Ray Winstone
Ray Winstone was born in Homerton, England, United Kingdom on February 19th, 1957 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 67, Ray Winstone biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, and networth are available.
At 67 years old, Ray Winstone has this physical status:
Raymond Andrew Winstone (born 19 February 1957) is an English film and television actor.
He is best known for his "hard guy" roles, beginning with his role as Carlin in the 1979 film Scum.
Kevin, an ex-army soldier, appeared in Quadrophenia, as well as Will Scarlet in the television series Robin of Sherwood.
He has also established himself as a voice over actor and has branched out into filmmaking. His film career includes appearances in Sexy Beast, Cold Mountain, King Arthur, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, The Departed, Beowulf, Indiana Jones, and The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Edge of Darkness, The Sweeney, and Noah. Winstone, according to American writer Roger Ebert, "one of the finest actors now active in films" on film.
Early life
Winstone was born in Hackney Hospital, London, on February 19th. He grew up in Caister Park Road, Plaistow E13, and attended Portway infants and junior school. He was seven years old when he moved to Enfield and grew up on a council estate just off the A10 highway. Raymond J. Winstone (1933–2015), a fruit and vegetable business, while Margaret (née Richardson, 1932–1985) had a fruit and vegetable farm. Winstone has related how, as an infant, he used to play with his buddies on bomb sites (vacant lots swarmed with rubble from World War II bombings). On his arrival, he moved from a grammar school to a comprehensive. He also attended Corona Theatre School. He did not go to school and finished with a single CSE (Grade 2) in Drama. He related to an early encounter with a notorious gangster:
Winstone had a love for acting; his dad would bring him to the theater every Wednesday afternoon. "I could be that geezer," Albert Finney said later on Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. John Wayne, James Cagney, and Edward G. Robinson were among John Wayne's major influences. Winstone took to the stage in a Cockney newspaper vendor production in Emil and the Detectives after borrowing more tuition money from a friend's mother, a drama coach.
Winstone was also a fan of boxing. Little Sugs at home, according to his relatives as Winnie (his father was already known as Sugar after Sugar Ray Robinson). Winstone joined the Repton Amateur Boxing Club at the age of 12. He won 80 out of 88 battles over the next ten years. He was the London schoolboy champion on three occasions, twice for England, and twice for England at welterweight. "If you can get into a ring with 2,000 people watching and be smacked around by another guy," he said, walking onstage gives him a new perspective on his later career.
Winstone enrolled at the Corona Stage Academy in Hammersmith when he was in age "about seventeen." It was expensive considering that the average wage was only £36 a week. He landed his first major role in What a Wonderful World at the Theatre Royal, Stratford in London, but his typically generous father told him, "Give it up, while you're ahead." One of his first television appearances came in the 1976 "Life Arms" episode of the well-known police show The Sweeney, where he was credited as "Raymond Winstone" (as he appeared in "What a Crazy World") and appeared as an unidentified young thug.
Winstone, who was not well-known in the secondary school, was not popular, and he was deemed a loser of power. When he discovered that he was the only one not invited to the Christmas party, he decided to take revenge for this little. He hammered some pins into a piece of wood and slammed it into the wheel of his headmistress's vehicle, destroying the tyre, which had been banned. He went to the BBC, where his classmates were included in an interview but got one of his own by flirting with the secretary as a joke. The audition was for one of history's most famous plays – Alan Clarke's Scum – and Clarke loved Winstone's cocky, aggressive boxer's walk, he was cast in the role, even though it had been written for a Glaswegian.
The play, written by Roy Minton and directed by Clarke, was a brutal representation of a young murderer's prison. Winstone was cast in Carlin's lead role, a young criminal who fights against both his captors and his fellow convicts to become the institution's "Daddy." The performance was not shown on television until 1991, and it was hard hitting and often violent (particularly during Carlin's "billiards" scene, in which Carlin used two billiard balls stuffed in a sock to beat one of his fellow prisoners over the head). Several of the original actors appeared in the same scenes as Winstone in the banned television play completely re-filmed in 1979 for cinematic release. Winstone cites Clarke as a major influence on his career and mourns his death in 1990 from cancer in a Scum DVD review.
While Winstone has portrayed several characters that represent the "hard man" quality of his Scum appearance, he has also explored a variety of other genres, including comedy (Martha, Meet Frank, Daniel and Laurence), as the romantic lead (Fanny and Elvis). Henry VIII of the 2003 television serial of the same name, remarking at the time: "It's really flattering for me to play a king." I'm a kid out of Plaistow, and I'm playing one of England's most popular kings.It's fantastic!"
Personal life
When filming That Summer in 1979, Winstone met his wife, Elaine McCausland. They have three children; Lois and Jaime, the oldest two, are both actresses; the eldest two, Lois and Jaime, are both actors. Winstone and his wife reside in Roydon, Essex.
He is a huge fan of West Ham United and he has supported the 2009 home kit.
Winstone was declared bankrupt on October 4, 1988, and again on March 19, 1993.
Winstone said in March 2019, that he preferred leaving the European Union without a contract in the context of Brexit, and that calling a second referendum "would result in "revolution" and that "The country voted to leave" as a result. You leave in the "liberty of democracy."
