Known for movies

Short Info

Net Worth$75 million
Date Of BirthMarch 14, 1933
SpouseShakira Caine, Patricia Haines
MarkHis spectacles (rare for 1960s leading actors)
FactAlthough often listed as 6'2", Caine himself gave his height as 6'1" in his 1992 autobiography "What's It All About?".
PaymentsEarned $250,000 from Gambit (1966)


Michael Caine was born Maurice Joseph Micklewhite in London, England, on March 14, 1933. His father, Maurice Joseph Micklewhite Sr., was a fishmonger, and his mother, Ellen Frances Marie (Burchell), was a charlady. He has two older brothers, Stanley and David. Caine was evacuated from London during World War II and spent much of his childhood in the seaside resort town of Margate, Kent. He left school at age 15 and worked a variety of odd jobs before joining the British Army in 1951.

After his discharge from the army, Caine began working in the theater. He changed his name to Michael Scott in 1954 and made his film debut in 1956. Caine’s career took off in the 1960s with starring roles in such films as Zulu (1964), Alfie (1966), The Ipcress File (1965), and Funeral in Berlin (1966). He won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in Woody Allen’s Hannah and Her Sisters (1986). Caine has appeared in more than 115 films and has been nominated for six Academy Awards.

Caine has been married twice. His first marriage, to actress Patricia Haines, ended in divorce. He married actress and model Shakira Baksh in 1973. The couple has two daughters, Natasha and Sonia.

Caine is a Knight Bachelor and has been awarded the Order of the British Empire (OBE) and the Legion d’Honneur. He has a net worth of $130 million.

General Info

Full NameMichael Caine
Net Worth$75 million
Date Of BirthMarch 14, 1933
Height1.84 m
ProfessionEntrepreneur, Film producer, Voice Actor, Author
EducationWilson's School, Hackney Downs School

Family

SpouseShakira Caine, Patricia Haines
ChildrenNatasha Caine, Dominique Caine
ParentsEllen Maria Burchell, Maurice Joseph Micklewhite
SiblingsStanley Caine, David Burchell

Accomplishments

AwardsAcademy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, European Film Award for Best Actor, BAFTA Fellowship, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Su...
NominationsAcademy Award for Best Actor, Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture – Drama, Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Critics...
MoviesYouth, The Dark Knight, Alfie, Zulu, Inception, Batman Begins, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Interstellar, The Dark Knight Rises, Hannah and Her Sisters, The Cider House Rules, Harry Brown, The Man Who Would Be King, The Ipcress File, Get Carter, The Prestige, The Italian Job, Jaws: The Revenge, Children...
TV ShowsEdgar Wallace Mysteries, The Hollywood Greats, The Vise, Armchair Theatre, Deadline Midnight, Knight Errant Limited, 50 Films to See Before You Die, Walk a Crooked Mile

Social profile links

Marks

#Marks / Signs
1Frequently works with director Christopher Nolan
2Tall, lean frame
3Often plays mentors and father figures to younger characters in films
4His cockney accent
5His spectacles (rare for 1960s leading actors)

Salary

TitleSalary
Hurry Sundown (1967)$20,000 /week
Gambit (1966)$250,000
Zulu (1964)£4,000

