Matt Damon is one of Hollywood’s most sought-after talents. In 2006, Damon
starred in The Good Shepherd for director Robert DeNiro, with Angelina
Jolie and in The Departed for director Martin Scorsese, starring
alongside Matt Damon and Jack Nicholson. In 2007, he will star the in sequels Ocean’s Thirteen and The Bourne Ultimatum.
Damon
has also been featured in Syriana, directed by Stephen Gaghan and in
The Brothers Grimm, co-starring with Heath Ledger for director Terry
Gilliam. He also recently reprised his roles as Linus Caldwell in
Ocean’s Twelve for director Steven Soderbergh, and as Jason Bourne in
the boxoffice hit The Bourne Supremacy, the second installment in the
series following The Bourne Identity.
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In 2004, Damon
starred with Greg Kinnear in the Farrelly Brothers comedy Stuck On You,
and in 2002, in Gerry with Casey Affleck for director Gus Van Sant. In
2000, audiences saw Damon star in The Legend of Bagger
Vance, for director Robert Redford and in the film version of the
Cormick McCarthy book All the Pretty Horses for director Billy Bob
Thornton.
In 1999, Damon
starred in Anthony Minghella’s The Talented Mr. Ripley, for which he
received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor. That same year he
rejoined Chasing Amy director Kevin Smith and pal Ben Affleck in Dogma, a
film about a pair of outcast angels.
In 1998, he won an
Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay with longtime friend Ben
Affleck for the critically-acclaimed drama Good Will Hunting, a
coming-of-age story about a young mathematical genius who, due to his
upbringing in inner-city Boston, can’t live up to his potential. Damon
also earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor for his work in
the title role. In addition, both he and Affleck received a Golden Globe
Award for their screenplay, and Damon also garnered a
Golden Globe nomination for his performance. The film, directed by Gus
Van Sant, received seven additional Oscar nominations, including one for
Best Picture and a win for Robin Williams for Best Supporting Actor.
In the same year, Damon
starred in the title role of the World War II drama Saving Private Ryan
for Academy Award-winning director Steven Spielberg, and in John Dahl’s
Rounders, about a reformed gambler who is drawn back into New York’s
underground poker world to help a recently paroled friend pay off loan
sharks.
In 1997, Damon
made a cameo appearance in Kevin Smith’s Chasing Amy. In the same year,
he starred as an idealistic young attorney in Francis Ford Coppola’s
The Rainmaker, based on the best-selling novel by John Grisham.
Damon
first gained the public’s eye in 1996, when he gave a vivid performance
in Courage Under Fire, in which he portrayed a guilt-ridden Persian Gulf
War soldier tormented by an incident that happened in the heat of
battle.
The versatile young
actor made his feature film debut in 1988 in a small role in the
critically well-received Mystic Pizza. He went on to play Brian
Dennehy’s medical school dropout in the TV movie Rising Son (TNT, 1990)
and gained further attention when he returned to the big screen as a
fascist preppy in School Ties (1992).
For director Walter Hill, Damon
enjoyed a sizeable supporting role as the green second lieutenant new
to the West who narrates Geronimo: An American Legend (1993) and in
1995, he appeared in The Good Old Boys, directed by Tommy Lee Jones for
TNT.
In 1998, Damon
and Affleck partnered with Good Will Hunting associate producer and
longtime friend Chris Moore to form Pearl Street Productions, now known
as LivePlanet. This unique company produces feature films, television
series and new media projects. LivePlanet has produced three
Emmy-nominated seasons of Project Greenlight, the documentary series
chronicling the making of an independent feature films by a first time
writer and director. The three Project Greenlight films produced for
Miramax/Dimension have been Stolen Summer, The Battle of Shaker Heights,
and Feast. Damon’s latest LivePlanet project is
Running the Sahara, a documentary about three men running across the
Sahara Desert, directed by Academy Award winner James Moll.
Damon,
who attended Harvard University, first gained acting experience at the
American Repertory Theatre as well as other Boston-based theatre venues.
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