Birthday: 8 August 1937, Los Angeles, California, USA
Birth Name: Dustin Lee Hoffman
Height: 167 cm
Dustin Lee Hoffman was born in Los Angeles, California, to Lillian (Gold) and Harry Hoffman, who was a furniture salesman and prop supervisor for Columbia Pictures. He was raised in a Jewish family (from Ukraine, Russia-Poland, and Romania). Hoffman graduated from Los Angeles High School in 1955, and went to Santa Monica City College, where he drop...
Show more »
Dustin Lee Hoffman was born in Los Angeles, California, to Lillian (Gold) and Harry Hoffman, who was a furniture salesman and prop supervisor for Columbia Pictures. He was raised in a Jewish family (from Ukraine, Russia-Poland, and Romania). Hoffman graduated from Los Angeles High School in 1955, and went to Santa Monica City College, where he dropped out after a year due to bad grades. But before he did, he took an acting course because he was told that "nobody flunks acting." Also received some training at Los Angeles Conservatory of Music. Decided to go into acting because he did not want to work or go into the service. Trained at The Pasadena Playhouse for two years. Show less «
Euthanasia is legal in Hollywood. They just kill the film if it doesn't succeed immediately.
Euthanasia is legal in Hollywood. They just kill the film if it doesn't succeed immediately.
I think the most insulting thing you can do to a director is to challenge when he or she is satisfie...Show more »
I think the most insulting thing you can do to a director is to challenge when he or she is satisfied with your interpretation. Show less «
On how he became an actor: I started junior college in Los Angeles because I didn't have the grades ...Show more »
On how he became an actor: I started junior college in Los Angeles because I didn't have the grades to go to university and I didn't want to go into the military. So in my first year of junior college I'm failing and I don't know what to do. I don't want to get a job, I want to be a student, and a friend says, 'Take acting, because they don't flunk you - it's like gym, nobody gets an F.'"I took it and suddenly it was the first thing I ever did that wasn't painful. Where I held focus. And suddenly, rehearsing with somebody - learning lines - hours could pass by. And I begged my parents to let me go to this acting school, because I knew I couldn't fail." Show less «
On working at the New York Psychiatric Institute: It was one of the most illuminating experiences I ...Show more »
On working at the New York Psychiatric Institute: It was one of the most illuminating experiences I ever had. You see all the devils we have and just see it out of control. The only thing that frightened me was, I had to hold people down while they were given shock treatments, but after a few months I said, 'I can't do it any more.' [At the time, he was reading "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest," and couldn't get over how close it mirrored life at the psychiatric institute.] You went in there normal and came out crazy in those days. You came out worse. Show less «
[on first turning down The Graduate (1967)] It was like a bad dream for me. And it came at a time wh...Show more »
[on first turning down The Graduate (1967)] It was like a bad dream for me. And it came at a time when I was beginning to get work off-Broadway as an actor and I'd just been in a hit and I'd gotten awards and I thought for the rest of my life my dream will come true: I will be an off-Broadway actor for the rest of my life. And that would have been enough. More than enough. Steady employment was the goal. If God had come down at that moment and said to me or Gene Hackman or Robert Duvall, 'Sign a contract here that says "You're never going to be successful, you're never going to have a lead, you're never going to be rich and famous, you will never be on Broadway, you will never be in the West End - you'll be not even off, but off-off-off-Broadway, but you will never see a day without work' - we would have signed on the dotted line in a New York minute. Show less «
I lived below the official American poverty line until I was 31.
I lived below the official American poverty line until I was 31.
