Clint Eastwood

Clint Eastwood net worth is $400 Million. Also know about Clint Eastwood bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Clint Eastwood Wiki Biography

Clinton Eastwood Jr was born on 31 May 1930, in San Francisco, California USA, of British, Dutch and Irish descent, and is an actor, film director and producer, composer, and television producer, known widely for his acting and directing of many successful films during a career now spanning six decades, including three so-called ‘spaghetti westerns’, the ‘Dirty Harry” series, and award-winning films including ‘Unforgiven'(1992) and “Million Dollar Baby”(2003).

So just how rich is Clint Eastwood? According to sources, Eastwood’s net worth is estimated to be almost $400 million as of early 2016, the vast majority gathered from his prominent career as an actor, director and producer in over 80 films and TV productions since 1955.

Clint was educated at Piedmont Junior High and Oakland Technical High Schools. He had a variety of jobs before becoming an actor, working as a lifeguard, grocery clerk, golf caddy, paper carrier, forest firefighter, before being drafted by the US Army in 1951 and appointed as a swimming instructor at Fort Ord in California. Clint survived when a military ‘plane crashed into the Pacific Ocean, and he and other survivors swam three miles (five kms) to shore. His military pay was the basis of his net worth.

Eastwood’s first major television role was as Rowdy Yates in over 200 episodes of the Western TV series “Rawhide” from 1959 to 1965, starting on $750 per episode, but receiving a payout of $120,000 when the series ended. He appeared in several uncredited parts in a number of movies over the same period, until in 1963, Eastwood starred in the Italian-made ‘spaghetti western’ entitled “A Fistful of Dollars” playing an anti-hero, and signing an eleven week contract worth $15,000. The film proved popular enough to spawn two more movies, entitled “For A Few Dollars More”, and “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly”, the  last taking $8 million at the box office, very significant then, including for his net worth, and with which Clint formed Malpaso Productions.

Clint’s first production was another western, “Hang ‘Em High’, a critical and commercial success, and then he starred in and wrote the score for a musical western – “Paint Your Wagon”(1969) with Lee Marvin and Jean Seberg. In the same year, he starred with Richard Burton in the war movie “Where Eagles Dare”, with a boost to his net worth of $750,000 – Clint Eastwood had certainly “arrived”.

Clint Eastwood has now been involved in a total of 80 films, as actor, director or producer – sometimes all three, the vast majority successful at the box office if not critically acclaimed. The “Dirty Harry” (Callaghan) series of five films was particularly popular in the ’70s, and films such as “Play Misty For Me”(1971) to “American Sniper”(2014) and nominated for Best Picture, have constantly kept him in the public eye. A few still manage to stand out – “Unforgiven”(1992) won him Oscars for Best Picture and Director, and for Gene Hackman Best Supporting Actor, while “Million Dollar Baby”(2003) also won him Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director, and a nomination for Best Actor. He has also directed Tim Robbins and Sean Penn in “Mystic River”, and Morgan Freeman and Hilary Swank in “Million Dollar Baby”, to win Oscars. “The Bridges of Madison County”(1995) with Meryl Streep was also a hit, as was “Jersey Boys”(2014), based on the pop group The Four Seasons which he directed and co-produced, and Clint’s latest is “Sully”, released in 2016. In addition  Eastwood directed “Mystic River” and “Letters from Iwo Jima”, both of which earned him Academy Awards nominations.

A lesser known fact is that Clint Eastwood is also a composer, and has written over 15 scores for his films, for such movies as “Million Dollar Baby” with Morgan Freeman, “Flags of Our Fathers” with Ryan Phillippe and Adam Beach, and “Grace is Gone” starring John Cusack. The latter earned Eastwood a nomination for the Best Original Score, while the song “Grace is Gone” was nominated for the Best Original Song and won the Satellite Award for Best Song.

Apart from those mentioned, Clint Eastwood has received numerous other awards and honours, including Golden Globe and People’s Choice Awards. In 1996 he was awarded an American Film Industry(AFI) Lifetime Achievement Award, and in 2009 an honorary degree from AFI. In 2006, he was inducted into the California Hall of Fame by then California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, and in 2007, Clint was awarded France’s highest civilian honour, Légion d’Honneur,  In 2009, the Lumière Award honored his entire career, then in February 2010, Eastwood was recognized by President Barack Obama with an arts and humanities award. He has also received a number of honorary degrees, including  in 2007  an honorary Doctor of Music degree from the Berklee College of Music.

Somehow, Clint Eastwood has also found time to become involved in politics, becoming mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California in April 1986, serving a two-year term during which he supported small business, environmental protection, and the extension of the library, among other facilities. He was also an appointee to the California State Park and Recreation Commission in 2001, with particular reference to environmental protection. Surprisingly, perhaps, Clint is also a long-time strong proponent of gun control

In his somewhat complicated personal life, Clint Eastwood was first married to Maggie Johnson (1953-84) – including a separation during which he had a son with Roxanne Tunis – with whom he has a son and a daughter. He was then partnered with actress Sondra Locke(1975-89), also starring with her in five films. During the late ’80s, he had a son and a daughter with Jacelyn Reeves. From 1990-05 he lived with actress Frances Fisher, and they have a daughter. In 1996 Clint married Dina Ruiz, and they also have a daughter; they divorced in 2014. He is now seen with Christina Sandera, who apparently would like to be Mrs Eastwood number three – officially, that is!

Finally, despite working on many western films and TV series, Clint is allergic to horses!

IMDB Wikipedia “Jersey Boys”(2014) “Sully” (2016) “The Bridges of Madison County”(1995) $400 Million 106 & Park 1930 A Fistful of Dollars Academy Award Academy Awards – Best Director/ Best Picture/ Best Actor Actor Actors American Film Industry(AFI) Berklee College of Music Businessperson California Christina Sandera Clint Clint Eastwood Clint Eastwood Net Worth Clinton “Clint” Eastwood Clinton “Clint” Eastwood Jr Clinton Eastwood Clinton Eastwood Jr. Composer Dina Eastwood Dina Eastwood (m. 1996–2014) Directors Guild of America Awards Dollars Trilogy Dutch-American English American Film director Film producer Film Score Composer Films Francesca Eastwood Golden Globe Awards Grace Is Gone Gran Torino Investor Irish American Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Awards (1994) Italian films Jean Eastwood Jr. Kyle Eastwood Letters from Iwo Jima Lifetime Achievement Award Lumière Award (2009) Maggie Johnson Maggie Johnson (m. 1953–1984) Margaret Ruth Runner May 31 Million Dollar Baby Mystic River Oakland Technical High Schools People’s Choice Awards Pianist Piedmont Junior High Politician Samson San Francisco Satellite Award for Best Song Scott Eastwood Scottish American Spaghetti Westerns Television Producer the Bad and the Ugly The Good War epic films

Clint Eastwood Quick Info

Full Name Clint Eastwood
Net Worth $400 Million
Date Of Birth May 31, 1930
Place Of Birth San Francisco, California, United States
Height 6 ft 3 in (1.93 m)
Profession Actor, Film director, Film Producer, Politician, Composer, Pianist, Film Score Composer, Television producer, Businessperson, Investor
Education Piedmont Junior High, Oakland Technical High Schools
Nationality American
Spouse Dina Eastwood (m. 1996–2014), Maggie Johnson (m. 1953–1984)
Children Scott Eastwood, Francesca Eastwood, Kyle Eastwood
Parents Clint Eastwood, Margaret Ruth Runner
Siblings Jean Eastwood
Partner Christina Sandera
Nicknames Clinton Eastwood, Jr. , Samson , Clint , Clinton Eastwood Jr. , Clinton “Clint” Eastwood Jr , Clinton “Clint” Eastwood Jr. , Clinton “Clint” Eastwood, Jr.
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/ClintEastwood
Twitter https://twitter.com/clinteastwoodla?lang=en
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/clinteastwood/?hl=en
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000142
Allmusic www.allmusic.com/artist/clint-eastwood-mn0000160428
Awards Academy Awards – Best Director/ Best Picture/ Best Actor, Directors Guild of America Awards, Golden Globe Awards, People’s Choice Awards, American Film Industry(AFI), Satellite Award for Best Song, Lifetime Achievement Award, Lumière Award (2009), Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Awards (1994)
Nominations Academy Award for Best Actor, Palme d’Or, Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, BAFTA Award for Best Film, BAFTA…
Movies “Sully” (2016), “Mystic River”, “Unforgiven”, “Letters from Iwo Jima”,”Mystic River”, “Million Dollar Baby”, “The Bridges of Madison County”(1995), “Jersey Boys”(2014), “Mystic River”, “Letters from Iwo Jima”
TV Shows Mrs. Eastwood & Company, Rawhide

Clint Eastwood Trademarks

  1. His films often feature misguided but well meaning younger characters who are mentored by older characters
  2. Recurring pattern of his characters is having an unloaded gun or one that misfires.
  3. Often plays characters who are consumed by regrets over past mistakes and are given one chance to redeem themselves
  4. His scowl
  5. His films are often period pieces with a strong attention to detail
  6. Many of his films show at least one variation of sexual assault
  7. Deadpan delivery of one-liners
  8. Often breaks unexpectedly into a warm smile
  9. Unmistakable authoratative rasping (sometimes hissing) voice
  10. Narrow eyes and towering height
  11. The lead characters in his movie are often outsiders with a dark past they prefer not to remember
  12. Known on-set as a director for filming very few takes and having an easy shooting schedule. Tim Robbins once said that when working on Mystic River, Eastwood would usually ask for only one take, or two “if you were lucky”, and that a day of filming would consist of starting “no earlier than 9 a.m. and you leave, usually, after lunch.”
  13. Frequently uses shadow lightning in his films
  14. During the credits at the end of his movies, the camera will move around the location it was filmed in, after which there will be freezeframe for the rest of the credits.

