John Travolta
John Travolta was born in Englewood, New Jersey, United States on February 18th, 1954 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 70, John Travolta biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.
At 70 years old, John Travolta has this physical status:
John Joseph Travolta (born February 18, 1954) is an American actor, singer, and dancer.
Travolta came to prominence in the 1970s, appearing on television shows Welcome Back, Kotter (1975–1979) and appearing in the box office's successes Saturday Night Fever (1977) and Grease (1978).
His acting career began in the 1980s, but with his appearance in Pulp Fiction (1994), Be Cool (1997), Bolt (2007), and The Taking of Pelham (2009), his career began in the 1990s. Travolta was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his appearances in Saturday Night Fever and Pulp Fiction.
He received his first and only Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for his role in Get Shorty, and he has received a total of six awards, the most recent being in 2011.
In 2010, he received the IIFA Award for Outstanding Achievement in International Cinema.
Travolta received his first Primetime Emmy Award in 2016 as a producer of the first season of the anthology series American Crime Story, titled The People vs. O.J. Simpsons.
In addition, he received an additional Emmy Award and a Golden Globe nomination for his role as lawyer Robert Shapiro in the series.
Early life
Travolta, the youngest of six children, was born and raised in Englewood, New Jersey, an inner-ring suburb of Bergen County, New Jersey. Salvatore "Sam" Travolta (November 8, 1912 – May 29, 1995) was a semiprofessional American footballer and partner in Travolta Tire Exchange, a tire exchange. Helen Cecilia Burke, née Burke, born January 18, 1912 – December 2, 1978), was an actress and singer who had appeared in The Sunshine Sisters, a radio vocal group, and performed and directed before becoming a high school drama and English teacher. Joey, Ellen, Ann, Margaret, and Sam Travolta were all inspired by their mother's love of theatre and drama and became actors. His father, a second-generation Sicilian American with roots in Godrano, Province of Palermo, was born, and his mother, an Irish woman, was Irish American. He grew up in an Irish-American neighborhood and said that his family was mainly Irish in ethnicity. He was raised Catholic but later converted to Scientology at the age of 21. Travolta attended Dwight Morrow High School but dropped out as a freshman in 1971 at age 17.
Personal life
Travolta was in a love with actress Diana Hyland, whom he encountered while filming The Boy in the Plastic Bubble (1976). They remained together until Hyland's death from breast cancer on March 27, 1977. Travolta dated French actress Catherine Deneuve in 1980. Travolta also had an on-again/off-again relationship with actress Marilu Henner, which ended in 1985 and was a member of The Family Reunion. Travolta met actress Kelly Preston, who married in Paris in 1991, while filming The Experts. Jett (1992–2009), Ella Bleu (born 2000), and Benjamin (born 2010). They went to marriage counseling on a regular basis, and Travolta has reported that therapy helped with the marriage. They lived in Ocala, Florida.
Jett died on January 2, 2009, while on a Christmas vacation in the Bahamas. A Bahamian death certificate was released, attributed the death cause to a seizure. Jett, who had a history of seizures, was said to have suffered from Kawasaki disease from childhood. Travolta confirmed that Jett was autistic and had regular seizures and made his public appearances shortly after giving testimony to a multimillion-dollar extortion conspiracy against him in connection with Jett's death. Travolta dropped the charges after a mistrial and credits his immediate family and Scientology with assisting him in coping with Jett's death and moving forward with his career. Travolta's memory was founded by the Jett Travolta Foundation, a non-profit group that supports children with special needs. It has worked with organizations like the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy, Institutes for Human Potential, and the Simon Wiesenthal Center.
Kelly Preston, Travolta's wife, died on July 12, 2020, two years after she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Preston was undergoing medical attention at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas; she was also treated at other medical centers. When Preston died, she was at her house in Anthony, Florida.
Travolta has been a member of the Church of Scientology since 1975. When filming The Devil's Rain in Durango, Mexico, he converted after being given Dianetics.
Travolta was apparently flying his Boeing 707 full of supplies, doctors, and Scientologist Volunteer Ministers into the disaster area after the 2010 Haiti earthquake, alongside other celebrities in assisting with the relief efforts.
Travolta is a private pilot and owns four aircraft.
Travolta owned an ex-Qantas Boeing 707-138B (Ex-VH-EBM), which bears the Qantas livery, and Travolta acted as the airline's official goodwill ambassador whenever he flew. In honor of his children, Travolta named his 707 "Jett Clipper Ella." The word "capper" in the name refers to Pan Am's use of the word "clipper" in the names of their planes. Travolta donated the Boeing 707 to the Historical Aircraft Restoration Society (HARS) near Wollongong, Australia, in 2017. In November 2019, this was forecast to be flown to Australia, but it was postponed until 2020 due to the aircraft's condition. Travolta intended to be on board when the plane was supposed to be flown to Illawarra Regional Airport, where HARS is based, but it was not allowed to fly because it was to be registered as an Australian aircraft.
His estate in Ocala, Florida, is located at Jumbolair Airport with its own runway and taxiway right to his house, as well as two outbuildings for covered access to planes.
Travolta was inducted into the American Academy of Achievement and presented with the Golden Plate Award by Awards Council member General Chuck Yeager, USAF.
Travolta was piloting his Gulfstream N728T at night over a solid undercast when he encountered a total electrical breakdown while flying under instrument flight restrictions into Washington National Airport on November 24, 1992. During the emergency landing, he almost died of a mid-air collision with a USAir Boeing 727, which was due to a dangerous decision by an air traffic controller.
