joaquin phoenix| 有名人の最新ニュースを読者にお届けします。

私たちは、人々が好きな有名人について読んで、それについて気分を良くすることができるスペースを作りたかったのです.私たちは、人々が有名人についてポジティブな方法でゴシップできる場所を作りたかった.
私たちは、何年もの間、日本のエンターテインメント ニュースを生き、呼吸してきた情熱的なエンターテインメント ニュース ジャンキーの小さなチームです。
私たちは、有名人の最新のゴシップを分析し、日本のポップ カルチャーの最新トレンドを分析することを何よりも愛しています。私たちはエンターテインメントのすべてに夢中になっており、私たちの情熱を世界と共有したいと考えています。当サイトへようこそ!
joaquin phoenix, /joaquin-phoenix,
Video: Joaquin Phoenix On Meeting Johnny Cash | Late Night with Conan O’Brien
私たちは、人々が好きな有名人について読んで、それについて気分を良くすることができるスペースを作りたかったのです.私たちは、人々が有名人についてポジティブな方法でゴシップできる場所を作りたかった.
私たちは、何年もの間、日本のエンターテインメント ニュースを生き、呼吸してきた情熱的なエンターテインメント ニュース ジャンキーの小さなチームです。
joaquin phoenix, 2020-09-29, Joaquin Phoenix On Meeting Johnny Cash | Late Night with Conan O’Brien, (Original airdate: 11/17/05) Joaquin Phoenix explains how he entertains himself on press tours, shares about his experience meeting Johnny Cash, and tells Conan how he perfected Johnny’s deep baritone in “Walk The Line.”
Subscribe to watch more Team Coco videos https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi7GJNg51C3jgmYTUwqoUXA?sub_confirmation=1
Watch more Late Night clips https://classic.teamcoco.com/
FOLLOW TEAM COCO ON SOCIAL
Team Coco on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/teamcoco
Team Coco on Twitter https://twitter.com/teamcoco
Team Coco on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/teamcoco/
ABOUT LATE NIGHT WITH CONAN O’BRIEN
Running from 1993-2009, Late Night with Conan O’Brien is one of the most beloved late night shows in television history. Known for its absurdist humor, hilarious celebrity interviews and featuring the best stand-up comedians and musical acts of the 90’s and early 2000s. Hosted by Conan O’Brien alongside sidekick Andy Richter and house band Max Weinberg and the Max Weinberg 7, Late Night with Conan O’Brien featured unforgettable segments like “If They Mated,” “In the Year 2000,” “Desk Driving” and made a breakout star of Triumph the Insult Comic Dog.
ABOUT TEAM COCO
Team Coco is the YouTube home for all things Conan O’Brien and the Team Coco Podcast Network. Team Coco features over 25 years of comedy sketches, celebrity interviews and stand-up comedy sets from CONAN on TBS and Late Night with Conan O’Brien, as well as exclusive videos from podcasts like Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, Literally! with Rob Lowe, Why Won’t You Date Me? with Nicole Byer, The Three Questions with Andy Richter, May I Elaborate? with JB Smoove and Scam Goddess with Laci Mosley.
Joaquin Phoenix On Meeting Johnny Cash | Late Night with Conan O’Brien
https://www.youtube.com/c/TeamCoco, Conan Classic
,
生い立ち[編集]
プエルトリコのサンフアンにて生まれる。父ジョン・リー・ボトムはカリフォルニア州フォンタナ出身[2] の元カトリック教徒[3] で、その後宗教団体「神の子供たち(Children of God)」の宣教師になっていた[4]。ボトム家はイングランド系、ドイツ系、フランス系の祖先を持っている。母アーリン・シャロンはニューヨーク市ブロンクス出身の東欧系ユダヤ人(ハンガリー系とロシア系のハーフ)で、同じく宣教師として活動していた。
1969年、両親は結婚時に「神の子供たち」に入信し、熱心な信徒として活動した。ホアキンがプエルトリコという土地で生まれたのも同団体のコミュニティが南米に形成されていたからで、特に祖先の出自などとは関係ない。後に兄のリヴァー・フェニックスは幼少時に目撃した同団体の腐敗と異常性を告発しているが、1978年に両親も信仰心を失って団体を離脱した。一家は新しい生活の為にフェニックスという名字に改名してアメリカに戻り、まだ4歳だったホアキンは生まれ故郷から引き離されている。
俳優一家として[編集]
アメリカに戻った一家だったが、生活基盤を失った状態では貧困に苦しむより他になかった。両親は共働きで生活費を工面しようとしたが5人兄妹を育てるのは苦しく、兄妹も街頭に出て歌や演奏を行って金銭を恵んで貰う日々を送った。そんな折に兄妹の一人が子役を探していたスタジオの社員からエキストラとして雇われ、CMに出演する機会を得た[5]。これを契機に兄妹はそれぞれ子役から芸能界への道を進むが、ホアキンは子役に進む兄妹達と距離を置いて父と南米を回る旅に出ていた。このような経緯もあり幼少期は流暢なスペイン語を話したと言われているが、2006年のインタビューではほとんど忘れて話せないと語っている。
Early life and acting background[edit]
Joaquin Rafael Bottom was born on October 28, 1974, in the Río Piedras district of San Juan, Puerto Rico,[4] to John Lee Bottom, the founder of a landscape gardening company, and Arlyn “Heart” Bottom (née Dunetz), who was an executive secretary at NBC and whose connection to an agent provided her children with acting work.[5] He is the third of five children, following River (1970–1993) and Rain (born 1972), and preceding Liberty (born 1976) and Summer (born 1978), all of whom have been involved in acting. He also has a half-sister named Jodean (born 1964) from his father’s previous relationship.[6] His father was a Catholic from Fontana, California, and was of English, German and French ancestry.[7] His maternal grandfather, Meyer Dunetz, was Russian Jewish and his maternal grandmother, Margit Lefkowitz, was Hungarian Jewish; they were both Ashkenazi Jews who resided in New York City.[8] Phoenix’s parents met when his mother was hitchhiking in California and got married less than a year after meeting.[9]
Soon after the second child was born, they joined the religious cult called Children of God and started traveling throughout South America and Puerto Rico in the Caribbean as missionaries for the cult, where the next two children were born. They eventually grew disillusioned with Children of God and left in 1977, being opposed to the cult’s increasingly distorted rules, particularly the practice of flirty fishing.[10] The fifth child was born in Florida where the family settled for a while. It was also around this time they legally adopted the surname Phoenix, inspired by the mythical bird that rises from its own ashes, symbolizing a new beginning.[1] When Phoenix was three, he and his older siblings witnessed fish being stunned as “they were throwing them against the side of the boat.” This act made the whole family convert to veganism.[11] He also began calling himself “Leaf”, having been inspired by spending time outdoors raking leaves and desiring to have a nature-related name like his siblings.[2] Leaf became the name he used before changing it back to his birth name Joaquin at the age of fifteen.[1]
In 1979, after Phoenix’s father had to stop working because of an old spinal injury, the whole family moved to Los Angeles where the mother met a high-profile child agent named Iris Burton, who got the children into commercials and bit parts on TV.[12] He made his acting debut alongside his brother in the television series Seven Brides for Seven Brothers in the 1982 episode “Christmas Song”.[13] He has said of his first time acting:
Instantaneous joy. The most enjoyable thing. For some kids, it’s the first time they crack a ball or score a goal. For me, it was this. I was eight years old, and I remember the first scene on the TV set so vividly. And I knew that I loved it – the physical sensation; how powerful it was. That’s the feeling I’ve been chasing ever since.[14]
In 1984, Phoenix starred opposite his brother River in the ABC Afterschool Special entitled Backwards: The Riddle of Dyslexia, for which they shared a nomination for Best Young Actor in a Family Film Made for Television at the 6th Youth in Film Awards.[15] He also made guest appearances in the Murder, She Wrote episode “We’re Off to Kill the Wizard” and individual episodes of The Fall Guy and Hill Street Blues.[16][17] A year later, Phoenix appeared in the television film Kids Don’t Tell. To supplement their income, the kids sang their original songs like “Gonna Make It,” written by River, and busked for money in matching yellow shirts and shorts. They also studied dance; Phoenix became an avid break dancer.[18] Phoenix dropped out of high school when he was sent a dead frog in the mail to dissect for his biology studies, which prompted him to discontinue his studies. Dissatisfied with life in Los Angeles, the Phoenixes moved back to Florida, settling in Gainesville.[5]

Film[edit]
Television[edit]
Executive producer only[edit]
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
2007 | 4Real | Reality series |
2016 | I Am Dying | Documentary |
2017 | What the Health | Documentary |
Across My Land | Short film | |
2019 | The Animal People | Documentary |
2020 | Gunda | Documentary |
2021 | Indigo | Documentary short |
See also[edit]
- List of awards and nominations received by Joaquin Phoenix
References[edit]
- ^ Paul Fischer (2000). “Gladiator”. Dark Horizons. Archived from the original on June 21, 2000. Retrieved August 22, 2007.
