ANTHONY QUINN Biography - Other artists & entretainers

 
 

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ANTHONY QUINN
       

Anthony Quinn (April 21, 1915 - June 3, 2001) was a Mexican actor, painter, and writer. He was born Antonio Rudolfo Oaxaca Quinn in Chihuahua, Chihuahua, Mexico. He grew up in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.

       

Acting
Before becoming an actor, Quinn had been a prizefighter and a painter. He launched his film career playing character roles in several 1936 films, including Parole (his debut) and The Milky Way, after a brief stint in the theater. Quinn remained relegated to playing “ethnic” villains in Paramount films through the 1940s. By 1947, he was a veteran of over 50 films and had played everything from Indians, Mafia dons, Hawaiian chiefs, Chinese guerrillas, and comical Arab sheiks, but he was still not a major star. So he returned to the theater, where for three years he found success on Broadway in such roles as Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire.

       

Upon his return to the screen in the early 1950s, Quinn was cast in a series of B-adventures like Mask of the Avenger (1951). He got one of his big breaks playing opposite Marlon Brando in Elia Kazan’s Viva Zapata! (1952). His supporting role as Zapata’s brother won Quinn his first Oscar and after that, Quinn was given larger roles in a variety of features. He went to Italy in 1953 and appeared in several films, turning in one of his best performances as a dim-witted, thuggish, and volatile strongman in Federico Fellini’s La Strada (1954). Quinn won his second Best Supporting Actor Oscar portraying the painter Gaugin in Vincente Minnelli’s Lust for Life (1956). The following year, he received another Oscar nomination for George Cukor’s Wild is the Wind.