Real name Issur Danielovitch Demsky

Date of birth


December 9th,1916, 8:30am
Click here for Kirk´s horoscope
Location Amsterdam, New York, USA
Height 5' 11" (1,80 m)

Parents

Issur Danielovitch, is a born jew, by his father Herschel Danielovitch (born 1884 in Russia), and his mother Bryna Sanglel. They came to America in 1910.

Sisters

Pesha (1910)
Kaleh (1912)
Tamara (1914),
Haska and Siffra (1918) - twins
Rachel (1924)

Spouse

Diana Dill (born Jan. 22th, 1924)
- marriage on Nov. 2nd, 1943
- divorced in 1951
- 2 sons:
..Michael Kirk (09/25/1944); Joel (01/23/1947)
  Anne Buydens
- marriage on May 29th, 1954 - present
- 2 sons:
..Peter Vincent (11/23/1955); Eric (06/21/1958)
Grandchildren:
Cameron Morell (born Dec. 13, 1978)
Son of Michael and Diandra
(married March 20th, 1977)
  Kelsey (born ~ 1992) and Tyler (born ~ 1996)
Children of Peter and Lisa (married ???)

Biography:

"Films of Kirk Douglas",
Tony Thomas, New Jersey 1972, Citadel Press
Perssonal
quotes:
"I´ve made a career of playing sons of bitches"

Agent:





Kirk Douglas
805 N. Rexford Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90210, USA

Kirk Douglas
141 El Camino Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90212, USA

Click here for Kirk Douglas' home


Click on pictures to see full size

"My story is the American dream come true," Kirk Douglas says about his life. Some dream! He was born the son of a junk dealer, but he became one of those rare stars who are "as much institutions as actors, cultural icons who conjure up an entire era's worth of images" (The New York Times). On screen we know him as cowboy, painter, Viking, lover, boxer, trumpeter, cop, slave--characters who fought the system and more often than not ended up destroyed by it. In real life he fought the system, too--but ended up victorious.

He grew up the son of Russian Jewish immigrant parents, as Issur Danielovitch, but he worked his way through St. Lawrence University as a janitor and became president of his class and of the school drama club. With a new name, Isadore Demsky, he went to New York's American Academy of Dramatic Arts to pursue his acting dreams and soon landed his first role on Broadway (Spring Again, 1941) and changed his name again, this time to one that would become famous around the world. He served in the Navy during World War II. In Hollywood his first screen role came in 1946's popular Barbara Stanwyck vehicle, The Strange Love of Martha Ivers. Stanley Kramer, producer of Douglas's 1949 star-making film Champion, said Douglas "acted like a star when he was nobody. He came at you, center stage, and there it was." He wasn't a nobody long. In three short years stardom was his.

While most stars were content to be pawns of the all-powerful movie moguls, Douglas founded his own production company and starred in his own films. With that power, he created legendary roles for himself and produced passionate movies such as Paths of Glory and Spartacus. Along the way Douglas has acted in over 80 films, has been named official goodwill ambassador to the United Nations twice, and has published best-selling novels and an autobiography, The Ragman's Son. His most critically acclaimed role as an actor was Lust for Life's Vincent van Gogh, which earned him one of three Oscar nominations and a New York Film Critics Award. Other career touchstones include The Bad and the Beautiful, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, Detective Story, and Lonely Are the Brave. Explaining his acting success, Douglas boils it down to "acting with my guts." Michael Douglas, the oldest of the actor's four sons, all of whom have followed him into the film business, talks of his father's ability to give characters "a furious spark of life." It's been noted that his special gift has been to show us the flaws in every hero and the virtues in every heel.

In The Bad and the Beautiful, one of the greatest Hollywood-on-Hollywood films, a very young Kirk Douglas tells star-playing-star Lana Turner: "When you're on the screen, no matter who you're with or what you're doing, the audience is looking at you. That's star quality." He could just as well be describing himself.

 

Kirk Douglas' second career as writer of autobiographies and novels:

  AUTOBIOGRAPHIES:  
 

The Ragman´s Son - An Autobiography

published 1988 by Simon and Schuster, New York

 

 

 

   
 

Climbing the Mountain: My Search for Meaning

An Autobiography:
The actor shares his search for his Jewish identity and his
fight to overcome a stroke.

published August 1997 by Simon and Schuster, NY


For cover picture and more infos click on cover photo!

   
  NOVELS:  
 

Kirk Douglas: The Gift

published July 1993 by Warner Books, Incorporated

 

 

 

For more infos click on cover photo!

   
 

Kirk Douglas: Last Tango in Brooklyn

published May 1994 by Warner Books, Incorporated

 

 

For more infos click on cover photo!

   
 

Kirk Douglas: Dance with the Devil

published September 1994 by Mac Lib Re

For more infos click on picture!

   
 

Kirk Douglas: The Broken Mirror

published August 1997 by Simon and Schuster, NY




For more infos click on cover photo!

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