PROFESSIONS
Actor, Producer, Director, Assistant Film Editor, Gofer, Gas Station Attendant
SOMETIMES CREDITED AS
Michael Kirk Douglas
BIOGRAPHY
Actor and producer Michael Douglas enjoyed great success by avoiding the heroic leading man archetype by creating smart, flawed, sympathetically human characters. His popularity grew through battle-of-the-sexes dramas “Fatal Attraction” (1987), “Basic Instinct” (1987) and “Disclosure” (1994) and held strong as he portrayed mid-life professionals at a crossroads in “Wall....
Actor and producer Michael Douglas enjoyed great success by avoiding the heroic leading man archetype by creating smart, flawed, sympathetically human characters. His popularity grew through battle-of-the-sexes dramas “Fatal Attraction” (1987), “Basic Instinct” (1987) and “Disclosure” (1994) and held strong as he portrayed mid-life professionals at a crossroads in “Wall Street” (1987) and “Wonder Boys” (2000). Douglas rarely dominated a movie like his famous father Kirk Douglas had during his 1950s heyday, and though his $20 million price tag might have suggested otherwise, the younger Douglas remained more of a complementary player who allowed a collection of strong actors to drive a film. In addition to his movie star status Douglas was well known as a film producer, garnering a Best Picture Oscar for his first outing, “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975) and maintaining his reputation with films including “The China Syndrome” (1979) and “The Rainmaker” (1997).

Michael Douglas was born on Sept. 25, 1944, to budding actors Kirk Douglas and Diana Dill. The couple was divorced when Douglas was five years old and he was raised by his mother and stepfather, William Darrid, in New York and his mother’s homeland of Bermuda. Douglas and his father had a tumultuous relationship and saw little of each other while the son and his brothers were growing up. After graduating from the tony private school, Choate, in Connecticut, Douglas went on to the University of California in Santa Barbara, where the beach environment and political stirrings transformed the “uptight” teen into a self-proclaimed “hippie.”

On the brink of flunking out, Douglas was forced to declare a major and reluctantly chose theater. Anticipating that stage fright might hinder his career, Douglas reconnected with his father and learned some behind-the-scenes skills as an assistant director on Kirk’s “The Heroes of Telmark” (1965) and “Cast a Giant Shadow” (1966). Reportedly, the elder Douglas was not encouraged by his offspring’s acting potential after seeing him in a college production of "As You Like It," however Douglas did get his theater degree in 1968 and moved to New York where he continued training at the Neighborhood Playhouse with Sanford Meisner.

After getting his feet wet in off-Broadway and regional theater productions, a deal to appear in “CBS Playhouse” (CBS, 1967-70) brought Douglas to Los Angeles. In early TV roles, he often portrayed idealistic youths confronting the issues of the day in offerings like "Hail, Hero" (1969), "Adam at 6 A.M." (1970) and "Summertree" (1971). He significantly upped his profile as the college-educated, idealistic partner of veteran detective (Karl Malden) on the TV cop drama "The Streets of San Francisco" (ABC, 1972-1980). The show not only polished Douglas’ acting chops enough to earn him three consecutive Emmys, it exposed him to every aspect of production. Douglas fell in love with the process and eventually began to direct episodes starring his idol, Malden.

Douglas left the show in 1976 to pursue the opportunity to produce his first feature, Milos Forman's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (1975), adapted from the novel by Ken Kesey. His father, who had played the lead role of Randel McMurphy on Broadway, owned the film rights and tried unsuccessfully for a decade to put together a screen version of the feisty misfit who inspires his fellow mental patients to assert themselves. Douglas breathed new life into the project and the result was runaway box-office returns and a sweep of the top five Oscars. Douglas shared Best Picture honors with Saul Zaentz and Kirk made a hefty profit, though it must have been difficult for the fading screen hero to see his newcomer son take home an Oscar while he had never earned one himself.

Joining forces with Jane Fonda's IPC Films, Douglas next co-produced and starred alongside Fonda and Jack Lemmon in "The China Syndrome" (1979), a powerful political drama which benefited from the fortuitously timed near meltdown at New York state’s Three Mile Island nuclear power facility. The following year, Douglas suffered a skiing accident which led to knee surgery and an absence from the screen for three years. He was still regarded as more of a producer than an actor when he returned to the game in "Romancing the Stone" (1984), but his superb portrayal of the amiable, smug adventurer Jack Colton – a sort of black sheep Indiana Jones – began to change that perception. The film profitably teamed him with Kathleen Turner and Danny De Vito for a rollicking, fast-paced comedy adventure.