- ^ Maslin, Janet (September 27, 1995). “To Die For (1995) FILM REVIEW; She Trusts in TV’s Redeeming Power”. The New York Times. Archived from the original on April 3, 2015. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
- ^ “The 73rd Academy Awards (2001) Nominees and Winners”. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS). Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
- ^ “2002 Worldwide Grosses”. Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on June 24, 2017. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
- ^ “Oscars 2006 – Academy Award Winners, Nominees, Movies Released in 2005”. Movies.about.com. Archived from the original on July 1, 2015. Retrieved April 14, 2012.
- ^ a b “Joaquin Phoenix”. Golden Globes. Archived from the original on February 26, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2015.
- ^ “20 People You Won’t Believe Have Grammys”. Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on April 3, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2015.
- ^ “Director Casey Affleck Confirms Joaquin Phoenix ‘Documentary’ Isn’t Real”. Yahoo! News. Archived from the original on December 22, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
- ^ Waxman, Sharon (September 8, 2012). “‘Pieta,’ ‘The Master’ Win Top Venice Prizes – Jury Shifts Votes”. The Wrap. Archived from the original on September 10, 2012. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
- ^ “Oscar 2013: The nominations revealed…” Entertainment Weekly. January 10, 2013. Archived from the original on January 12, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013.
Early life[edit]
Phoenix was born on December 31, 1944, in The Bronx, New York City, the daughter of Margaret (née Lefkowitz; 1916–1998) and Meyer Dunetz (1910–1996).[1] Arlyn was raised with her two sisters, Rhoda and Merle (Sun). Her mother’s family was from Hungary, and her father’s family was from Russia. Although Arlyn’s family was Jewish[2][3] and celebrated the Jewish culture and holidays, they did not attend synagogue.[2]
Adult life[edit]
Phoenix left New York in 1968 and moved to California, where she met her future husband John Lee Bottom (April 5, 1947–2015, died of cancer).[4]
They traveled together along the West Coast, picking fruit and vegetables along the way, and their first son River was born August 23, 1970.[citation needed]
Soon after their first daughter Rain was born in 1972, they joined the religious group The Children of God and toured Mexico, Puerto Rico and South America as missionaries of the cult for several years. It was during this time that their son and daughter Joaquin and Liberty (Libertad) were born. Arlyn and John renamed themselves for a brief period, taking the biblical names Jochebed and Amram, respectively.[5]
The couple eventually grew disillusioned with the Children of God and left in 1977. Arlyn would later state that she and her husband were opposed to the cult’s increasingly distorted rules, particularly the practice of flirty fishing.[6] They returned to the US in late 1977 and lived in Winter Park, Florida, where Arlyn gave birth to her youngest child, Summer. Around this time, they legally adopted the surname “Phoenix” (Arlyn later changed her name to “Heart” in 1988) and began to embrace veganism as their new diet and lifestyle.[citation needed]
The parents took their five children and headed back to California, where Arlyn got a job as an executive secretary for NBC. She later hired an agent, Iris Burton, who eventually got all of her children acting work. John and Arlyn divorced in 1997. She is now married to her third husband, Jeffrey Weisberg.[citation needed]
Phoenix was the Executive Director of The Florida School of Traditional Midwifery for five years, one of ten accredited direct entry midwifery schools in the country.[7]
In 2012, she co-founded the non-profit organization River Phoenix Center for Peacebuilding which provides and promotes the best practices and principles of peacebuilding and global sustainability.[8]
She is on the Board of Directors of Peace Alliance, an organization which supports the creation of a United States Department of Peace.