Clint Eastwood Quotes

  • [in the early 70s] I’m number one at the box office, but Hollywood considers me a bore.
  • For years I bummed around trying to get an acting job. They told me my voice was too soft, my teeth needed capping, I squinted — all that tearing down of my ego. If I walked into a casting office now, a stranger, I’d get the same old crap. But now I’m Clint Eastwood.
  • [asked for the secret to a lasting marriage, 1971] We don’t believe in togetherness. We’ve stayed together by staying apart.
  • I’m not a person who pre-plans life.
  • My dad was always talking about retiring and sitting next to a stream with a couple of beers in his hand. Sounds like a commercial – but it’s not for me!
  • I’m in the entertainment business, NOT in the business of trying to shape social opinions.
  • Sometimes I think I disappoint people by not being more like the characters I play in the movies. But who wants to be those guys? The best kind of fan is the one who tells you he loved your film and then, boom, is off.
  • I guess I’m just a bum and a drifter by nature. I don’t think of myself as a “star.” I don’t have any image of myself.
  • In some ways I know I didn’t live up to my parents’ hopes. It was a long time before I wanted to go to college–but in some ways I surpassed my parents’ hopes.
  • The main thing is not how long you’re on the planet, but the quality you have while you’re here.
  • Marriage is not just about ‘love.’ It’s about ‘like’ as well.
  • I am very well mannered, and that, believe it or not, stands me in very good stead.
  • I can get into the nostalgia thing sometimes, but to me the good old days are right now.
  • [in GQ magazine, October 2011] I don’t give a fuck about who wants to get married to anybody else! Why not?! We’re making a big deal out of things we shouldn’t be making a deal out of … Just give everybody the chance to have the life they want
  • I think I’m reasonably intelligent.
  • I’m just doing a job, I’m just in the entertainment business doing the kinds of films that appeal to me. You’ve got to keep that in perspective. Fame is fleeting.
  • My appeal is in the characters I play. A superhuman type character who has all the answers, is double cool, exists on his own without society or the help of society’s police forces. A guy sits in the audience. He’s twenty-five years old and he’s scared stiff about what he’s going to do with his life. He wants to have that self-sufficient thing he sees up on the screen.
  • [asked on the red carpet at The Bridges of Madison County (1995) premiere if he thinks men become sexier with age] That’s in the eyes of the beholder. I know nothing about how men become sexy because men aren’t sexy to me, so I really don’t know.
  • The important thing to remember about women is that they’re a lot smarter than men and they don’t play fair.
  • I think women like to see other women put down when they’re out of line. They have a dream of the guy who won’t let them get away with anything. And the man in the audience is thinking, ‘That’s how I’d like to handle it–cool and assured, knowing all the answers.’ He wants to be a superhero.
  • I was a bit of a screw-up, a loner.
  • Follow what you think. You want to do something? Just do it the best you can. Not everyone makes something phenomenal, but at least you can fail on your own terms.
  • [on the contemporary superhero craze in Hollywood] Thank God that I didn’t have to do that. […] I always liked characters that were more grounded in reality. Maybe they do super things or more-than-human things – like Dirty Harry, he has a knack for doing crazy things, or the western guys – but, still, they’re not caped crusaders.
  • [on taking nootropics] You can actually feel a difference and see a difference in yourself. I’m not necessarily interested in extending life. To me, what seems most intriguing is just keeping the quality of your life up as long as fate decrees that you’ll be here on the planet.
  • When I was growing up in the ’30s and ’40s, kids were a lot more active than they are today. We didn’t have television, we certainly didn’t have computers, so you came home from school and then went out to play with the other kids in your neighborhood. You didn’t have to be a varsity athlete to get into a game of pickup basketball or football or to take a bat, ball and glove out to an empty lot for a game of flies-and-grounders.
  • I am a junior, and all my younger life I was called Sonny or Junior, and I think a kid deserves his own name.
  • One of the most important things in life is feeling good about yourself. And when you’re in decent shape, when you like the way your body looks and feels and your energy levels are at their highest, it’s a lot easier to feel good about yourself.
  • What’s one great thing about a theater is it’s got an exit.
  • 100 years from now and more, people will look back on this generation of films, and the guy who will standout more than anyone else will be Tom Cruise.
  • I don’t have any great pickup lines. I was never an extrovert, so I always had to have someone meet me halfway. If she was interested, we’d come together, and if not … When I became a movie actor and became well-known, it took care of itself. Maybe that’s why I became an actor.
  • You’re as young as you feel. As young as you want to be. There’s an old saying I heard from a friend of mine. People ask him, “Why do you look so good at your age?” He’ll say, “Because I never let the old man in.” And there’s truth to that. It’s in your mind, how far you let him come in.
  • [on Barack Obama] He doesn’t go to work. He doesn’t go down to Congress and make a deal. What the hell’s he doing sitting in the White House? If I were in that job, I’d get down there and make a deal. Sure, Congress are lazy bastards, but so what? You’re the top guy. You’re the president of the company. It’s your responsibility to make sure everybody does well. It’s the same with every company in this country, whether it’s a two-man company or a two-hundred-man company…
  • I don’t know what I am. I’m a little of everything.
  • Secretly everybody’s getting tired of political correctness, kissing up. That’s the kiss-ass generation we’re in right now. We’re really in a pussy generation. Everybody’s walking on eggshells. We see people accusing people of being racist and all kinds of stuff. When I grew up, those things weren’t called racist. And then when I did Gran Torino (2008), even my associate said, “This is a really good script, but it’s politically incorrect.” And I said, “Good. Let me read it tonight.” The next morning, I came in and I threw it on his desk and I said, “We’re starting this immediately.”
  • When I used to be a contract player in 1954 at Universal, I wasn’t getting good roles. I was getting one-liners, and then I’d be gone. But I’d hang around; I’d watch guys. And when I had days off, which was most days, I’d go down and watch other sets while they were shooting. Watch Joan Crawford or whomever. Just watch how they worked and how the director handled them. I didn’t know anything about making movies, and there’s a lot to learn.
  • [asked by British interviewer Ginny Dougary why so many women had his babies] Well, sometimes — ughh . . . arghh . . . I . . . I don’t . . . ahh . . . know why it is that I’m any more of a sire than anyone else. Um . . . er . . . something to do with the genes, I guess.
  • Who’s Barbara Walters?
  • [on Roxanne Tunis and Kimber Eastwood, as quoted in “The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly”] I give them a few thousand here and there, but I always give it in cash so they can’t prove anything. Besides, Kimber is listed as a dependent on her stepfather’s tax returns; she’s not a dependent of mine. Legally, I’m not responsible.
  • There’s a bar I used to go to on Sunset Boulevard that was a straight bar that’s now a gay bar. I think I went into it once some years later, and I looked around and said, ‘Oh, yeah, it’s a gay bar.’ I still finished my beer.
  • [on his dissatisfaction with his diminishing role in the “Dollars” trilogy] In the first, I was just about alone. Then there were two of us. And now are three of us. If it goes on like this I’m going to end up in a detachment of cavalry.
  • Too many directors don’t know what the hell they’re doing. They’ll do multiple takes on scenes and try out different angles and lighting. I don’t like that. If you can’t see it yourself straight away, you shouldn’t be a director.
  • [on John Ford] I remember seeing Stagecoach (1939) as a kid when it first came out. Ford had an influence on me subconsciously, and I watched it in a dark theatre with my knees up. Sometimes twice in a row. There’s something about the way he approached the subject that broke down clichés of the era. I think he was always trying to make social statements in his movies, and with Stagecoach he used the western to do it efficiently.
  • As soon as I read that line in the script, “Go ahead make my day”, I knew audiences would love it.
  • Films can go overboard on violence but the Dirty Harry films don’t. We don’t use slow motion violence for instance, or lingering blood squirts. Also, Harry Callahan is an honorable man and a hero to middle America. I’d question films like Taxi Driver (1976) where the hero is mentally ill.
  • I am concerned about violence in films. In 1992, when I did Unforgiven (1992), which is a film that is very anti-violence and very anti-gun, I remember that Gene Hackman was concerned about it too. And we both discussed how much violence in films has escalated since Dirty Harry (1971) and other movies I made.
  • Sergio Leone loved long stories and long pictures. To me, I don’t mind a long picture if you’ve got a lot of story. But if you’re just making a long movie to just show off more production value, I think you can edit some of that stuff down. That’s where he and I would differ.
  • [on marriage] I haven’t exactly been successful at it, but I made a couple of attempts. I’ve had moments of success interrupted by moments of satyr. Shelley Berman used to say that. I admire people who can accomplish and do it, but it’s very difficult in today’s society, because there are so many things pulling at people. People gain different interests as time goes by, so they decide that they want to try something else. You have to keep trying! You don’t want to give up and be so cynical that, you say, ‘Never!’ But, maybe, at my stage in life, there’s a silver act. Never say never.
  • [December 2014] I just went through a period where my DNA was in demand for a while. I think that’s all ended-but, you never know!
  • [if he could give advice to his younger self] He was never a smart kid. I was a slow learner, so I’d say speed up the process a bit-and maybe practice a little more!
  • I’ve waited all my life for a woman like Dina. She is bright, funny, independent. It’s fate that I met her when I was in my sixties. I’d love to have been with her 20, 30 years ago and I would have settled down much sooner. I spent my twenties and thirties being angry, then my forties and fifties being disappointed. It’s only in the last part of my life that I’ve learned to be happy.
  • I’m not good in big crowds. I prefer smaller, one-to-one nights out, which is why I’ve never been single. I like the company of women, but I do go for longer-term relationships than flings. The best things to come of all those relationships are my children.
  • In the past I have been with women who wanted more from me than I was ever willing to give. I was probably not as attentive as I could have been. I can be selfish and some of the women didn’t have a good idea of their self. They wanted me to mould them and I just can’t do that.
  • [April 2010] I planned on not working at this time in my life, but I am enjoying working more now than I ever have. I have been lucky enough to work in a profession I really like and I figure I will continue until somebody hits me over the head.
  • [January 1962] There has to be something for me beyond western roles, which rarely give you a full feeling of acting accomplishment. Have you ever heard of a western star being called an actor’s actor? I’ll bet not!
  • I like Italian movies. I was frequently there in the ’60s, in Rome and the vicinity. It was a great period in life. I was very influenced by their stuff.
  • Everybody has certain things they wish they hadn’t done in life. They wish they hadn’t kicked their dog when they were ten or something.
  • I’ve been through my womanizer part of my life. There was a point when it was an illness, just compulsive, but that’s behind me now. I’ve never considered myself addicted to anything, but if I was, that was it.
  • [speaking in 2007 about troubled actress June Fairchild] My heart sank when I heard of what had become of June. There are organizations that can help her but I’m sure she could also use a friendly face right now. I’d really like to meet her.
  • I kind of make a film for myself to sort of express myself.
  • Why am I a star? It can’t be because of looks.
  • When I was a kid, I thought movies just came from air. I thought they just appeared.
  • I love stories about women.
  • I always thought of myself as a character actor. I never thought of myself as a leading man.
  • Plagiarism is always the biggest thing in Hollywood.
  • [characterizing his relationship with Roxanne Tunis] It didn’t mean anything; it was just an affair. I was young and . . . anyway she was a stand-in and extra on the show, and she was really crazy about me, and always hanging out in my dressing room.
  • It’s much more fun to play something you’re nothing like than what you are… It’s much easier to hide yourself in a character.
  • I grew up with J. Edgar Hoover. He was the G-man, a hero to everybody, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation was the big, feared organization. He was ahead of his time as far as building up forensic evidence and fingerprinting. But he took down a lot of innocent people, too.
  • My grandfather lived to be late 90s on one side and on the other side, 70s or something. And my father died young, at 63. But he didn’t take very good care of himself.
  • [on home pornography] The ultimate turn-on.
  • I was always respectful of people who were deeply religious because I always felt that if they gave themselves to it, then it had to be important to them. But if you can go through life without it, that’s OK, too. It’s whatever suits you.
  • [answering David Letterman’s declarative question, “You have seven children?”] Uh, at least.
  • Crimes against children are the most heinous crime. That, for me, would be a reason for capital punishment because children are innocent and need the guidance of an adult society.
  • Alfred Hitchcock once told me, when I was analyzing a lot of things about his pictures, ‘Clint, you must remember, it’s only a movie.’
  • [in 1975 on Sondra Locke] I never knew I could love somebody so much, and feel so peaceful about it at the same time.
  • I tried being reasonable, I didn’t like it.
  • Every movie I make teaches me something. That’s why I keep making them.
  • [on director Arthur Lubin] We spent a lot of time together, traveled together. He liked me a lot; got me into the talent program at Universal, gave me a lot of breaks. Bought me some nice clothes, too. That’s when people started wondering about us!
  • [on misrepresentation of his early work] My parts ranged from one-liners to four-liners, but to look at some of the billings in TV Guide these days, you’d think I co-starred in those films.
  • [about Patrick McGilligan’s unauthorized biography of him, 2002] I don’t know if this is the same book that came out in England, but if it is, it’s just very factually inaccurate. He has me involved with women I’ve never met and attending schools I’ve never gone to – and there was a photograph supposedly of me that wasn’t me. The stories about my father weren’t true. There were incidents described that never took place; I’ve never broken a window with a ball peen hammer in my life. If you can’t even get the little stuff right, then how are you going to get the big stuff right? But I don’t want to talk about it too much, because I hate even giving it credence. It’s a very mean-spirited book. I don’t care if you write something bad about me, as long as it’s true. I’m not Mr. Evangelical Pure-as-the-snow. I just want the true (stories) out. They’re fair game. But when they’re made up, they’re not fair game.
  • [press statement in response to claims made by ex-significant other Sondra Locke, 4/27/89] I adamantly deny and deeply resent the accusation that either one of those abortions or the tubal ligation were done at my demand, request or even suggestion. As to the abortions, I told Locke that whether to have children or terminate her pregnancies was a decision entirely hers. Particularly with regard to the tubal ligation, I encouraged Locke to make her own decision after she had consulted with a physician about the appropriateness of and the necessity for that surgical procedure.
  • [to Steve Kroft, why he refuses to say how many children he has] Well, ’cause I – you – they’re – there are other people that are involved there and they’re vulnerable people. I can protect myself, but they can’t.
  • My father used to say to me, ‘Show ’em what you can do, and don’t worry about what you’re gonna get. Say you’ll work for free and make yourself invaluable’.
  • [after the Carmel city council refused his architectural plans for a downtown construction] They don’t know who they’re fuckin’ with. I’ll build that damn building the way I want it if I have to run the fucking city council to do it.
  • I like the image of the piano player: the piano player sits down, plays, tells his story, and then gets up and leaves – letting the music speak for itself.
  • There’s a rebel lying deep in my soul. Anytime anybody tells me the trend is such and such, I go the opposite direction.
  • The stronger the participation of the female characters, the better the movie. They knew that in the old days, when women stars were equally as important as men.
  • Extremism is so easy. You’ve got your position and that’s it. It doesn’t take much thought. And when you go far enough to the right,you meet the same idiots coming around from the left.
  • I’ve done war movies because they’re always loaded with drama and conflict. But as far as actual participation … it’s one of those things that should be done with a lot of thought, if it needs to be done. Self-protection is a very important thing for nations, but I just don’t like to see it.
  • [on his planned remake of A Star Is Born (1937)] I talked about that for a while with Warner Brothers’ people and we’re still playing with that idea. But the problem at the beginning was they were more infatuated with just the idea of the casting. They were talking about having Beyoncé Knowles in it, and she was very popular, but she also is very active and it’s hard to get a time scheduled, so we never could get that worked out. But I’m still playing with the idea.
  • [on surviving a plane crash in the early 1950s] They had one plane, a Douglas AD, sort of a torpedo bomber of the World War II vintage, and I thought I’d hitch on that. Everything went wrong. Radios went out. Oxygen ran out. And finally we ran out of fuel up around Point Reyes, California, and went in the ocean. So we went swimming. It was late October, November. Very cold water. I found out many years later that it was a white shark breeding ground, but I’m glad I didn’t know that at the time or I’d have just died.
  • I don’t believe in pessimism. If something doesn’t come out the way you want, forge ahead. If you think it’s going to rain, it will.
  • [on Bruce Surtees] He was fearless. He wasn’t afraid to give you sketchy lighting if you asked for it. He didn’t believe in flat light or just bright, ‘Rexall drugstore’ lighting, which a lot of times you can get if you get somebody that isn’t very imaginative. He was perfect for me, because we didn’t have very big budgets in those days. He’d made dollies by towing a blanket across the floor with the cameraman sitting on it.
  • [on directing Leonardo DiCaprio as J. Edgar Hoover] He could make a lot of money making mechanical genre pictures but he wants to be challenged. And it’s much more of a challenge to play someone who doesn’t have the slightest thing in common with you.
  • I would never have been able to pass the Bill Clinton-Gary Hart test. No one short of Mother Teresa could pass.
  • [on the Rocky (1976) movies] I loved the first one. I always admired Sylvester Stallone’s tenacity to go ahead and get that made.
  • If you believe in reincarnation you’re putting too much on the other side. I believe you have just one shot at life, and you should do the best you can with that shot. And I suppose you should be thankful that you’ve been given the ability to do certain things in life, and not be greedy enough to want to stay around forever.
  • [on death] I don’t think older people think about it that much, my mother was 97. She passed away a few years back. The only thing she ever said to me, toward the last, she said, ‘I want out of here, I am tired.’ And I said ‘No, no, three more years. We get the century mark.’ I figured I could coax her into more after that, but when she finally did pass away, she couldn’t talk because she had had a stroke. They said do you want to be resuscitated for while, and she said ‘no.’ So, I had to grant her that wish. She had no fear and I think as you get older — you probably have more fear as a younger person than you do as an older person. Because as an older person you have stacked up a lot of background and time-in-grade, so to speak, so you are probably thinking what the hell ‘I have had a good time.
  • [in 2002, on Michael Cimino] George Lucas made Howard the Duck (1986), and the guy who made Waterworld (1995) – those films didn’t destroy them. Critics were set up to hate Heaven’s Gate (1980) . . . the picture didn’t work with the public. If it had, it would have been the same as Titanic (1997). “Titanic” worked, so all is forgiven. Certain things may have been his fault. The accolades for The Deer Hunter (1978) probably made him think, “I am a genius, king of the world”. But if you say you’re king of the world then people will root for you to fall . . . I’ve always said that if you’re prepared to accept reviews saying you’re brilliant, you better be prepared to accept reviews saying you’re a burn. The guy calling you a bum may be wrong, but the guy calling you brilliant may be wrong, too. Michael needs to make an intimate, smaller picture, do a film for five or six weeks, with no special effects, flying by the seats of his pants, to not be afraid and pull the trigger.
  • I don’t quite understand this obsession about doing remakes and making television series into feature films. I would rather see them encourage writers with new ideas in all different genres like they used to in the heyday of movies.
  • [on Million Dollar Baby (2004)] It’s a tragedy that could have been written by the Greeks or Shakespeare.
  • [on Angelina Jolie] She’s wonderful. To me, she’s like a throwback to the women in film of the Forties. Not to say women today aren’t great, but back then there was more individuality. They didn’t have the same Botox look. Angelina has that great individuality, her own look and her own style. I think she would have been just as big a name in that era, the same as Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis and Ingrid Bergman.
  • [on a possible return to acting after saying he was giving it up with Gran Torino (2008)] I’m like Jaws 2 (1978): “Just when you think it’s safe to go back in the water…”
  • I keep finding interesting stories, or they come to me, so I’ll keep making movies.
  • [on the possibility of a Dirty Harry (1971) sequel] I’m 78 years old, and you’re pretty well drummed out of the police force by that age. There could be a scenario. I suppose if some mythical writer came out of nowhere and it was the greatest thing on the planet, I’d certainly have to think about it. But it’s not like I’ve ever courted it. I feel like that was an era of my life, and I’ve gone on to other things. I’m not sure about being Dirty Harry again–but who knows?
  • People have lost their sense of humor. In former times we constantly made jokes about different races. You can only tell them today with one hand over your mouth or you will be insulted as a racist. I find that ridiculous. In those earlier days every friendly clique had a ‘Sam the Jew’ or ‘Jose the Mexican’ – but we didn’t think anything of it or have a racist thought. It was just normal that we made jokes based on our nationality or ethnicity. That was never a problem. I don’t want to be politically correct. We’re all spending too much time and energy trying to be politically correct about everything.
  • At this particular time in my life, I’m not doing anything as a moneymaker. It’s like I’m pushing the envelope the other way to see how far we can go to be noncommercial. But I’m definitely not going for the demographics of 13- to 15-year-olds. I didn’t know if Mystic River (2003) would go over at all. I had a hard time getting it financed, to tell you the truth. But I just told Warners the same thing I did with Million Dollar Baby (2004): “I don’t know if this is going to make any money. But, I think I can make a picture that you’d be proud to have in your library.
  • Gene Hackman was interesting because I gave the Unforgiven (1992) script to his agent and he said no, he didn’t want to do anything violent. But I went back to him and said, “I know where you’re coming from. You get to a certain age and I’m there too, where you don’t want to tell a lot of violent stories, but this is a chance to make a great statement”.
  • With Every Which Way But Loose (1978), they gave me the script and I thought, “This is something. This is kinda crazy. But there’s something kind of hip about it. This guy’s out drifting along and his best friend is an orangutan”. I mean, the scenes of talking to an orangutan about your troubles, I’d never seen anything quite like it. He has a romance that falls through, he doesn’t get the girl, and then he goes off with the orangutan. I thought, What could be better? I wouldn’t put it in the time capsule of films you did that you thought were great, but everything’s a challenge.