Quotes

#Quote
1[About starring in "Youth", Hollywood Reporter - December 2015] The only alternative to playing elderly people is playing dead people. So I picked elderly people. That's a better idea.
2[In order to appear strong in character] Don't blink.
3(On Sean Connery) If you were his friend in these early days you didn't raise the subject of Bond. He was, and is, a much better actor than just playing James Bond, but he became synonymous with Bond. He'd be walking down the street and people would say, "Look, there's James Bond." That was particularly upsetting to him.
4[on Queen Queen Elizabeth II] She knighted me once. I nearly got into trouble though. She said to me, "I have a feeling you have been doing what you do for a very long time". And I almost said, 'And so have you'.
5If I made a film like The Swarm (1978), I would make three very quickly before it came out, so I always survived failure - because I had a hit. People say: 'Why did you do Jaws: The Revenge (1987)?'. They paid me $1million for 10 days... I come from a very poor background so I wanted to do everything for everyone. Every one of my family got a house. That was the attitude I had. I'm either going to get the Academy Award or I'm going to make a lot of money, I still base it on that.
6I do a lot of charity work, but never for adults. I don't like grown-ups very much.
7My charity is the NSPCC, which I've always done. I'm one of the patrons at the NSPCC, which harks back to when I was younger. So my charity goes towards children. If I were ever to do another charity, I would do it for the homeless. That's the other thing that bugs me, the homeless. But for me, it's mainly the children. I care very much about them.
8I can seem quite cold and I can hold it in but it stores itself; it works later. I'm very easily moved. I'm not repressed at all.
9[on Henry Fonda while shooting The Swarm (1978)]: 'He's one of the most astute actors I've ever known, with an intimate awareness of the film profession.'
10People always told me "you can't be an actor, you don't talk posh." And I said, "I'll show you how to be an actor without talking posh". And I did it.
11I've always got to have one impossible dream on the back burner. The one I've had for a long time is to write a screenplay from the novel I've written. And direct it, and star in it. It's an impossible dream. But if you think of my life, there are so many impossible dreams that have come true for me that no dream is ever impossible any more as far as I'm concerned.
12I know a lot of stuff but my close friend, Leslie (lyricist Leslie Bricusse), knows everything, and before Google, the two of us were sort of human Googles!
13I'm the United Kingdom of Michael Caine.
14I'm an icon. It says so in the paper.
15[Roger Moore] does the two things I hate most. I love children but I could never do what Roger's doing. My idea of hell is long airplane flights. My other idea of hell is giving speeches to strangers. He does both all the time. Believe me, he's earned his knighthood!'
16[When I was evacuated during the war, I spent a brief period with a family who exercised] a mild form of child abuse [by locking me in a cupboard. My mother found out after a fortnight and took me away,] but it was long enough to leave a mark, which formed part of my psyche for the rest of my life. I have never trusted an adult until a great deal of investigation has gone into them. I trust everyone on the surface, but directly anything starts to go deeper in the relationship, I'm very mistrusting. Even now. Because of what happened to me as a child. Maybe that's why I am a controlling person. I usually control the environment I'm in, but my control is very quiet and subtle.
17I love comedy. I love to make people laugh. If I hadn't been an actor, or an architect, which I really wanted to be, I'd have been a stand-up comic.
18I'm always supremely confident as a movie actor and my own view of myself is that I'm a highly skilled movie actor.
19I think life has got to develop as you get older and I don't want to be wandering along doing the same old thing. I want more out of life.
20[on Bullet to Beijing (1995)] It was my worst professional experience ever. The filming itself was a joke. The final blow came when we were shooting in the Lenfilm studio itself. I wanted to go to the toilet and they directed me to it. I could smell it 50 yards away and it was the filthiest lavatory I have ever seen. I went outside and relieved myself against the sound stage, which I noticed several other men had done before. So this is where my career has ended, I thought to myself: in the toilet. I'm done.
21The danger is, of course, that the wait for a decent movie makes you desperate, and I got desperate to the point that I accepted a picture in Alaska with Steven Seagal, the martial arts expert. The movie was called On Deadly Ground (1994) and the title was to prove apt. Although Steven and the rest of the team were great to work with, I had broken one of the cardinal rules of bad movies: if you're going to do a bad movie, at least do it in a great location. Here I was, doing a movie where the work was freezing my brain and the weather was freezing my arse.
22Today I'm in the fortunate and luxurious position of only working when I want to. I don't like getting up early or spending a long time learning lines, so these days I only work with offers that I really can't refuse. It's very different from the way I used to be. From the age of 20 to the age of 29, I was obsessed with becoming an actor and when I finally got to Hollywood, I could never quite believe that I had made it and so I kept on working for fear it would all disappear on me. These days, I don't think like that at all. I don't see myself as a Hollywood movie star - in fact I don't see myself as anything in particular.
23Unlike my other golfing friend Sidney Poitier, Sean Connery is not the gentlest person in the world and my lack of grasp of the sport would not make him sad as it did Sidney, it would just make him angry. Sean has a terrible temper and when he tried to teach me golf he was so incensed by my performance he grabbed my club and broke it in two. I've never played since and I never will because I do not want to upset two of my best friends, Sean, in particular.
24Harry Brown (2009) wasn't a movie I wanted to do. It was a movie I HAD to do. I saw a lot of myself in the character and that is what drew me to the role.
25[on Sean Connery] We're still friends. I phoned him the other day on his 80th birthday, but we never see each other because he doesn't move around a lot now. He won't make another film now, no. I just asked him. He said, 'No, I'll never do it.'
26[on one good reason for winning an Oscar] It might mean I'd get more scripts without other actors' coffee stains on them.
27[on Marlon Brando's sending a surrogate to the 1973 Academy Awards to pick up his Best Actor Oscar for The Godfather (1972)] I think if the man wants to make a gesture, I agree entirely with what he did. But I think he should have stood up and done it himself instead of letting some poor little Indian girl [Sacheen Littlefeather] to take the boos. And if, you're going to make a humanitarian gesture, I think a man who makes $2 million playing the leader of the Mafia should at least give half of it to the Indians.
28[on the death of Tony Curtis] It was a terrible shock and instantly I remembered the first time I'd met him. I was at a party, it was in winter and there was a fire and I was chain-smoking at the time, smoking a lot of cigarettes. I was stood there talking to someone and suddenly I felt a hand in my inside pocket and they took out my cigarettes and chucked them in the fire. I looked up and it was Tony Curtis. I'd never met him and he was very famous. I said, 'What did you do that for?' And he said, 'You're going to die Michael if you keep doing that.' I didn't give them up then but I did give them up eventually.
29I never give advice to younger actors. Because when I was their age, I used to ask actors older than me for advice, and the only advice I got was "Just give up."
30I left the country for eight years when tax was put up to 82 per cent. You didn't get the 82 per cent tax from me for eight years. You didn't get any tax at all from me for the next eight years. Apart from that, a quarter of a billion dollars of movies were made outside this country instead of inside it which is just from one stupid, loud-mouth moronic actor. Imagine what is happening to companies, proper companies, who then disappear. It's no good.
31One of the odd things about the country today, odd for me to say it, is the obsession with celebrity. I do regard that as a little bit dangerous. Everyone expects too much of you, too much perfection. And then you get the shock headlines when you realize they're normal, we're all normal - J-Lo's got cellulite shock, and the rest - well, frankly, who gives a shit?
32The thing about gangsters in films these days is that they're either funny or they're stupid. Well, I'm sorry, but I've never met a gangster that's either. And I come from something of a gangster milieu. Nor have I met someone who deals out violence for violence's sake. The violence in Get Carter (1971) was incisive, fast and over. One blow, one shot, one hit, what was necessary. No one smashed people up in a sadistic fury.
33When they said they wanted to remake Sleuth (1972), my first thought was, 'Why make it again at all?' I do not like remakes. It shows a lack of imagination. But once I saw the script for Sleuth (2007) I realised it wasn't a remake at all. It was a brand new movie.
34My Alfie (1966) had to ask, 'What's it all about', as he was a bit stupid. Jude's Alfie (2004) was too smart, too clever by half. I can understand why he said yes to the part, it probably seemed like a good idea at the time. An actor's life is full of decisions, some bad, some good.
35I know there are thousands of actors out there who are as good, and better, than me, who just didn't get the breaks. I'm not saying that I didn't deserve any of this but I'm also aware of the fickle nature of this business, and how being in the right place at the right time can change everything.
36I'll probably vote Conservative. I mean, we're in a terrible state whichever way you look at it, socially, financially and politically, so just give the other guy a chance. I don't know what Cameron's (David Cameron) going to do, but in the end you vote out of desperation. You just have to have someone new and see what happens. I voted for Maggie Thatcher (Margaret Thatcher) because I thought we needed a change from that long period of socialism; I voted for Tony Blair because we had a great long period of Conservatism. The thing now is to vote for Cameron (David Cameron).
37I stayed in Britain, but they kept putting the tax up, so I'd do any old thing every now and then to pay the tax, that was my tax exile money. I realised that's not a socialist country, it's a communist country without a dictator, so I left and I was never going to come back. Maggie Thatcher (Margaret Thatcher) came in and put the taxes back down and in the end, you know, you don't mind paying tax. What am I going to do? Not pay tax and drive around in a Rolls Royce, with cripples begging on the street like you see in some countries?
38Schools are cheaper than prisons. They don't need to learn Shakespeare (William Shakespeare); they need to read and write and count, so make sure of that. But we need to bring back the old technical colleges where you went to learn how to be an electrician, a plasterer, a carpenter.
39If parents aren't working, how can they be decent role models? You have to look at all the people who are not sick, who've been on benefits for 20 years and have ten kids. I read in the news that we now spend more in benefits than we collect in income tax. I can't think of any country in the world that's ever done that. There can't be six million people who are too sick to go to work. You can't be accused of attacking the working classes, because they're not working.
40I refuse to take myself too seriously. I learnt that from Roger Moore many years ago. He said, 'Cheer up, you'd better have a good time because this is not a rehearsal. This is life - this is the show.
41I once read, 'You must not compete against your predecessors or your contemporaries. You must compete against yourself.' I try to look for something better and better and better.
42[on prisons] If you put people in cages, don't be surprised if they become animals.
43(On composer John Barry during filming of Deadfall (1968)) Look at him, he's so thin. You wouldn't think he had a bloody note in him!
