American actor and filmmaker
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He chased 14 Oscar nominations across four different categories—acting, directing, writing, producing—a breadth almost no one else has matched. The through-line: total creative control, from Bonnie and Clyde onward.
Henry Warren Beatty made his stage debut in A Loss of Roses in 1960, earning a Tony nomination, then broke through on screen a year later as a teenager in love in Elia Kazan's Splendor in the Grass. By 1967 he was Clyde Barrow in Bonnie and Clyde, the first of four Best Actor nominations. Through the seventies he moved between Robert Altman's McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Alan J. Pakula's The Parallax View, and Hal Ashby's Shampoo, then stepped behind the camera for Reds in 1981—winning Best Director and cementing a rare four-way Oscar presence. He returned as Bugsy Siegel in 1991, directed Dick Tracy…
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