eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 1r0792 AL PACINO signed 8x10 REPRO still '90s cool moody portrait standing in the shadows! Date Sold 8/6/2013Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Autographed 8" x 10" [20 x 25 cm] REPRODUCTION Still (Learn More) Al Pacino was born Alfredo James Pacino in New York City in 1940, the son of Italian immigrants from Corleone, Sicily. He went to the High School of Performing Arts, but failed most of his classes and dropped out when he was 17. He took up acting, and had a series of crappy jobs while he studied acting and acted in amateur productions. In 1966, he was accepted at The Actor's Studio (after being rejected many times) and he studied under Lee Strasberg (the two would act together in 1974 in The Godfather Part II!). It seemed he was destined to be a stage actor. In 1967, he had his first break in Awake and Sing in Boston, where he met Jill Clayburgh (she would move back to New York with him after the play, and they had a five year relationship). The following year he starred in an off-Broadway play called The Indian Wants the Bronx, and he won the Obie Award for Best Actor (John Cazale was also in the play and he won Best Supporting Actor, and later Pacino and Cazale would act together in the first two Godfather movies and Dog Day Afternoon). The next year he was in a Broadway play, Does a Tiger Wear a Necktie?. The play was a flop, but Pacino won the Tony Award for his performance. He also made his movie debut with a tiny role in Me, Natalie. In 1971, he starred in The Panic in Needle Park, where he played a heroin addict (opposite Kitty Wynn) and he gave a magnificent heartbreaking performance. When Francis Ford Coppola saw this movie, he knew he had found his Michael Corleone for The Godfather, and he hired the pretty unknown Pacino over actors like Robert Reford and Warren Beatty (who wanted the part), much to the dismay of the studio, but of course Pacino was superb. That made Pacino a star, and he made three wonderful movies: Serpico (nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for this film), The Godfather Part II (nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for this film), and Dog Day Afternoon (nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for this film) in 1975. But his career slumped considerably after, and he did more Broadway, and fewer movies. Between 1975 and 1983 he made four movies, Bobby Deerfield (a real dud), ...And Justice for All (nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for this film; an interesting failure with a great Pacino performance), Cruising (another loser), and Author! Author! (another loser). In 1983 he made a strong comeback with his performance as Tony Montana in Scarface, but he followed it with the dreadful Revolution, and he took four years off from movies and stayed on the stage. In 1989 he returned with a lackluster film, Sea of Love, but the following year he gave a great performance as "Big Boy" in Dick Tracy (nominated for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for this film), but offset it with a dreadful performance in the major disappointment, The Godfather: Part III. He gave two good performances in Frankie and Johnny and Glengarry Glen Ross (nominated for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for this film), and in 1992 was the lead in Scent of a Woman (winner of the Best Actor Academy Award for this film; "Hoo-aah"). Since then he has given some good performances and some lesser ones. For me, one of his very finest was in Donnie Brasco, where he was heartbreaking as 'Lefty' Ruggiero. It is impossible to deny that Al Pacino is one of the very finest actors of the past 40 years. But while he gave many amazing performances throughout his career, one can't help but wonder how many others he might have delivered, had he made some different career choices. As of 2021, he is alive at the age of 81! Important Added Info: Note that this REPRODUCTION still has been personally autographed (signed) by Al Pacino! Note that this item was consigned to us by an individual who owned a company that made movies and videos with famous celebrities in the 1980s and 1990s. The owner of the company would have the celebrities sign items from their famous films, and he also had correspondence with many famous celebrities which he saved. In addition, he would sometimes ask celebrities he came in contact with if they had signed items from other stars that they would sell to him, and he purchased a number of items that way. He also would purchase unsigned items from the famed Larry Edmunds Bookshop in Los Angeles or from other reputable Hollywood book stores and poster shops (to have the celebrities sign), and while he was doing that he would also purchase some of their signed items. So all of these autographed items we are auctioning were either obtained in person, obtained from celebrities who obtained them in person, or obtained from reputable Hollywood book stores, and we feel certain that the autograph(s) on this item is authentic! Condition: good to very good. There are some faint creases a scattered in the REPRO, more so in the lower left. Learn More about condition grades
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