  • [on Paint Your Wagon (1969)] It wasn’t like Singin’ in the Rain (1952), where it had a cohesive plot line. They started out with a real dramatic story and then made it fluffy. When they changed it around, I tried to bail out. It wasn’t my favorite. I wasn’t particularly nervous about singing on film. My dad was a singer and we’d have sing-arounds. But certainly [Frank Sinatra] wasn’t worried.
  • Having a good person as a foil certainly helps, because acting is an ensemble art form. Clark Gable is only as good as Claudette Colbert in It Happened One Night (1934).
  • There are certain things you have to be realistic about. Dirty Harry would not be on a police department at my age so we’ll move on from that.
  • [on Gran Torino (2008)] That will probably do it for me as far as acting is concerned. You always want to quit while you are ahead. You don’t want to be like a fighter who stays too long in the ring until you’re not performing at your best.
  • [on the retirement of friend and fellow actor Gene Hackman]: It is a sad thing. I know his agent and I saw him recently, and he said, ‘Can’t you talk Gene into coming back?’ I said, ‘I’d love to see him come back, but I think it’s not very nice to ride him.’ He’s too good an actor not to be performing but, by the same token, he probably thinks that’s enough.
  • [on Ambush at Cimarron Pass (1958)] Probably the lousiest western ever made.
  • I like working with actors who don’t have anything to prove.
  • In those days, they’d make interview tests, not acting tests. They’d sit you in front of the camera and talk–just as we’re talking now. I thought I was an absolute clod. It looked pretty good; it was photographed well, but I thought, “If that’s acting, I’m in trouble”. But they signed me up as a contract player–which was a little lower than working in the mailroom.
  • I was tired of playing the nice, clean-cut cowboy in Rawhide (1959), I wanted something earthier. Something different from the old-fashioned Western. You know: Hero rides in, very stalwart, with white hat, man’s beating a horse, hero jumps off, punches man, schoolmarm walks down the street, sees this situation going on, slight conflict with schoolmarm, but not too much. You know schoolmarm and hero will be together in exactly 10 more reels, if you care to sit around and wait, and you know the man beast horse with eventually get comeuppance from hero this guy bushwhacks him in reel nine. But [A Fistful of Dollars (1964)] was different; it definitely had satiric overtones. The hero was an enigmatic figure, and that worked within the context of this picture. In some films, he would be ludicrous. You can’t have a cartoon in the middle of a Renoir.
  • “Macho” was a fashionable word in the 1980s. Everybody was kind of into it, what’s macho and what isn’t macho. I really don’t know what macho is. I never have understood. Does it mean somebody who swaggers around exuding testosterone? And kicks the gate open and runs sprints up and down the street? Or does handsprings or whatever? Or is macho a quiet thing based on your security. I remember shaking hands with Rocky Marciano. He was gentle, he didn’t squeeze your hand. And he had a high voice. But he could knock people around, it was a given. That’s macho. Muhammad Ali is the same. If you talked with him in his younger years, he spoke gently. He wasn’t kicking over chairs. I think some of the most macho people are the gentlest.
  • [on Sergio Leone] I spun off Sergio and he spun off me. I think we worked well together. I like his compositions. He has a very good eye. I liked him, I liked his sense of humor, but I feel it was mutual. He liked dealing with the kind of character I was putting together.
  • [on John Wayne] I gave him a piece of material that I thought had potential for us to do as a younger guy and an older guy. He wrote me back critical of it. He had seen High Plains Drifter (1973), and he didn’t think that represented Americana like She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) and other John Ford westerns. I never answered him.
  • [on the Iraq war] I wasn’t for going in there. Only because democracy isn’t something that you get overnight. I don’t think America got democracy overnight. It’s something we had to fight for and believe in.
  • [on President George W. Bush] You’ve got to admire somebody who stands up for what they believe regardless of how the polls go. A lot of presidents do everything by the polls. They do a focus group then all of a sudden they say, “OK, that’s what I’m going to be for because that’s where focus group is leading me.
  • [on the Iraq war] My druthers would have been, “Get a more benevolent dictator and stick him in. You know, try somebody a little less mean.” You don’t go in there and fire the army. The army’s got to do something. When you fire ’em, you leave them all unemployed. Worst thing in the world. Just get somebody else who they respect and bring him on your side. That’s one way of doing it.
  • Life is a constant class, and once you think you know it all, you’re due to decay. You’re due to slide. I have to keep challenging myself and try something I haven’t done before. The studios aren’t always happy with that. When I wanted to make Mystic River (2003), the studio said, “Uh-oh, it’s so dark.” And I said, “Well, it’s important. And it’s a nice story.” Then the next movie, Million Dollar Baby (2004), they said, “Who wants to see a picture about a girl boxing?” And I said, “It’s really a father-daughter love story. Boxing just happens to be what’s going on.” They didn’t have much faith. So there are always obstacles and people afraid to take risks. That’s why you end up with remakes of old TV shows as movies. But playing it safe is what’s risky, because nothing new comes out of it.
  • As for me, I like being behind the camera instead of in front of it. I can wear what I want. Will I act again? I never say never. I like doing things where I can stretch and go in different directions. I’m not looking to take it easy. Like the Marines on Iwo Jima, I understand that if you really want something, you have to be ready to fight.
  • I guess if you see both of the movies [Flags of Our Fathers (2006) and Letters from Iwo Jima (2006)] together, they sum up as an antiwar film. Whether it’s about territory or religion, war is horrifyingly and depressingly archaic. But I didn’t set out to make a war movie. I cared about those three fellows – Bradley, Hayes and Gagnon [John H. Bradley, Ira H. Hayes, ‘René A. Gagnon’] – the headliners on that war-bond circus. The young men were taken off the front lines, wined and dined, introduced to movie stars. But it felt wrong to them.
  • The Americans who went to Iwo Jima knew it would be a tough fight, but they always believed they’d win. The Japanese were told they wouldn’t come home – they were being sent to die for the Emperor. People have made a lot out of that very different cultural approach. But as I got into the storytelling for the two movies [Flags of Our Fathers (2006) and Letters from Iwo Jima (2006)], I realised that the 19-year-olds from both sides had the same fears. They all wrote poignant letters home saying: “I don’t want to die.” They were all going through the same thing, despite the cultural differences.
  • I was a teenager when the battle of Iwo Jima took place. I remember hearing about the bond drive and the need to maintain the war effort. Back then, people had just come through 10 years of a Depression, and they were used to working for everything. I still have an image of someone coming to our house when I was about six years old, offering to cut and stack the wood in our back yard if my mother would make him a sandwich.
  • Every movie I make teaches me something, and that’s why I keep making them. I’m at that stage of life when I could probably stop and just hit golf balls. But in filming these two movies about Iwo Jima, I learnt about war and about character. I also learnt a lot about myself.
  • I also wonder how I got this far in life. Growing up, I never knew what I wanted to do. I was not a terribly good student or a very vivacious, outgoing person. I was just kind of a backward kid. I grew up in various little towns and ended up in Oakland, California, going to a trade school. I didn’t want to be an actor, because I thought an actor had to be an extrovert – somebody who loved to tell jokes and talk and be a raconteur. And I was something of an introvert. My mother used to say: “You have a little angel on your shoulder.” I guess she was surprised I grew up at all, never mind that I got to where I am. The best I can do is quote a line from Unforgiven (1992): “Deserve’s got nothing to do with it.”
  • Guys I thought of as heroes were like Joe Louis and, maybe during the war, there was General [George S. Patton], of course, and maybe [Dwight D. Eisenhower], who was the head of the Allied forces. And Gary Cooper. There were just a handful of men and a handful of women. Now, people become stars who are just heiresses or something.
  • I always cry when I watch myself on screen.
  • If you want a guarantee, buy a toaster.
  • I never considered myself a cowboy, because I wasn’t. But I guess when I got into cowboy gear I looked enough like one to convince people that I was.
  • [on John Huston] It’s another aspect of the character that pleased me: he was interested in other things besides his art. He liked women, gambling, living the high life. He could have a life parallel to his work. I could identify with this type of behavior. But, because of this very fact, he became attracted more and more by other things, so that what interested him in life moved him away from his art to the point that he nearly lived a tragedy. And the tragedy brings him back to reality. If you study Huston’s life, you realize that at the age of nineteen he thought he didn’t have long to live because of a heart defect a doctor has notified him of as a result of a misdiagnosis. It drove him to elaborate a personal philosophy according to which he would profit from life to the maximum. He didn’t take care of himself – he was a confirmed smoker, a heavy drinker – and yet he lived to be more than eighty. Paul Newman spoke to me about him when we were acting at the same time, each in a different movie, in Tucson, Arizona. He was starring in The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972) and I was doing Joe Kidd (1972) with John Sturges. Huston drank martinis and smoked cigars all night long, slept from one o’clock to four o’clock in the morning because he was an insomniac, did everything he shouldn’t do to live to be old, and yet he died at a very great age! It was the same thing with John Wayne, who was first of all the opposite of a health fanatic.
  • [when asked if he has disappointed his conservative fans by directing Million Dollar Baby (2004)] Well, I got a big laugh out of that. These people are always bitching about “Hollyweird”, and then they start bitching about this film. Are they all so mad because The Passion of the Christ (2004) is only up for the makeup award and a couple of other minor things? Extremism is so easy. You’ve got your position, and that’s it. It doesn’t take much thought. And when you go far enough to the right you meet the same idiots coming around from the left.
  • When I was doing The Bridges of Madison County (1995), I said to myself, “This romantic stuff is really tough. I can’t wait to get back to shooting and killing.”
  • [when asked if he is still registered as a Republican] Yes, I am. I started – I enrolled as a Republican in 1951 when Dwight D. Eisenhower was running. And I was in the military. I was a fan of his. And that’s how I got started off. I was never – my parents were mixed, I think one Republican, one Democrat, so I didn’t have any grand-pappies to influence me.
  • [on former President Ronald Reagan] Yes, I liked him very much. When he was a former president of the Screen Actors Guild, I don’t think he had the vast support that a lot of other presidents have had. So I don’t know why that is, it’s just the nature of things.
  • I’ve actually had people come up to me and ask me to autograph their guns.
  • I’ve always had the ability to say to the audience, watch this if you like, and if you don’t, take a hike.
  • Whatever success I’ve had is due to a lot of instinct and a little luck.
  • My involvement goes deeper than acting or directing. I love every aspect of the creation of motion pictures and I guess I’m committed to it for life.
  • I like to play the line and not wander too far to either side. If a guy has just had a bad day in the mines and wants to see a good shoot ’em up, that’s great.
  • Maybe I’m getting to the age when I’m starting to be senile or nostalgic or both, but people are so angry now. You used to be able to disagree with people and still be friends. Now you hear these talk shows, and everyone who believes differently from you is a moron and an idiot – both on the Right and the Left.
  • I’ve done a lot of violent movies, especially in the early days. My recent efforts, like The Bridges of Madison County (1995), weren’t too violent. In recent years I’ve done less, and, yes, I am concerned about violence in film. In ’92, when I did Unforgiven (1992), which is a film that had a very anti- violence and anti-gun play – anti-romanticizing of gun play theme, I remember that Gene Hackman was concerned about it, and we both discussed the issue of too much violence in films. It’s escalated ninety times since Dirty Harry (1971) and those films were made.
  • [on World War II] I feel terrible for both sides in that war and in all wars. A lot of innocent people get sacrificed. It’s not about winning or losing, but mostly about the interrupted lives of young people.
  • I’ve thought about retiring for years now. When I did Play Misty for Me (1971) in 1970, I thought that if I could pull this off maybe I could step behind the camera, and it would be time to see the end of me. Every year I have threatened to do that – and here I am. So it may come sooner than you think.
  • I’ve always supported a certain amount of gun control. I think California has always had a mandatory waiting period, so we were never concerned about it like the rest of the country. Some states didn’t have any at all. So I’ve always supported that. I think it’s very important that guns don’t get in the wrong hands, and, yes, I would support most of that. I don’t know too much about trigger locks. I’ve never really discussed that with anyone. But I do feel that guns – it’s very important to keep them out of the hands of felons or anyone who might be crazy with it.
  • They say marriages are made in Heaven. But so is thunder and lightning.
  • This film cost $31 million. With that kind of money I could have invaded some country.
  • The reason I became a Republican is because [Dwight D. Eisenhower] was running. A hero from World War II, a charismatic individual, a military man, a non-attorney – even then I liked that! I was a very young person voting for the first time. A lot of people joke that a conservative is a liberal who’s made his first $100,000 and then decides,”Wait a second, I want to save this, why are they taxing it away?”. Today the country’s in kind of a turmoil over taxing. Being raised in the thirties, watching my parents work hard to make ends meet, with jobs scarce, and then the war years – it tends to make a person a little more fiscally conscious than if you’ve been born into a wealthier family. You know, if you go to most people who are self-made and ask them what their political philosophy is, usually they’re a little more conservative than people who had a better start.
  • I don’t believe in pessimism. If something doesn’t come up the way you want, forge ahead.
  • I don’t like the wimp syndrome. No matter how ardent a feminist may be, if she is a heterosexual female, she wants the strength of a male companion as well as the sensitivity. The most gentle people in the world are macho males, people who are confident in their masculinity and have a feeling of well-being in themselves. They don’t have to kick in doors, mistreat women, or make fun of gays.
  • There’s a rebel lying deep in my soul. Anytime anybody tells me the trend is such and such, I go the opposite direction. I hate the idea of trends. I hate imitation; I have a reverence for individuality. I got where I am by coming off the wall. I’ve always considered myself too individualistic to be either right-wing or left-wing.
  • [on how he decided to do A Fistful of Dollars (1964)] I’d done Rawhide (1959) for about five years. The agency called and asked if I was interested in doing a western in Italy and Spain. I said, “Not particularly.” They said, “Why don’t you give the script a quick look?” Well, I was kind of curious, so I read it, and I recognized it right away as Yojimbo (1961), a Kurosawa [Akira Kurosawa] film I had liked a lot. Over I went, taking the poncho with me – yeah the cape was my idea.
  • None of the pictures I take a risk in cost a lot, so it doesn’t take much for them to turn a profit. We don’t deal in big budgets. We know what we want and we shoot it and we don’t waste anything. I never understand these films that cost twenty, thirty million dollars when they could be made for half that. Maybe it’s because no one cares. We care.
  • You have to trust your instincts. There’s a moment when an actor has it, and he knows it. Behind the camera you can feel the moment even more clearly. And once you’ve got it, once you feel it, you can’t second-guess yourself. You can find a million reasons why something didn’t work. But if it feels right, and it looks right, it works. Without sounding like a pseudointellectual dipshit, it’s my responsibility to be true to myself. If it works for me, it’s right.
  • I think people jumped to conclusions about Dirty Harry (1971) without giving the character much thought, trying to attach right-wing connotations to the film that were never really intended. Both the director [Don Siegel] and I thought it was a basic kind of drama – what do you do when you believe so much in law and order and coming to the rescue of people and you just have five hours to solve a case? That kind of impossible effort was fun to portray, but I think it was interpreted as a pro-police point of view, as a kind of rightist heroism, at a time in American history when police officers were looked down on as “pigs”, as very oppressive people – I’m sure there are some who are, and a lot who aren’t. I’ve met both kinds.
  • In The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Kincaid’s a peculiar guy. Really, he’s kind of a lonely individual. He’s sort of a lost soul in mid-America. I’ve been that guy.
  • I feel very close to the western. There are not too many American art forms that are original. Most are derived from European art forms. Other than the western and jazz or blues, that’s all that’s really original.
  • The plan was, when I first started directing in the 1970s, to get more involved in production and directing so at some point in my life, when I decided I didn’t want to act anymore, I didn’t have to suit up.
  • Most people who’ll remember me, if at all, will remember me as an action guy, which is OK. There’s nothing wrong with that. But there will be a certain group which will remember me for the other films, the ones where I took a few chances. At least, I like to think so.
  • One of the first films I went to – I went with my dad because my mother didn’t want to go see a war movie – was Sergeant York (1941). My dad was a big admirer of Sergeant York stories from [World War I]. It was directed by Howard Hawks. That was when I first became aware of movies, who made them, who was involved.
  • [1985] My old drama coach used to say, “Don’t just do something, stand there.” Gary Cooper wasn’t afraid to do nothing.
  • [2005 Academy Awards acceptance speech for Best Director for Million Dollar Baby (2004)] Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. I’d like to thank my wife, who is my best pal down here. And my mother, who was here with me in 1993. She was only 84 then. But she’s here with me again tonight. And she just — so, at 96, I’m thanking her for her genes. It was a wonderful adventure. It takes a — to make a picture in 37 days, it takes a well-oiled machine. And that well-oiled machine is the crew — the cast, of course, you’ve met a lot of them. But there’s still Margo and Anthony and Michael and Mike and Jay and everybody else who was so fabulous in this cast. And the crew, Campanelli. Billy Coe and, of course, Tom Stern, who is fantastic. And Henry Bumstead, the great Henry Bumstead who is the head of our crack geriatrics team. And Henry and Jack Taylor, and Dick Goddard [Richard C. Goddard], all those guys. Walt and everybody. I can’t think of everybody right now. I’m drawing a blank right now. But, Warren, you were right. And thank you, for your confidence earlier in the evening. I’m just lucky to be here. Lucky to be still working. And I watched Sidney Lumet, who is 80, and I figure, “I’m just a kid. I’ll just — I’ve got a lot of stuff to do yet.” So thank you all very much. Appreciate it.
  • [on trying to get Million Dollar Baby (2004) made at Warner Bros.] They might have been a little more interested if I said I wanted to do “Dirty Harry 9” or something.
  • Plastic surgery used to be a thing where older people would try to go into this dream world of being 28 years old again. But now, in Hollywood, even people at 28 are having work done. Society has made us believe you should look like an 18-year-old model all your life. But I figure I might as well just be what I am.
  • I liked the Million Dollar Baby (2004)’ script a lot. Warner Bros. said the project had been submitted to them and they’d passed on it. I said, “But I like it.” They said, “Well, it’s a boxing movie.” And I said, “It’s not a boxing movie in my opinion. It’s a father-daughter love story, and it’s a lot of other things besides a boxing movie.” They hemmed and hawed and finally said that if I wanted to take it, maybe they’d pay for the domestic rights only. After that, I’d be on my own. We took it to a couple of other studios, and they turned it down, much like Mystic River (2003) was turned down, the exact same pattern. People who kept calling and saying, “Come on, work with us on stuff.” I’d give it to them, and they’d go, “Uh, we were thinking more in terms of Dirty Harry coming out of retirement.” And who knows? Maybe when it comes out they’ll be proven right.
  • I think I’m on a track of doing pictures nobody wants to do, that they’re all afraid of. I guess it’s the era we live in, where they’re doing remakes of The Dukes of Hazzard (1979) and other old television shows. I must say, I’m not a negative person, but sometimes I wonder what kind of movies people are going to be making 10 years from now if they follow this trajectory. When I grew up there was such a variety of movies being made. You could go see Sergeant York (1941) or Sitting Pretty (1948) or Sullivan’s Travels (1941), dozens of pictures, not to mention all the great B movies. Now, they’re looking for whatever the last hit was. If it’s The Incredibles (2004), they want ‘The Double Incredibles.’ My theory is they ought to corral writers into writers’ buildings like they used to and start out with fresh material.
  • At the studios, everybody’s into sequels or remakes or adaptations of old TV shows. I don’t know if it’s because of the corporate environment or they’re just out of ideas. Pretty soon, they’re going to be wanting to do one of Rawhide (1959).
  • You know when you think of a particular director, you think you would have liked to be with them on one particular film and not necessarily on some other one.
  • …in America, instead of making the audience come to the film, the idea seems to be for you to go to the audience. They come up with the demographics for the film and then the film is made and sold strictly to that audience. Not to say that it’s all bad, but it leaves a lot of the rest of us out of it. To me cinema can be a much more friendly world if there’s a lot of things to choose from.
  • Again, after you’ve gone through all the various processes and the film comes out and is very successful, you’re almost afraid to revisit it. You want to save it for a rainy day.
  • There’s really no way to teach you how to act, but there is a way to teach you how to teach yourself to act. That’s kind of what it is; once you learn the little tricks that work for you, pretty soon you find yourself doing that.
  • I think kids are natural actors. You watch most kids; if they don’t have a toy they’ll pick up a stick and make a toy out of it. Kids will daydream all the time.
  • [on directing] Most people like the magic of having it take a long time and be difficult . . . but I like to move along, I like to keep the actors feeling like they’re going somewhere, I like the feeling of coming home after every day and feeling like you’ve done something and you’ve progressed somewhere. And to go in and do one shot after lunch and another one maybe at six o’clock and then go home is not my idea of something to do.
  • And I like to direct the same way that I like to be directed.
  • Nowadays you’d have many battles before you blow it up, but eventually you’d take it down. And that’s okay, I don’t heavily quarrel with that, but for me personally, having made films for years and directed for 33 years, it just seems to me that I long for people who want to see a story and see character development. Maybe we’ve dug it out and there’s not really an audience for that, but that’s not for me to really worry about.
  • Right now, the state of the movies in America, there’s an awful lot of people hanging on wires and floating across things and comic book characters and what have you. There seems to be a lot of big business in that, a nice return on some of those.
  • I love every aspect of the creation of motion pictures and I guess I am committed to it for life.
  • I like the libertarian view, which is to leave everyone alone. Even as a kid, I was annoyed by people who wanted to tell everyone how to live.
  • [what he says after a take, instead of “Cut!”] That’s enough of that shit.
  • [to Eli Wallach prior to starting work on The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)] Never trust anyone on an Italian movie. I know about these things. Stay away from special effects and explosives.
  • [on Sondra Locke] She plays the victim very well. Unfortunately she had cancer and so she plays that card.

