Tom Hanks

Tom Hanks

Thomas Jeffrey Hanks is an American actor and filmmaker. He won two consecutive Academy Awards for Best Actor for starring as a gay lawyer suffering from AIDS in Philadelphia and a young man with below-average IQ in Forrest Gump. His other notable films include the romantic comedies Sleepless in Seattle and You’ve Got Mail ; the dramas Apollo 13, The Green Mile, Cast Away, Road to Perdition, and Cloud Atlas. He has also appeared as the title character in the Robert Langdon film series, and has voiced Sheriff Woody in the Toy Story film series. In 2016, he received a Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama, as well as the French Legion of Honor.

About Tom Hanks in brief

Summary Tom HanksThomas Jeffrey Hanks is an American actor and filmmaker. Hanks made his breakthrough with leading roles in the comedies Splash and Big. He won two consecutive Academy Awards for Best Actor for starring as a gay lawyer suffering from AIDS in Philadelphia and a young man with below-average IQ in Forrest Gump. His other notable films include the romantic comedies Sleepless in Seattle and You’ve Got Mail ; the dramas Apollo 13, The Green Mile, Cast Away, Road to Perdition, and Cloud Atlas. He has also appeared as the title character in the Robert Langdon film series, and has voiced Sheriff Woody in the Toy Story film series. In 2016, he received a Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama, as well as the French Legion of Honor. In 2020 he received the Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award. He received the Stanley Kubrick Britannia Award for Excellence in Film from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in 2004. His films have grossed more than USD 4. 9 billion in North America and more thanUSD 9. 96 billion worldwide, making him the fourth-highest-grossing actor in NorthAmerica. He is married to actress Amy Adams and has three children. He was born in Concord, California on July 9, 1956, and is the son of hospital worker Janet Marylyn and itinerant cook Amos Mefford Hanks. He studied theater at Chabot College in Hayward, California, and transferred to California State University, Sacramento after two years.

His family moved often; by the age of 10, he had lived in 10 different houses. While Hanks’s family religious history was Catholic and Mormon, he has characterized his teenage self as being a \”Bible-toting evangelical\” for several years. In 2013, he received a Tony Award nomination for Best actor in a Play for his performance in Nora Ephron’s Lucky Guy. He also won 7 Primetime Emmy Awards for his work as a producer of various limited series and television movies, including From the Earth to the Moon, Band of Brothers, John Adams, and The Pacific. In 2000, Hanks became an intern at the Great Lakes Theater Festival in Cleveland, Ohio, where he covered most of the festival’s most popular plays. His most recent internship stretched into a three-year stint at the festival, covering all of the plays from Tennessee Williams, Ibsen, and Tennessee Williams to Tennessee Williams. In 2004, he became a director, producer, and screenwriter for the miniseries Band Of Brothers, which launched him as a director and producer. In 2010, he won the AFI Life Achievement Award in 2002. In 2014, he was awarded a Kennedy Center Honor, and in 2016 he was given a Presidential medal of Freedom by President Obama. He lives in Los Angeles, California with his wife, Amy, and their three children, Sandra, Larry, and Tom, while the youngest, Jim, remained with their mother in Red Bluff, California.