After the trio made the inevitable, successful but critically maligned sequel, "Jewel of the Nile" (1985), Douglas found himself in ninth place on the annual exhibitors' poll of the Top 10 box office stars, despite never having a track record as a leading man. In 1987, Douglas was handed the first dramatic lead that showed his real acting potential. Even though "Wall Street" was more about Charlie Sheen’s newbie character, Bud Fox, Douglas won the Best Actor Oscar and Golden Globe for his infinitely more intriguing Gordon Gekko – a wonderfully smarmy and arrogant corporate raider and the high-rolling epitome of 80s excess and greed. In fact, it was Gekko’s “greed is good” speech that entered the pop cultural lexicon. That same year, he took what could have been the unlikable role of a husband who endangers his family by trying to get away with adultery, and earned audience forgiveness with his human frailty in the megahit cautionary tale, “Fatal Attraction.” Perhaps even more with the latter film, Douglas effectively resonated with audiences as a morally lazy and thrill-seeking Everyman caught in the spider's web of his own making.

Douglas reunited with De Vito and Turner in the marital black comedy "The War of the Roses" (1989), with the actor scoring again with a delicious, Golden Globe-nominated performance in the satiric commentary on "yuppie" materialism. Back in the producer’s chair, he formed Stonebridge Entertainment, Inc. in 1988 and went on to produce Joel Schumacher's "Flatliners" (1990) and Richard Donner's "Radio Flyer" (1992). In another box office hit resonant of his earlier victimization by Close, Douglas was drawn to the flame of a bisexual, man-eating lover (Sharon Stone) in "Basic Instinct" (1992). The film brought a firestorm of criticism from the gay community, but audiences flocked to see Paul Verhoeven's sexy and stylish thriller. Around that same time, Douglas went through a stint of treatment for alcohol abuse, and the following year, scored again at the box office as a government employee on a revenge spree in Schumacher's "Falling Down" (1993), though the critically lambasted film was tagged "wildly stupid" and "morally dangerous."

Douglas produced "Made in America" (1993), a questionable comic pairing of Whoopi Goldberg and Ted Danson, before succumbing to a woman once again in "Disclosure" (1994). Based on Michael Crichton's best-selling novel, the film told the story of a male executive sexually harassed by his female boss (Demi Moore). In a more lighthearted exploration of the battle of the sexes, Douglas starred as a single, handsome, commander-in-chief in Rob Reiner’s charming romantic comedy "The American President” (1995). He earned a Golden Globe nomination for his light and breezy performance as a widowed President trying to run the free world while romancing an environmental lobbyist (Annette Bening). In 1994, he signed a development deal at Paramount and produced and starred in the historical adventure "The Ghost and the Darkness" (1996), but the studio was much happier with two producing projects in which he did not act – John Woo's actioner "Face/Off" (1997) and "John Grisham's The Rainmaker" (1997).

Returning to the screen, Douglas had a box-office hit as a ruthless businessman whose ne'er-do-well brother gives him an unusual birthday present in David Fincher's dark thriller "The Game" (1997). After plotting the death of a wealthy young trophy wife (Gwyneth Paltrow) in "A Perfect Murder" (1998), Douglas delivered one of his most critically hailed roles as a pot-smoking college professor plagued by writer's block in the sleeper hit “Wonder Boys” (2000). Onscreen he elicited sympathy for his bathrobe-clad sad sack, but off-screen the actor received a flurry of gossip attention over the end of his 23-year marriage to Diandra Douglas – amidst rumors of sex addiction and infidelity – and the beginning of his new romance and extravagant 2000 Plaza Hotel wedding to bombshell Catherine Zeta-Jones, 25 years his junior. Douglas reportedly fell in love with the Welsh beauty after seeing her in “The Mark of Zorro” (1998), proclaiming to all who would listen that he would one day make that woman his wife. The two were prominently (though separately) featured in "Traffic" (2000), the Steven Soderbergh Best Picture Oscar winner in which Douglas played a drug czar trying to rid the U.S. of substance abuse while his own crack and heroin-addicted daughter slips into ruin.