I know it's written that I'm difficult. Barry Levinson - who I did four films with - told me that ev...Show more »
I know it's written that I'm difficult. Barry Levinson - who I did four films with - told me that every press person comes up to him and asks, 'How do you work with that guy?' and he says, 'I've done nothing but extol what a privilege and fun it's been.' But not one interviewer has ever printed that. Look, the medical metaphor I use is, it's like you're on a table for brain surgery and you're being wheeled in and the guy leans in and says, 'Hi I'm your brain surgeon and don't worry - I'm not difficult, I'm not a perfectionist.' I am no different from the focus puller - you're either sharp or you're not. Show less «
[on choosing a profession where he felt secure in failure:] It's very painful for us to feel we dese...Show more »
[on choosing a profession where he felt secure in failure:] It's very painful for us to feel we deserve a life. That's the toughest thing. That we deserve to have a life. That can take a lifetime. Show less «
I knew I was not going to win for The Graduate (1967). I knew that Rod Steiger was going to win for ...Show more »
I knew I was not going to win for The Graduate (1967). I knew that Rod Steiger was going to win for In the Heat of the Night (1967), and I knew I was not going to win for Midnight Cowboy (1969) because John Wayne was a sentimental favorite for True Grit (1969). And he won, as he should have, by the way, because I somehow feel they make more sense when they give you an award for a body of work... I actually remember walking up the aisle, and I'd had a few drinks, when I was nominated for Tootsie (1982). I was a little late getting there. Everybody was seated, and the show was just beginning, and I'm walking down the aisle and Paul Newman was on my right. He was nominated (for The Verdict (1982)) I leaned over and said to him, with three drinks in me, I whispered in his ear, "We're not gonna win." And he smiled because everyone knew Ben Kingsley was going to win for Gandhi (1982). There's never been a time, thankfully, where I thought, "Man, I think I'm gonna win this, and then I didn't." Show less «
One thing about being successful is that I stopped being afraid of dying. Once you're a star you're ...Show more »
One thing about being successful is that I stopped being afraid of dying. Once you're a star you're dead already. You're embalmed. Show less «
[on his Luck (2011) character Chester "Ace" Bernstein] I think he tells the truth, and yet he's very...Show more »
[on his Luck (2011) character Chester "Ace" Bernstein] I think he tells the truth, and yet he's very intimidating. He's not believed. In the world that he lives in, telling the truth is the last thing they're going to believe. Paddy Chayefsky said to me many, many years ago when he was researching for The Godfather (1972), he says, "I'll take the mob any day, because if you don't keep your word, they kill you. So you keep your word. I just got to know a little bit about Hollywood. There is no moral compass because no one keeps your word because no one's going to kill them. They're just going to get sued. Give me the mafia." Show less «
I grew up thinking a movie star had to be like Rock Hudson or Tab Hunter, certainly nobody in any wa...Show more »
I grew up thinking a movie star had to be like Rock Hudson or Tab Hunter, certainly nobody in any way like me. Show less «
[on working with Meryl Streep in Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)] She's an ox when it comes to acting. She ...Show more »
[on working with Meryl Streep in Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)] She's an ox when it comes to acting. She eats words for breakfast. Working with her is like playing tennis with Chris Evert -- she keeps trying to hit the perfect ball. Show less «
Working with Federico Fellini? That destabilised everything. That makes liars out of my parents. Bec...Show more »
Working with Federico Fellini? That destabilised everything. That makes liars out of my parents. Because I believed what they told me. I should not have turned down Fellini. If he wants you to do it in mumbo jumbo, if it's the worst script you've ever read, you do not turn down the great artists. I turned Samuel Beckett down! I didn't show up for a meeting at a bar in Paris. I got too scared. It was to do 'Godot.' They called me up and said he waited there for an hour! That's the title of my autobiography - 'I Turned Beckett Down.' But I just froze. I look back and I can't call up Federico now and say, 'I changed my mind. Will you work with me?' Show less «
I got into acting so that I could meet girls. Pretty girls came later. First, I wanted to start off ...Show more »
I got into acting so that I could meet girls. Pretty girls came later. First, I wanted to start off with someone with two legs, who'd smile at me and look soft. Show less «
I don't like the fact that I have to get older so fast, but I like the fact that I'm aging so well.
I don't like the fact that I have to get older so fast, but I like the fact that I'm aging so well.
[on the administration of President George Bush and its invasion of Iraq] "For me as an American, th...Show more »
[on the administration of President George Bush and its invasion of Iraq] "For me as an American, the most painful aspect of this is that I believe that [this] administration has taken the events of 9/11 and has manipulated the grief of the country and I think that's reprehensible. I don't think, like many of us, that the reasons we have been given for going to war are the honest reasons. If they are saying it's about the fact they have biological weapons and might have nuclear weapons and that gives us the liberty to pre-empt and strike because we think they might hit us, then what prevents Pakistan from attacking India, what prevents India from attacking Pakistan, what prevents us from going into North Korea? I believe--though I may wrong because I am no expert--that this war is about what most wars are about: hegemony, money, power and oil." Show less «
Stardom equals freedom. It's the only equation that matters.
