Alec Baldwin Movies
Equally at home playing leads and character roles, actor
Alec Baldwin is known for his work in just about every genre, from action thrillers to comedies to dramas. Born April 3, 1958, in Massapequa, Long Island, he was the second of six children (brothers
William,
Daniel, and
Stephen would also become actors).
Baldwin was a political science major at George Washington University before he decided to become an actor; following his change in vocation, he studied drama at NYU and the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute.
Early in his career,
Baldwin was a busy man, simultaneously playing a role on the TV daytime drama
The Doctors and performing in
Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream on-stage in the evenings. A few years after making his 1980 Broadway debut, the actor moved to Los Angeles, where he landed a part in the television series
Knots Landing. He made his film debut in 1987 with a starring role in
Forever, Lulu, which led to work in a number of major films. From 1988 to 1989 alone,
Baldwin appeared in no less than seven films, including
Tim Burton's black comedy
Beetlejuice,
Mike Nichols'
Working Girl,
Jonathan Demme's
Married to the Mob, and
Oliver Stone's
Talk Radio.
In 1990,
Baldwin achieved big-budget success playing ace CIA agent Jack Ryan in the undersea thriller
The Hunt for Red October. The film's popularity won him acclaim, so
Baldwin surprised many by foregoing the opportunity to reprise his role in the sequel
Patriot Games (he was replaced by
Harrison Ford) in favor of returning to Broadway to star as Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire. Although his decision paid off -- he received a Tony nomination for his performance -- it also marked the point at which
Baldwin's star wattage began to flicker. His 1991 film,
The Marrying Man proved to be an all-out flop (although it did provide him an introduction to co-star
Kim Basinger, whom he would marry in 1993), and the critical success of his next two films,
Prelude to a Kiss and
Glengarry Glen Ross was overshadowed by a subsequent string of flops, including
Malice (1993),
The Getaway (1994), and
The Juror (1996).
The actor rebounded a bit with his role in
Al Pacino's acclaimed documentary
Looking for Richard (1996) but then had the unfortunate luck of starring in the 1998
Bruce Willis disaster
Mercury Rising. However, the following year proved more fortuitous for
Baldwin, as he starred in the coming-of-age comedy
Outside Providence, as well as in the crime drama Thick As Thieves and the ethical drama
The Confession, appearing alongside
Amy Irving and
Ben Kingsley. In addition, the actor made an uncredited appearance in
Notting Hill, sending up his macho Hollywood persona as
Julia Roberts' piggish actor boyfriend.
Baldwin started off the 2000s by re-teaming with
David Mamet on the Hollywood satire
State and Main as a lecherous leading man with a weakness for underage girls. He provided narration for
Wes Anderson's
The Royal Tenenbaums, and was one of the few people to escape unscathed from
Michael Bay's
Pearl Harbor.
Although he continued to make headlines because of his politics, as well as his ongoing legal scuffles with now ex-wife
Kim Basinger,
Baldwin continued to do strong work in the comedies
Along Came Polly (2004) and
Fun with Dick and Jane (2005), and scored his first-ever Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor playing a menacing casino manager in 2003's
The Cooler. He became a part of
Martin Scorsese's stock company playing Juan Trippe in 2004's
The Aviator, following it up as a federal agent in love with the Patriot Act in 2006's
The Departed.
Baldwin's longstanding association with the venerable sketch comedy show
Saturday Night Live (he has hosted over ten times) paid great dividends when he was hired to play the part of the boss on former
SNL head writer
Tina Fey's fall 2006 sitcom
30 Rock. He earned universal raves for his work on the show, and would earn a Golden Globe nomination every single year of the show's run, winning the award three times. He'd also pick up no less than five Emmy nods, winning that award twice as well. Baldwin was positively beloved on the series, but he would also continue to work in film as well, most notably in the 2009 romcom It's Complicated, which he starred in with Meryl Streep, and the 2012 Woody Allen ensmeble film To Rome with Love. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi