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Tall, powerfully built stage actor whose gaunt, leathery features were first seen on film in 1950, when Elia Kazan, who had previously directed Palance on Broadway in "A Streetcar Named Desire", cast him as a plague-ridden gangster in "Panic in the Streets". With his severe, strongly sculpted cheekbones, beady, piercing eyes and velvety, insinuating line delivery, Palance did manage to achieve star status, though he has usually played menacing, often dangerous or at least harshly unsympathetic types....

Filmography

Searching for Bobby DeNiro - ( / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Treasure Island - ( Long John Silver / 2002 / Released / )
Prancer Returns - ( Old Man Richards / 2001 / Released / USA Cable )
Marco Polo - ( / 2000 / Released / )
Contempt - ( Jeremy Prokosh / 1997 / Released / )
City Slickers II: the Legend of Curly's Gold - ( Duke Washburn / 1994 / Released / )
Cops and Robbersons - ( Jack Stone / 1994 / Released / )
The Swan Princess - ( of Rothbart / 1994 / Released / Dentsu Communications Company )
Cyborg II: Glass Shadows - ( Mercy / 1993 / Released / )
Solar Crisis - ( Travis / 1992 / Released / Shochiku-Fuji Company Ltd/Kuzui Enterprises )
City Slickers - ( Curly / 1991 / Released / Transmundo Films SA )
Batman - ( Carl Grissom / 1989 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Tango & Cash - ( Yves Perret / 1989 / Released / Greater Union Distributors )
Bagdad Cafe - ( Rudi Cox / 1988 / Released / Film Company )
Young Guns - ( L G Murphy / 1988 / Released / Hoyts Distribution )
Gor - ( Xenos / 1987 / Released / Cannon Releasing )
Outlaw of Gor - ( Xenos / 1987 / Released / Cannon Releasing )
George Stevens: A Filmmaker's Journey - ( Himself / 1985 / Released / )
Alone in the Dark - ( Frank Hawkes / 1982 / Released / Rank Film Distributors Ltd )
Hawk The Slayer - ( Voltan / 1980 / Released / )
Without Warning - ( Taylor / 1980 / Released / Filmways Inc )
Cocaine Cowboys - ( / 1979 / Released / International Harmony Inc )
The Shape of Things to Come - ( Omun / 1979 / Released / Film Ventures International )
One Man Jury - ( / 1978 / Released / Cal-Am Artists )
Welcome to Blood City - ( Frendlander / 1977 / Released / )
Eva Nera - ( Judas / 1976 / Released / Fine Films )
Squadra antiscippo - ( Richard J Russo-- / 1976 / Released / )
The Four Deuces - ( / 1976 / Released / Embassy Pictures )
Craze - ( Neal Mottram / 1973 / Released / )
Oklahoma Crude - ( Hellman / 1973 / Released / )
Chato's Land - ( Quincey Whitmore / 1971 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
The Horsemen - ( Tursen / 1971 / Released / )
Monte Walsh - ( / 1970 / Released / )
The McMasters - ( / 1970 / Released / Chevron )
The Mercenary - ( Ricciolo / 1970 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
Che! - ( Fidel Castro / 1969 / Released / )
Las Vegas 500 Milliones - ( Douglas / 1969 / Released / Pathe International )
The Desperados - ( Parson Josiah Galt / 1969 / Released / Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group )
L' Urlo dei Giganti - ( Major Heston / 1968 / Released / E J Fancey )
Kill a Dragon - ( Rick / 1967 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
The Professionals - ( Raza / 1966 / Released / )
The Spy in the Green Hat - ( Louis Strago / 1966 / Released / )
Once a Thief - ( Walter Pedak / 1965 / Released / MGM/UA Entertainment Company )
Barabbas - ( Torvald / 1962 / Released / )
The Last Judgement - ( / 1961 / Released / Dino De Laurentiis Company )