44[on John Wayne] Every now and then, we used to meet and have a drink or lunch. He genuinely liked me and of course I adored him. I met him by accident in the lobby of the Beverly Hills Hotel. Many years later, Shakira (Caine's wife) was in hospital with peritonitis and John coincidentally was in the next room, dying of cancer. I was around with him at the end. We used to walk up and down the corridor.
45What you have now which you didn't have when I was young is drugs. You had alcoholism, people getting pissed, but you never had the drugs and that is a massive problem. We were shooting in Hackney and someone local came up to me and said, 'Welcome to Crackney!' It was a gentler time when I was young. There were vicious gangsters but they were professional gangsters. They chose who they hit and what they robbed. But the drug addicts today have to kill anybody - it doesn't matter who - to get the money, so you get this incredible random violence. When I was young you fought the guy in the next street. But it wasn't so vicious then. We fought with our fists. Now they fight with knives and guns.
46I shared a flat with Terence Stamp. I understudied Peter O'Toole. I remember being in Liverpool and going to see a matinée with a young actor nobody had ever heard of called Albert Finney. Oh, a tremendous wave. It was ridiculous. I knew a writer who wanted to write musicals called Lionel Bart, a painter called Francis Bacon.
47The Government has taken tax up to 50 per cent, and if it goes to 51, I will be back in America. I will not pay the Government more than I get. No way, ever. They've reached their limit with me, and that's what will happen to a lot of people. You know how much they made out of that high taxation all those years ago? Nothing. But they sent a mass of incredible brains to America. This return to high tax will only deepen our debt. While top-earners will be hit by the highest tax in 20 years, our MPs escape Scot-free. We've got three-and-a-half million layabouts laying about on benefits, and I'm 76, getting up at 6am to go to work to keep them. Let's get everybody back to work so we can save a couple of billion and cut tax, not keep sticking it on.
48My father said nothing, but I know that he thought I'd just confessed to being gay. Back then, everyone thought all actors were gay, and most of them were right. But it must have been the right move - did you know that the only good word you can make from 'Michael Caine' is 'cinema'? I discovered that in a crossword 10 years ago.
49It should have been a hindrance, but I have a phrase which I taught my children: 'Use the difficulty.' Where I came from, nobody even knew what a drama school was, and everyone thought you couldn't become an actor unless you talked posh. Class is still there but it's less relevant now. You don't need to have gone to a certain kind of school to have done that [become an actor] like you did back then.
50Brown's (Gordon Brown) never been elected by anybody. I'm supposed to be in a country where I get the chance to elect someone and I'm around here at the most dangerous of times led by a man who's never been elected. You've gotta be elected. A political party that's in too long is like a piece of meat - if it's there too long it will go rotten and they've gone rotten and they've gotta go.
51I've had such a great time, I'd like to come back as me - and do it all over again.
52[on playing Clarence in Is Anybody There? (2008)] I'm my own worst critic. I spend my entire life trying to get it absolutely right. There are other actors who could do it better, but I'm proud of it. There's no Michael Caine there, there's no ego there. You just see poor old Clarence.
53Old? I stopped ageing at 38. I still am 38 . . . except when they say, 'Run up those stairs.'
54[When he told his parents he wanted to act, they assumed he was gay.] That's what we thought actors were, all poofs. And sometimes we were right.
55On learning acting in postwar Britain: There was a whole generation of English theatre actors who'd do a film in order to buy a car or a refrigerator, but really thought it was beneath them.
56On his first days in Hollywood: It was amazing to see Fred Astaire doing his food shopping.
57When he was nominated for an Oscar for Educating Rita (1983): Irene Dunne and Loretta Young stopped me and said, 'We both voted for you.' I couldn't believe it!
58After eight years in Hollywood: Weather always the same. Nothing to talk about. No seasons. My gardener told me that if I wanted to grow daffodils, I'd have to keep them in the fridge for five weeks so they'd think they were in England. But I couldn't put them in the fridge because I thought the maid would make onion soup out of them and poison the bloody lot of us.
59[on some of his mid-career flops] I did a couple of pictures which were absolutely dreadful - one was Blue Ice (1992), and another with Olivier, where I played a spy based on Philby [The Jigsaw Man (1983).] I thought there was no need to put myself through it. I had enough money. I opened eight restaurants, goofed around in Miami, until Jack Nicholson persuaded me to do Blood and Wine (1996) with him and restored my faith in the business.
60While shooting Harry Brown (2009): The young guys I met there were fascinated by my success. They asked how I got out of there. I told them the truth - I had a happy family. My mum and dad were together all the time. I won a scholarship to grammar school. And there was drink, but not drugs.
61Do I believe in God? Yes I do. When you've had a life like mine, you have to.
62I love HD. Of course, it's very unforgiving, especially on young beautiful ladies, but thank God I'm old, I don't care.
63[on Ray Milland] A nice old bloke.
64[on Otto Preminger] O.P. is only happy if everybody else is miserable. Still, if you can keep his paranoia from beating you down, you can learn a lot from the guy.
65Educating Rita (1983) was wonderful, I did it with Julie Walters, the original girl. She is sensational, really fantastic, and she is a very nice person as well, which is always a bonus.
66[on Heath Ledger's performance as The Joker] The worry going in was The Joker. Jack Nicholson was the greatest Joker so, you know, how do you top that? Well, Heath Ledger's done it and he's extraordinary. He's gone in a completely different direction to Jack. Jack was like a clown figure, benign but wicked, maybe a killer old uncle. He could be funny and make you laugh. Heath is like a really scary psychopath. I did one scene with him and he was ready to go and had to come up in a lift and raid our place. I didn't see him for rehearsal and when he came out of the lift he was so incredible I forgot my lines. He frightened the life out of me. I'd never met him before. He's a lovely guy and his Joker is going to be a hell of a revelation in this picture.
67I've made an awful lot of films. In fact, I've made a lot of awful films.
68[about remakes of his classic films such as Get Carter (1971) and The Italian Job (1969)] I wish they would remake the BAD ones!
69I'm a sort of boy next door. If that boy has a good scriptwriter.
70Don't remake a successful picture, because you're liable to be the flop. Steve Martin and I made a much better picture of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988) than Marlon Brando and David Niven did. What I wouldn't do anymore is play any guest shots. I've given that up. I did it as some fun and it backfired in Get Carter (2000) so I'm not doing it again. Now I hear that they're going to remake The Italian Job (1969) with me in the Noël Coward part. I'd consider it, yes.
71I'm the original bourgeois nightmare - a Cockney with intelligence and a million dollars.
72In England I was a Cockney actor. In America, I was an actor.
73I'll always be around because I'm a skilled professional actor. Whether or not I've any talent is beside the point.
74You get paid the same for a bad film as you do for a good one.
75Such is an actor's life. We must ride the waves of every film, barfing occasionally, yet maintain our dignity, even as the bulk of our Herculean efforts are keel-hauled before our very eyes.
76[on Richard Gere] He's got a pin-up image, which he hates. The only trouble is this: whenever they ask him to take his trousers off, he does.
77[on Alfie (1966)] To be a movie star, you have to carry a movie. And to carry a movie where you play the title role is the supreme example. The third thing, for a British actor, is to do it in America. The fourth is to get nominated for an award. That picture did all four things for me.
78Whenever anyone asks me to do something about my life's work, I keep saying, "Please, I haven't finished yet. Can you give me another year?" . . . In a lifetime achievement award, you just have to watch yourself grow old in 45 minutes.
79I did Harold Pinter's first play, "The Room". Harold was an actor named David Baron. He said, "I'm going to write". I said, "Oh yeah, it'll be nice". He said, "But I don't want to get mixed up with being an actor. I'm going to write with my real name". I said, "What's your real name, David?" He said, "Harold Pinter".
80My most useful acting tip came from my pal John Wayne. Talk low, talk slow, and don't say too much.
81It's terrible. Every six weeks it's Christmas. In Catch-22 (1970), the hero says, "Time is going by so fast, I have to make my life more boring." That's what I've got to do, because my life is so interesting and I enjoy myself so much, I've got to make it more tedious, because I'll be 100 in a minute. My mother died when she was 90, so I've got just under 20 years left. The terrible thing is that in obituaries, you read, "He died at 74, he had a good life." You think, "Bloody hell, I've only got 18 months to go". And another strange thing about aging - as you get older, it gets faster, and you see people you haven't seen in what you think is five years, but it turns out to be 25 years. You say, "I made that film ten years ago," and they correct me: "Thirty, Michael. Thirty".
82My view is that you should always do remakes of failures. Then you've got nowhere to go but up, you know? They can't say, "Well, it's not as good as the original, you made a piece of crap". They'd just say, "What a piece of crap that was," anyway.
83[In reference to the Oscar Family Album Tribute sequence at The 70th Annual Academy Awards (1998) and speaking live on British television following the Oscar ceremony in 1998] I was sat up there with the likes of Claire Trevor and Luise Rainer. It means a lot to me, it was amazing, they are living legends!
84[on doing the Texan accent for Secondhand Lions (2003)] I had a great dialect coach and he told me there's always one moment when you get something. He said, "Do your Texan accent for me," when I had learned it from a tape. He said, "It's too English!". I said, "Why?". He said, "Each word stands up like soldiers standing to attention next to each other. The way they talk in Texas, they're so lazy they sort of lean on each word". And I could just picture all these words leaning over each other, and that's when I got it.
85Be like a duck, my mother used to tell me. Remain calm on the surface and paddle like hell underneath.
86The difference between a movie star and a movie actor is this--a movie star will say, "How can I change the script to suit me?" and a movie actor will say. "How can I change me to suit the script?"
87First of all, I choose the great roles, and if none of these come, I choose the mediocre ones, and if they don't come, I choose the ones that pay the rent.
88The best research [for playing a drunk] is being a British actor for 20 years.
89Movie acting is about covering the machinery. Stage acting is about exposing the machinery. In cinema, you should think the actor is playing himself, if he's that good. It looks very easy. It should. But it's not, I assure you. To disappear your complete self into a character is quite difficult. I've tried it 85 times, and I've succeeded two or three times.
90I used to get the girl; now I get the part. In The Quiet American (2002) you may have noticed I got the part and the girl. It's a milestone for me, because it's the last time I'm going to get the girl. I'm sure of it, now I'm nearly seventy.
91I am in so many movies that are on TV at 2:00 a.m. that people think I am dead.
92[on Jaws: The Revenge (1987)] I have never seen it, but by all accounts it is terrible. However, I have seen the house that it built, and it is terrific.
93My name is Michael Caine.
94[in 1967] I've never been out with a married woman, never. I respect others' properties.

