Harvey Keitel is a movie actor best known for playing streetwise toughs, notably in films by
Martin Scorsese and
Quentin Tarantino. Keitel grew up in Brooklyn and was in the U.S. Marines in Lebanon (1958) before becoming a member of New York's Actor's Studio. He appeared in Scorsese's first feature,
Who's That Knocking At My Door (1967, also titled
I Call First), and led the cast of
Mean Streets (1973), a breakthrough for Keitel, Scorsese and young
Robert DeNiro. Keitel then furthered his reputation as an intense portrayer of complex characters in
Ridley Scott's
The Duellists (1977) and James Toback's
Fingers (1978). During the 1980s he made movies in Europe and stepped out of the limelight, then turned in a sturdy performance as
Judas in Scorsese's
The Last Temptation of Christ (1988). His career as a reliable character actor took off in the early '90s, with roles in
Thelma & Louise (1991, with
Geena Davis and
Susan Sarandon),
Bugsy (1991, Oscar nomination) and
The Piano (1993, starring
Holly Hunter). He also played Mr. White in Tarantino's
Reservoir Dogs (a film he helped finance), Mr. Wolf in
Pulp Fiction, and a twisted cop in
Bad Lieutenant (1992). Despite a solid reputation as a dramatic actor, Keitel has had success at comedy as well, including 1992's
Sister Act (with
Whoopi Goldberg) and 1995's
Smoke (with
William Hurt). He began a new series on TV,
Life On Mars, in the fall of 2008.
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