Stardom equals freedom. It's the only equation that matters.
The truth is, the older you get, the less variety of parts you are offered. If you're a star and you...Show more »
The truth is, the older you get, the less variety of parts you are offered. If you're a star and you've spent most of your career being able to take your pick of the litter, you notice when the offers start to diminish. You're too old to play leads, so you're offered the supporting role - but many stars don't want to make that transition. They see it as a sign of symbolic impotence. And that the audience will no longer regard them as a star. I love acting, and I'm not going to determine what I do based on what I fear other people might think. I do what I want to do. Show less «
[when asked by a 60 Minutes (1968) interviewer what he would like his tombstone to say] I'd like to ...Show more »
[when asked by a 60 Minutes (1968) interviewer what he would like his tombstone to say] I'd like to thank my parents. Without them I couldn't have gotten this far. Show less «
[in a 2008 interview, on whether he ever googled himself] No, and it's not out of modesty. It's 'cau...Show more »
[in a 2008 interview, on whether he ever googled himself] No, and it's not out of modesty. It's 'cause I don't belong in the 21st Century. I really never got far into the technology since the dial phone. It's all very tough for me. I jut block it out or whatever, but I cannot work those things without help... As we speak, I'm walking my dogs on the beach, and, lo and behold, paparazzi. I'm being interviewed while I'm being shot. Show less «
To this day, Robert Duvall says it was one of the best times of when we were all living together. Be...Show more »
To this day, Robert Duvall says it was one of the best times of when we were all living together. Because I'd come home and they'd say, 'What did so-and-so do today?' and I'd act out the characters I'd met there. Gene Hackman would spend his entire day in the cinema. It was a place where the homeless went, because for 35 cents they could sleep there all day. He was in there at 10am and he heard one homeless guy in the balcony saying, 'You're sorry? You're sorry? What do you mean, you're sorry? You piss all over my date and you say you're sorry?' Show less «
[on Mike Nichols] He makes you feel kind of like a kite. He lets you go ahead and you do your thing....Show more »
[on Mike Nichols] He makes you feel kind of like a kite. He lets you go ahead and you do your thing. And then when you're finished he pulls you in by the string. But at least you've had the enjoyment of the wind. Show less «
[on learning about Santa Anita Park while making Luck (2011)] Through David Milch. David knows more ...Show more »
[on learning about Santa Anita Park while making Luck (2011)] Through David Milch. David knows more about it than anything else. I shouldn't say that, because my wife [Lisa Gottsegen]'s father was a "degenerate" [a nickname for a regular gambler], and my wife went to the track with him when she was 6 years old. My wife has told me everything I have to know about the track, because as a child, she'd learn it from her father, who was a degenerate. When my wife was 5 or 6 years old, she went out to Santa Anita every day with him, and she held a piece of paper and she would look at her dad and say, "See that horse? Write down KS," and she knew that stood for "kidney sweat" [a sign of a nervous or sick horse], and that was her job for about three years. Show less «
[on his role of Dorothy in Tootsie (1982)] I feel cheated never being able to know what it's like to...Show more »
[on his role of Dorothy in Tootsie (1982)] I feel cheated never being able to know what it's like to get pregnant, carry a child and breast-feed. Show less «
It's very hard to do your best work, but you want a shot at it. You cannot get a shot at doing your ...Show more »
It's very hard to do your best work, but you want a shot at it. You cannot get a shot at doing your best work in the studio system. You can't. There's committees, there's meetings, you're on the set, you don't have to do that, they get involved in a quasi-creative way but they buck heads with people they shouldn't be bucking heads with. With HBO, once they give a go, there's no committee, no meetings. I was expecting 20 pages a day. I was expecting an atmosphere like making movies on cocaine or speed. It's the opposite. We did the best we could with as much time as we could, and came back the next day. Michael Mann hired all film directors. There was no difference between making a movie, except he used digital and three cameras, which actors love because we don't have to repeat. Show less «
I'm sixty-eight, I cry every chance I can.