Facts

#Fact
1Ranked 10th highest grossing actor of all time with his previous films grossing $3.2 billion.[2016].
2Acting mentor and friend of Julie Walters.
3Although often listed as 6'2", Caine himself gave his height as 6'1" in his 1992 autobiography "What's It All About?".
4When he was still a struggling actor, Caine shared a London flat with future hairstylist-guru Vidal Sassoon.
5Though he had been considered for, but never appeared in a Bond movie, Caine was the very first person to hear the completed film score for Goldfinger (1964). After he and roommate Terence Stamp were both ejected from their apartment, Caine asked composer friend John Barry if he could use the spare bedroom at Barry's London residence. As they were good friends, Barry agreed and so for several months Caine crashed with Barry and was there the sleepless night he completed his iconic score. At breakfast the following morning Barry played his composition for Caine, the first time he'd performed it for anybody.
6In 2009, he praised Christoph Waltz's performance as Colonel Hans Landa in Inglourious Basterds (2009), saying that it was the "best performance of a villain" he's seen in years.
7He turned down the role of David Dilbeck in Striptease (1996) that went to Burt Reynolds.
8He claimed that the worst films he ever made were The Magus (1968), _The Swarm (1978)_(qv and Ashanti (1979).
9He was offered the role of Arthur Seldom in The Oxford Murders (2008) that went to John Hurt.
10He was considered to play 'C.S. Lewis' in Shadowlands (1993).
11He was considered for the role of Bart in Unleashed (2005) that went to Bob Hoskins.
12He was considered for the role of Ben du Toit in A Dry White Season (1989) that went to Donald Sutherland.
13He was the first choice for the role of Marvin in City of Ghosts (2002) that went to James Caan.
14He was considered for the role of Grandpa Joe in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005).
15He turned down the role of Captain Smith in Titanic (1997).
16He turned the role of Josiah Samuel Smith in the Doctor Who (1963) serial "Ghost Light". The role went to Ian Hogg.
17He turned down the role of Staff Sergeant Williams in The Hill (1965) in order to star in Alfie (1966). The role went to Ian Hendry.
18He was considered for the lead role in Tootsie (1982).
19He was considered for the title role in Fellini's Casanova (1976).
20He turned down the role of Col. John Stewart in Khartoum (1966) that went to Richard Johnson.
21He turned down the role of Patrick Dalton Six Weeks (1982) that went to Dudley Moore.
22He was considered to star opposite Sean Connery in Saturn 3 (1980). The roles went to Kirk Douglas and Harvey Keitel.
23He turned down the role of Maurice Castle in The Human Factor (1979) that went to Nicol Williamson.
24He was considered for the title role in Sebastian (1968) that went to Dirk Bogarde.
25He wanted to play The Jackal in The Day of the Jackal (1973), but was turned down by director Fred Zinnemann, because he felt that the role shouldn't be played by a star.
26He was originally cast as Private Wilkes in Guns at Batasi (1964). John Leyton replaced him.
27He turned down the role of Jolly in Kiss Me Goodbye (1982) in order to star in Educating Rita (1983). The role went to James Caan.
28He was going to star in The Dresser (1983) with Orson Welles in the early 1980s. His role went to Tom Courtenay.
29He turned down the role of PC Bob Steele in Z Cars (1962).
30He turned down both of the male leads in Women in Love (1969) because he refused to do any nudity. The roles went to Alan Bates and Oliver Reed.
31He was considered for Sean Connery's roles in Highlander (1986) and The Name of the Rose (1986).
32He tried out for the role of Lieutenant Scott-Padget in Damn the Defiant! (1962) which went to Dirk Bogarde.
33He turned down the role of John L. Sullivan IV in Switching Channels (1988) in order to be in Jaws: The Revenge (1987). The role went to Burt Reynolds.
34He turned down the role of Col. Colin Caine in Lifeforce (1985) that went to Peter Firth.
35He revealed in his autobiography that he that he also read for Doctor Yuri Zhivago in Doctor Zhivago (1965) and participated in the screen shots with Julie Christie, but (after watching the results with David Lean) was the one who suggested Omar Sharif.
36He was considered for the role of Mark Wallace in Two for the Road (1967) that went to Albert Finney.
37Attended the wedding of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to former model Jerry Hall in 2016.
38Publicly called for the UK to leave the European Union in January 2016.
39He has two roles in common with Jude Law: (1) Caine played Alfie Elkins in Alfie (1966) while Law played him in Alfie (2004) and (2) Caine played Milo Tindle in Sleuth (1972) while Law played him in Sleuth (2007), in which Caine played Andrew Wyke.
40He appeared in four films with Laurence Olivier: Battle of Britain (1969), Sleuth (1972), A Bridge Too Far (1977) and The Jigsaw Man (1983).
41In every film where Caine and Christopher Nolan make a collaboration, Caine's character either assists, guides, trains or educates the protagonist of each film. In The Prestige (2006), Caine portrays a magician who teaches the main character the art of illusion. For 'The Dark Knight trilogy', Caine plays a butler to the Wayne family, where he supports, nurtures and loves the main character Bruce Wayne (Batman). During Inception (2010), Caine depicts the father of the main protagonist, Cobb, and aids him by recruiting one of his students. In Interstellar (2014), Caine portrays a professor/engineer, who invites and encourages the central character, Cooper, to lead an important space mission that will determine the future of planet earth.
42Of the six performers who have won Oscars for performances in films directed by Woody Allen, he is the only man. The others are Diane Keaton, Dianne Wiest (twice), Mira Sorvino, Penelope Cruz, and Cate Blanchett.
43As of 2014, has appeared in four films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: Alfie (1966), Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), The Cider House Rules (1999), Inception (2010).
44Caine and fellow Brit Michael Gough, who both played Alfred Pennyworth in "Batman" movies, have also both had roles in different productions of "A Christmas Carol" (Caine as Scrooge in The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) and Gough as Mr. Poole in A Christmas Carol (1984) with George C. Scott).
45In Chicago Illinois filming The Dark Knight (2008). [August 2007]
46Visiting the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, England [June 2010]
47As of 2013, he has three grandchildren, a granddaughter and two grandsons.
48Favorite film is The Third Man (1949).
49Claims that his trick to being able to cry on cue is thinking about a painful childhood memory.
50Stated that for years he hated the smell of garlic as he associated it with his service in the Korean War where North Korean and Chinese troops would munch it as a snack. He eventually overcame his dislike upon becoming a restauranteur.
51Educating Rita (1983) is his favourite film of his own, and the performance he's the most proud of.
52Supports Chelsea FC.
53For more than forty years, Caine's mother, Ellen Maria Burchell, paid periodic visits to a "cousin" in a mental hospital. When she died in 1989, Caine learned that the cousin was really his elder brother, David.
54Publicly supported Conservative Party leader David Cameron for Prime Minister in the 2010 General Election.
55Lives in Fetcham, Surrey, United Kingdom.
56Confirmed in an interview with "The Mail on Sunday" newspaper on 1 November 2009 that he has dropped his support for Labour and will vote Conservative at the next General Election.
57Chosen by GQ magazine as one of the 50 Most Stylish Men in the Past 50 Years.
58In an interview with "The Sunday Telegraph" on 26 April 2009, Caine admitted that he is considering becoming a tax exile again if Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown increases taxes on high earners.
59He was made a Fellow of the British Film Institute in recognition of his outstanding contribution to film culture.
60Once said that he knew he'd made it as an actor when he started getting scripts to read that no longer had coffee stains already on them (meaning that he was the first choice for that role).
61His all-time favorite actor, his inspiration to become an actor and his hero is Humphrey Bogart.
62He is famous for the catch-phrase "Not a lot of people know that", though he never actually said it. The phrase was probably first said by Peter Sellers when he appeared Parkinson (1971) on 28 October 1972 and said: "Not many people know that. This is my Michael Caine impression. You see, Mike's always quoting from the Guinness Book of Records. At the drop of a hat he'll trot one out. 'Did you know that it takes a man in a tweed suit five and a half seconds to fall from the top of Big Ben to the ground?' Now there's not many people who know that!".
63Alfie (1966) and Sleuth (1972) were both remade with Jude Law taking over his role.
64Has appeared in the remakes of two of his films: Get Carter (2000) and Sleuth (2007).
65Originally had the lead role of Switching Channels (1988) but was held up by production delays on Jaws: The Revenge (1987).
66While he uses "Michael Caine" professionally, he used his given name in his personal life until he decided to officially change his name to Michael Caine in 2016. He said in an interview that the reason was that he was losing too much time at the reinforced safety checks in airports because the name on his passport did not match his stage name.
6712/18/05: Attended the party at his close friend Sir Elton John's Old Windsor mansion after the singer married David Furnish in a civil partnership ceremony.
68Turned down Alfred Hitchcock's Frenzy (1972).
69Has been nominated for an Oscar at least once in five consecutive decades (1960s-2000s).
70An ardent Thatcherite during the 1980s, Caine switched his support to Tony Blair's New Labour Party shortly before the 1997 General Election.
711979: Left England for tax reasons, and did not return until 1987.
72Visited John Wayne several times when the veteran star was dying of cancer in hospital.
73Mike Myers said that he based the character of Austin Powers partially on Caine's character in Alfie (1966). Caine would play Austin Powers father in Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002).
74Allegedly did not get along with Steven Seagal while filming On Deadly Ground (1994).
75Near the end of The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992), he passes by a store called "Micklewhite's." His real name is Maurice Micklewhite.
76Superstar Swedish rock band Kent refer to him in their song "Palace and Main"
77In 1957, at Brighton University, Caine appeared in a one-act play written by a fellow actor who went by the name of David Baron. It was Baron's very first play. He later changed his name back to Harold Pinter, the name under which he won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2005.
78Was the first person to be nominated for an acting Razzie award for more than one title. He was nominated for Worst Actor of 1980 at the very first Razzie awards for his roles in the films Dressed to Kill (1980) and The Island (1980).
79Throughout the 1960s he was by his own estimation drinking two bottles of vodka and smoking at least eighty cigarettes a day. He quit smoking cigarettes following a stern lecture from Tony Curtis at a party in 1971, and finally quit smoking cigars shortly before his 70th birthday in 2003.
80Is close friends with Sir Sean Connery, Sir Roger Moore, Sir Elton John and Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber.
81The soundstage at Shepperton Studios, in which he filmed Batman Begins (2005), is also the one where he filmed his very first film, Hell in Korea (1956).
82Has stated that the character of Vichy war criminal Pierre Brossard in The Statement (2003) was his least favorite. He said that all the other characters he played in his career, whether good or evil, had a sense of humor on some level that he would try to convey in his performance. He felt that Brossard had no sense of humor whatsoever, in part because the character was such an intense man.
831987: Was not present at the Academy Awards ceremony when he won best supporting actor for Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) because he was filming Jaws: The Revenge (1987), for which he was nominated for worst supporting actor at the Razzie awards the following year.
84Three of his memorable films (Alfie (1966), The Italian Job (1969), and Get Carter (1971)) have all been remade.
85Lobbied for the lead role in The Day of the Jackal (1973) but was rejected by director Fred Zinnemann, who felt that the character of The Jackal, who essentially is a cipher, should not be played by a movie star.
862001: Was voted fifth in the Orange Film Survey of greatest British actors.
87"Michael Caine", a top 10 song in Britain in the mid-'80s by the group Madness, had his "My Name Is Michael Caine" quote sampled into the song.
88Lodged with composer John Barry in the early 1960s for a few months, after being forced to leave his own flat, penniless. He returned the favor in 1998 when agreeing to introduce the composer's Royal Albert Hall concert - his first in the UK for 25 years.
89The role of Alfie was turned down by Anthony Newley and Terence Stamp before it was offered to him.
90Has two brothers. Younger brother Stanley Caine appeared in at least three of Caine's films: Billion Dollar Brain (1967), Play Dirty (1969) and The Italian Job (1969). He did not know about his elder half-brother David until their mother died. David suffered from epilepsy and had lived in a hospital his entire life.
91The production offices of Mona Lisa (1986) were located in the disused St Olave's hospital, the very hospital in which Caine was born.
92Father, with the late Patricia Haines, of Dominique (aka Nikki).
93Father, with Shakira Caine, of Natasha.
94He owns seven restaurants: six in London, one in Miami.
9511/16/00: Formally knighted at Buckingham Palace under his real name of Maurice Micklewhite. He will be known professionally as Sir Michael Caine.
96He was appointed a Knight Bachelor in the 2000 Queen's Birthday Honours List for his contribution to the performing arts.
97Shared a London flat with actor Terence Stamp early in his career.
98Took his name from the film The Caine Mutiny (1954)
99Owns his own film production company.
100He was awarded the CBE (Commander Of The Order Of The British Empire) in the 1992 Queen's Birthday Honours List for his services to drama.
1011987: Awarded British Variety Club Award for Best Film Actor.
102Co-owned top London restaurant Langan's Brasserie.
10310/87: Ranked #55 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time" list.
104His first American accent was in the film Hurry Sundown (1967). He was taught the Southern drawl by Vivien Leigh, who told him to say "four door Ford" all day long for weeks. (source - "What's it all about?" Michael Caine's autobiography - 1992)