Austerlitz - ( Weirother / 1960 / Released / Lux )
Ten Seconds to Hell - ( Eric Koertner / 1959 / Released / )
The Man Inside - ( Milo March / 1958 / Released / )
House of Numbers - ( Arnie Judlow / 1957 / Released / MGM/UA Entertainment Company )
House of Numbers - ( Bill Judlow / 1957 / Released / MGM/UA Entertainment Company )
The Lonely Man - ( Jacob Wade / 1957 / Released / )
Attack! - ( Lieutenant Costa / 1956 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
I Died a Thousand Times - ( Roy Earle / 1955 / Released / )
Kiss of Fire - ( El Tigre / 1955 / Released / Universal )
The Big Knife - ( Charles Castle / 1955 / Released / )
Sign of the Pagan - ( Attila / 1954 / Released / )
The Silver Chalice - ( Simon / 1954 / Released / )
Arrowhead - ( Toriano / 1953 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
Flight to Tangier - ( Gil Walker / 1953 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
Man in the Attic - ( Slade / 1953 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
Shane - ( Wilson / 1953 / Released / )
Sudden Fear - ( Lester Blaine / 1952 / Released / )
Halls of Montezuma - ( / 1950 / Released / )
TV Credits
Back When We Were Grownups ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
Living With The Dead ( 2002 / Released ): Actor
Night Visions ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Prancer Returns ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The Omen Legacy ( 2001 / Released ): Narrator
Sarah, Plain and Tall: Winter's End ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Ebenezer ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
The 70th Annual Academy Awards ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
I'll Be Home For Christmas ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
Monster Mania ( 1997 / Released ): Actor / Narrator
Buffalo Girls ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Rod Serling: Submitted For Your Approval ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Twilight Zone: Rod Serling's Lost Classics ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
The 65th Annual Academy Awards Presentation ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
The 7th Annual American Comedy Awards ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
Keep the Change ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
The 6th Annual American Comedy Awards ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
When It Was a Game II ( 1992 / Released ): Voice
Dame Edna's Hollywood ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
The Night of 100 Stars II ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
Ripley's Believe It or Not ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
The Golden Moment -- An Olympic Love Story ( 1980 / Released ): Actor
The Ivory Ape ( 1980 / Released ): Actor
The Last Ride of the Dalton Gang ( 1979 / Released ): Actor
The Disappearance of Aimee ( 1976 / Released ): Actor
Bronk ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
Rickles ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
The Hatfields and the McCoys ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
Dracula ( 1974 / Released ): Actor
The Godchild ( 1974 / Released ): Actor
Alice Through the Looking Glass ( 1966 / Released ): Actor
Zane Grey Theater ( 1956 / Released ): Actor
Gulf Playhouse ( 1952 / Released ): Actor
The Web ( 1950 / Released ): Actor
Legends of the West With Jack Palance ( Released ): Executive Producer / Actor
Tales of the Haunted ( Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

