Trapped! Floyd Collins' tale.
Thornton played Lorne Malvo in the FX miniseries Fargo, which was based on the 1996 film of the same name, for which he received a Golden Globe in a Mini-Series.
Thornton appeared on The Big Bang Theory in 2014, where he played a middle-aged urologist who gets excited about every woman who comes near him.
Thornton appears on Amazon Studios' "Goliath" as a formerly brilliant and personable prosecutor who is now washed up and alcoholic. Amazon Video premiered on October 13, 2016. Amazon announced on February 15, 2017 that the series had been renewed for a second season.
Thornton appeared in the music video Stand Down by Kario Salem (musically referred to as K.O.). It has been voted Best Music Video by the Toronto Shorts International Film Festival, and it has received over 13 million views on Facebook and counting.
Thornton was the drummer of a blues rock band named Tres Hombres in the 1970s. Billy Gibbons, a guitarist, referred to the band as "the best little cover band in Texas," and Thornton has a tattoo of the band's name on it.
Thornton joined Piet Botha in the South African rock band Jack Hammer in 1985, when Botha spent in Los Angeles. Thornton's Death of a Gypsy, a 1986 compilation, was released in one studio album by Jack Hammer.
Thornton on Lost Highway Records in 2001 released the album Private Radio on Lost Highway Records. The Edge of the World (2004), Hobo (2005), and Beautiful Door (2007) are among the many sequel albums. On the tribute album Enjoy Every Sandwich: Warren Zevon's Songs, he performed The Wind. Thornton performed a cover of Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire" with Earl Scruggs for the Oxford American magazine's Southern Music CD in 2001. The song appeared on Scruggs' 2001 album Earl Scruggs and Friends.
Thornton formed The Boxmasters with J.D. in 2007. Andrew.
Thornton and his musical group The Boxmasters appeared on the CBC Radio One program Q on April 8, 2009. Thornton's appearance was widely mocked and international interest after the actor was persistently unintelligible and discourteous to host Jian Ghomeshi. Thornton eventually revealed that he had "instructed" the show's producers not to ask questions about his film career. In the introduction, Ghomeshi had referred to Thornton's appearance. "Mmashed potatoes without the gravy," Thornton had also stated that Canadian audiences were like "mashed potatoes without the gravy." Thornton said mid-set he liked Canadians but not Ghomeshi, which was welcomed with boos and catcalls the following night. According to Thornton, the Boxmasters did not continue the tour in Canada because several members of the crew and band had the flu.