I'm sixty-eight, I cry every chance I can.
[on the financial success of 'All the President's Men'] The reason for the success of this picture i...Show more »
[on the financial success of 'All the President's Men'] The reason for the success of this picture is that Hoffman's back and Redford's got him. It's what the public always wanted: that beautiful WASP finally wound up with a nice Jewish boy. Show less «
A good review from the critics is just another stay of execution.
A good review from the critics is just another stay of execution.
If a lot of dogs are on the beach, the first thing they do is smell each other's ass. The informatio...Show more »
If a lot of dogs are on the beach, the first thing they do is smell each other's ass. The information that's gotten somehow makes pacifists out of all of them. I've thought, 'If only we smelled each other's asses, there wouldn't be any war.' Show less «
[About acting] "You get caught off-guard during a take. Your mind goes wild and it just comes out 'W...Show more »
[About acting] "You get caught off-guard during a take. Your mind goes wild and it just comes out 'Waaa, you talking to me!' " Show less «
[on winning the Academy Award] We are part of an artistic family.There are sixty thousand actors in ...Show more »
[on winning the Academy Award] We are part of an artistic family.There are sixty thousand actors in the Screen Actors Guild who don't work. You have to practice accents while you're driving a taxicab 'cause when you're a broke actor you can't write and you can't paint. Most actors don't work and few of us are lucky to have a chance. And to that artistic family that strives for excellence, none of you have ever lost, and I am proud to share this with you, and I thank you. Show less «
You go to the cinema and you realize you're watching the third act. There is no first or second act....Show more »
You go to the cinema and you realize you're watching the third act. There is no first or second act. There is this massive film-making where you spend this incredible amount of money and play right to the demographic. You can tell how much money the film is going to make by how it does on the first weekend. The whole culture is in the crap house. It's not just true in the movies, it's also true in the theater. Show less «
Someone once said to me, 'Some of us choose to live with a lifeboat just a little bit out of our rea...Show more »
Someone once said to me, 'Some of us choose to live with a lifeboat just a little bit out of our reach.' I'd like to reach a point where I no longer bullshit myself. I think that's the natural human condition - to lie to yourself. Because the truth is painful. Show less «
[1974] The Academy Awards are obscene, dirty and no better than a beauty contest.
[1974] The Academy Awards are obscene, dirty and no better than a beauty contest.
[Acting coach Barney Brown] told me, you can have a life. He didn't say anything about success. He s...Show more »
[Acting coach Barney Brown] told me, you can have a life. He didn't say anything about success. He said, 'Whether you direct, write, act or stage-manage, you're in the right place.' And he said, 'Go to New York and understand one thing - nothing is going to happen to you for 10 years. Give yourself 10 years and nothing is going to happen.' It was true. I found work where I could fail with dignity. Because 90% of us didn't get jobs. Show less «
[2004 quote] I once met Clint Eastwood, and it was remarkable. I studied him as I spoke to him. I lo...Show more »
[2004 quote] I once met Clint Eastwood, and it was remarkable. I studied him as I spoke to him. I looked down, and his pants were a little short -- they showed a bit too much of his socks. There was something so timid and shy and almost gawky about him in real life. I remember thinking to myself, Someone should have cast him in Meet John Doe (1941), the Frank Capra movie, because that's the real him. There's not a wisp of aggression about him. That's the real essence, not the guy who says, "Make my day." Show less «
On meeting Gene Hackman at the Pasadena Playhouse College of Theater Arts: They kicked him out after...Show more »
On meeting Gene Hackman at the Pasadena Playhouse College of Theater Arts: They kicked him out after three months because he had no talent. Show less «
[in 2005] "I became an actor because I believed I was a failure. In acting, because so few of us eve...Show more »
[in 2005] "I became an actor because I believed I was a failure. In acting, because so few of us ever get work, I could feel proud and fail with dignity. I was born into what I now know was a dysfunctional family. I found that out in therapy three weeks ago." Show less «
Movies are a bastard art form, period. Art, I would think, is the first day you don't start with cha...Show more »
Movies are a bastard art form, period. Art, I would think, is the first day you don't start with chapter 25, then jump to the beginning, then jump to the end, and it's all set in concrete, and a script is never what the movie turns out to be. It's either better or worse, but it's a blueprint. When you're painting a picture or writing, you know as well as anyone, you have the general feeling of it but it begins to tell you where it's going. This is the first time I've ever had that opportunity. That is extraordinary. Michael Mann said he looks at the work, and it starts to influence [him]: We could go there, we could go there, we could go there. I've never had that experience before. As far as it inhabiting me, it doesn't. I don't take the character [home], I've never really understood that personally. You're pretending. Show less «
[About his new film Stranger Than Fiction (2006)] "I'm really proud of it, and I've only said that a...Show more »
[About his new film Stranger Than Fiction (2006)] "I'm really proud of it, and I've only said that about three times during my career." Show less «
I wanted to be a jazz pianist, but I wasn't good enough. I got into city college because I didn't ha...Show more »
I wanted to be a jazz pianist, but I wasn't good enough. I got into city college because I didn't have the grades to get into university. I took acting because it was a way to get three credits. I just needed three credits and my friend told me to take acting because it was like gym - nobody fails you. I took it and that's literally how I got involved in acting. Show less «
God knows I've done enough crap in my life to grow a few flowers.