Tall, powerfully built stage actor whose gaunt, leathery features were first seen on film in 1950, when Elia Kazan, who had previously directed Palance on Broadway in "A Streetcar Named Desire", cast him as a plague-ridden gangster in "Panic in the Streets". With his severe, strongly sculpted cheekbones, beady, piercing eyes and velvety, insinuating line delivery, Palance did manage to achieve star status, though he has usually played menacing, often dangerous or at least harshly unsympathetic types.

Palance went on to earn two supporting actor Oscar nominations, as the seemingly affectionate husband of Joan Crawford actually plotting her demise in "Sudden Fear" (1952) and as a particularly nasty gunslinger in "Shane" (1953). Leading roles soon followed, beginning with his recreation of Jack the Ripper for the modest period thriller, "Man in the Attic" (1953). Palance did occasionally manage to play victim as well as victimizer, notably as a blackmailed movie star in Robert Aldrich's adaptation of Clifford Odets' blistering portrait of Hollywood, "The Big Knife" (1955), and in a fine Emmy-winning turn as an unfortunate boxer in Rod Serling's landmark TV play, "Requiem for a Heavyweight" (1956).

One of Palance's last really outstanding films from this peak period was the powerful war film, "Attack!" (1956). As the 1960s dawned, routine actioners like "Ten Seconds to Hell" (1959) and "Once a Thief" (1965) became increasingly common. During this time he began appearing in foreign films, and though they included such similar fodder as "Barabbas" (1962), Palance did manage a superb turn as a crass American movie producer in Jean-Luc Godard's "Le Mepris/Contempt" (1963). He also tried TV with the circus-set series, "The Greatest Show on Earth" (1963-64).

Palance began alternating supporting roles with leads during the late 60s and early 70s but he kept very busy in mostly action fare including "The Desperados" (1968), "The Horsemen" (1971) and "Oklahoma Crude" (1973). TV work began to increase as well, and Palance clearly enjoyed himself giving unnerving, showmanlike performances in a special presentation of "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1968) and in his first TV-movie, "Dracula" (1974).

Palance tried a TV series again with the gritty cop drama, "Bronk" (1975-76) but had better luck bringing a creepy, bemused flair to his hosting duties on "Ripley's Believe It or Not" (1982-86), especially when he taunted audiences to "believe it...or not". He won new audiences with his offbeat performances as a courtly, aging artist in Percy Adlon's cult hit, "Bagdad Cafe" (1987) and as a gruff veteran trail boss leading tenderfoot vacationers on a cattle drive in the mid-life crisis comedy "City Slickers" (1991). The film earned the good-humored veteran actor a supporting Oscar and led to another sprightly performance--at the Academy Award ceremony, where he joked about his ability to keep working as well as his virility and then dropped to the floor to prove it with a series of one-armed push-ups. The inevitable sequel, "City Slickers II: The Search for Curly's Gold" (1994), followed; since the first film killed off Palance's character, Curly, this film featured the feisty actor as Curly's brother.


Profession(s):
Actor, professional boxer, model, waiter, lifeguard, cattle rancher, short order cook, coal miner, radio repairman, salesman
Sometimes Credited As:
Vladimir Palahnuik
Walter Palance
Walter Palanskie
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Family
brother:Leon Palahniuk (made appearances in films like "Chato's Land" and "Te Deum")
daughter:Brooke Palance (born on February 9, 1952; mother, Virginia Baker)
daughter:Holly Palance (born on August 6, 1950; was one of Palance's co-hosts on TV's "Ripley's Believe It or Not"; mother, Virginia Baker)
father:John Palahnuik (Ukranian)
son:Cody John Palance (born in 1955; appeared alongside his father in the film "Young Guns," and was 42 when he died from malignant melanoma in 1998; mother, Virginia Baker)
wife:Elaine Rogers (married in May 1987)
wife:Virginia Baker (met when both worked as understudies in the national tour of "A Streetcar Named Desire"; married on April 21, 1949; divorced in 1966)

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Education
Hazle Township High School Hazle, Pennsylvania
University of North Carolina North Carolina
Stanford University Stanford, California journalism
Awards (Back to top)
American Comedy Award Supporting Actor in a Film "City Slickers" 1992
Golden Globe Award Best Supporting Actor "City Slickers" 1991
Oscar Best Supporting Actor "City Slickers" 1991
Emmy Best Single Performance by an Actor "Requiem for a Heavyweight" (on "Playhouse 90") 1956
Theatre World Award 1951