Clint Eastwood Important Facts

  • $6,000,000
  • $6,000,000
  • $7,000,000
  • $10,000,000
  • $6,000,000
  • $5,000,000
  • $5,000,000
  • $30,000,000 (includes salary and 60% of all profits)
  • $16,000,000 (after 15% take from the gross)
  • $1,000,000
  • $750,000
  • $600,000
  • $850,000
  • $1,000,000
  • $400,000 + 25% of gross
  • $20,000
  • $250,000 + 10% of Western Hemisphere profits
  • $50,000
  • $15,000
  • $700 per episode (season 1)
  • $750
  • $750
  • $75
  • $300
  • Of his 8 or more children, the only one who lived with him growing up is daughter Morgan Eastwood, born when Clint was 66.
  • According to the unpublished manuscript “Take Ten” by Ria Brown, Anita Lhoest at one point became pregnant with Clint’s child, but went ahead and had an abortion.
  • To date, 24 of the 46 films Eastwood has starred in depict violence against women. He’s made 16 films in which a female character is killed, 12 films depicting rape or attempted rape, and 11 films showing a female character battered.
  • Left-handed.
  • Biographer Patrick McGilligan recounted that “the people who know Clint best suspect there are other families in his closet” in addition to his verified children, editorializing “If Kimber Tunis was kept secret for twenty-five years, and the Washington woman for forty, might there not be others?”.
  • With the exception his cameo as Silvana Mangano’s husband in the obscure Italian film The Witches (1967), Space Cowboys (2000) is the only time Eastwood has played a formally married man. His characters are usually single and meet their potential love interest during the course of the movie. Other times he’s played divorcées (Tightrope (1984), Heartbreak Ridge (1986), The Rookie (1990)), widowers (Dirty Harry (1971), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), Gran Torino (2008), Trouble with the Curve (2012)) or men who are separated from their wives (True Crime (1999)) but never actually married.
  • His mother Ruth Wood often brought her own bedsheets when she stayed overnight at Clint’s. Sondra Locke said she never observed the two of them really “talking.” Most odd was the day she and Clint arrived at Rising River Ranch and on the kitchen counter lay a few dollars and change with a note from Ruth: “We made a long-distance phone call. Have fun. Mom.” Clint stuffed the money in his pocket and looked impressed that she’d paid.
  • Although Clint implies that he grew up poor by frequently dropping references to the Great Depression, actually his family lived in a very wealthy part of town, had a swimming pool, belonged to the country club, and each parent drove their own car.
  • After meeting Sondra Locke at a luncheon in 1994, feminist activist Gloria Steinem said she would orchestrate a nationwide campaign to ban Clint Eastwood films.
  • Went to the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in 2013 and 2015.
  • Known to be passive-aggressive in private life, communicating only by gesture, inference, and what isn’t said or done.
  • While promoting the reality series Mrs. Eastwood & Company (2012) on E!, Clint’s then-wife Dina Eastwood told Chelsea Handler: “I hope we’re still married when this is over!”. Two weeks after the show premiered, Clint and Dina separated.
  • De-facto producer of Ratboy (1986) even though his name is nowhere to be found in the credits.
  • Was asked for permission about his name being used for Marty (Michael J. Fox) in Back to the Future Part III (1990). He consented and was said to be tickled by the homage.
  • Had hair transplants in the mid-1980s. After the surgery when his head was wrapped in white bandages, he said he’d been in a bicycle accident.
  • A bachelor again at age 84, he’s been seen in the company of photographer Erica Tomlinson-Fisher and restaurant hostess Christina Sandera in recent times, and has reportedly bought homes for both women.
  • His net worth was estimated at $375 million prior to his 2014 divorce from Dina Eastwood. No terms of financial settlement were revealed in the divorce decree, so it’s unclear where his personal fortune currently stands.
  • Eastwood’s image was untouched by personal scandal of any sort until late April 1989, when his girlfriend of 14 years, Sondra Locke, made it known to the world that she had undergone two abortions and a tubal ligation “at his specific request,” she claimed. (“I had done the unthinkable. I had publicly exposed him,” she commented in retrospect.) The breakup with Locke opened the floodgates to investigative journalism about Eastwood. In July 1989, the National Enquirer reported the existence of a love child he fathered in 1964, and in February 1990, the Star tabloid became the first publication to link Eastwood’s name with Jacelyn Reeves–who, it turns out, was the mother of two of his unmentionable offspring. Reputable news outlets wouldn’t touch this information for years after. When Locke’s memoirs were published in 1997, she was shut out of most venues to promote the book. “Sadly, it was well suppressed by Clint and WB. […] I was sad that it did not get the attention I feel it deserved,” she said in 2013. “Clint: The Life and Legend,” a deeply unflattering biography by film historian Patrick McGilligan, was published in Great Britain in 1999, but did not make its way to the United States until 2002, having bounced around publishers for three years amid rumored threats from Eastwood’s attorneys. Los Angeles Times critic Allen Barra called it “perhaps the most thoroughly demythologizing book yet written on modern Hollywood.” On Christmas Eve 2002, Eastwood’s lawyer Marshall Grossman filed a $10 million libel suit against McGilligan and St. Martin’s Press in San Jose, California. Strangely enough, out of all the sordid stories in the book, the libel claim only covered three points, according to news reports: (1) That Eastwood once punched his first wife Maggie Johnson in the face; (2) That Eastwood is an atheist; (3) That Eastwood used a romantic relationship with an officer’s daughter in order to avoid being sent overseas during the Korean War. The suit was settled in 2004 without any public disclosure; McGilligan and the publisher admitted no wrongdoing and there was no penalty. A revised and updated version of “Clint” was published in 2015, with most of the original content intact. The three cited passages had been excised, and a few other modifications amounting to less than two pages were made. McGilligan says many of things he reported in the first edition are now taken for granted, and one of the reasons Eastwood sued him was an obvious attempt to find out his sources.
  • He started lifting weights at 19, when weight training and bodybuilding were relegated to back-alley sweatshops with black-iron plates.
  • Personal physician Dr. Harry Demopoulos told Muscle & Fitness magazine in 1991 that Clint never eats fat, takes his antioxidants faithfully, works out like a demon and gets plenty of sleep, which is an area that is often neglected in a fitness program.
  • Completely avoids soda and rarely drinks alcohol.
  • Without taking any acting jobs, he earned $17 million for the period of a year ending in 2010: $6 million apiece for directing Invictus (2009) and Hereafter (2010), $4 million in DVD royalties for Gran Torino (2008), plus $1 million in royalties from earlier projects.
  • Has no middle name.
  • Clint’s first wife Maggie encouraged him to marry Frances Fisher, with whom she and her kids got along great. Fisher was aware of Roxanne and Kimber Tunis, but it was only after giving birth to Eastwood’s child that she discovered – not through him – that he had yet another brood with Jacelyn Reeves. Hence it did not come as a surprise to anyone in the know when they didn’t get married and split up rather abruptly. Frances later had a face-to-face encounter with Reeves at the funeral of one of Clint’s golf buddies.
  • The only biographical book he’s ever authorized is “Clint Eastwood: A Biography” (1996) by Richard Schickel, which contains extensive plot summary for each of Eastwood’s movies but leaves his private life little documented by comparison.
  • Ferris Webster was Eastwood’s film editor for many years, working for him exclusively, but the two had a falling out during postproduction on Firefox (1982).
  • Has always been allergic to horses, which is why, in his westerns, he is rarely seen in close-up on horseback.
  • A July 1968 item by Dorothy Manners gives insight to Eastwood’s rapid rise to stardom: “Clint Eastwood is on his way to earning $750,000 per picture while the proverbial man in the street is still asking, ‘Who’s Clint Eastwood?’. He’s the hottest property sight unseen (almost) in Hollywood today.”.
  • Cited under the pseudonym Mr. Smith in “Life Extension: A Practical Scientific Approach” by Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw.
  • Turned down the role of Archie Gates in Three Kings (1999) which went to 31-years-younger George Clooney.
  • In addition to his multiple houses, he has a well-appointed apartment behind his studio office in Burbank. In Carmel, he used to keep an apartment on the third floor of a building two doors down from the Hog’s Breath Inn.
  • His first onscreen kiss was with Carol Channing in The First Traveling Saleslady (1956).
  • Doesn’t use text messaging and prefers landline when he talks on the phone.
  • Turned down The Bucket List (2007).
  • Avid tennis player in the past.
  • According to author Patrick McGilligan, in mid-1993 Eastwood was confronted with the claims of a woman in her late thirties, originally from Washington State, who had researched her adoption and ascertained that he was her biological father. After having his lawyers and business managers check her out, the story goes, Eastwood agreed to have dinner with the woman, who was married to a rich man and was happy to guard her anonymity – she just wanted to meet him – and promised to stay in touch. (It is worth noting that although McGilligan’s book is touted as being meticulously researched, it does contain easily provable errors concerning important people in Eastwood’s life, e.g. ex-partner Sondra Locke’s year of birth, son Kyle Eastwood’s marital status at a given time and the gender of Clint’s only grandchild of record, Graylen Eastwood.) In a 2012 documentary that aired on French television, McGilligan stated on camera: “We don’t know how many children Clint has had with how many women.” A now-defunct website launched in 2006 by a man claiming to be Eastwood’s cousin said he also has a son named Lesly, born 13 February 1959 to Rosina Mary Glen. Publicly, Eastwood has not addressed any of these claims or been asked to comment on them by the media.
  • Past cars have included Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz and GMC Yukon XL. As of 2016 he is still driving at 86 years old and his vehicle of choice is an unmarked Ford Crown Victoria.
  • Used to be buddies with Robert Donner, George Fargo and Chill Wills.
  • Parodied by Bill Hader on Saturday Night Live (1975).
  • One of his properties, the Rising River Ranch (located in Burney, CA) was formerly owned by the late Bing Crosby.
  • Developed his movie voice by listening to audio recordings of Marilyn Monroe. He said he’d noticed Monroe’s breathy whisper and he thought it was very sexy and since it had worked so well for her, he decided he’d “do” a male version of it himself.
  • Accounts from inside the courtroom in the fraud case brought against him by Sondra Locke noted that Eastwood spoke in a barely audible tone on the witness stand and was unable to cross-reference. In one deposition he used the phrase “I have no records on that” 79 times.
  • A slow bloomer in almost every regard, Eastwood didn’t leave high school until he was 19 (in an era where most students graduated at 16 or 17), got his first important film role at age 34, waited until he turned 38 to start a family, made his directorial debut at 41, and received his first Oscar nomination when he was nearly 63.
  • Was interested in the prospect of playing Hank Rearden in a cinematic adaptation of “Atlas Shrugged” that was in development by Albert S. Ruddy in the early ’70s.
  • Had a long-held obsession with New York Times film critic Pauline Kael because she never liked his work. After her review of The Enforcer (1976), Clint asked a psychiatrist to do an analysis of Kael from her reviews of his past work, which he had memorized verbatim. It concluded that Kael was actually physically attracted to Clint and because she couldn’t have him she hated him. Therefore, it was some sort of vengeance, according to Clint.
  • Admitted to voting for Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956, Richard Nixon in 1968 and 1972, Ronald Reagan in 1980 and 1984, Ross Perot in 1992, and John McCain in 2008.
  • Former father-in-law of Kirk Fox and Jordan Feldstein.
  • On a return air trip from a prearranged tryst in Seattle in September 1951, a two-seated plane on which he was aboard ran out of fuel and crashed into the Pacific Ocean near Point Reyes. Using a life raft, Eastwood and the pilot swam two miles to shore.
  • One of several celebrity endorsers of David Lynch’s Foundation for Consciousness-Based Education and World Peace.
  • On Christmas morning 2001, his daughter Francesca Eastwood and her mother Frances Fisher narrowly escaped a fire that engulfed their rented house in North Vancouver, Canada. Francesca leaped 15 feet from a second-story window into the arms of her mother and a neighbor, and was treated at a hospital for smoke inhalation. Frances was also treated for burns on her hands. Clint flew up to visit them in the hospital and personally thanked his daughter’s rescuers.
  • Former agent is Leonard Hirshan.
  • Wanted to play Charles A. Lindbergh in The Spirit of St. Louis (1957) and penned a letter to director Billy Wilder in October 1954 requesting to meet in person to discuss his potential eligibility for the role. At the time, Eastwood had just done his first screen test for Universal Pictures but had yet to make his acting debut. The role ultimately went to an established star, James Stewart.
  • In an interview with the London Times, Eastwood confessed that he had gained unwanted attention from a 23-year-old schoolteacher when he was 19 and that she stalked him and threatened to kill herself after a one-night stand.
  • Hired a private detective in the early 1980s when his company, Malpaso Productions, began to receive a series of strange, threatening letters addressed to him mailed from various California locations by someone who seemed to have inside knowledge of his life. The trouble was, the detective had an extremely long list of possible Clint enemies and ex-girlfriends but no real clues as to who might be the culprit. After a while suspicion focused on Jane Brolin, an off-and-on paramour of Eastwood’s then married to actor James Brolin. Eastwood scoffed at the idea it was her and thought it might be an actress friend of ex-mistress Roxanne Tunis, seeking some kind of revenge on him. One night he drove around the Hollywood Hills with Fritz Manes, trying to find the assumed woman’s address. He tried to convince Manes that they should burgle her place, and see if the lady’s typewriter matched up with the letters. Manes said no, and the vile letters eventually waxed and waned.
  • Once said that his wide hips were his only physical flaw, except for the chipped tooth he eventually had fixed.
  • Wanted to direct Angels & Demons (2009), but didn’t get the chance because Ron Howard was contractually obligated to direct it because of his contract from The Da Vinci Code (2006).
  • Landed his breakthrough role in A Fistful of Dollars (1964) after Charles Bronson, Rory Calhoun, James Coburn, Henry Fonda, Ty Hardin, Steve Reeves, Tony Russel and Henry Silva all turned it down.
  • At one time, was dating Barbra Streisand.
  • Had a falling out with longtime associate Fritz Manes during the filming of Heartbreak Ridge (1986).
  • Couples in his social circle used to include Merv Griffin & Eva Gabor, Bud Yorkin & Cynthia Sikes, Richard D. Zanuck & Lili Fini Zanuck, Arnold Schwarzenegger & Maria Shriver.
  • Clint and former spouse Maggie Johnson were estranged for nine years and legally separated for six before she filed for divorce in May 1984 (it was finalized that November). She had finally decided to make the split official so she could marry Henry Wynberg, a used car salesman who had once squired Elizabeth Taylor. The Johnson-Wynberg union ended in 1989 after four years, and in 1992 Wynberg married a 19-year-old Costa Rican woman.
  • Has a grandson born in February 1984 named Clinton Eastwood Gaddie through his illegitimate daughter Kimber Tunis (Kimber Eastwood). Clint and Roxanne Tunis are great-grandparents via Kimber’s son.
  • Discovered by director Arthur Lubin during filming of Francis Joins the WACS (1954) on location in Marina, Ca.
  • Early in his career he appeared in a “B” western, Ambush at Cimarron Pass (1958), in which he was billed third and leading lady Margia Dean was billed second. Years later, after Eastwood had become a superstar actor and director, Dean ran into him at a social function and teased him, “Just remember, I got top billing over you”.
  • Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. “World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945- 1985”. Pages 294-302. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
  • Ex-significant other Sondra Locke was legally married to gay sculptor Gordon Anderson the entire time she and Eastwood were living together, and to this day they are still married in name. While house hunting with Locke in the late ’70s, Eastwood introduced himself as “Mr. Anderson,” even when he happened to be wearing a Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (1974) T-shirt. Locke recalled that the sales agents could barely keep a straight face and always looked at their feet when addressing him as such.
  • Along with Orson Welles, Laurence Olivier, Woody Allen, Warren Beatty, Kenneth Branagh and Roberto Benigni, he is one of only seven men to receive Academy Award nominations for both Best Actor and Best Director for the same film: Welles for Citizen Kane (1941), Olivier for Hamlet (1948), Allen for Annie Hall (1977), Beatty for both Heaven Can Wait (1978) and Reds (1981), Branagh for Henry V (1989), Eastwood for Unforgiven (1992) and Benigni for Life Is Beautiful (1997).
  • Ranked #19 in Forbes magazine’s list of the world’s 40 best-paid entertainers, with estimated earnings of $44 million in 1995 and 1996. [September 1996]
  • Had planned to star in Die Hard (1988) and originally owned the rights to the novel “Nothing Lasts Forever” on which the film is based, but opted to make The Dead Pool (1988) instead.
  • He appeared in and directed two Best Picture Academy Award winners: Unforgiven (1992) and Million Dollar Baby (2004). Morgan Freeman also appeared in both films.
  • Has played the same character in more than one film three times: The Man with No Name in the Leone trilogy, Philo Beddoe in the Any Which Way movies and Harry Callahan in the Dirty Harry franchise.
  • A guest speaker at the 2012 Republican National Convention, Eastwood spent much of his speech time on a largely improvised routine addressing an empty chair representing President Barack Obama. It generated many responses and a lot of discussion. Ex-girlfriend Frances Fisher wrote a condemning post on Facebook and suggested Eastwood’s appearance was a publicity stunt to get more tickets sold for his new movie Trouble with the Curve (2012), adding “I’ve seen this act before. And I didn’t buy it. Crazy like a fox. I saw the same act sitting with therapists, mediators and lawyers. […] Even though I am certainly not a Republican, I felt bad for the people who thought this was a good idea.” Several commentators including Bill Maher sidetracked to point out the hypocrisy of Eastwood’s mere presence at the gathering, since the star’s turbulent personal history was the antithesis of the “family values” advocated by Presidential nominee Mitt Romney on the same stage that evening.
  • The character Shane Gooseman (“Goose” for short) from the animated space opera The Adventures of the Galaxy Rangers (1986) was based on him and his screen persona.
  • Attending Cannes premiere of latest film Changeling (2008), a period thriller set in the 1920s. [May 2008]
  • In Cape Town, South Africa, filming Invictus (2009). [March 2009]
  • Father-in-law of Stacy Poitras.
  • Cinematographer Bruce Surtees and actor Geoffrey Lewis are regulars in Eastwood films (he’s directed).
  • Directed two films concurrently in 1973; High Plains Drifter (1973) and Breezy (1973).
  • A former logger, steel furnace stoker and gas station attendant before becoming an actor.
  • His signature character, “The Man With No Name”, is portrayed by Timothy Olyphant as “The Spirit of the West” in Rango (2011).
  • He and Warren Beatty are the only actor-directors to earn Best Actor and Best Director Oscar nominations for the same film two times.
  • According to Robert Daley, the head of Warner Bros. when Eastwood made 15 pictures there, none of those films ever included preview screenings because Clint “doesn’t believe in the preview process”.
  • Although he has been associated with violence throughout his career, he personally detests it and has carefully shown the horrific consequences of violence in films such as Unforgiven (1992), A Perfect World (1993), Absolute Power (1997), Mystic River (2003), Million Dollar Baby (2004) and Gran Torino (2008).
  • He was going to play the villain Two-Face on the Batman (1966) TV series, but the show was canceled before the episode began shooting. He later expressed interest for the same role in Batman Forever (1995).
  • Paul Haggis, who wrote the screenplay for Million Dollar Baby (2004), offered Eastwood the role of Hank Deerfiled in In the Valley of Elah (2007). Eastwood turned it down and recommended Tommy Lee Jones, who went on to receive a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his performance.
  • Turned down the role of K in Men in Black (1997).
  • Five of his movies were nominated for AFI’s 100 Years…100 Movies: Dirty Harry (1971), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), Unforgiven (1992), Mystic River (2003) and Million Dollar Baby (2004). “Unforgiven” made the list at #68, 30 places up from its original rank at #98.
  • Served as President of the Cannes Jury when Pulp Fiction (1994) won but the film was not his personal choice: “On the jury here when ‘Pulp Fiction’ won, somebody said, ‘Oh, Clint Eastwood was on the jury, so he voted for the American film.’ But my sensibilities are European, here is where my success started. Actually, ‘Zhang Yimou”s To Live (1994) was my favorite piece, but most of the European jurors seemed to like ‘Pulp Fiction’.”.
  • Eastwood’s parents settled in Piedmont, California, where he attended Piedmont Jr. High School, then Piedmont High School from January 1945 to January 1946. Later, Eastwood enrolled at Oakland Technical High School; he was held back due to poor academic scores and was scheduled to graduate in January 1949 as a midyear graduate, although it is not clear if he ever did.
  • Sergio Leone asked him and his The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) co-stars Eli Wallach and Lee Van Cleef to appear in Once Upon a Time in the West (1968). The idea was reportedly scrapped due to scheduling conflicts with other films, although some rumors state they declined when they heard that their characters were going to be killed off by Charles Bronson’s character in the first five minutes. Leone filmed the scene instead with character actors Woody Strode, Jack Elam and Al Mulock.
  • Turned down the role of Harmonica in Once Upon a Time in the West (1968), which went to Charles Bronson.
  • The genesis of his production company, Malpaso Productions, had a curious origin. When Italian director Sergio Leone approached Eastwood about appearing in what would become the “Spaghetti Western” trilogy–A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)–Eastwood was eager to take it but was advised against it by his agent, suggesting it would be a “bad move” (mal paso). Against all advice, the actor went ahead and accepted the “man with no name” role and his decision turned out to be a “good move”. Eastwood never forgot the irony of the situation and adopted “Malpaso” as his production company name.
  • Declined to have a party for his 80th birthday, explaining that at his age he doesn’t like birthday parties for himself. He said his only plans to celebrate the occasion would be to go out for a drink with his wife.