Early life and education[edit]
Mara was born on April 17, 1985[2] and raised in Bedford, New York, a town in Westchester County about 40 miles (64 km) north of New York City.[3] Mara’s mother’s family founded the Pittsburgh Steelers and her father’s family founded the New York Giants. Her father, Timothy Christopher Mara, is the senior vice president of player personnel for the New York Giants, and her mother, Kathleen McNulty (née Rooney), is a part-time real estate agent.[4] She is the third of four children: she has an older brother, Daniel, an older sister, Kate, who is also an actress, and a younger brother, Conor.[5]
Mara’s father has Irish, German and French-Canadian ancestry, and her mother is of Irish and Italian descent.[6][7] Her Rooney ancestors originated in Newry, County Down.[8] Her paternal grandparents were Wellington Mara and Ann Mara. Wellington was the long-time co-owner of the Giants, who was succeeded in that position by his son (Rooney Mara’s uncle), John Mara. Rooney Mara’s maternal grandfather, Timothy James “Tim” Rooney, has run Yonkers Raceway & Empire City Casino in Yonkers, New York since 1972.[9][10] Mara is the great-granddaughter of both New York Giants founder Tim Mara and Pittsburgh Steelers founder Art Rooney, Sr., as well as of Kathleen McNulty Rooney.[11] Her granduncle, Dan Rooney, was chairman of the Steelers, the former United States Ambassador to Ireland, the co-founder of The Ireland Funds charitable organization, and the architect of American Football’s Rooney Rule. U.S. Representative Tom Rooney and former Florida State Representative Patrick Rooney Jr. are her cousins.[12]
After graduating from Fox Lane High School in 2003,[13] Mara went to Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia in South America for four months as part of the Traveling School, an open learning environment. She attended George Washington University for a year before transferring to New York University‘s Gallatin School of Individualized Study, where she studied psychology, international social policy and nonprofits,[5][14] graduating in 2010.[15]
Mara was inspired to act by seeing musical theatre and classic movies, like Gone with the Wind (1939), Rebecca (1940), and Bringing Up Baby (1938), with her mother.[16] She also wanted to be like her sister, Kate Mara, a professional actress. Mara resisted pursuing acting as a child, stating to The Journal News that “it never seemed that honorable to me, and I guess I was always afraid that I might fail.”[3] Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend.[17] Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting,[3] first auditioning at the age of nineteen.[5]
Etymology, definition, rationale[edit]
The term is derived from Matthew 4:19 from the New Testament, in which Jesus tells two fishermen that he will make them “fishers of men”.[5] Cult leader David Berg extrapolated from this that women in his movement should be “flirty fishers” (also called “bait” or “fisherwomen”). The targeted men were called “fish”. The cult published several documents with exact instructions. Flirty Fishing was defined as using sex appeal for proselytizing. If masturbation, oral, or penetrative sex ensued, this was termed as “loving sexually”,[citation needed] and also counted as a “deep witness”, meaning that the “bait” earned more brownie points within the group than by mere flirting. Berg noted that Flirty Fishing did not necessarily entail intercourse, but that this was by far the most efficient method of proselytizing.[citation needed]
According to The Family’s history, “Father David [Berg] arrived at the rather shocking conclusion that Christians were therefore free through God’s grace to go to great lengths to show the Love of God to others, even as far as meeting their sexual needs.” While acknowledging that this interpretation scandalized “many religious institutions,” The Family maintained that “many people, most of whom would never even go near a church, were reached and won to Christ through this very humble, honest, open and intimately human approach to witnessing.”[6] A Family spokesman John Francis describes the main “fish” involved as “lonely traveling businessmen” staying in hotels.[6]
Filmography
Hide
Show
Actor (56 credits)
2019/I
Joker
Arthur Fleck
2018/II
Lou
(Short)
Karl
2013
Her
Theodore
2002
Signs
Merrill Hess
1999
8MM
Max California
1997
U Turn
Toby N. Tucker
1988
Secret Witness
(TV Movie)
Drew Blackburn (as Leaf Phoenix)
1987
Russkies
Danny (as Leaf Phoenix)
1986
SpaceCamp
Max (as Leaf Phoenix)
1983
Six Pack
(TV Movie)
Tad Akins (as Leaf Phoenix)
Show
Producer (13 credits)
Show
Writer (1 credit)
Show
Thanks (1 credit)
Show
Self (92 credits)
Edit
Personal Details
Other Works:
TV commercial for PETA (Banned in the USA after it aired) (2005)
See more
»
Publicity Listings:
1 Biographical Movie |
1 Portrayal |
11 Interviews |
33 Articles |
5 Pictorials |
18 Magazine Cover Photos |
See more
»
Alternate Names:
Leaf Phoenix
Children:
River Mara Phoenix
Parents:
Phoenix, Arlyn
| Bottom, John Lee
Edit
Did You Know?
Personal Quote:
When you’re not on-set, you don’t even want to tie your shoes.
See more
»
ユーザーがトピックに関連して検索するキーワード joaquin phoenix joaquin phoenix
Conan, Conan O’Brien, Late Night with Conan O’Brien, Team Coco, andy richter, best moments of conan, best of late night, celebrity, celebrity interview, classic, coco, comedy, comedy sketches, conan funny moments, conan obrien interview, conan obrien podcast, first, humor, interview, late night show, late night with conan classic, late night with conan obrien, late show, max weinberg, official, original, sketch, special, talk show, talk show hosts, teamcoco, triumph the insult comic dog
.