Pictures

Movies

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
It All Came True1998Max Gale
Little Voice1998Ray Say
Shadow Run1998Haskell
Mandela and de Klerk1997TV MovieF.W. de Klerk
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea1997TV Mini-SeriesCaptain Nemo
Blood and Wine1996Victor
Midnight in Saint Petersburg1996TV MovieHarry Palmer
Bullet to Beijing1995TV MovieHarry Palmer
World War II: When Lions Roared1994TV MovieJoseph V. Stalin
On Deadly Ground1994Michael Jennings
The Muppet Christmas Carol1992Scrooge
Blue Ice1992Harry Anders
Noises Off...1992Lloyd Fellowes
Bullseye!1990Sidney Lipton / Doctor Hicklar
Mr. Destiny1990Mike
A Shock to the System1990Graham Marshall
Jekyll & Hyde1990TV MovieDr. Henry Jekyll Mr. Edward Hyde
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels1988Lawrence Jamieson
Without a Clue1988Reginald Kincaid / Sherlock Holmes
Jack the Ripper1988TV SeriesInspector Frederick Abberline
Surrender1987/ISean Stein
Jaws: The Revenge1987Hoagie
The Fourth Protocol1987John Preston
The Whistle Blower1986Frank Jones
Half Moon Street1986Lord Bulbeck
Mona Lisa1986Mortwell
Sweet Liberty1986Elliott James
Hannah and Her Sisters1986Elliot
The Holcroft Covenant1985Noel Holcroft
Water1985Baxter
Blame It on Rio1984Matthew Hollis
Beyond the Limit1983Charley Fortnum, Consul
Educating Rita1983Dr. Frank Bryant
The Jigsaw Man1983Philip Kimberley / Sergei Kuzminsky
Deathtrap1982Sidney Bruhl
Victory1981Capt. John Colby - The Players: England
The Hand1981Jonathan Lansdale
Dressed to Kill1980Doctor Robert Elliott
The Island1980Blair Maynard
Beyond the Poseidon Adventure1979Captain Mike Turner
Ashanti1979Dr. David Linderby
California Suite1978Sidney Cochran
The Swarm1978Brad Crane
A Bridge Too Far1977Lieutenant Colonel J.O.E. Vandeleur
Silver Bears1977Doc Fletcher
The Eagle Has Landed1976Colonel Steiner
Harry and Walter Go to New York1976Adam Worth
The Man Who Would Be King1975Peachy Carnehan
Peeper1975Leslie C. Tucker
The Romantic Englishwoman1975Lewis
The Wilby Conspiracy1975Jim Keogh
The Destructors1974John Deray
The Black Windmill1974Maj. John Tarrant
Sleuth1972Milo Tindle
Pulp1972Mickey King
X, Y and Zee1972Robert Blakeley
Kidnapped1971Alan Breck
Get Carter1971Jack Carter
The Last Valley1971The Captain
Too Late the Hero1970Pvt. Tosh Hearne
Battle of Britain1969Squadron Leader Canfield
The Italian Job1969Charlie Croker
ITV Saturday Night Theatre1969TV SeriesCornelius
Male of the Species1969TV MovieCornelius
Play Dirty1969Capt. Douglas
The Magus1968Nicholas Urfe
Deadfall1968Henry Stuart Clarke
Billion Dollar Brain1967Harry Palmer
Woman Times Seven1967Handsome Stranger (segment "Snow")
Hurry Sundown1967Henry Warren
Funeral in Berlin1966Harry Palmer
Gambit1966Harry Dean
The Wrong Box1966Michael Finsbury
Alfie1966Alfie
The Ipcress File1965Harry Palmer
ITV Play of the Week1961-1964TV SeriesGeorge Grant Willie Mossop PC Wimbush
Hamlet at Elsinore1964TV MovieHoratio
Zulu1964Lt. Gonville Bromhead
First Night1963TV SeriesReggie Downes / Johnny
The Wrong Arm of the Law1963Police Station PC (uncredited)
The Arthur Haynes Show1962TV Series
Drama 61-671962TV SeriesArthur Green
The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre1962TV SeriesPaddy Mooney
BBC Sunday-Night Play1961-1962TV Mini-SeriesPaul Latimer / Tosh
Solo for Sparrow1962Paddy Mooney
The Day the Earth Caught Fire1961Checkpoint Policeman (uncredited)
The Younger Generation1961TV SeriesRay the Raver
Storyboard1961TV Series
The Compartment1961TV MovieYoung Man
Armchair Theatre1961TV SeriesHelmsman
Walk a Crooked Mile1961TV Mini-SeriesPolice constable
The Bulldog Breed1960Sailor in Cinema Fight (uncredited)
Foxhole in Cairo1960Weber
No Wreath for the General1960TV SeriesSecond Police Constable
Golden Girl1960TV SeriesDetective
Deadline Midnight1960TV SeriesTed Drake
Knight Errant Limited1960TV SeriesPhotographer
William Tell1958-1959TV SeriesSgt. Wiener / Max
Dixon of Dock Green1957-1959TV SeriesTufty Morris / Brocklehurst / Indian Pedlar
Breakout1959Prisoner with Pin-Up (uncredited)
Television Playwright1959TV SeriesExterior Guard
Room 431958Bridegroom (uncredited)
The Two-Headed Spy1958Gestapo Agent
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre1956-1958TV SeriesThird P.C. / Court orderly / Fighter / ...
Blind Spot1958Johnny Brent
The Key1958Bit part (uncredited)
A Woman of Mystery1958Minor Role (uncredited)
The Vise1958TV SeriesFolsham
Navy Log1958TV SeriesSoldier No. 1
Carve Her Name with Pride1958Thirsty Prisoner on Train (uncredited)
Mister Charlesworth1957TV SeriesDusty
Escape1957TV SeriesBill
The Steel Bayonet1957German Soldier (uncredited)
How to Murder a Rich Uncle1957Gilrony
Blood Money1957TV MovieFighter
The Crime of the Century1956TV Series
The Adventures of Sir Lancelot1956TV SeriesThird Knight
Hell in Korea1956Pvt. Lockyer
Panic in the Parlor1956Sailor (uncredited)
Coup d'Etat2017post-productionGeneral Anton Vincent
Going in Style2017Joe
Now You See Me 22016Arthur Tressler
The Last Witch Hunter2015Dolan 36th
GivingTales2015Video GameNarrator - Little Claus and Big Claus (voice, as Sir Michael Caine)
Youth2015/IFred Ballinger
Kingsman: The Secret Service2014Arthur
Interstellar2014Professor Brand
Stonehearst Asylum2014Benjamin Salt
Last Love2013Matthew Morgan
Now You See Me2013/IArthur Tressler
The Dark Knight Rises2012Alfred
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island2012Alexander
Cars 22011Finn McMissile (voice)
Gnomeo & Juliet2011Lord Redbrick (voice)
Inception2010Miles
Harry Brown2009Harry Brown
Is Anybody There?2008Clarence
The Dark Knight2008Alfred
Flawless2007Hobbs
Sleuth2007Andrew
The Prestige2006Cutter
Children of Men2006Jasper
The Weather Man2005Robert Spritzel
Bewitched2005Nigel Bigelow
Batman Begins2005Video GameAlfred Pennyworth (voice)
Batman Begins2005Alfred
Around the Bend2004Henry Lair
The Statement2003Pierre Brossard
Secondhand Lions2003Garth
The Actors2003Anthony O'Malley
Quicksand2003Jake Mellows
Freedom: A History of Us2003TV Series documentaryNewspaper Editor / William Wood / Steelworker / ...
On the Set Gag Reel2002Video shortScrooge (uncredited)
The Quiet American2002Thomas Fowler
Austin Powers in Goldmember2002Nigel Powers
Last Orders2001Jack
Miss Congeniality2000Victor Melling
Get Carter2000Cliff Brumby
Shiner2000Billy 'Shiner' Simpson
Quills2000Royer-Collard
The Debtors1999
The Cider House Rules1999Dr. Wilbur Larch

