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Vincent Phillip D'Onofrio (born June 30, 1959) is an American actor and film producer.[1] He first gained attention for his role as "Private Leonard 'Gomer Pyle' Lawrence" in Full Metal Jacket, and more currently for his role as Detective Robert Goren in Law & Order: Criminal Intent.
[edit] Biography[edit] Early lifeD'Onofrio was born in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, of Italian descent.[2] Vincent is the son of Gennaro (Gene) D’Onofrio, an interior designer and part-time theater production assistant, and Phyllis D‘Onofrio (now Meyer) a waitress and restaurant manager. Vincent's parents met while Gennaro was stationed in Hawaii with the U.S. Air Force. The couple relocated to the mainland where they had three children. Vincent is the youngest and the only boy. His middle sister Elizabeth D'Onofrio is an actress and drama coach now residing in Ft. Myers Beach, Florida. His eldest sister, Toni, owns the Rib City restaurant in Utah. [edit] CareerIn 1984, D'Onofrio became a full member of the American Stanislavsky Theatre, appearing in a number of its productions, including Of Mice and Men and Sexual Perversity in Chicago. He also made his Broadway debut as Nick Rizzoli in Open Admissions.[3] Before this breakthrough, he had been acting in New York University student films and was working as a bouncer at the Hard Rock Cafe.[4] In 1987, D'Onofrio entered the mainstream consciousness with two film roles that demonstrated his range as an actor. His first major film role was as the over-weight Private Leonard "Gomer Pyle" Lawrence in Stanley Kubrick's 1987 film, Full Metal Jacket, a part for which he gained nearly 70 lbs, bringing his weight to 280 lbs.[5] The other role was that of Dawson, the owner of Dawson's Garage in Adventures in Babysitting, directed by Chris Columbus. D'Onofrio appears in only one pivotal scene near the end of the film, but his role attracted attention because of his muscular physique and long blond hair, which cause the film's youngest character to mistakenly believe that he is actually Thor, the comic-book superhero she idolizes. D'Onofrio continued to play a wide variety of roles, including iconic director Orson Welles in Tim Burton's Ed Wood, farmer Edgar and the evil "Bug" that possesses him from Men in Black, the father of a saint in Nancy Savoca's Household Saints, Yippie founder Abbie Hoffman in Steal This Movie, a time traveler from the distant future in Happy Accidents, and opposite Jennifer Lopez as fictional serial killer Carl Stargher in The Cell. He has dabbled in film production and direction, having produced two films, The Whole Wide World and Guy, in 1996 and 1997 executive produced two others, The Velocity of Gary in 1998 and Steal This Movie in 2000, and directed the short Five Minutes, Mr. Welles in 2005. This last represents a culmination of D'Onofrio's desire to improve on his performance as Welles in Ed Wood, which, in spite of D'Onofrio's striking physical resemblance to the late actor/director, reportedly left director Tim Burton underwhelmed. Burton had to procure the services of voice-over artist Maurice LaMarche to produce a more dramatically effective rendering of the character's dialogue. D'Onofrio received an Emmy nomination in 1997 for his appearance as John Lange, the doomed victim in the "Subway" episode of Homicide: Life on the Street. He also starred as Det. Robert Goren, a principal character, on the NBC television show Law & Order: Criminal Intent. In 2003, it was reported that D'Onofrio and Joe Pantoliano began work on a small film entitled Little Victories, about a 12-year old boy whose perceptions of the world are forever changed when his gangster uncle comes to live with him.[6] According to a television interview with Pantoliano, Little Victories was not completed and went into turnaround because of a failure to raise the funds necessary for production.[citation needed] In November 2005, D'Onofrio won Best Actor at the Stockholm International Film Festival for his role as Mike Cobb in the independent film Thumbsucker. In 2006, D'Onofrio appeared in The Break Up, starring Jennifer Aniston and Vince Vaughn. In it, he played Vaughn's somewhat eccentric brother. They had appeared together on two previous films, in The Cell, when Vaughn played an FBI agent attempting to catch D'Onofrio, and Thumbsucker. In 2008, D'Onofrio made a cameo appearance in a Presidential Election-related sketch of a Saturday Night Live episode as his character Det. Robert Goren.[7] In the sketch, which originally aired on March 1, 2008, he interrogates Hillary Clinton (played by Amy Poehler). His entrance to and exit from the skit are punctuated by the classic Law & Order "dun-DUN" sound. On Oct. 27, 2009, D'Onofrio portrayed a fictional country singer named George Geronimo Gerkie at Joe's Pub in New York City. D'Onofrio turned down a role in The Sopranos. D'Onofrio will be leaving Law & Order: Criminal Intent in Spring of 2010, and will appear in a two part story in ninth season premiere.[8] [edit] Personal lifeD'Onofrio's father, Gene, and his sister Beth founded the River Run International Film Festival in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, which began in 1998.[9] D'Onofrio has a daughter, Leila George D'Onofrio[10], born 20 March 1992[11][12] in Sydney, Australia. Her mother is actress Greta Scacchi, with whom D'Onofrio made several movies in the late '80s and early '90s (including The Player and Fires Within). The couple were in a relationship from 1991 until 1993. After that relationship ended, D'Onofrio married model Carin van der Donk on March 22, 1997.[13] The couple have a son, Elias Gene, born in December 1999. D'Onofrio and van der Donk split in October 2003,[14] but reconciled in 2007. Carin gave birth to their second son, Luca, on February 14, 2008.[15] D'Onofrio and his family reside in New York, where Law & Order: Criminal Intent is filmed.[16] D'Onofrio experienced a health issue when he collapsed on the set of Law & Order: Criminal Intent on November 10, 2004. He collapsed again at home a few days later and was taken back to the hospital for more thorough testing, where he was diagnosed with exhaustion.[17] [edit] filmography (selection)[edit] Television (including notable guest appearances)
[edit] Documentaries
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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