  • Profiled in “Directors Close Up” by Jeremy Kagan (2005).
  • Contrary to rumors, he is not a vegetarian. However, he does keep to a strict lowfat diet.
  • He was awarded the American National Medal of the Arts on February 25, 2010 for his services and contributions to the arts.
  • Considered for the role of Rambo in First Blood (1982) long before Sylvester Stallone was hired.
  • Father was Clinton Eastwood Sr. (1906-1970), an executive at Georgia Pacific LLC, a pulp and paper manufacturing company. Stepfather, after his widowed mother remarried in 1972, was John Belden Wood (1913-2004), a lumber executive.
  • Dislikes hunting, saying that he doesn’t enjoy killing an animal for no reason.
  • Practices transcendental meditation twice a day, and said in 2013 that he has been meditating for the past 40 years.
  • Notable women Eastwood has reportedly been romantically linked with include actresses Inger Stevens, Jean Seberg, Jo Ann Harris, Jamie Rose, Rebecca Perle, Catherine Deneuve, Susan Saint James and Jill Banner, singer Keely Smith, competitive swimmer Anita Lhoest, restaurant critic Gael Greene, wildlife activist Jane Brolin, columnist Bridget Byrne, story analyst Megan Rose, French model Cathy Reghin and former Carmel mayor Jean Grace.
  • Owns a hillside mansion in Sun Valley, Idaho and a beachfront estate in Maui.
  • Has a younger sister named Jeanne Bernhardt (b. 1934) and two nieces, Anna (b. 1958) and Celia (b. 1961).
  • Was offered the chance to play James Bond in Live and Let Die (1973), but turned it down because he felt the character should be played by an English actor. Roger Moore was then cast and went on to play Bond six more times.
  • Turned down the role of Captain Willard in Apocalypse Now (1979) because he found the story “too dark.” The role went to Martin Sheen, whose son Charlie went on to co-star with Clint in The Rookie (1990).
  • Served as mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, for one term for the nominal salary of $300.
  • He and Burt Reynolds had major influences on each other’s careers. It was he who sent a copy of “Sharky’s Machine” to Reynolds, which gave Reynolds the idea to turn the novel into a movie, Sharky’s Machine (1981), which went on to garner excellent reviews. On the other hand, it was Reynolds who sent Clint a copy of “The Outlaw Josey Wales”, later made into a film by Eastwood (The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976)). Years later, Reynolds told him about “this great novel” called “The Bridges of Madison County”, and some time later it was shot by Eastwood (The Bridges of Madison County (1995)).
  • Although he can handle pistols with either hand equally well, he is left-eye dominant, evident when he shoots a rifle as in Joe Kidd (1972) or Unforgiven (1992), but is right handed, as seen when he wears or handles one pistol.
  • Though he often smokes in his movies, he is a lifelong non-smoker offscreen.
  • Sondra Locke filed a palimony lawsuit against Eastwood in April 1989, after he changed the locks on their Bel-Air home and moved her possessions into storage while she was at work directing Impulse (1990). Diagnosed with breast cancer in the midst of the hearings, Locke met privately with him and dropped the suit in November 1990 in exchange for a settlement that included financial payments, title to a house in West Hollywood that he had been leasing to her estranged husband Gordon Anderson, and a multi-year contract with Warner Bros. to direct films. In June 1995 she sued Eastwood again, for fraud and breach of fiduciary duty once she became convinced – after having more than 30 separate projects rejected by the studio – that the deal was a sham and that she was employed only on paper. Having unearthed a bookkeeping printout to corroborate this assertion, Locke alleged the checks she received from Warner actually came from money Eastwood had laundered out of the budget for Unforgiven (1992) and written off as production costs. The case went to trial in September 1996, with ten of the 12 jurors believed to be solidly in Locke’s corner, with the only real issue being how much money ultimately would be awarded. Eastwood’s lawyers suggested a settlement, and on the morning in which jurors were set to begin a second day of deliberation, Locke announced her decision to drop her suit against him in return for an unspecified monetary reward. A separate lawsuit against Warner Brothers was settled out of court in May 1999, ending the decade-long legal saga.
  • Former longtime companion Sondra Locke blasted Eastwood in her autobiography “The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly: A Hollywood Journey” (1997), describing him as “a monster who thought nothing of destroying anything inconvenient to him” and even likening Clint to O.J. Simpson. Locke reiterated earlier publicized claims that Eastwood had manipulated her into having two abortions and a tubal ligation in the 1970s and sabotaged her directorial career after the couple’s 1989 split, but also made new allegations that he sired two children by another woman in the last three years of their relationship (which mainstream media refused to report, despite the fact that the kids’ names and exact birthdates were revealed in the book). Sondra wrote that she learned of this “double life” from an investigative journalist who phoned her during depositions in the palimony case with the shocking revelation that Clint had a secret family in Carmel living in a house under his business manager’s name–a fact confirmed when she filed a motion to discover and Eastwood’s will was called in for evidence, with the document showing one Jacelyn Reeves, her legally fatherless son and daughter listed as beneficiaries.
  • William Goldman said of Eastwood that he was the only person to be a star in the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s. By “star” Goldman means Variety’s list of top ten actors of the decade.
  • He was made a Fellow of the British Film Institute in recognition of his outstanding contribution to film culture.
  • In the late 1980s he discussed remaking the classic Sam Peckinpah western Ride the High Country (1962) with Charlton Heston.
  • Along with John Travolta and Tom Selleck, he attended the formal state dinner at the White House held by President Ronald Reagan to welcome Prince Charles and Princess Diana to the United States in 1985.
  • California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver inducted Eastwood into the California Hall of Fame located at The California Museum for History, Women, and the Arts. [December 2006]
  • An accomplished jazz pianist, he performs much of the music for his movies, including the scene in the bar in In the Line of Fire (1993).
  • Learned mountain climbing for The Eiger Sanction (1975) because he felt the scenes were too dangerous for him to pay a stuntman to do for him. He was the last climber up The Totem Pole in Monument Valley, and as part of the contract, the movie crew removed the pitons left by decades of other climbers. The scene where he was hanging off the mountain by a single rope was actually Eastwood, and not a stuntman.
  • Received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from the University of Southern California. [May 2007]
  • Mentioned in theme song in The Adventures of George the Projectionist (2006).
  • Used to shop at Market Basket a lot when it was still open.
  • William Friedkin offered him the lead in Sorcerer (1977), but Eastwood didn’t want to travel anywhere at that time. Jack Nicholson turned the film down for the same reason.
  • The producers of Dirty Harry (1971) originally didn’t want Eastwood, since they felt he was too young at 41. After older stars like John Wayne, Frank Sinatra and Robert Mitchum turned the film down, Eastwood was cast. He last played Harry Callahan aged 58 in The Dead Pool (1988), which was only a year older than the character was supposed to be in the first film according to the original screenplay.
  • Was offered Gregory Peck’s role in Mackenna’s Gold (1969), but turned it down to make Hang ‘Em High (1968) instead.
  • Had to fill in for Charlton Heston at The 44th Annual Academy Awards (1972) until Heston arrived.
  • Semi-fluent in Italian.
  • In 1969 he attended a celebration of John Wayne’s 40-year career at Paramount Pictures, along with Lee Marvin, Rock Hudson, Fred MacMurray, James Stewart, Ernest Borgnine, Michael Caine and Laurence Harvey.
  • Son of Ruth Wood.
  • Voted for Arnold Schwarzenegger as Governor of California in 2003 and 2006.
  • He is “Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur”, a high French distinction that has been conferred on him by President Jacques Chirac on February 17, 2007, as a tribute to his career as an actor and a filmmaker.
  • Cited as America’s Favorite Movie Star by the Harris Polls conducted in 1993, 1994 and 1997. Tom Hanks and Harrison Ford are the only other actors to be cited as the #1 Movie Star as many times.
  • Whenever asked if he would do a Dirty Harry 6, he often joked that he can imagine Dirty Harry now long retired, and fly-fishing with his .44 magnum.
  • Claims to have been an early choice for the title role in Superman (1978). “I was like, ‘Superman? Nah, nah, that’s not for me.’ Not that there’s anything wrong with it. It’s for somebody, but not me,” he said.
  • His “Fistful” mannerisms was imitated in Canada, by the Tim Horton’s restaurant chain, to promote the 2005 Southwest chicken sub.
  • Presented the Golden Globe Award for Best Director to Ang Lee for Brokeback Mountain (2005).
  • Is a patron of the arts, notably as an avid collector of western art.
  • Was offered Al Pacino’s role in Any Given Sunday (1999), but turned it down because Warner Bros. wouldn’t let him direct it also.
  • He claims that he wound up getting the role in Sergio Leone’s A Fistful of Dollars (1964) because James Coburn, to whom the role was originally offered, wanted $25,000. Eastwood accepted the role for $15,000.
  • Ended his longstanding friendship with onetime neighbor William R. Thompkins in 1964.
  • His performance as “Dirty” Harry Callahan in Dirty Harry (1971) is ranked #42 on Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
  • His performance as Blondie in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) is ranked #50 on Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
  • Eastwood declined an offer from President George Bush to campaign for him in the 1992 Presidential election. He told an interviewer the next year, “I think what the ultra-right wing conservatives did to the Republicans is really self-destructive, absolutely stupid”.
  • At a press conference for his movie Mystic River (2003), Eastwood condemned the Iraq war as a “big mistake” and defended Sean Penn’s visit to Baghdad, saying he might have done the same thing but for his age.
  • His performance as “Dirty” Harry Callahan in Dirty Harry (1971) is ranked #92 on Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Performances of All Time (2006).
  • Has ruled out the possibility of playing Dirty Harry again, saying he has “outgrown him age-wise.”
  • Was appointed to serve on the National Council of the Arts by President Nixon in 1972.
  • In 1972 Eastwood attended President Richard Nixon’s landslide victory celebration in Los Angeles, along with John Wayne, Charlton Heston and Glenn Ford.
  • Took acting class from Michael Chekhov in Hollywood.
  • At the 2005 National Board of Review awards dinner in New York City, Eastwood joked that he would kill filmmaker Michael Moore if Moore ever showed up at his home with a camera (an evident reference to Moore’s controversial interview Charlton Heston, for Bowling for Columbine (2002)). After the crowd laughed, Eastwood said, “I mean it.” Moore’s spokesman said, “Michael laughed along with everyone else, and took Mr. Eastwood’s comments in the lighthearted spirit in which they were given.” Publicly, Eastwood has not commented further.
  • He was a contract player at Universal International in the mid-1950s. He and a younger actor named Burt Reynolds were released from their contracts and left the studio on the same day. They were both fired by the same director. Eastwood was fired when the director didn’t want to use him in a movie because “his Adam’s Apple was too big.” Reynolds, who was serving as a stunt man, was fired after he shoved the director into a water tank during an argument over how to do a stunt fall.
  • He objected to the end of Dirty Harry (1971) when Harry throws his badge away after killing the Scorpio Killer, arguing with director Don Siegel that Harry knew that being a policeman was the only work for which he was suited. Siegel eventually convinced Eastwood that Harry threw his badge away as a symbol that he had lost faith in the justice system.
  • As a director, he has always refused to test screen his films before their release.
  • Made six movies with former partner Sondra Locke: The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), The Gauntlet (1977), Every Which Way But Loose (1978), Bronco Billy (1980), Any Which Way You Can (1980) and Sudden Impact (1983).
  • The boots that he wore in Unforgiven (1992) are the same ones he wore in the TV series Rawhide (1959). They are now a part of his private collection and were on loan to the 2005 Sergio Leone exhibit at the Gene Autry Museum of Western Heritage in Los Angeles, California. In essence these boots have book-ended his career in the Western genre.
  • Claimed that the trait he most despised in others was racism.
  • President of jury at the Cannes Film Festival. [1994]
  • He, Warren Beatty, Robert Redford, Mel Gibson, Richard Attenborough and Kevin Costner are the only directors best known as actors who have won an Academy Award as Best Director.
  • He stood at 6’4″ at his peak, but due to recent back problems, he can only stretch up to 6’2″.
  • Has his look-alike puppet in the French show Les guignols de l’info (1988).
  • Opened the Hog’s Breath Inn with co-founders Paul E. Lippman and Walter Becker in 1972. According to Lippman, “I had to terminate three pretty good waitresses in the first few months of operation; not because they went to bed with Clint Eastwood, but because they either talked about it all over the premises, or came in the next day acting like they owned the place.” The restaurant closed in 1999 and then re-opened under new management.
  • Some of his favorite actors are Gary Cooper, Humphrey Bogart, Robert Mitchum and James Stewart.
  • Some of his favorite movies are The 39 Steps (1935), How Green Was My Valley (1941), Sergeant York (1941), The Ox-Bow Incident (1943) and Chariots of Fire (1981).
  • Favorite actor is James Cagney.
  • Premiere Magazine ranked him as #43 on a list of the Greatest Movie Stars of All Time in their Stars in Our Constellation feature (2005).
  • In early 2005 he announced that he would supply the voice for a “Dirty Harry” video game.
  • Every year the PGA tour comes to Pebble Beach, California, to host a celebrity golf tournament where celebrities team up with the professionals. Clint participated in this every year from 1962-2002 and is the longest running participant. He now serves as Host.
  • Received an honorary Doctorate from Wesleyan University in Connecticut (2000). Wesleyan is also home to his personal archives.
  • For two consecutive years he directed two out of the four actors who won Oscars for their performances: Sean Penn (Best Actor) and Tim Robbins (Best Supporting Actor) in Mystic River (2003)) in 2004, and Hilary Swank (Best Actress) and Morgan Freeman (Best Supporting Actor) for Million Dollar Baby (2004)) in 2005.
  • He directed 11 different actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Gene Hackman, Meryl Streep, Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Marcia Gay Harden, Hilary Swank, Morgan Freeman, Angelina Jolie, Matt Damon, Bradley Cooper, and himself (in Unforgiven (1992) and Million Dollar Baby (2004)). Hackman, Penn, Robbins, Freeman and Swank won Oscars for their performances in one of Eastwood’s movies.
  • At age 74, he became the oldest person to win the Best Director Oscar for Million Dollar Baby (2004).
  • Stacy McLaughlin filed a $100,000 lawsuit against Eastwood in May 1989 for “knowingly, intentionally and deliberately” ramming her Nissan Maxima with his quarter-ton pickup at the Burbank Studios on Dec. 16, 1988, when she mistakenly parked in his parking space while dropping off a tape at his Malpaso Productions office. Eastwood, who contended he was only trying to park his vehicle in its rightful space, paid $960 to repair the headlights and bumper of McLaughlin’s car. She sought the additional money as punitive damages, claiming malice on Eastwood’s part. The case went to court in July 1991, but a judge refused to grant the damages.
  • Was named the #1 top money-making star at the box office in Quigley Publications’ annual poll of movie exhibitors five times between 1972 and 1993. Bing Crosby, Burt Reynolds and Tom Hanks also have been named #1 five times, while Tom Cruise holds the record for being named #1 six times.
  • At The 72nd Annual Academy Awards (2000) he presented the Best Picture statuette to American Beauty (1999).
  • At The 45th Annual Academy Awards (1973), he presented the 1972 Best Picture Oscar to Albert S. Ruddy, the producer of The Godfather (1972). Thirty-two years later they would jointly accept the 2004 Best Picture Oscar at the The 77th Annual Academy Awards (2005), along with fellow Million Dollar Baby (2004) co-producer Tom Rosenberg.
  • A sample of his whistling can be heard on the track “Big Noise” from his son Kyle Eastwood’s jazz CD “Paris Blue” (2004).
  • He was the only nominee for the Best Actor Oscar in 2004 (for Million Dollar Baby (2004)) to play a fictitious character. All four other nominees portrayed real people in their respective films.
  • Was named the top box-office star of 1972 and again in 1973 by the Motion Picture Herald, based on an annual poll of exhibitors as to the drawing power of movie stars at the box-office, conducted by Quigley Publications.
  • Has been named to Quigley Publications’ annual Top 10 Poll of Money-Making Stars 21 times, making him #2 all-time for appearances in the top 10 list. Only John Wayne, with 25 appearances in the Top 10, has more. Eastwood, who first appeared in the Top Ten at #5 in 1968, finished #2 to Wayne at the box office in 1971 after finishing #2 to Paul Newman in 1970. After his first two consecutive #1 appearances in 1972 and 1973, he dropped back to #2 in 1974, trailing Robert Redford at the box office. Clint was again #2 in 1979, 1981 and 1982 (topped by Burt Reynolds all three years), before leading the charts in 1983 and ’84. He last topped the poll in 1993.
  • He has always disliked the reading of political and social agendas in his films, which has occurred from Dirty Harry (1971) to Million Dollar Baby (2004). He has always maintained that all of his films are apolitical and what he has in mind when making a film is whether it’s going to be entertaining and compelling.
  • Eastwood’s children from liaisons with Jacelyn Reeves, now known as Scott Eastwood and Kathryn Eastwood, were born with their mother’s last name and have been left out of nearly all publications and documentaries about Eastwood until recently. No father is listed on either of their birth certificates.
  • He asked his first wife Maggie Johnson for a divorce after fathering a child with Roxanne Tunis in 1964, but within a matter of weeks, Johnson became very ill with hepatitis. She and Eastwood reconciled and came to a mutual agreement that it would be best if she turned a blind eye to the other family. In 1968, almost 15 years after they married, their first child together was born.
  • Brother-in-law of Dominic V. Ruiz and Jade Marx-Berti.
  • 35 years older than wife Dina Eastwood. Dina’s parents were 19 and 21 when she was born. This makes Clint 16 years older than his mother-in-law, and 14 years older than his father-in-law.
  • Current wife Dina Ruiz (Dina Eastwood) is a former local television news anchor/reporter from Salinas, Ca. They met when she was assigned to interview him for KSBW-TV in spring 1993. She admitted that she had seen zero of his movies.
  • When Don Siegel fell ill during production of Dirty Harry (1971), Eastwood stepped in as director during the attempted-suicide/jumper sequence.
  • Mentioned on T.G. Sheppard’s hit single “Make My Day,” which in the first half of 1984 reached #12 on Billboard’s Hot Country Singles chart and also reached #62 on that magazine’s Hot 100 singles survey.
  • His production company is Malpaso Productions, which he formed in 1968. The company’s first feature release was Hang ‘Em High (1968).
  • Weighed 11 lbs 6 oz at birth.
  • When directing, he simply says “okay” instead of “action” and “cut.” (source: “Sunday Morning Shootout”).
  • When he directs, he insists that his actors wear as little makeup as possible and he likes to print first takes. As a result, his films consistently finish on schedule and on budget.
  • His character’s voice was provided by Enrico Maria Salerno in A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966). In 1967, Eastwood dubbed his dialogue in English for the trilogy’s American release.
  • Of English, Scottish, Irish, and smaller amounts of German, Dutch, and Welsh, ancestry.
  • Received the Career Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival. [August 2000]
  • 2000 recipient of John F. Kennedy Center Honors.
  • Sworn in as parks commissioner for state of California at Big Basin Redwood Park, Santa Cruz, Ca., 8 June 2002. Holding up his new commissioner’s badge, he told the crowd, “You’re all under arrest”.
  • Until his pride was displaced by discovery of a larger version of same tree in 2002, Eastwood used to be proud owner of tree believed to be the nation’s largest known hardwood – a bluegum eucalyptus.
  • Mentioned in the theme song of the 1980s TV hit The Fall Guy (1981).
  • His name is used as the title of the hit Gorillaz song and video “Clint Eastwood” (2001).
  • It’s interesting, given his penchant towards violence, that his name, Clint Eastwood, is an anagram for ‘old west action’.
  • Has eight children by six different women: Kimber Eastwood (b. June 17, 1964) with Roxanne Tunis; Kyle Eastwood (b. May 19, 1968) and Alison Eastwood (b. May 22, 1972) with Maggie Johnson; Scott Eastwood (b. March 21, 1986) and Kathryn Eastwood (b. February 2, 1988) with Jacelyn Reeves; Francesca Eastwood (b. August 7, 1993) with Frances Fisher; Morgan Eastwood (b. December 12, 1996) with Dina Eastwood; and another child with another woman whose identities are not confirmed. Only Kyle, Alison, Francesca and Morgan are mentioned in Clint’s October 2003 episode of Biography (1987).
  • Lifeguard and projectionist of training films for the U.S. Army from 1951-1952, stationed at Fort Ord in California. According to former high school buddy Don Loomis in “Clint: The Life and Legend” by Patrick McGilligan, page 49, Eastwood avoided being sent to combat in Korea by romancing one of the daughters of a Fort Ord officer, who might have been entreated to watch out for him when names came up for postings.
  • Got his role in Rawhide (1959) while visiting a friend at the CBS lot when a studio exec spotted him because he “looked like a cowboy.”
  • Was apparently such an organized director that he finished Absolute Power (1997) days ahead of schedule.
  • Elected mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. It has often been claimed that Eastwood ran for office as a Republican. In fact, although he was registered as a Republican in California, the position of mayor is non-partisan. [April 1986]
  • He wore the same poncho, without ever having washed it, in all three of his “Man with No Name” Westerns.
  • Gained popularity with his first three major films, A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) (which weren’t released in America until 1967/68). Soon afterwards Jolly Films (which produced A Fistful of Dollars (1964)) came out with a film called “The Magnificent Stranger”, which was actually two episodes of Rawhide (1959) edited together. Eastwood sued and the film was withdrawn.
  • Ranked #2 in Empire (UK) magazine’s “The Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time” list. [October 1997]
  • Received an honorary Cesar award in Paris, France for his body of work. [February 1998]
  • Owns the Mission Ranch hotel & restaurant in Carmel, Calif., the exclusive Tehama golf club in Carmel Valley, and is partial owner of the Pebble Beach Golf Country Club in nearby Monterey Peninsula.
  • Lived with Sondra Locke from 1975 to 1989.