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
My Generation2017Documentary producer post-production
The Double2013executive producer
Forever After2001executive producer
Blue Ice1992producer
The Fourth Protocol1987executive producer
Pulp1972producer - uncredited
Get Carter1971producer - uncredited

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Going in Style2017performer: "Hey, Look Me Over"
Atop the Fourth Wall2012-2015TV Series performer - 2 episodes
The Muppet Christmas Carol: Frogs, Pigs and Humbug - Unwrapping a New Holiday Classic2002Video documentary short performer: "Thankful Heart", "When Love Is Gone" - uncredited
Little Voice1998performer: "The White Cliffs of Dover", "It's Over"
The Muppet Christmas Carol1992performer: "When Love Is Gone", "Thankful Heart", "Finale - When Love Is Found / It Feels Like Christmas"

Composer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Maybe2005Short

Miscellaneous

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Hell in Korea1956technical advisor

Thanks

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Inside 'Interstellar'2015Video documentary special thanks
Showreel2013TV Series special thanks to - 1 episode
Clive James' Postcard from...1991TV Series documentary with thanks to - 1 episode

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The BBC and the BAFTA Lifetime Achievement Tribute to Richard Attenborough1999TV Movie documentaryHimself
Best of British1999TV SeriesHimself
Larry King Live1999TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 56th Annual Golden Globe Awards1999TV Special documentaryHimself - Winner
The Real ....1998TV Series documentaryHimself
The 50th British Academy Film Awards1998TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Best Film
The 70th Annual Academy Awards1998TV SpecialHimself - Past Winner (uncredited)
The Man Who Would Be Caine1998TV Movie documentaryHimself
The 49th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1997TV SpecialHimself
The Making of Special: '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea'1997TV Movie documentaryCaptain Nemo
Walter Matthau: Diamond in the Rough1997TV Movie documentaryHimself
Extra Rosa1997TV SeriesHimself
The London Programme1997TV SeriesHimself
Elle s'appelait Françoise1996TV Movie documentaryHimself
Lights, Camera, Action!: A Century of the Cinema1996TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
Biography1995TV Series documentaryHimself
The First 100 Years: A Celebration of American Movies1995TV Movie documentaryHimself
Live for Peace: A Royal Gala1995TV MovieHimself
Michael Caine: Breaking the Mold1994TV Movie documentaryHimself
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor1993TV Special documentaryHimself
The 65th Annual Academy Awards1993TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In: 25th Anniversary Reunion1993TV MovieHimself
Hollywood U.K.1993TV Series documentaryHimself - Contributor
Danny Kaye International Children Award for Unicef1992TV MovieHimself
The 49th Annual Golden Globe Awards1992TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Cecil B. DeMille Award
Into the Blue: Dolphin Rescue1991TV Movie documentaryHimself - Narrator
Rabbit Ears: King Midas and the Golden Touch1991Video shortHimself - Narrator (voice)
Benny Hill: The World's Favorite Clown1991TV Movie documentaryHimself
Preminger: Anatomy of a Filmmaker1991DocumentaryHimself
Clive James' Postcard from...1991TV Series documentaryHimself
Siskel & Ebert: Actors on Acting1991TV MovieHimself
The 63rd Annual Academy Awards1991TV SpecialHimself
Masterchef1990TV SeriesHimself
Night of 100 Stars III1990TV MovieHimself
The Movie Life of George1989TV Movie documentaryHimself
The 61st Annual Academy Awards1989TV SpecialHimself - Presenter
The Princess Grace Foundation Special Gala Tribute to Cary Grant1988TV MovieHimself
Cary Grant: A Celebration of a Leading Man1988TV Movie documentaryHimself - Host
John Huston: The Man, the Movies, the Maverick1988DocumentaryHimself
The Trouble with Michael Caine1987TV MovieHimself
Acting1987TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
Late Night with David Letterman1983-1987TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Behind the Scenes with 'Jaws: The Revenge'1987TV Movie documentaryHimself
Hero: The Official Film of the 1986 FIFA World Cup1987DocumentaryNarrator (voice)
Good Morning Britain1986TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 11th Annual People's Choice Awards1985TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
Bob Hope's Happy Birthday Homecoming (London Royal Gala)1985TV MovieHimself - Performer
Night of 100 Stars II1985TV MovieHimself
The Golden Gong1985TV Movie documentaryHimself - Host
Aspel & Company1984TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 56th Annual Academy Awards1984TV Special documentaryHimself - Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role & Presenter: Best Animated & Best Live Action Short Film
The 41st Annual Golden Globe Awards1984TV SpecialHimself - Winner
Hour Magazine1983TV SeriesHimself
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson1965-1983TV SeriesHimself - Guest
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to John Huston1983TV SpecialHimself
Natalie - A Tribute to a Very Special Lady1982TV Movie documentaryHimself
Clapper Board1977-1981TV SeriesHimself - Interviewee
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to James Stewart1980TV Special documentaryHimself (uncredited)
The Mike Douglas Show1973-1979TV SeriesHimself - Guest / Himself - Actor
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Alfred Hitchcock1979TV Movie documentaryHimself
The 5th Annual People's Choice Awards1979TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Favourite All Around Male Entertainer
Dinah!1975-1979TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Behind the Scenes: Beyond the Poseidon Adventure1979TV MovieHimself
The Road to Eltham1978TV MovieHimself
The 50th Annual Academy Awards1978TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Best Actor in a Supporting Role
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Henry Fonda1978TV Special documentaryHimself (uncredited)
V.I.P.-Schaukel1978TV Series documentaryHimself - Guest
Inside 'The Swarm'1978TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Paul Ryan Show1977TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The British Academy Awards1977TV MovieHimself - Presenter: Best Director
The Norman Gunston Show1976TV MovieHimself
The British Academy Awards1976TV MovieHimself - Presenter: Best Actor
Don Rickles: Buy This Tape You Hockey Puck1975Video documentaryHimself
Rickles1975TV MovieHimself
Call It Magic1975Documentary shortHimself
The 45th Annual Academy Awards1973TV SpecialHimself - Co-Host & Presenter
Film Night1973TV SeriesHimself
The David Frost Show1970-1972TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Fight of the Century1971TV MovieHimself - Audience Member
Simon Simon1970ShortHimself
London aktuell1970TV Series documentaryHimself
The Dick Cavett Show1970TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 24th Annual Tony Awards1970TV SpecialHimself - Presenter
Laugh-In1969-1970TV SeriesHimself - Guest Performer
World in Action1970TV Series documentaryHimself
Playboy After Dark1969TV SeriesHimself
The Joey Bishop Show1969TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Candid Caine: A Self Portrait of Michael Caine1969TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Battle for The Battle of Britain1969TV Movie documentaryHimself - Host
Wedding of the Doll1968DocumentaryHimself
Tonite Let's All Make Love in London1967DocumentaryHimself (segment "Movie Stars") (uncredited)
The 39th Annual Academy Awards1967TV SpecialHimself - Nominee: Best Actor in Leading Role
Caine Below Zero1967Documentary shortHimself / Harry Palmer
Cinema1967TV Series documentaryHimself
The Eamonn Andrews Show1965-1966TV SeriesHimself - Guest
A Bob Hope Comedy Special1966TV SpecialHimself
The Bob Hope Show1966TV SeriesHimself - Guest
What's My Line?1966TV SeriesHimself - Mystery Guest
A Whole Scene Going1966TV SeriesHimself
Man at the Wall1966Documentary shortHimself / Harry Palmer
Man at the Wall: The Making of Funeral in Berlin1966Documentary shortHimself
Monitor1961TV Series documentaryHimself - Presenter
My Generation2017Documentary post-productionHimself
Ok! TV2017TV SeriesHimself
Made in Hollywood2017TV SeriesHimself
The Graham Norton Show2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The View2005-2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest / Himself
Rotten Tomatoes2017TV SeriesHimself
Today2008-2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest / Himself
Entertainment Tonight2006-2017TV SeriesHimself
Watching, Waiting2017Documentary shortHimself
Actors Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony2016TV MovieHimself
Now You See Me 2: The Art of the Ensemble2016Video documentary shortHimself
BBC Proms2016TV SeriesHimself
Birthday Stories with Lynn Hirschberg2016TV Series shortHimself
Film '722000-2016TV SeriesHimself - Interviewee
Close Up with the Hollywood Reporter2016TV SeriesHimself
60 Minutes2015TV Series documentaryHimself - Actor (segment "Michael Caine")
The 2015 European Film Awards2015TV MovieHimself - Winner: Best Actor & Honorary Award
CBS This Morning2015TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert2015TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Kingsman: The Secret Service Revealed2015Video documentaryHimself
Inside 'Interstellar'2015Video documentaryHimself / Professor Brand
Sidewalks Entertainment2014TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Good Morning America1979-2014TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Interstellar: Nolan's Odyssey2014TV Movie documentaryHimself
Sir David Frost: That Was the Life That Was2013TV Movie documentaryHimself - Actor (as Sir Michael Caine)
TVGN Movie Special: Now You See Me2013TV Special documentaryHimself
Larry King Now2013TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Power of Love: Quincy Jones & Sir Michael Caine's 80th Birthday Celebration2013TV SpecialHimself
Ending the Knight2012Video documentaryHimself
Piers Morgan's Life Stories2010-2012TV SeriesHimself - Interviewee
Fantástico2012TV Series documentaryHimself
Breakfast2011TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Daybreak2011TV SeriesHimself
The Many Faces of...2011TV Series documentaryHimself / Various Characters
Charlie Rose1998-2010TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson2006-2010TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Campbell Live2010TV SeriesHimself
The One Show2009-2010TV SeriesHimself - Guest
HBO First Look2005-2010TV Series documentary shortHimself
The Rotten Tomatoes Show2010TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Daily Show2003-2010TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon2010TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Late Show with David Letterman1998-2010TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Welsh Greats2010TV Series documentaryHimself
Pinter's Progress2009TV Movie documentaryHimself
Alex Zane's GuestList2009TV SeriesHimself
Live from Studio Five2009TV SeriesHimself
Xposé2009TV SeriesHimself
Chris Moyles Quiz Night2009TV SeriesHimself
The Paul O'Grady Show2009TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno1992-2009TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Nobel Peace Prize Concert2008TV Special documentaryHimself - Host
British Style Genius2008TV Series documentaryHimself
Valentino: The Last Emperor2008DocumentaryHimself
Tomtesterom2008TV SeriesHimself
A Game of Cat and Mouse: Behind the Scenes of Sleuth2008Video documentary shortHimself
Inspector Doppler: Make-up Secrets Revealed2008Video shortHimself
Michael Caine: From Alfie to Zulu2008TV MovieHimself
Parkinson1971-2007TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Newsnight2007TV SeriesHimself
Up Close with Carrie Keagan2007TV SeriesHimself - Guest
British Film Forever2007TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
Happy Birthday Elton! From Madison Square Garden, New York2007TV MovieHimself
The Director's Notebook: The Cinematic Sleight of Hand of Christopher Nolan2007Video documentary shortHimself
Cartelera2007TV SeriesHimself - Interviewee
Children of Men: Visions of the Future2007TV Movie documentaryHimself
Weekend Sunrise2006TV SeriesHimself
The Culture Show2006TV Series documentaryHimself
The Prestige: Now That's Magic2006TV Special documentaryHimself
Le grand journal de Canal+2006TV Series documentaryHimself
Live with Kelly and Ryan2006TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Corazón de...2006TV SeriesHimself
50 Films to See Before You Die2006TV Movie documentaryHimself
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Sean Connery2006TV SpecialHimself
The Foreign Eye2006DocumentaryHimself
Relative Humidity: The Characters2006Video documentary shortHimself
The Making of 'Blood and Wine'2006Video documentaryHimself
Getaway2005TV SeriesHimself
Caiga quien caiga2005TV SeriesHimself
Avenue of the Stars: 50 Years of ITV2005TV SpecialHimself
It's a Good Day: The Making of 'Around the Bend'2005Video documentaryHimself / Henry Lair
Bewitched: Star Shots2005Video documentary shortHimself
Casting a Spell: Making 'Bewitched'2005Video documentary shortHimself
Why I Love 'Bewitched'2005Video documentary shortHimself
Arena2004TV Series documentaryHimself
GMTV2004TV SeriesHimself
On the Set with 'Secondhand Lions'2004Video documentary shortHimself
HARDtalk2003TV SeriesHimself
Julie Walters: A BAFTA Tribute2003TV MovieHimself
Children in Need2003TV SeriesHimself
Late Night with Conan O'Brien1994-2003TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Richard & Judy2003TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 100 Greatest Movie Stars2003TV Movie documentaryHimself
The 75th Annual Academy Awards2003TV SpecialHimself - Past Winner & Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role
Hollywood Greats2003TV Series documentaryHimself
The Orange British Academy Film Awards2003TV SpecialHimself
The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards2003TV SpecialHimself - Nominee: Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama & Presenter: Cecil B. DeMille Award
The Heaven and Earth Show2003TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Bob Hope at 1002003TV Movie documentaryHimself
The World of Austin Powers2002Video documentary shortHimself
Autograph2002TV SeriesHimself
Star Boulevard2002TV Series documentary shortHimself
The 59th Annual Golden Globe Awards2002TV Special documentaryHimself - Presenter: Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy
Anatomy of a Scene2002TV Series documentaryHimself - Actor
Hero: The Bobby Moore Story2002TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Quiet American: Featurette2002Video documentary shortHimself
The 100 Greatest Films2001TV Movie documentaryHimself
Quills: Creating Charenton2001Video documentary shortHimself
Quills: The Marquis on the Marquee2001Video documentary shortHimself
Miss Congeniality: Behind the Beauty2001Video documentary shortHimself / Victor Melling
Miss Congeniality: Behind the Crown2001Video documentary shortHimself / Victor Melling
The BBC and the BAFTA Tribute to Michael Caine2000TV Movie documentaryHimself
TFI Friday1996-2000TV SeriesHimself
Omnibus1999-2000TV Series documentaryHimself / Dr. Frank Bryant
Premio Donostia a Michael Caine2000TV SpecialHimself - Honoree
The Orange British Academy Film Awards2000TV SpecialHimself
The 72nd Annual Academy Awards2000TV SpecialHimself - Winner: Best Actor in a Supporting Role
Breakfast with Frost2000TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Inside the Actors Studio2000TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Cider House Rules: The Making of an American Classic1999Video documentary shortHimself