Career
Winstone appeared in the first episode of Bergerac (1983), followed by another big break when he appeared in Robin of Sherwood (1984). Scarlett was both well-known and loved the role, with Scarlett dubbed "the first football hooligan" according to reports, although he wasn't a fan of the dubbed German version. As the series ended, he teamed up with Jason Connery when they co-starred in Tank Malling, which also starred Amanda Donohoe and Maria Whittaker. He has appeared on television shows including The Sweeney, The Bill, Boon, Fairly Secret Army, (as Stubby Collins), One Foot in the Grave, Murder More Mortality, Murder Most Horrid, Birds of a Feather, Minder, Pet, and Get Back (with fledgling Kate Winslet). He was drawn to theatre during this period, appearing in Hinkemann in 1988, Some Voices in 1994, and Dealer's Choice and Pale Horse the following year.
Winstone was asked to appear in Mr Thomas, a play directed by his companion and fellow Londoner Kathy Burke. The reviews were positive, leading to Winstone being cast, as well as Burke in Gary Oldman's dramming Nil By Mouth. He was lauded for his role as an alcoholic wife-batterer, earning a BAFTA nomination (17 years after his Best Newcomer award for That Summer). In Face and The War Zone, the former actor played a man who rapes his own daughter, but the innate toughness would also allow him to act in romantic comedies Fanny and Elvis. In Last Christmas, he appeared as a deceased man, now a trainee angel, who was able to support his young son's bereavement, written by Tony Grounds, who was the Royal Television Society Best Actor Award winner. Winstone portrayed a football manager on All in the Game in 2006, where they worked together again. He created a series of Holsten Pils advertisements in which he riffed on the phrase "Who's the Daddy," coined in the film Scum.
Winstone appeared in Love, Honour, and Obey, a hit cult film from 2000-2004, then gained his lead role in Sexy Beast, which attracted acclaim from British and international audiences and brought him to the attention of the American film industry. Winstone's "Gal" Dove, a former and happily married former robber, was pulled back to London's underworld by a psychopathic former employee (Ben Kingsley, who received an Oscar nomination for his role).
After a brief appearance in Burke's tragi-comic The Martins, he appeared in Last Orders, where he appeared alongside Michael Caine, Helen Mirren, David Hemmings, and Tom Courtenay.
Winstone will be the first character in Ripley's Game, the sequel to The Talented Mr. Ripley, in which he played a gangster once more. He continued with Lenny Blue, the sequel to Tough Love, and the short "Bouncer."
He appeared in To the Green Fields Beyond at the Donmar Warehouse in 2000 and was directed by Sam Mendes. Griffin in The Night Heron, a British court performer, appeared in The Royal Court in 2002. Kevin Spacey was hired by Kevin Spacey at 24 Hour Plays at the Old Vic in a string of plays that were written, rehearsed, and performed in a single day two years ago. Winstone, now nationally known, was next chosen by Anthony Minghella to play Teague, a sinister Home Guard chief in the American Civil War drama Cold Mountain.
Winstone has now decided to direct and produce his own films, collaborating with his longtime agent Michael Wiggs, who was inspired by Burke and Oldman. She's Gone, the first attempt, was directed by a businessman whose teenage daughter disappeared in Istanbul, but filming was suspended due to widespread Middle East unrest. In an interview with Jerusalem in which he played poet and visionary William Blake, he continued the celebrations.
Winstone made his action film debut in King Arthur, starring Clive Owen, directed by Antoine Fuqua, and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. Fuqua lauded his appearance, boasting that he was "the British De Niro." Soldier Sam was the voice of Soldier Sam in The Magic Roundabout's on-screen version.
He appeared alongside Suranne Jones in an ITV thriller about a team of private detectives in 2005. He returned to the role in 2006 and was named an International Emmy. In The Proposition, he also depicted a 19th-century English policeman trying to tame the Australian outback. Winstone was rated by American writer Roger Ebert in 2006 as "one of the finest actors now working in film" in the film.
Winstone was completely different when he portrayed the tumultuous Mr. Beaver in The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, 2005. Winstone appeared in Martin Scorsese's 2006 film The Departed as Mr. French, an enforcer to Jack Nicholson's Irish mob boss. "Invests every line with the authority of God dictating to Moses," critic Roger Ebert praised Winstone among the ensemble cast of The Departed, writing that the actor "invests every inch with the authority of God dictating to Moses."
In Robert Zemeckis' film Beowulf, he performed motion capture movements and voice-over work for the title character. He appeared in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull from 1988 to 1988, which was released on May 22nd. In The Changeling-inspired Compulsion, which appeared in May 2009, he returned to television drama.
In the film Tracker with Temuera Morrison, Winstone came next, replacing Robert De Niro as a CIA agent Darius Jedburgh. Winstone played Detective Jack Regan in a remake of The Sweeney in 2012 (having only played a minor part in the original film). Winstone appeared in the slasher-thriller film Red Snow, directed by Stuart St. Paul and based on a short film by Adam Mason.
Winstone appeared in The Hot Potato, a British independent film about two men who find a lump of uranium. Lois Winstone's eldest daughter Lois Winstone, Jack Huston, Colm Meaney, and David Harewood appear in the film, which is set in the East End of London in the 1960s.
"Ray Winstone calls Scots 'tramps' on the television quiz show. He caused a lot of outrage by claiming that Scotland's top exports were "oil, whisky, tartan, and tramps" in April 2013. Viewers also screamed over Ofcom and the BBC. In The Trials of Jimmy Rose, a three-part drama for ITV, he appeared as ex-criminal Jimmy Rose in 2015.