Born:
October 26, 1942
in
Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
Best Known For:
The Long Good Friday.
Early-life:
Born Robert William Hoskins Jr in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, on October 26, 1942, but grew up in Finsbury Park, London. He left school at 15 following a happy, but rebellious childhood and supported himself via a series of odd jobs, including window cleaner, truck driver, steeplejack and even circus performer. Despite never taking a single drama lesson, he landed his first acting role in 1968 after being invited to take part in an audition at a pub.
Career:
Small parts in TV productions and films during the early 1970s led to him landing his breakthrough role in Dennis Potter's 1978 miniseries Pennies from Heaven. Violent thriller The Long Good Friday followed in 1980, cementing his stardom. Other offerings, including The Cotton Club, Brazil, Mona Lisa and A Prayer for the Dying followed, but he found global fame in 1988's effects-laden Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Subsequent Hollywood movies included Mermaids and Hook, but he also worked in the UK on A Christmas Carol, Made in Dagenham, TwentyFourSeven, Last Orders and The Street. His final film, Snow White and the Huntsman, was released in 2012. He died of pneumonia on April 30, 2014.
Quote:
"I came into this business uneducated, dyslexic, 5ft 6in, cubic, with a face like a squashed cabbage and they welcomed me with open arms."
Trivia:
Hoskins won a Golden Globe for his role in Mona Lisa.