Clint Eastwood Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly 1966 Blondie Actor
For a Few Dollars More 1965 Monco Actor
Rawhide 1959-1965 TV Series Rowdy Yates Actor
A Fistful of Dollars 1964 Joe Actor
Alfred Hitchcock Presents 1959 TV Series Newsman Actor
Maverick 1959 TV Series Red Hardigan Actor
Ambush at Cimarron Pass 1958 Keith Williams Actor
Lafayette Escadrille 1958 George Moseley Actor
Navy Log 1958 TV Series Burns Actor
Escapade in Japan 1957 Dumbo Pilot (uncredited) Actor
West Point 1957 TV Series Cadet Bob Salter Actor
Death Valley Days 1956 TV Series John Lucas Actor
Away All Boats 1956 Corpsman (uncredited) Actor
The First Traveling Saleslady 1956 Lt. Jack Rice Actor
Star in the Dust 1956 Tom – Ranch Hand (uncredited) Actor
Highway Patrol 1956 TV Series Joe Keeley Actor
Never Say Goodbye 1956 Will (uncredited) Actor
TV Reader’s Digest 1956 TV Series Lt. Wilson Actor
Lady Godiva of Coventry 1955 First Saxon (uncredited) Actor
Francis in the Navy 1955 Jonesey Actor
Allen in Movieland 1955 TV Movie Orderly Actor
Tarantula 1955 Jet Squadron Leader (uncredited) Actor
Revenge of the Creature 1955 Jennings (uncredited) Actor
American Sniper 2014 Church Goer (uncredited) Actor
Trouble with the Curve 2012 Gus Actor
Gran Torino 2008 Walt Kowalski Actor
Million Dollar Baby 2004 Frankie Dunn Actor
Blood Work 2002 Terry McCaleb Actor
Space Cowboys 2000 Frank Corvin Actor
True Crime 1999 Steve Everett Actor
Absolute Power 1997 Luther Whitney Actor
The Bridges of Madison County 1995 Robert Kincaid Actor
Casper 1995 Clint Eastwood (uncredited) Actor
A Perfect World 1993 Chief Red Garnett Actor
In the Line of Fire 1993 Frank Horrigan Actor
Unforgiven 1992 Bill Munny Actor
The Rookie 1990 Nick Pulovski Actor
White Hunter Black Heart 1990 John Wilson Actor
Pink Cadillac 1989 Tommy Nowak Actor
The Dead Pool 1988 Harry Callahan Actor
Heartbreak Ridge 1986 Highway Actor
Pale Rider 1985 Preacher Actor
City Heat 1984 Lieutenant Speer Actor
Tightrope 1984 Wes Block Actor
Sudden Impact 1983 Harry Callahan Actor
Honkytonk Man 1982 Red Stovall Actor
Firefox 1982 Mitchell Gant Actor
Any Which Way You Can 1980 Philo Beddoe Actor
Bronco Billy 1980 Bronco Billy Actor
Escape from Alcatraz 1979 Frank Morris Actor
Every Which Way But Loose 1978 Philo Beddoe Actor
The Gauntlet 1977 Ben Shockley Actor
The Enforcer 1976 Harry Callahan Actor
The Outlaw Josey Wales 1976 Josey Wales Actor
The Eiger Sanction 1975 Jonathan Hemlock Actor
Thunderbolt and Lightfoot 1974 Thunderbolt Actor
Magnum Force 1973 Harry Callahan Actor
Breezy 1973 Man at Marina (uncredited) Actor
High Plains Drifter 1973 The Stranger Actor
Joe Kidd 1972 Joe Kidd Actor
Dirty Harry 1971 Harry Actor
Play Misty for Me 1971 Dave Actor
The Beguiled 1971 John McBurney Actor
Kelly’s Heroes 1970 Kelly Actor
Two Mules for Sister Sara 1970 Hogan Actor
Paint Your Wagon 1969 Pardner Actor
Where Eagles Dare 1968 Schaffer Actor
Coogan’s Bluff 1968 Coogan Actor
Hang ‘Em High 1968 Marshal Jed Cooper Actor
The Witches 1967 Carlo (Segment “Sera Come Le Altre, Una”) Actor
A Star Is Born 2018 producer filming Producer
The 15:17 to Paris producer pre-production Producer
Sully 2016 producer Producer
American Sniper 2014 producer Producer
Jersey Boys 2014 producer Producer
Trouble with the Curve 2012 producer Producer
J. Edgar 2011 producer Producer
Dave Brubeck: In His Own Sweet Way 2010 TV Movie documentary executive producer / producer Producer
Hereafter 2010 producer Producer
Invictus 2009 producer Producer
Johnny Mercer: The Dream’s on Me 2009 TV Movie documentary executive producer Producer
Gran Torino 2008 producer Producer
Changeling 2008 producer Producer
American Masters TV Series documentary executive producer – 1 episode, 2008 producer – 1 episode, 2007 Producer
Letters from Iwo Jima 2006 producer Producer
Flags of our Fathers 2006 producer Producer
Budd Boetticher: An American Original 2005 Video documentary executive producer Producer
Budd Boetticher: A Man Can Do That 2005 TV Movie documentary executive producer Producer
Million Dollar Baby 2004 producer Producer
The Blues 2003 TV Series documentary producer – 1 episode Producer
Mystic River 2003 producer Producer
Blood Work 2002 producer Producer
Space Cowboys 2000 producer Producer
True Crime 1999 producer Producer
Monterey Jazz Festival: 40 Legendary Years 1998 Video documentary executive producer Producer
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil 1997 producer Producer
Absolute Power 1997 producer Producer
The Stars Fell on Henrietta 1995 producer Producer
The Bridges of Madison County 1995 producer Producer
77 Sunset Strip 1995 TV Movie executive producer Producer
A Perfect World 1993 producer Producer
Unforgiven 1992 producer Producer
White Hunter Black Heart 1990 producer Producer
Thelonious Monk: Straight, No Chaser 1988 Documentary executive producer Producer
Bird 1988 producer Producer
Heartbreak Ridge 1986 producer Producer
Pale Rider 1985 producer Producer
Tightrope 1984 producer Producer
Sudden Impact 1983 producer Producer
Honkytonk Man 1982 producer Producer
Firefox 1982 producer Producer
Joe Kidd 1972 executive producer – uncredited Producer
Dirty Harry 1971 executive producer – uncredited Producer
The Beguiled 1971 executive producer – uncredited Producer
The 15:17 to Paris pre-production Director
Sully 2016 Director
American Sniper 2014 Director
Jersey Boys 2014 Director
J. Edgar 2011 Director
Hereafter 2010 Director
Invictus 2009 Director
Gran Torino 2008 Director
Changeling 2008 Director
Letters from Iwo Jima 2006 Director
Flags of our Fathers 2006 Director
Million Dollar Baby 2004 Director
The Blues 2003 TV Series documentary 1 episode Director
Mystic River 2003 Director
Blood Work 2002 Director
Space Cowboys 2000 Director
True Crime 1999 Director
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil 1997 Director
Absolute Power 1997 Director
The Bridges of Madison County 1995 Director
A Perfect World 1993 Director
Unforgiven 1992 Director
The Rookie 1990 Director
White Hunter Black Heart 1990 Director
Bird 1988 Director
Heartbreak Ridge 1986 Director
Amazing Stories 1985 TV Series 1 episode Director
Pale Rider 1985 Director
Sudden Impact 1983 Director
Honkytonk Man 1982 Director
Firefox 1982 Director
Bronco Billy 1980 Director
The Gauntlet 1977 Director
The Outlaw Josey Wales 1976 Director
The Eiger Sanction 1975 Director
Breezy 1973 Director
High Plains Drifter 1973 Director
The Beguiled: The Storyteller 1971 Documentary short Director
Play Misty for Me 1971 Director
Sully 2016 writer: “Flying Home Theme from ‘Sully'” Soundtrack
American Sniper 2014 writer: “Taya’s Theme” Soundtrack
Trouble with the Curve 2012 performer: “You Are My Sunshine” – uncredited Soundtrack
Welcome to the Basement 2012 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
Invictus 2009 music: “Invictus 9,000 Days” 2009 Soundtrack
Away We Go 2009 performer: “H.A.P.P.Y.” Soundtrack
Qwerty 2009 TV Series writer – 1 episode Soundtrack
Gran Torino 2008 performer: “Gran Torino” – uncredited / writer: “Gran Torino”, “Gran Torino” uncredited Soundtrack
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 2007 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
Grace Is Gone 2007 music: “Grace Is Gone” Soundtrack
Flags of our Fathers 2006 writer: “Flags of Our Fathers” Soundtrack
The Wire 2006 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
Million Dollar Baby 2004 writer: “Blue Morgan” Soundtrack
The Blues TV Series documentary performer – 1 episode, 2003 writer – 1 episode, 2003 Soundtrack
Mystic River 2003 writer: “Mystic River” Soundtrack
Space Cowboys 2000 writer: “ESPACIO” Soundtrack
True Crime 1999 writer: “Why Should I Care” Soundtrack
Qui 1997 Short writer: “Claudia’s Theme” Soundtrack
Absolute Power 1997 writer: “Power Waltz”, “Kate’s Theme” Soundtrack
The Bridges of Madison County 1995 writer: “Doe Eyes Love Theme from ‘The Bridges Of Madison County'” Soundtrack
A Perfect World 1993 writer: “Big Fran’s Baby” Soundtrack
Unforgiven 1992 writer: “Claudia’s Song” Soundtrack
Heartbreak Ridge 1986 writer: “How Much I Care” Soundtrack
All-Star Party for Clint Eastwood 1986 TV Special writer: “How Much I Care” Soundtrack
City Heat 1984 “Montage Blues” Soundtrack
Honkytonk Man 1982 performer: “Honkytonk Man”, “When I Sing About You”, “No Sweeter Cheater Than You” Soundtrack
Any Which Way You Can 1980 performer: “Beers To You” Soundtrack
Bronco Billy 1980 performer: “Barroom Buddies” Soundtrack
The Beguiled 1971 performer: “Dove She is a Pretty Bird” – uncredited Soundtrack
Two Mules for Sister Sara 1970 performer: “Sam Hall” – uncredited Soundtrack
Paint Your Wagon 1969 performer: “I Still See Elisa”, “I Talk To The Trees”, “Best Things”, “Gold Fever” Soundtrack
A Fistful of Dollars 1964 performer: “Sweet Betsy from Pike” – uncredited Soundtrack
J. Edgar 2011 Composer
Hereafter 2010 Composer
The Writers’ Block 2010 TV Series 1 episode Composer
Changeling 2008 Composer
Grace Is Gone 2007 Composer
Flags of our Fathers 2006 Composer
Million Dollar Baby 2004 Composer
Mystic River 2003 Composer
Johnny Mercer: The Dream’s on Me 2009 TV Movie documentary presenter Miscellaneous
Dirty Harry 1971 fill-in director – uncredited Miscellaneous
A Fistful of Dollars 1964 western advisor: Italian prints only Miscellaneous
Man Without a Star 1955 voice dubbing – uncredited Miscellaneous
Sully 2016 composer: theme music Music Department
American Sniper 2014 composer: “Taya’s theme” Music Department
Eastwood on Eastwood 1997 TV Movie documentary still photographer Camera Department
Auer 2017 Short special thanks completed Thanks
Momentum 2015/I special thanks Thanks
Don’t Say No Until I Finish Talking: The Story of Richard D. Zanuck 2013 Documentary special thanks Thanks
No More Heroes 2013 Short dedicatee Thanks
The Forger 2012 special thanks Thanks
J. Edgar: A Complicated Man 2012 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
J. Edgar: The Most Powerful Man in the World 2012 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
The Suppressor 2011 special thanks Thanks
The Deliverer 2011 Short special thanks Thanks
El defensor 2011 Short the director wishes to thank Thanks
Biography: Morgan Freeman 2010 TV Movie special thanks Thanks
Beware the Moon: Remembering ‘An American Werewolf in London’ 2009 Documentary special thanks Thanks
Gran Torino: Next Door 2009 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Gran Torino – The Eastwood Way 2009 Video short special thanks Thanks
Partners in Crime: Clint Eastwood and Angelina Jolie 2009 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
An Old Fashioned Love Story: Making ‘The Bridges of Madison County’ 2008 Video documentary special thanks Thanks
Six Reasons Why 2008 dedicatee Thanks
In the Valley of Elah 2007 special thanks Thanks
Red Sun, Black Sand: The Making of ‘Letters from Iwo Jima’ 2007 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
na [email protected] 2006 Short special thanks Thanks
La tigre e la neve 2005 thanks Thanks
Mystic River: Beneath the Surface 2004 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Making ‘Blood Work’ 2002 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Iron and Beyond 2002 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Dirty Harry: The Original 2001 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
In the Line of Fire: The Ultimate Sacrifice 2000 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Hell Hath No Fury 1999 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Warner Bros. 75th Anniversary: No Guts, No Glory 1998 TV Movie documentary special thanks Thanks
Traveller 1997 special thanks Thanks
Back to the Future Part III 1990 thanks Thanks
Clint, ‘The Rookie’ & Me 1990 TV Movie thanks Thanks
Détective 1985 dedicatee Thanks
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly 1966 special thanks – 2003 extended English-language version Thanks
14th Annual Critics’ Choice Awards Red Carpet Premiere 2009 TV Special Himself Self
An Old Fashioned Love Story: Making ‘The Bridges of Madison County’ 2008 Video documentary Himself – ‘Robert Kincaid’ / Director / Producer Self
The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts 2008 TV Movie Himself Self
Cartelera 2008 TV Series Himself Self
Cinema 3 1992-2008 TV Series Himself Self
Rencontres de cinéma 2008 TV Series Himself Self
Shootout 2004-2008 TV Series Himself Self
Wisdom 2008 Video documentary Himself Self
A Moral Right: The Politics of Dirty Harry 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Business End: Violence in Cinema 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Evolution of Clint Eastwood 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Long Shadow of Dirty Harry 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
AFI’s 10 Top 10: America’s 10 Greatest Films in 10 Classic Genres 2008 TV Movie Himself Self
Showbiz Tonight 2008 TV Series Himself Self
The Craft of Dirty Harry 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
American Masters 2000-2008 TV Series documentary Himself / Himself – Narrator Self
Trying to Get Good: The Jazz Odyssey of Jack Sheldon 2008 Documentary Himself Self
Erika Rabau: Puck of Berlin 2008 Documentary Himself Self
Screen Nation Television and Film Awards 2007 2007 TV Special Himself Self
Bienvenue à Cannes 2007 Documentary Himself Self
Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project 2007 Documentary Himself / Private Kelly / ‘Dirty’ Harry Callahan Self
Gala Tribute AFI’s 40th Anniversary 2007 TV Movie Himself – Speaker Self
Pierre Rissient: Man of Cinema 2007 Documentary Himself Self
AFI’s 100 Years… 100 Movies: 10th Anniversary Edition 2007 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
A Few Weeks in Spain 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
Clint Eastwood, le franc-tireur 2007 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Red Sun, Black Sand: The Making of ‘Letters from Iwo Jima’ 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
Fog City Mavericks 2007 Documentary Himself Self
2007 Trumpet Awards 2007 TV Special Himself Self
La noche de los Oscar 2007 TV Movie Himself – Interviewee Self
The 79th Annual Academy Awards 2007 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Honorary Oscar / Nominee: Best Director, Best Picture Self
Channel 4 News 2007 TV Series Himself – Director Self
BBC Four News 2007 TV Series Himself – Actor Self
ITV Evening News 2007 TV Series Himself – Actor Self
One O’Clock News 2007 TV Series Himself – Actor Self
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 1992-2007 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The 12th Annual Critics’ Choice Awards 2007 TV Special Himself Self
The 64th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2007 TV Special Himself – Winner: Best Foreign Language Film & Nominee: Best Director Self
Corazón de… 2006-2007 TV Series Himself Self
Charlie Rose 1996-2006 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Larry King Live 2006 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
2006 BAFTA/LA Cunard Britannia Awards 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
HBO First Look 2006 TV Series documentary short Himself Self
Denn sie kennen kein Erbarmen – Der Italowestern 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Frankie Laine: An American Dreamer 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
The 63rd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself – Presenter: Best Director Self
B InTune TV 2006 TV Series Guest star Self
Budd Boetticher: An American Original 2005 Video documentary Himself Self
Budd Boetticher: A Man Can Do That 2005 TV Movie documentary Interviewee Self
The Spaghetti West 2005 Video documentary Himself Self
Born to Fight 2005 Video documentary short Himself Self
James Lipton Takes on Three 2005 Video documentary short Himself Self
2nd Annual Directors Guild of Great Britain DGGB Awards 2005 Video Himself – Nominee ‘Million Dollar Baby’ Self
Back for More 2005 Video documentary short Himself Self
Hardball with Chris Matthews 2005 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The 77th Annual Academy Awards 2005 TV Special Himself – Nominated: Best Actor in a Leading Role / Winner: Best Director & Best Picture Self
The O’Reilly Factor 2005 TV Series Himself Self
11th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2005 TV Special Himself – Nominee Self
60 Minutes 2005 TV Series documentary Himself – Director, Million Dollar Baby (segment “Hilary Swank”) Self
The 62nd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2005 TV Special documentary Himself – Winner: Best Director / Nominee: Best Original Score Self
Tsunami Aid: A Concert of Hope 2005 TV Special Himself Self
2005 BAFTA/LA Cunard Britannia Awards 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Meryl Streep 2004 TV Special Himself Self
Mystic River: Beneath the Surface 2004 Video documentary short Himself – Director Self
Mystic River: From Page to Screen 2004 TV Short documentary Himself – Director Self
Leone’s West 2004 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Leone Style 2004 Video documentary short Himself Self
Caiga quien caiga 2004 TV Series Himself Self
Tinseltown TV 2003-2004 TV Series Himself Self
10th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2004 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role Self
The 61st Annual Golden Globe Awards 2004 TV Special Himself – Accepting Best Actor Award for Sean Penn Self
The 2003 European Film Awards 2003 TV Movie Himself – Nominee European Film Academy Non-European Film – Prix Screen International Self
The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn 2002-2003 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Parkinson 2003 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Paula Zahn Now 2003 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Inside the Actors Studio 2003 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Blues 2003 TV Series documentary Himself Self
9th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2003 TV Special Himself Self
A Decade Under the Influence 2003 Documentary Himself Self
Conversation with Clint Eastwood, Wanda De Jesus and Paul Rodriguez 2002 Video short Himself Self
Making ‘Blood Work’ 2002 Video documentary short Himself Self
Iron and Beyond 2002 Video documentary short Himself – Actor & Director Self
All on Accounta Pullin’ a Trigger 2002 Video documentary short Himself Self
Dirty Harry: The Original 2001 Video documentary short Himself Self
America: A Tribute to Heroes 2001 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Play It Again: A Look Back at ‘Play Misty for Me’ 2001 Video documentary Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Barbra Streisand 2001 TV Special documentary Himself Self
In the Line of Fire: How’d They Do That? 2001 Video short Himself Self