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Welcome to the Basement2016-2017TV SeriesCharlie Croker / Alfie
60 Minutes2016TV Series documentaryHimself - Actor (segment "Michael Caine")
Our Queen at Ninety2016TV Movie documentaryHimself
Knights of Classic Drama at the BBC2015TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
TFI Friday2015TV SeriesHimself
Julie Walters: A Life on Screen2014TV Movie documentaryDr. Frank Bryant
The Greatest Ever War Films2014TV Movie documentaryHimself (1961)
The Fire Rises: The Creation and Impact of the Dark Knight Trilogy2013Video documentaryHimself
Chelsea Lately2013TV SeriesHimself
Movie Guide2013TV SeriesArthur Tressler
London 2012 Olympic Closing Ceremony: A Symphony of British Music2012TV SpecialHimself
Too Young to Die2012TV Series documentaryHimself
London - The Modern Babylon2012DocumentaryHimself - Actor
Edición Especial Coleccionista2011-2012TV SeriesSidney Lipton / Doctor Hicklar / Lloyd Fellowes / ...
Top Priority: The Terror Within2012DocumentaryHimself - Academy Award Winning Actor
Whistleblowers: The Untold Stories2011TV SeriesHimself - Award Winning Actor
A Night at the Movies: Merry Christmas!2011TV Movie documentaryEbeneezer Scrooge
Me & Arthur Haynes2011TV Movie documentary
Breakfast2010TV SeriesHimself
Presidentti Ahtisaaren Nobel-vuosi2009TV Movie documentaryHimself
Raiders of the Lost Archive2009TV Series documentaryWillie Mossop
Gomorron2008TV SeriesHimself
E! True Hollywood Story2002-2008TV Series documentaryHimself / Hoagie
Oscar, que empiece el espectáculo2008TV Movie documentaryHimself
Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired2008DocumentaryHimself
Legends2007TV Series documentaryHimself
Premio Donostia a Matt Dillon2006TV SpecialHimself
Premio Donostia a Max Von Sydow2006TV SpecialHimself
Timeshift2005TV Series documentaryHimself / Sherlock Holmes
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson2005TV SeriesHimself
Cinema mil2005TV SeriesHimself
Premio Donostia a Willem Dafoe2005TV SpecialHimself
Retrosexual: The 80's2004TV Mini-Series documentary
Unsere Besten2004TV Series
Biography2004TV Series documentaryHimself
The Rise of the Celebrity Class2004TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Making of 'Zulu': Roll of Honour2002Video documentary short
Life and Times2002TV Series documentaryHimself
The Muppet Christmas Carol: Frogs, Pigs and Humbug - Unwrapping a New Holiday Classic2002Video documentary shortHimself / Scrooge
Playboy: Inside the Playboy Mansion2002TV Movie documentaryHimself
Legends2000TV Series documentaryHimself
Festival de San Sebastián. Ceremonia de Clausura1996TV MovieVictor
Heroes of Comedy1995TV Series documentary
Charlie Sheen's Stunts Spectacular1994TV MovieHimself - Award winning actor
Harry Enfield and Chums1994TV SeriesHimself
Comic Relief: The Invasion of the Comic Tomatoes1993TV SpecialHimself on Wogan
The Dick Cavett Show1992TV SeriesLloyd Fellowes
Memories of 1970-19911991TV Series documentaryHimself
Wogan1991TV SeriesHimself
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson1988TV SeriesLaawrence Jamieson
The 59th Annual Academy Awards1987TV SpecialElliot (uncredited)
Terror in the Aisles1984DocumentaryDoctor Robert Elliott (uncredited)
Mia and Roman1968Documentary shortHimself
Mondo Hollywood1967DocumentaryHimself (uncredited)

