Jon Voight - - Biography

February 2022 ยท 3 minute read

Early Years and Career

Jonathan Vincent Voight was born on December 29, 1938, in Yonkers, New York. The son of a Czechoslovakian-American golf pro, Jon Voight discovered his love for acting as a teenager. Following a stint on Broadway, he appeared in his first film, Fearless Frank, in 1965. 

'Midnight Cowboy' and Acting Fame

It was Voight's 1969 role as country boy-turned-hustler Joe Buck in the groundbreaking film Midnight Cowboy that earned him an Oscar nomination and launched his career into the big time.

For the next two decades, Voight's film career was a mix of incredible highs and forgettable misses. His many memorable projects from this period include 1972's Deliverance and 1978's Coming Home, for which he won a Best Actor Oscar for his portrayal of a quadriplegic Vietnam War veteran opposite Jane Fonda. 

In 1985, he ended a five-year dry spell with an Academy Award nod for his performance in Japanese director Akira Kurosawa's thriller Runaway Train. A "spiritual reawakening" then led Voight to work on a number of intellectually related and doomed film projects.

After playing Robert De Niro's underworld contact in Michael Mann's 1995 drama Heat, Voight once again began to star in big budget offerings, including 1996's Mission: Impossible, 1997's The Rainmaker and 1998's Enemy of the State. In 2001, he delivered well-received performances as President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in Pearl Harbor and as the patriarch in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, a film that starred his estranged daughter, actress Angelina Jolie. That year he also brilliantly channeled sportscaster Howard Cosell in the biopic Ali, capturing his fourth Oscar nomination.

In recent years, Voight has enjoyed a resurgence as one of Hollywood's most sought-after character actors. He received an Emmy nomination in 2002 for his performance in the acclaimed NBC miniseries Uprising. He also found great success with the 2004 sleeper hit Holes and Jonathan Demme's 2004 remake of The Manchurian Candidate. Voight Later co-starred with Edward Norton and Colin Farrell in Pride and Glory (2008), a story of familial corruption among New York City police officers.

In recent years, Voight has enjoyed great success on the small screen. He appeared on season seven of the hit action drama 24 and then landed one of his most significant roles in years. In Ray Donovan, which debuted in 2013, Voight plays Mickey Donovan, a Boston ex-con. Liev Schrieber plays his son, the title character, who works with celebrities to make their problems go away by any means necessary. Ray and Mickey Donovan have one of the most dysfunctional father-son relationships in TV history. In 2014, Voight won a Golden Globe for his nuanced portrayal of this rough-around-the-edges aging thug. He also received an Emmy Award nomination.

Personal

Jon Voight was married to Lauri Peters from 1962 to 1967 and to Marcheline Bertrand from 1971 to 1978. He has two children, actor James Haven and actress Angelina Jolie, with Bertrand.

One of the few outspoken Republicans in Hollywood, Voight supported Donald Trump in the 2016 U.S. presidential race. Ironically, when the animatronic version of President Trump debuted at Disney World's Hall of Presidents in December 2017, he was said to strongly resemble Voight.

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