Travolta was inducted into the Living Legends of Aviation in 2007 and serves as the show's official ambassador.
Oprah Winfrey revealed on September 13, 2010, during the first episode of her talk show's final season, with Travolta as the pilot. He had been assisting Winfrey in arranging the trip for more than a year.
He is the author of the book Propeller One-Way Night Coach, which tells the tale of a young boy's first flight.
Travolta published a video on his Instagram claiming that he had received his type approval to fly a 737 on March 20, 2022. He is also certified to fly 707 and 747 planes.
An anonymous male masseur filed a lawsuit against Travolta in May 2012, alleging sexual assault and battery. The allegations were "complete fabrication and fabrication," according to a Travolta lawyer. Travolta's counsel also stated that after getting the lawsuit dismissed, he would be able to demonstrate that he was not in California on the day in question, and that Travolta would "sue the attorney and Plaintiff for malicious charges." A second masseur joined the lawsuit later in the case, alleging similar facts. Both lawsuits were eventually dismissed by the defendants and dismissed without prejudice.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Malcolm Mackey dismissed a defamation lawsuit brought by writer Robert Randolph on September 27, 2012, finding that a letter sent by singer in response to Randolph's assertions in a book was covered by free expression.
Career
Travolta moved across the Hudson River to New York City and gained a presence in the touring company of the musical Grease and on Broadway in Over Here!, singing the Sherman Brothers' "Dream Drummin'." He then migrated to Los Angeles for work reasons.
Travolta's first film appearance in California was as a victim of Emergency in Emergency. Billy Nolan, a bully who was tricked into playing a prank on Sissy Spacek's character in the horror film Carrie (1976), was his first significant film role. (Season 2, Episode 2) in September 1972. He made his name as Vinnie Barbarino in the ABC TV sitcom Welcome Back, Kotter (1975-1989), in which his sister, Ellen, appeared occasionally (as Arnold Horshack's mother).
"Let Her In" was Travolta's highest-selling single on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in July 1976, peaking at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. He appeared in The Boy in the Plastic Bubble (1977) and Danny Zuko in Grease (1978). The films were among the decade's most commercially profitable films, and they launched Travolta to international prominence. At age 24, one of the youngest entertainers ever nominated for the Best Actor Award was Saturday Night Fever, earning him a nomination for Best Actor. Ann and his mother Ann appeared in Saturday Night Fever and his sister Ellen played a waitress in Grease for a short period of time. Travolta appeared on the Grease soundtrack album. Travolta recovered in 1980 after the failure of Moment by Moment (1978), in which he appeared with Lily Tomlin, following a national country music craze, in which he appeared with Debra Winger.
Travolta continued to Urban Cowboy with a starring role in Brian de Palma's 1981 film Blow Out, which was praised but not a box office disappointment, owing to its bleak ending. Travolta's acting career began after Blow Out, a sequence of commercial and critical failures that characterized his career. These included Two of a Kind (1983), a romantic comedy reuniting him with Olivia Newton-John, and Perfect (1985), co-starring Jamie Lee Curtis. He appeared in Staying Alive, the 1983 sequel to Saturday Night Fever, in which he trained intensively to portray a professional dancer and lost 20 pounds; the film was a financial success, but critics also scorned it.
Travolta was on display during that time, but she declined, lead roles in what would be box-office hits, including American Gigolo and a Gentleman, as well as Splash, which went to Tom Hanks.
Travolta appeared in Look Who's Talking, his first film since Grease, in 1989. He appeared in Look Who's Talking Too (1990) and Now That You Can (1993), but it wasn't until he played against type as Vincent Vega in Quentin Tarantino's hit Pulp Fiction (1994), for which he received an Academy Award nomination, that his career was revived. Travolta appeared in all three films alongside Bruce Willis. The film brought him right back to the A-list, and he was inundated with offers. A prominent role in Pulp Fiction include a film-buff loan shark in Get Shorty (1995), an armourist in Phenomenon (1996), an FBI agent and terrorist in Face/Off (1998), a struggling prosecutor in The General's Daughter (1999), and a military prosecutor in The General's Daughter (1999).
Travolta appeared in and co-produced Battlefield Earth, based on L. Ron Hubbard's book in which he played the villainous leading role in a bleak future Earth as a leader of a group of aliens enslaving humanity. Travolta's film was a dream project since the book's debut in 1982, when Hubbard told him to help with a film adaptation. The film received almost universally critical feedback and did a poor job at the box office, which was disappointing. Travolta's appearance in Battlefield Earth earned him two Razzie Awards.
Travolta stayed busy as an actor in the 2000s; Be Cool (2005); Wild Hogs (2007); and Old Dogs (2006); both 2009).
Travolta appeared in the remake of Hairspray in 2007, his first musical since Grease, and was a musician named Edna Turnblad.
Travolta has appeared in mostly action films and thrillers since 2010. In 2016, he returned to television in the first season of the anthology series American Crime Story, entitled The People vs. O. J. Simpson, in which he appeared as a prosecutor Robert Shapiro.
Travolta mispronounced Idina Menzel at the 86th Academy Awards, with the emonym "Adele Dazeem" being pronounced. Menzel performed the award-winning song "Let It Go" from Disney's animated film Frozen.
Travolta speculated on his Instagram account that he would be posting about his children who have lost their mother on July 25, so please excuse me in advance if you don't hear from us for a while."