In the Line of Fire: The Ultimate Sacrifice 2000 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Making of ‘Space Cowboys’ 2000 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts 2000 TV Special documentary Himself – Honoree Self
Great Performances 1987-2000 TV Series Himself Self
The Directors 2000 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Nulle part ailleurs: midi 2000 TV Series Himself Self
Bravo Profiles 2000 TV Series documentary Himself Self
2000 Blockbuster Entertainment Awards 2000 TV Special documentary Himself Self
The 72nd Annual Academy Awards 2000 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Best Picture Self
Forever Hollywood 1999 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
True Crime: The Scene of the Crime 1999 Video documentary short Himself Self
E! True Hollywood Story 1999 TV Series documentary Himself Self
AFI’s 100 Years… 100 Stars: America’s Greatest Screen Legends 1999 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Hell Hath No Fury 1999 Video documentary short Himself – Director / Actor Self
Monterey Jazz Festival: 40 Legendary Years 1998 Video documentary Himself Self
Junket Whore 1998 Documentary Himself Self
AFI’s 100 Years… 100 Movies: The Antiheroes 1998 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
AFI’s 100 Years… 100 Movies: America’s Greatest Movies 1998 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Le cercle du cinéma 1998 TV Series Himself Self
La nuit des Césars 1998 TV Series documentary Himself – César d’honneur Self
Hollywood Salutes Arnold Schwarzenegger: An American Cinematheque Tribute 1998 TV Special Himself Self
Intimate Portrait 1998 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Eastwood on Eastwood 1997 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Big Guns Talk: The Story of the Western 1997 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Martin Scorsese 1997 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Eastwood After Hours: Live at Carnegie Hall 1997 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Very Important Pennis 1996 TV Series Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Clint Eastwood 1996 TV Special documentary Honoree Self
The 53rd Annual Golden Globe Awards 1996 TV Special Himself – Nominee Self
Wild Bill: Hollywood Maverick 1995 Documentary Himself Self
The South Bank Show 1995 TV Series documentary Himself – Guest Self
The Annual 1995 ShoWest Awards 1995 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
The First 100 Years: A Celebration of American Movies 1995 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies 1995 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 67th Annual Academy Awards 1995 TV Special Himself – Thalberg Award Recipient Self
One Hundred and One Nights 1995 Himself – in Cannes Self
A Century of Cinema 1994 Documentary Himself Self
Don’t Pave Main Street: Carmel’s Heritage 1994 Documentary Narrator (voice) Self
The 66th Annual Academy Awards 1994 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Best Director Self
The 46th Annual Director’s Guild Awards 1994 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
In the Line of Fire: Behind the Scenes with the Secret Service 1993 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Vicki! 1993 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Shooting ‘In the Line of Fire’ 1993 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 12th Annual Golden Boot Awards 1993 TV Special Himself – Honoree Self
The 65th Annual Academy Awards 1993 TV Special Himself – Winner: Best Director / Best Picture & Nominated: Best Actor in a Leading Role Self
The 45th Annual Directors Guild Awards 1993 TV Special Himself – Winner: Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Self
The 50th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1993 TV Special Himself – Winner: Best Director & Nominee: Best Motion Picture Drama Self
Eastwood… A Star 1992 TV Short documentary Himself Self
Eastwood & Co.: Making ‘Unforgiven’ 1992 TV Short documentary Himself Self
Stars 90 1992 TV Series Himself Self
Clint Eastwood on Westerns 1992 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson 1967-1992 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself Self
Harvey Shine Presents 1991 TV Series documentary Himself (1991-1993) Self
Here’s Looking at You, Warner Bros. 1991 TV Movie documentary Himself – Host / Narrator Self
Doris Day: A Sentimental Journey 1991 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Thank Ya, Thank Ya Kindly 1991 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Movie Awards 1991 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Sammy Davis, Jr. 60th Anniversary Celebration 1990 TV Special Himself Self
Clint, ‘The Rookie’ & Me 1990 TV Movie Himself Self
Gary Cooper: American Life, American Legend 1989 Documentary Host Self
The 46th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1989 TV Special Himself – Winner & Presenter Self
Presidential Inaugural Gala 1989 TV Special Himself Self
The 6th Annual American Cinema Awards 1989 TV Special Himself Self
21st NAACP Image Awards 1989 TV Special Himself Self
James Stewart’s Wonderful Life 1988 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Talking Pictures 1988 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The 45th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1988 TV Special Himself – Cecil B. DeMille Award Recipient Self
All-Star Party for Joan Collins 1987 TV Special Himself Self
James Stewart: A Wonderful Life – Hosted by Johnny Carson 1987 TV Movie Himself Self
Happy 100th Birthday, Hollywood 1987 TV Special documentary Himself Self
De película 1987 TV Series Himself Self
All-Star Party for Clint Eastwood 1986 TV Special Himself Self
The 11th Annual People’s Choice Awards 1985 TV Special Himself – Winner Self
The National Association of Theater Owners Awards 1985 TV Special Himself – Winner Self
Bitte umblättern 1978-1985 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Drôle de festival 1985 TV Short documentary Himself (uncredited) Self
Aspel & Company 1985 TV Series Himself Self
Na sowas! 1985 TV Series Himself Self
CBS Early Morning News 1982 TV Series Himself Self
The Barbara Walters Summer Special 1980-1982 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Late Night with David Letterman 1982 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Clint Eastwood: Director 1982 TV Short documentary Himself Self
The 7th Annual People’s Choice Awards 1981 TV Special Himself – Winner: Favourite Actor in Motion Picture Self
Clapper Board 1980-1981 TV Series Himself Self
Les nouveaux rendez-vous 1980 TV Series Himself Self
The American Movie Awards 1980 TV Special Himself – Honorary Award Recipient Self
Don Siegel: Last of the Independents 1980 TV Movie documentary Guest Self
Ciné regards 1978 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The Man with No Name 1977 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Gauntlet: Behind the Scenes 1977 Documentary short Himself Self
Eastwood in Action 1976 Documentary short Himself Self
Harry Callahan/Clint Eastwood: Something Special in Films 1976 Documentary short Himself (uncredited) Self
Backstage in Hollywood 1975 TV Series Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to James Cagney 1974 TV Special documentary Himself (uncredited) Self
The Merv Griffin Show 1967-1974 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to John Ford 1973 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 45th Annual Academy Awards 1973 TV Special Himself – Co-Host & Presenter Self
The Hero Cop: Yesterday and Today 1973 Documentary short Himself Self
Sad Hill Unearthed 2017 Documentary completed Self
The 29th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1972 TV Special Himself Self
Untitled Geraldine Page Documentary Documentary post-production Himself Self
Dirty Harry’s Way 1971 Short documentary Himself / Dirty Harry Self
Entertainment Tonight 2006-2017 TV Series Himself Self
The David Frost Show 1969-1971 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Sully: Neck Deep in the Hudson: – Shooting Sully 2016 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Mike Douglas Show 1971 TV Series Himself – Actor Self
Hollywood Film Awards 2016 Video Himself Self
Dinah’s Place 1971 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Good Morning America 1990-2016 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Linkletter Show 1970 TV Series Himself Self
Extra 2003-2016 TV Series Himself / Himself – American Sniper Self
The 42nd Annual Academy Awards 1970 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Best Foreign Film Self
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 2014-2016 TV Series Himself / Himself – Guest Self
The Joey Bishop Show 1967-1969 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
WGN Morning News 2016 TV Series Himself Self
Gold Fever 1969 Documentary short Himself Self
Ellen: The Ellen DeGeneres Show 2008-2016 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself Self
On Location: Where Eagles Dare 1968 Documentary short Himself Self
Guys Choice Awards 2015 2015 TV Movie Himself – Presenter Self
First Annual All-Star Celebrity Softball Game 1967 TV Special Himself – Celebrity Self
One Soldier’s Story: The Journey of American Sniper 2015 Short Himself Self
The Danny Kaye Show 1965 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Making of American Sniper 2015 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Eamonn Andrews Show 1965 TV Series Himself Self
Tab Hunter Confidential 2015 Documentary Himself Self
CBS: The Stars’ Address 1963 TV Movie Himself Self
The 87th Annual Academy Awards 2015 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Picture Self
Talent Scouts 1963 TV Series Himself Self
Hannity 2012-2015 TV Series Himself Self
Stump the Stars 1962 TV Series Self
Bringing the War Home: The Cost of Heroism 2015 Short Himself – Narrator Self
Mister Ed 1962 TV Series Himself Self
Today 1985-2014 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Here’s Hollywood 1960-1962 TV Series Himself Self
The Insider 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Disneyland ’59 1959 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 68th Annual Tony Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
Éternelle Jean Seberg 2014 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Million Dollar Baby: On the Ropes 2014 Video short Himself Self
Guys Choice Awards 2013 2013 TV Special Himself Self
Don’t Say No Until I Finish Talking: The Story of Richard D. Zanuck 2013 Documentary Himself – Interviewee Self
Eastwood Directs: The Untold Story 2013 Documentary Himself Self
Milius 2013 Documentary Himself Self
Tales from the Warner Bros. Lot 2013 Documentary Himself Self
Vivir de cine 2012 TV Series Himself Self
Casting By 2012 Documentary Himself Self
The 40th Republican National Convention 2012 TV Special Himself Self
Mrs. Eastwood & Company 2012 TV Series Himself Self
Behind the Seams: The 14th Annual Costume Designers Guild Awards Special 2012 TV Special Himself Self
Addicted to Fame 2012 Documentary Himself Self
J. Edgar: A Complicated Man 2012 Video documentary short Himself Self
J. Edgar: The Most Powerful Man in the World 2012 Video documentary short Himself Self
DGA Moments in Time 2011 Short Himself Self
Up Close with Carrie Keagan 2009-2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Daily Show 2008-2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Clint Eastwood’s West 2011 Video documentary short Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Morgan Freeman 2011 TV Special Himself Self
Kurosawa’s Way 2011 Documentary Himself Self
Unite for Japan 2011 Short Himself Self
Making It in Hollywood 2011 Documentary Himself Self
Dave Brubeck: In His Own Sweet Way 2010 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Jimmy Kimmel Live! 2010 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Hour 2010 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Ray Charles America 2010 Documentary Himself Self
Hollywood Salutes Matt Damon: An American Cinematheque Tribute 2010 TV Movie Himself Self
Go’ aften Danmark 2010 TV Series Himself Self
The Eastwood Factor 2010 Video documentary Himself Self
Xposé 2010 TV Series Himself Self
Hope for Haiti Now: A Global Benefit for Earthquake Relief 2010 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Biography 1994-2010 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The Making of Anton AKA Trapped 2009 Video documentary Himself Self
Lopez Tonight 2009 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Johnny Mercer: The Dream’s on Me 2009 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Reel Injun 2009 Documentary Himself Self
Vittorio D. 2009 Documentary Himself Self
Spike’s Guys Choice 2009 TV Special Himself Self
Gran Torino: Next Door 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Making of… 2009 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Gomorron 2009 TV Series Himself – Om Livet i Hollywood / Himself – Från Los Angeles Self
Changeling – Partners in Crime: Bringing Changeling to the Screen 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Changeling – The Common Thread: Angelina Becomes Christine 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Partners in Crime: Clint Eastwood and Angelina Jolie 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Plymouth Rock Studios: The Series 2009 TV Series Himself Self
The Movie Loft 2009 TV Series Himself Self
Días de cine 1992-2009 TV Series Himself Self
Late Show with David Letterman 2006-2009 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The 66th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2009 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Original Score & Best Original Song Self
Oscar’s Greatest Moments 1992 Video documentary Himself Archive Footage
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson 1992 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Back to the Future Part II 1989 Joe (uncredited) Archive Footage
Give Me Your Answer True 1987 Documentary Archive Footage
The Ultimate Stuntman: A Tribute to Dar Robinson 1987 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter 1982 TV Movie documentary Actor – ‘Every Which Way But Loose’ (uncredited) Archive Footage
Fist of Fear, Touch of Death 1980 Documentary Himself, at the Academy Awards (uncredited) Archive Footage
The Ed Sullivan Show 1970 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
El magnifico extranjero 1967 Rowdy Yates Archive Footage
Le Fossoyeur de Films 2017 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Sunrise 2017 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Fox and Friends 2016 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Extra 2015-2016 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Mes Chers Contemporain 2015 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Wogan: The Best Of 2015 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 2015 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Inside Edition 2015 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
2nd Indie Fest of YouTube Videos 2014 2014 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
And the Oscar Goes To… 2014 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
The O’Reilly Factor 2008-2014 TV Series Himself
Harry Callahan
Insp. Harry Callahan
Archive Footage
Weekend Today 2014 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Giuliano Gemma: Un italiano nel mondo 2013 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Edición Especial Coleccionista 2013 TV Series Blondie Archive Footage
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 2012-2013 TV Series Himself / Himself – Convention Speech Archive Footage
Sendung ohne Namen 2012 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Insiders 2012 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The Bolt Report 2012 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Welcome to the Basement 2012 TV Series Pardner Archive Footage
I Am Bruce Lee 2012 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Banda sonora 2012 TV Series Frankie Dunn Archive Footage
Whistleblowers: The Untold Stories 2011 TV Series Himself – Award Winning Actor Archive Footage
Gilles Jacob: CIitizen Cannes 2010 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Premio Donostia a Meryl Streep 2008 TV Special Robert Kincaid Archive Footage
Ceremonia de inauguración – 56º Festival internacional de cine de San Sebastián 2008 TV Movie Robert Kincaid (uncredited) Archive Footage
The Real ‘Life on Mars’! 2008 TV Movie documentary Insp. Harry Callahan (uncredited) Archive Footage
Il falso bugiardo 2008 Himself Archive Footage
Oscar, que empiece el espectáculo 2008 TV Movie documentary Frankie Dunn (uncredited) Archive Footage
Cannes, 60 ans d’histoires 2007 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
La tele de tu vida 2007 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Canada A.M. 2007 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Boffo! Tinseltown’s Bombs and Blockbusters 2006 Documentary Himself / William ‘Bill’ Munny (uncredited) Archive Footage
50 premios Sant Jordi de cinematografía 2006 TV Special Frankie Dunn Archive Footage
Sexes 2005 TV Series Robert Kincaid Archive Footage
80s 2005 TV Series documentary Gunnery Sgt. Tom ‘Gunny’ Highway Archive Footage
Cinema mil 2005 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
60 Minutes 2003-2005 TV Series documentary Himself – Director, Million Dollar Baby (segment “Hilary Swank”) / Himself – Actor Archive Footage
The 76th Annual Academy Awards 2004 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Picture, Best Director Archive Footage
Gomorron 2003 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Comedy Central Roast of Denis Leary 2003 TV Movie Archive Footage
Modern Marvels 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
I sogni nel mirino 2002 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Who Is Alan Smithee? 2002 TV Movie documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
Private Screenings 2001 TV Series Red Hardigan Archive Footage
The Unbeatable Bruce Lee 2001 Video documentary Himself Archive Footage
Warner Bros. 75th Anniversary: No Guts, No Glory 1998 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
The Movie Show 1995 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Ennio Morricone 1995 TV Movie documentary Archive Footage
100 Years of the Hollywood Western 1994 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Red, White & Boots 1994 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
The Best of the Don Lane Show 1994 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage

Clint Eastwood Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2015 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year American Sniper (2014) Won
2015 CinemaCon Award CinemaCon, USA Fandango Fan Choice Won
2015 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Director Jersey Boys (2014) Won
2015 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Jersey Boys (2014) Won
2015 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Jersey Boys (2014) Won
2014 Truly Moving Picture Award Heartland Film American Sniper (2014) Won
2014 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Director American Sniper (2014) Won
2014 OFTA Film Hall of Fame Online Film & Television Association Creative Won
2012 Governors’ Award Society of Camera Operators Won
2012 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year J. Edgar (2011) Won
2012 Distinguished Collaborator Award Costume Designers Guild Awards Won
2011 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Hereafter (2010) Won
2011 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Non-European Director (Regista del Miglior Film Non-Europeo) Hereafter (2010) Won
2010 CinEuphoria CinEuphoria Awards Top Ten of the Year – International Competition Changeling (2008) Won
2010 César César Awards, France Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film étranger) Gran Torino (2008) Won
2010 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Gran Torino (2008) Won
2010 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Director Gran Torino (2008) Won
2010 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Gran Torino (2008) Won
2009 Modern Master Award Santa Barbara International Film Festival Changeling (2008) Won
2009 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year Gran Torino (2008) Won
2009 Honorary Golden Palm Cannes Film Festival Won
2009 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Gran Torino (2008) Won
2009 Audience Award FICE – Federazione Italiana Cinema d’Essai Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Gran Torino (2008) Won
2009 Gold Derby Award Gold Derby Awards Life Achievement (Performer) Won
2009 Golden Camera for Lifetime Achievement Golden Camera, Germany International Won
2009 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Non-European Director (Regista del Miglior Film Non-Europeo) Gran Torino (2008) Won
2009 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Director Invictus (2009) Won
2009 Career Achievement Award Palm Springs International Film Festival Won
2008 Bodil Bodil Awards Best American Film (Bedste amerikanske film) Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Won
2008 Special Award Cannes Film Festival Won
2008 Gold Derby Award Gold Derby Awards Life Achievement (Other) Won
2008 Hollywood Film Award Hollywood Film Awards Director of the Year Won
2008 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Actor Gran Torino (2008) Won
2007 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Original Song Grace Is Gone (2007) Won
2007 Movies for Grownups Award AARP Movies for Grownups Awards Best Director Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Won
2007 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Won
2007 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Non-European Director (Regista del Miglior Film Non-Europeo) Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Won
2007 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Won
2007 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Director Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Won
2007 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Won
2007 Spirit of Independence Award Los Angeles Film Festival Won
2007 Filmmaker’s Award Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA Won
2007 NTFCA Award North Texas Film Critics Association, US Best Foreign Language Film Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Won
2006 Milestone Award PGA Awards Won
2006 SDFCS Award San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Director Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Won
2006 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Director Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Won
2006 Critics Award SESC Film Festival, Brazil Best Foreign Film (Melhor Filme Estrangeiro) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Critics Award SESC Film Festival, Brazil Best Foreign Director (Melhor Diretor Estrangeiro) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Britannia Award BAFTA/LA Britannia Awards Excellence in Film Won
2006 Blue Ribbon Award Blue Ribbon Awards Best Foreign Langauge Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 César César Awards, France Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film étranger) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Lifetime Achievement Award Directors Guild of America, USA Won
2006 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Founder’s Award Golden Boot Awards Won
2006 Hochi Film Award Hochi Film Awards Best Foreign Language Film Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Won
2006 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2006 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Motion Picture of the Year Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Achievement in Directing Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Director – Motion Picture Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 VFCC Award Vancouver Film Critics Circle Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 Blue Ribbon Award Blue Ribbon Awards Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Won
2005 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 DGA Award Directors Guild of America, USA Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 FCCA Award Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards Best Foreign Film – English Language Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2005 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Won
2005 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Won
2005 Mainichi Film Concours Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Won
2004 Lifetime Achievement Award Publicists Guild of America Won
2004 SDFCS Award San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2004 SDFCS Award San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Score Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2004 Sant Jordi Sant Jordi Awards Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Mystic River (2003) Won
2004 Seattle Film Critics Award Seattle Film Critics Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2004 UFCA Award Utah Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2004 Opus Award ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards Won
2004 Lifetime Achievement Award Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Won
2004 CFCA Award Chicago Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2004 César César Awards, France Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film étranger) Mystic River (2003) Won
2004 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Mystic River (2003) Won
2004 ALFS Award London Critics Circle Film Awards Director of the Year Mystic River (2003) Won
2004 Special Achievement Award National Board of Review, USA Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2004 NSFC Award National Society of Film Critics Awards, USA Best Director Mystic River (2003) Won
2004 NYFCC Award New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Won
2003 Life Achievement Award Screen Actors Guild Awards Won
2003 Golden Coach Cannes Film Festival Mystic River (2003) Won
2002 Future Film Festival Digital Award Venice Film Festival Blood Work (2002) Won
2002 Career Achievement Award Chicago International Film Festival Won
2001 Akira Kurosawa Award San Francisco International Film Festival Won
2001 Contribution to Cinematic Imagery Award Art Directors Guild Won
2001 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Space Cowboys (2000) Won
2001 Mainichi Film Concours Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film Space Cowboys (2000) Won
2000 Career Golden Lion Venice Film Festival Won
1999 Career Achievement Award National Board of Review, USA Won
1998 Lifetime Achievement Award in Motion Pictures PGA Awards Won
1998 Honorary César César Awards, France Won
1996 Life Achievement Award American Film Institute, USA Won
1996 ASCAP Award ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards Top Box Office Films The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Won
1996 Blue Ribbon Award Blue Ribbon Awards Best Foreign Language Film The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Won
1996 Gala Tribute Film Society of Lincoln Center Won
1996 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Won
1996 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Director The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Won
1996 Readers’ Choice Award Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Won
1995 Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award Academy Awards, USA Won
1995 Douglas Sirk Award Hamburg Film Festival Won
1994 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Unforgiven (1992) Won
1994 Mainichi Film Concours Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Showmanship Award Publicists Guild of America Motion Picture Won
1993 Sant Jordi Sant Jordi Awards Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Picture Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 ShoWest Award ShoWest Convention, USA Director of the Year Won
1993 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Director – Motion Picture Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Theatrical Motion Picture Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 BFI Fellowship British Film Institute Awards Won
1993 DGA Award Directors Guild of America, USA Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Empire Award Empire Awards, UK Best Film Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Golden Boot Golden Boot Awards Won
1993 Hochi Film Award Hochi Film Awards Best Foreign Language Film Unforgiven (1992) Won
1993 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor In the Line of Fire (1993) Won
1993 NSFC Award National Society of Film Critics Awards, USA Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Won
1992 KCFCC Award Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Won
1992 LAFCA Award Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Actor Unforgiven (1992) Won
1992 LAFCA Award Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Won
1991 Man of the Year Hasty Pudding Theatricals, USA Won
1990 Silver Medallion Award Telluride Film Festival, US Won
1989 Sant Jordi Sant Jordi Awards Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Bird (1988) Won
1989 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Director – Motion Picture Bird (1988) Won
1988 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite All-Time Motion Picture Star Won
1988 Cecil B. DeMille Award Golden Globes, USA Won
1987 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Won
1985 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Won
1985 Golden Apple Golden Apple Awards Male Star of the Year Together with Bill Cosby Won
1984 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Tied with Burt Reynolds Won
1982 Special Award ShoWest Convention, USA Male Star of the Decade Won
1981 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Won
1980 Special Marquee American Movie Awards In recognition of his distinguished and continuing career as an outstanding actor, director and … More Won
1971 Henrietta Award Golden Globes, USA World Film Favorite – Male Won
1964 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Fictional Television Drama Rawhide (1959) Won
1962 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Fictional Television Drama Rawhide (1959) Won
1961 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Fictional Television Drama Rawhide (1959) Won
2015 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year American Sniper (2014) Nominated
2015 CinemaCon Award CinemaCon, USA Fandango Fan Choice Nominated
2015 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Director Jersey Boys (2014) Nominated
2015 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Jersey Boys (2014) Nominated
2015 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Jersey Boys (2014) Nominated
2014 Truly Moving Picture Award Heartland Film American Sniper (2014) Nominated
2014 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Director American Sniper (2014) Nominated
2014 OFTA Film Hall of Fame Online Film & Television Association Creative Nominated
2012 Governors’ Award Society of Camera Operators Nominated
2012 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year J. Edgar (2011) Nominated
2012 Distinguished Collaborator Award Costume Designers Guild Awards Nominated
2011 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Hereafter (2010) Nominated
2011 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Non-European Director (Regista del Miglior Film Non-Europeo) Hereafter (2010) Nominated
2010 CinEuphoria CinEuphoria Awards Top Ten of the Year – International Competition Changeling (2008) Nominated
2010 César César Awards, France Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film étranger) Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2010 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2010 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Director Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2010 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Film Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2009 Modern Master Award Santa Barbara International Film Festival Changeling (2008) Nominated
2009 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2009 Honorary Golden Palm Cannes Film Festival Nominated
2009 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2009 Audience Award FICE – Federazione Italiana Cinema d’Essai Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2009 Gold Derby Award Gold Derby Awards Life Achievement (Performer) Nominated
2009 Golden Camera for Lifetime Achievement Golden Camera, Germany International Nominated
2009 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Non-European Director (Regista del Miglior Film Non-Europeo) Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2009 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Director Invictus (2009) Nominated
2009 Career Achievement Award Palm Springs International Film Festival Nominated
2008 Bodil Bodil Awards Best American Film (Bedste amerikanske film) Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Nominated
2008 Special Award Cannes Film Festival Nominated
2008 Gold Derby Award Gold Derby Awards Life Achievement (Other) Nominated
2008 Hollywood Film Award Hollywood Film Awards Director of the Year Nominated
2008 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Actor Gran Torino (2008) Nominated
2007 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Original Song Grace Is Gone (2007) Nominated
2007 Movies for Grownups Award AARP Movies for Grownups Awards Best Director Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Nominated
2007 AFI Award AFI Awards, USA Movie of the Year Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Nominated
2007 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Non-European Director (Regista del Miglior Film Non-Europeo) Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Nominated
2007 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Nominated
2007 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Director Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Nominated
2007 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Nominated
2007 Spirit of Independence Award Los Angeles Film Festival Nominated
2007 Filmmaker’s Award Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA Nominated
2007 NTFCA Award North Texas Film Critics Association, US Best Foreign Language Film Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Nominated
2006 Milestone Award PGA Awards Nominated
2006 SDFCS Award San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Director Letters from Iwo Jima (2006) Nominated
2006 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Director Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Nominated
2006 Critics Award SESC Film Festival, Brazil Best Foreign Film (Melhor Filme Estrangeiro) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Critics Award SESC Film Festival, Brazil Best Foreign Director (Melhor Diretor Estrangeiro) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Britannia Award BAFTA/LA Britannia Awards Excellence in Film Nominated
2006 Blue Ribbon Award Blue Ribbon Awards Best Foreign Langauge Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 César César Awards, France Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film étranger) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Lifetime Achievement Award Directors Guild of America, USA Nominated
2006 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Founder’s Award Golden Boot Awards Nominated
2006 Hochi Film Award Hochi Film Awards Best Foreign Language Film Flags of Our Fathers (2006) Nominated
2006 Silver Ribbon Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Best Foreign Director (Regista del Miglior Film Straniero) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2006 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Motion Picture of the Year Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Achievement in Directing Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Director – Motion Picture Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 VFCC Award Vancouver Film Critics Circle Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 Blue Ribbon Award Blue Ribbon Awards Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2005 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film (Miglior Film Straniero) Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 DGA Award Directors Guild of America, USA Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 FCCA Award Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards Best Foreign Film – English Language Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2005 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2005 Readers’ Choice Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2005 Mainichi Film Concours Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2004 Lifetime Achievement Award Publicists Guild of America Nominated
2004 SDFCS Award San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2004 SDFCS Award San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Score Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2004 Sant Jordi Sant Jordi Awards Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2004 Seattle Film Critics Award Seattle Film Critics Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2004 UFCA Award Utah Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2004 Opus Award ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards Nominated
2004 Lifetime Achievement Award Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Nominated
2004 CFCA Award Chicago Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2004 César César Awards, France Best Foreign Film (Meilleur film étranger) Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2004 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2004 ALFS Award London Critics Circle Film Awards Director of the Year Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2004 Special Achievement Award National Board of Review, USA Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2004 NSFC Award National Society of Film Critics Awards, USA Best Director Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2004 NYFCC Award New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Director Million Dollar Baby (2004) Nominated
2003 Life Achievement Award Screen Actors Guild Awards Nominated
2003 Golden Coach Cannes Film Festival Mystic River (2003) Nominated
2002 Future Film Festival Digital Award Venice Film Festival Blood Work (2002) Nominated
2002 Career Achievement Award Chicago International Film Festival Nominated
2001 Akira Kurosawa Award San Francisco International Film Festival Nominated
2001 Contribution to Cinematic Imagery Award Art Directors Guild Nominated
2001 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Space Cowboys (2000) Nominated
2001 Mainichi Film Concours Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film Space Cowboys (2000) Nominated
2000 Career Golden Lion Venice Film Festival Nominated
1999 Career Achievement Award National Board of Review, USA Nominated
1998 Lifetime Achievement Award in Motion Pictures PGA Awards Nominated
1998 Honorary César César Awards, France Nominated
1996 Life Achievement Award American Film Institute, USA Nominated
1996 ASCAP Award ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards Top Box Office Films The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Nominated
1996 Blue Ribbon Award Blue Ribbon Awards Best Foreign Language Film The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Nominated
1996 Gala Tribute Film Society of Lincoln Center Nominated
1996 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Nominated
1996 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Director The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Nominated
1996 Readers’ Choice Award Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film The Bridges of Madison County (1995) Nominated
1995 Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award Academy Awards, USA Nominated
1995 Douglas Sirk Award Hamburg Film Festival Nominated
1994 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1994 Mainichi Film Concours Mainichi Film Concours Best Foreign Language Film Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Showmanship Award Publicists Guild of America Motion Picture Nominated
1993 Sant Jordi Sant Jordi Awards Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Picture Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 ShoWest Award ShoWest Convention, USA Director of the Year Nominated
1993 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Director – Motion Picture Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Theatrical Motion Picture Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 BFI Fellowship British Film Institute Awards Nominated
1993 DGA Award Directors Guild of America, USA Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Empire Award Empire Awards, UK Best Film Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Golden Boot Golden Boot Awards Nominated
1993 Hochi Film Award Hochi Film Awards Best Foreign Language Film Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1993 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor In the Line of Fire (1993) Nominated
1993 NSFC Award National Society of Film Critics Awards, USA Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1992 KCFCC Award Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1992 LAFCA Award Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Actor Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1992 LAFCA Award Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Unforgiven (1992) Nominated
1991 Man of the Year Hasty Pudding Theatricals, USA Nominated
1990 Silver Medallion Award Telluride Film Festival, US Nominated
1989 Sant Jordi Sant Jordi Awards Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) Bird (1988) Nominated
1989 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Director – Motion Picture Bird (1988) Nominated
1988 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite All-Time Motion Picture Star Nominated
1988 Cecil B. DeMille Award Golden Globes, USA Nominated
1987 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Nominated
1985 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Nominated
1985 Golden Apple Golden Apple Awards Male Star of the Year Together with Bill Cosby Nominated
1984 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Tied with Burt Reynolds Nominated
1982 Special Award ShoWest Convention, USA Male Star of the Decade Nominated
1981 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Motion Picture Actor Nominated
1980 Special Marquee American Movie Awards In recognition of his distinguished and continuing career as an outstanding actor, director and … More Nominated
1971 Henrietta Award Golden Globes, USA World Film Favorite – Male Nominated
1964 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Fictional Television Drama Rawhide (1959) Nominated
1962 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Fictional Television Drama Rawhide (1959) Nominated
1961 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Fictional Television Drama Rawhide (1959) Nominated