Awards

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2015DFCS AwardDetroit Film Critic Society, USBest ActorYouth (2015)
2015Honorary AwardEuropean Film Awards
2015European Film AwardEuropean Film AwardsEuropean ActorYouth (2015)
2013CineMerit AwardMunich Film Festival
2011Commander of the Order of Arts and LettersOrder of Arts and Letters, FranceOn January 6, 2011.
2009Variety AwardBritish Independent Film Awards
2009COFCA AwardCentral Ohio Film Critics AssociationBest EnsembleThe Dark Knight (2008)
2009People's Choice AwardPeople's Choice Awards, USAFavorite CastThe Dark Knight (2008)
2009Lifetime Achievement AwardShoWest Convention, USA
2008ACCAAwards Circuit Community AwardsBest Cast EnsembleThe Dark Knight (2008)
2007ALFS AwardLondon Critics Circle Film AwardsBritish Supporting Actor of the YearThe Prestige (2006)
2004Gala TributeFilm Society of Lincoln Center
2003Golden Kinnaree AwardBangkok International Film FestivalBest ActorThe Quiet American (2002)
2003ALFS AwardLondon Critics Circle Film AwardsActor of the YearThe Quiet American (2002)
2003Golden Satellite AwardSatellite AwardsBest Actor in a Motion Picture, DramaThe Quiet American (2002)
2002SFFCC AwardSan Francisco Film Critics CircleBest ActorThe Quiet American (2002)
2001NBR AwardNational Board of Review, USABest Acting by an EnsembleLast Orders (2001)
2000OscarAcademy Awards, USABest Actor in a Supporting RoleThe Cider House Rules (1999)
2000Academy FellowshipBAFTA Awards
2000Lifetime Achievement AwardEmpire Awards, UK
2000ALFS AwardLondon Critics Circle Film AwardsBritish Supporting Actor of the YearLittle Voice (1998)
2000Donostia Lifetime Achievement AwardSan Sebastián International Film Festival
2000ActorScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting RoleThe Cider House Rules (1999)
1999Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Comedy or MusicalLittle Voice (1998)
1999Special AwardEvening Standard British Film AwardsFor services not only to British film, but also to international cinema.
1998Dilys Powell AwardLondon Critics Circle Film Awards
1998Career Achievement AwardNational Board of Review, USA
1996BFI FellowshipBritish Film Institute Awards
1996Silver SeashellSan Sebastián International Film FestivalBest ActorBlood and Wine (1996)
1990Britannia AwardBAFTA/LA Britannia AwardsExcellence in Film
1989Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for TelevisionJack the Ripper (1988)
1987OscarAcademy Awards, USABest Actor in a Supporting RoleHannah and Her Sisters (1986)
1984Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Comedy or MusicalEducating Rita (1983)
1984BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest ActorEducating Rita (1983)
1975Evening Standard British Film AwardEvening Standard British Film AwardsBest ActorSleuth (1972)
1967NSFC AwardNational Society of Film Critics Awards, USABest ActorAlfie (1966)
1966KCFCC AwardKansas City Film Critics Circle AwardsBest ActorAlfie (1966)

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2016Movies for Grownups AwardAARP Movies for Grownups AwardsBest ActorYouth (2015)
2016ALFS AwardLondon Critics Circle Film AwardsBritish/Irish Actor of the YearKingsman: The Secret Service (2014)
2015PCC AwardPhoenix Critics CircleBest ActorYouth (2015)
2011Movies for Grownups AwardAARP Movies for Grownups AwardsBest ActorHarry Brown (2009)
2011COFCA AwardCentral Ohio Film Critics AssociationBest EnsembleInception (2010)
2011Gold Derby AwardGold Derby AwardsEnsemble CastInception (2010)
2010Empire AwardEmpire Awards, UKBest ActorHarry Brown (2009)
2010PFCS AwardPhoenix Film Critics Society AwardsBest Ensemble ActingInception (2010)
2010Scream AwardScream AwardsBest CameoInception (2010)
2010WAFCA AwardWashington DC Area Film Critics Association AwardsBest Acting EnsembleInception (2010)
2009Critics Choice AwardBroadcast Film Critics Association AwardsBest Acting EnsembleThe Dark Knight (2008)
2009Gold Derby AwardGold Derby AwardsEnsemble CastThe Dark Knight (2008)
2007IOMAItalian Online Movie Awards (IOMA)Best Supporting Actor (Miglior attore non protagonista)Children of Men (2006)
2006ACCAAwards Circuit Community AwardsBest Cast EnsembleChildren of Men (2006)
2006Golden SchmoesGolden Schmoes AwardsBest Supporting Actor of the YearChildren of Men (2006)
2006IOMAItalian Online Movie Awards (IOMA)Best Supporting Actor (Miglior attore non protagonista)Batman Begins (2005)
2004Movies for Grownups AwardAARP Movies for Grownups AwardsBest Breakaway PerformanceSecondhand Lions (2003)
2003OscarAcademy Awards, USABest Actor in a Leading RoleThe Quiet American (2002)
2003Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - DramaThe Quiet American (2002)
2003BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest Performance by an Actor in a Leading RoleThe Quiet American (2002)
2003Movies for Grownups AwardAARP Movies for Grownups AwardsBest ActorThe Quiet American (2002)
2001Empire AwardEmpire Awards, UKBest British ActorThe Cider House Rules (1999)
2001European Film AwardEuropean Film AwardsEuropean ActorLast Orders (2001)
2001ALFS AwardLondon Critics Circle Film AwardsBritish Supporting Actor of the YearQuills (2000)
2000Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion PictureThe Cider House Rules (1999)
2000BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting RoleThe Cider House Rules (1999)
2000Golden Satellite AwardSatellite AwardsBest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, DramaThe Cider House Rules (1999)
2000ActorScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a Cast in a Theatrical Motion PictureThe Cider House Rules (1999)
1999BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest Performance by an Actor in a Leading RoleLittle Voice (1998)
1999British Independent Film AwardBritish Independent Film AwardsBest ActorLittle Voice (1998)
1999CFCA AwardChicago Film Critics Association AwardsBest Supporting ActorLittle Voice (1998)
1999OFTA Film AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Comedy/Musical ActorLittle Voice (1998)
1999Golden Satellite AwardSatellite AwardsBest Actor in a Motion Picture, Comedy or MusicalLittle Voice (1998)
1999ActorScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a CastLittle Voice (1998)
1998Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for TelevisionMandela and de Klerk (1997)
1998Golden Satellite AwardSatellite AwardsBest Actor in a Supporting Role in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for TelevisionMandela and de Klerk (1997)
1997Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a SpecialMandela and de Klerk (1997)
1994Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a SpecialWorld War II: When Lions Roared (1994)
1991Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for TelevisionJekyll & Hyde (1990)
1990Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a SpecialJekyll & Hyde (1990)
1989Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Comedy or MusicalDirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988)
1988Razzie AwardRazzie AwardsWorst Supporting ActorJaws: The Revenge (1987)
1987Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion PictureHannah and Her Sisters (1986)
1987BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest ActorHannah and Her Sisters (1986)
1987DavidDavid di Donatello AwardsBest Foreign Actor (Migliore Attore Straniero)Hannah and Her Sisters (1986)
1984OscarAcademy Awards, USABest Actor in a Leading RoleEducating Rita (1983)
1984BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest ActorThe Honorary Consul (1983)
1981Razzie AwardRazzie AwardsWorst ActorDressed to Kill (1980)
1979NSFC AwardNational Society of Film Critics Awards, USABest ActorCalifornia Suite (1978)
1973OscarAcademy Awards, USABest Actor in a Leading RoleSleuth (1972)
1973Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Actor in a Motion Picture - DramaSleuth (1972)
1967OscarAcademy Awards, USABest Actor in a Leading RoleAlfie (1966)
1967Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Actor - DramaAlfie (1966)
1967Golden GlobeGolden Globes, USABest Actor - Comedy or MusicalGambit (1966)
1967BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest British ActorAlfie (1966)
1967Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsMale Star12th place.
1966BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest British ActorThe Ipcress File (1965)
1966Gold MedalPhotoplay AwardsMost Promising New Star (Male)

2nd Place Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2003NSFC AwardNational Society of Film Critics Awards, USABest ActorThe Quiet American (2002)
2002Seattle Film Critics AwardSeattle Film Critics AwardsBest ActorThe Quiet American (2002)
1986LAFCA AwardLos Angeles Film Critics Association AwardsBest Supporting ActorHannah and Her Sisters (1986)
1966Golden LaurelLaurel AwardsNew Faces, Male

Source: IMDb, Wikipedia

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