Charles Bronson
Actor/Actriz
109
Movies
47
TV Shows
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Bronson (born Charles Dennis Buchinsky; November 3, 1921 – August 30, 2003) was an American actor. He was known for his roles in action films and his "granite features and brawny physique". Bronson was born into extreme poverty in Ehrenfeld, Pennsylvania, a coal mining town in the Allegheny Mountains. Bronson's father, a miner, died when Bronson was young. Bronson himself worked in the mines as well until joining the United States Army Air Forces in 1943 to fight in World War II. Bronson had sizeable co-starring roles in The Magnificent Seven (1960), The Great Escape (1963), This Property Is Condemned (1966), and The Dirty Dozen (1967). Bronson also performed in many major television shows, and was nominated for an Emmy Award for his supporting role in an episode of General Electric Theater. Actor Alain Delon (who was a fan of Bronson) hired him to co-star with him in the French film Adieu l'ami (1968). That year, he also played one of the leads in the Italian spaghetti Western, Once Upon a Time in the West (1968). Bronson continued playing leads in various action, Western, and war films made in Europe, including Rider on the Rain (1970), which won a Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film. During this time Bronson was the most popular American actor in Europe.
Early life and war service
Bronson was born November 3, 1921, in Ehrenfeld, Pennsylvania, a coal mining region in the Allegheny Mountains, north of Johnstown. He was the 11th of 15 children born into a Roman Catholic family of Lithuanian descent. The very large family slept in shifts in their cold-water shack. The coal car tracks that ran out of the mine's mouth passed just a few yards away. His father, Walter Buchinsky (né Vladislavas Valteris Paulius Bučinskas/Bučinskis), was a Lipka Tatar from Druskininkai in southern Lithuania. Bronson's mother, Mary (née Valinsky), whose parents were from Lithuania, was born in Tamaqua, Pennsylvania, in the Anthracite Coal Region.
Bronson said English was not spoken at home during his childhood, like many other first-generation American children he grew up with. He once recounted that even as a soldier, his accent was strong enough to make his comrades think he was a foreigner. Besides English, he could speak Lithuanian and Russian.
Marriages
His first marriage was to Harriet Tendler, whom he met when both were fledgling actors in Philadelphia. They had two children, Suzanne and Tony, before divorcing in 1965. Bronson died at age 81 on August 30, 2003, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
Bronson was married to English actress Jill Ireland from October 5, 1968, until her death in 1990. Death
Bronson died at age 81 on August 30, 2003, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
Although pneumonia and Alzheimer's disease have been cited as his cause of death, neither appears on his death certificate, which cites "respiratory failure", "metastatic lung cancer", with, secondarily, "chronic obstructive pulmonary disease" and "congestive cardiomyopathy" as the causes of death. He was interred at Brownsville Cemetery in West Windsor, Vermont. CLR
As Actor/Actress
Bonanza
Harry Starr
El fugitivo
Ralph Schuyler
Golden Globe Awards
Self - Presenter
La Dimensión Desconocida
Man
The Virginian
Ben Justin
Have Gun, Will Travel
Manfred Holt
Dr. Kildare
Harry Gregg
Studio One
Cal
Combat!
Velasquez
Rawhide
Del Lingman
The Dick Cavett Show
Self - Guest
El F.B.I. en Acción
Earl Clayton
The Big Valley
Tate
Gunsmoke
Crego
Adventures in Paradise
Dan Morton
One Step Beyond
Yank Dawson
Tales of Wells Fargo
Butch Cassidy
Sugarfoot
Sandy Randall
Alfred Hitchcock Presenta
Det. Krovitch
The Millionaire
Jerry Bell
Richard Diamond, Private Detective
Dan Rocco
Telephone Time
Guest
Playhouse 90
Wolf Hagan
M Squad
Eddie Loder
Érase una vez en el Oeste
'Harmonica'
Riverboat
Crowley
Studio 57
Dawson
Cavalcade of America
John Stanizewski
Cain's Hundred
Hank Conrad
Suspicion
Cal