Milestones (Back to top)
2001 Portrayed Long John Silver in feature remake of "Treasure Island"
2000 Returned to films after a six-year absence in "Marco Polo"
1999 Cast as Christopher Walken's father in the CBS "Hallmark Hall of Fame" presentation "Sarah, Plain and Tall: Winter's End"
1998 Played title role in "Ebenezer", the TNT-aired adaptation of "A Christmas Carol"
1995 Had featured role in the CBS miniseries "Buffalo Girls"
1994 Appeared as Curly's twin brother in "City Slickers II: The Secret of Curly's Gold"
1994 Provided the voice for the sinister villain Rothbert in the animated "The Swan Princess"
1992 Startled audience and gave host Billy Crystal material for quips when he performed a series of one-armed push-ups as part of his Oscar acceptance speech at the Academy Awards ceremony after winning Be
1992 Hosted four syndicated historical documentary specials, "Legends of the West with Jack Palance"
1991 Played Curly, an ornery trail boss who whips a trio of urban dwellers into shape to participate in a Montana cattle drive in "City Slickers"
1989 Co-starred in "Batman" directed by Tim Burton
1988 Portrayed a painter in "Bagdad Cafe"
1987 Returned to features with his leading role in the adult action-fantasy, "Gor"
1981 Hosted the special "Ripley's Believe It or Not!"
1980 First TV miniseries, "The Golden Moment--An Olympic Love Story"
1974 Had title role in the CBS adaptation of "Dracula"
1974 TV-movie debut, "Dracula"
1973 Co-starred with George C Scott and Faye Dunaway in "Oklahoma Crude"
1969 Cast as Fidel Castro in "Che!", the biopic of revolutionary Ernesto 'Che' Guevara
1968 Had title roles in the ABC special "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"; was injured in a fall during filming and later sued, receiving some $500,000 in damages
1966 Co-starred in "The Professionals"
1966 Played the Jabberwock in a one-hour NBC-TV musical adaptation, "Alice Through the Looking Glass"
1965 Returned to the stage as the King of Siam opposite Celeste Holm's Anna Leonowens in "The King and I" in Anaheim, California
1965 Began playing primarily supporting parts in features with his role in "Once a Thief"
1963 Directed by Jean-Luc Godard in "Contempt"
1960 Starred in the title role of the NBC adventure special "Rivak, the Barbarian"
1958 - 1963 Lived in Switzerland
1957 Made guest appearance on TV's "The Perry Como Show"; surprised many by displaying his vocal abilities
1957 Had dual role in "The House of Numbers"
1955 Spent a summer season at the American Shakespeare Festival in Straford, Connecticut
1955 Portrayed a movie idol in "The Big Knife"
1954 Co-starred in "Sign of the Pagan"
1953 Cast as the hired gunman in "Shane"; although filmed before "Sudden Fear", "Shane" was not released until the following year
1953 Received top billing in a feature film for the first time in the Jack the Ripper Gothic thriller, "Man in the Attic"
1953 First color film, "Second Chance"
1952 Received first Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actor for "Sudden Fear"
1952 Received first Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actor for "Sudden Fear"
1951 Returned to Broadway in "Darkness at Noon"
1950 Film debut in "Panic in the Streets", directed by Kazan
1950 Walked out on Fox contract when he failed to be cast alongside Brando in "Viva, Zapata!"; role went to Anthony Quinn who won an Oscar
1948 Appeared in the Off-Broadway production of "The Silver Tassie"
1947 Broadway acting debut, a one-line role as a Russian soldier in "The Big Two"
1946 Moved to NYC
1944 Left military service; returned to work in the coal mines
1942 Joined US Army Air Force; involved in plane crash during training
1938 Became a professional boxer at age 20; reportedly won 18 out of 20 bouts (date approximate)
Injured throat in last fight; left with signature raspy voice
Returned to Pennsylvania and worked briefly as a coal miner
Attended Stanford on the GI Bill
Worked for a time as a reporter in San Francisco for $35 a week
While at Stanford, landed role alongside Aline MacMahon in the play "My Indian Family"
Understudied Anthony Quinn in the national tour of "A Streetcar Named Desire"
After returning to NYC, became Marlon Brando's understudy for the Broadway production of "A Streetcar Named Desire", staged by Elia Kazan; spotted by 20th Century Fox talent scout when he went on for
Put under contract by 20th Century Fox
Starred as Johnny Slate on the ABC TV series, "The Greatest Show on Earth"
Hosted the ABC primetime documentary series, "Ripley's Believe It or Not"
Hosted the ABC half-hour primetime documentary series, "Ripley's Believe It or Not!"; daughter Holly served as co-host


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