God knows I've done enough crap in my life to grow a few flowers.
[Glancing at his Oscar for Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)] He has no genitalia and he's holding a sword. I...Show more »
[Glancing at his Oscar for Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)] He has no genitalia and he's holding a sword. I'd like to thank my mother and father for not practicing birth control. Show less «
[on The Graduate (1967)] As far as I'm concerned, Mike Nichols did a very courageous thing casting m...Show more »
[on The Graduate (1967)] As far as I'm concerned, Mike Nichols did a very courageous thing casting me in a part that was not right for, meaning I was Jewish. In fact many of the reviews were negative. It was kind of veiled anti-Semitism: I was called 'big-nosed'. Show less «
We all believe what we read. I read how Tom Cruise and I were two big egos holding up shooting. I kn...Show more »
We all believe what we read. I read how Tom Cruise and I were two big egos holding up shooting. I know that isn't true - but if I wasn't making a movie with him and I just picked up the paper, I'd believe it. That's interesting, isn't it? Show less «
On why he turned down great roles: I failed everything growing up. I was convinced I was failing for...Show more »
On why he turned down great roles: I failed everything growing up. I was convinced I was failing for a reason. I wasn't intelligent or like most people. I could barely get through school. I was considered in my family to be a loser. My brother, who is older, was an A student - captain of the football team and the baseball team, and I was the comedian. And someone saying, 'Boy, you're a real comedian,' is like someone saying, 'Boy, you're a real loser.' Show less «
[on playing a shady racetrack ex-con in Luck (2011)] I don't have a gangster phone book or anything ...Show more »
[on playing a shady racetrack ex-con in Luck (2011)] I don't have a gangster phone book or anything like that. I live in a certain milieu, that's called 'Hollywood' euphemistically, in which you are are continually lied to and screwed with. I'd much rather be with the mob because, if they promise you something, they keep their word. In Hollywood nobody keeps their word. Everybody lies to you because it doesn't cost them their life. If I were more like my character I might want to kill them with my bare hands. Show less «
[on Meryl Streep]: She's extraordinarily hardworking, to the extent that she's obsessive. I think th...Show more »
[on Meryl Streep]: She's extraordinarily hardworking, to the extent that she's obsessive. I think that she thinks about nothing else but what she's doing. Show less «
[on he and Gene Hackman as young stage actors and roommates in New York]: Psychologically, Gene/myse...Show more »
[on he and Gene Hackman as young stage actors and roommates in New York]: Psychologically, Gene/myself, we did not think about making it in the terms that people think about. We fully expected to be failures for our entire life. Meaning that we would always be scrambling to get a part. We were actors. We had no pretensions. There was more dignity in being unsuccessful. Show less «
On filming Kramer vs. Kramer (1979): What makes divorce happen is that you can't be in the same spac...Show more »
On filming Kramer vs. Kramer (1979): What makes divorce happen is that you can't be in the same space any more, for whatever reason - but the love stays. And that's the killer. That's where the vehemence and anger and rage comes from. Show less «