In 2001, Douglas could be seen as an Elvis-like hit man in the black comedy "One Night at McCool's" and subsequently as a psychiatrist blackmailed into treating a patient with key information in the thriller "Don't Say a Word." After a long absence from television, the handsomely aging actor had a guest-starring appearance on the sitcom “Will & Grace” (NBC, 1998-2006) in 2002, earned yet another Emmy Award for his role as a gay suitor. The following year, while riding along in the media whirlwind surrounding his wife’s acclaimed performance in "Chicago” (2003), Douglas unfortunately earned more headlines than box office earnings for his starring turn as the head of a dysfunctional clan in "It Runs in the Family," his first professional collaboration with his father. The father – having suffered from a stroke – and son made the inevitable press rounds, discussing their often complicated and conscientious relationship. Also that year, Douglas starred in the remake of the classic 1979 comedy "The In-Laws," directed by Andrew Fleming, playing a gonzo CIA agent to Albert Brooks' nebbish dentist.

After a small role as the bride’s (Kate Hudson) dad in the romantic comedy "You, Me and Dupree" (2004) and dealing with the grief of losing his half-brother, Eric, to a July 6, 2004 drug overdose, Douglas produced and starred in the uneven political thriller “The Sentinel” (2004) but fared better in the little-seen indie comedy, "The King of California" (2007), where he played a manic depressive dad obsessed with finding buried treasure in the San Fernando Valley. Douglas was rumored to revive his acclaimed “Wall Street” character Gordon Gekko in a 2009 sequel, “Money Never Sleeps,” but the Douglas family – now including son, Dylan, and daughter, Carys – spent a large amount of time at their secluded home in Bermuda.



Family

Brother:  Joel Douglas  (Born Jan. 23, 1947; head of Victorine Studios in Nice, France)
Daughter:  Carys Zeta Douglas  (Born April 20, 2003; mother Catherine Zeta Jones)
Father:  Kirk Douglas  (Star of such films as "Champion" (1949), "The Bold and the Beautiful" (1952), "Lust for Life" (1956), "Two Weeks in Another Town" (1962) and "Seven Days in May" (1964); married to Douglas' mother from 1943 to 1950; later married Anne Buydens)
Half-brother:  Peter Douglas  
Half-brother:  Eric Douglas  (Had highly publicized battles with addictions; died July 6, 2004)
Mother:  Diana Douglas  (Married to Douglas' father from 1943 to 1950; later married William Darrid c. 1956)
Son:  Cameron Douglas  (Born Dec. 12, 1978; mother, Diandra Douglas; reportedly spent time in rehab for alcohol problems c. 1997; arrested in 1999 for possession of cocaine and again in 2009 for a methamphetamine-dealing charge)
Son:  Dylan Michael Douglas  (Born Aug. 8, 2000; mother, Catherine Zeta-Jones)
Step-father:  William Darrid  (Married Douglas' mother c. 1956, until his death in July 1992)
Step-mother:  Anne Douglas  
Wife:  Catherine Zeta-Jones  (Began dating in spring 1999; announced engagement in January 2000; married Nov. 18, 2000 at the Plaza Hotel in NYC)
Wife:  Diandra Douglas  (Born c. 1957; met Douglas in Washington, DC, the night before Jimmy Carter's inauguration; married March 20, 1977; produced art history documentaries for PBS, "Frederic Remington: The Truth of Other Days" (1991) and "Beatrice Wood: Mama of Dada" (1993); formed a NYC-based production company named Wild Wolf Productions; separated in 1995; divorced in 2000; later romantically involved with painter Sacha Newley)

Companions

Brenda Vaccaro (Met on set of "Summertree" (1971); together c. 1970-76)
Elizabeth Vargas (Worked at NBC and ABC; briefly dated)
Maureen Dowd (Wrote op-ed pieces for The New York Times)

Education

Choate School Wallingford, CT
Eugene O'Neill Theater Center Waterford, CT
The Neighborhood Playhouse New York, NY
American Place Theatre New York, NY
University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, CA BA dramatic arts 1968
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