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One of the most popular stars in the world for nearly 30 years, Burt Reynolds was the boyishly charming but... (Learn more)

Top Projects: Robot Chicken, Evening Shade, Gunsmoke (View All)

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Burt Reynolds’s Milestones
Born in Georgia and raised in Florida
Donated $1 million to the Asolo Theatre in Sarasota, Florida
Founded Burt and Bert Productions with game show host Bert Convy
Starred in 12 ABC TV-movies as detective B.L. Stryker, the first of which was "The Dancer's Touch"
Worked as stuntman on TV and in films
1955 Drafted by the Baltimore Colts professional football team before accident ended his sports career
1956 Professional stage debut in the revival of "Mr. Roberts" starring Charlton Heston at NYC City Center Theatre
1959 - 1961 First regular TV appearances on "Riverboat" (NBC)
1961 First appearance on film, "Angel Baby"
1961 Made Broadway debut in the short-lived play "Look: We've Come Through"
1962 - 1965 Played Quint Asper for several season on the long-running CBS TV Western, "Gunsmoke"
1966 Had the title role on the police detective series, "Hawk" (ABC)
1970 - 1971 Played the title role on the ABC police detective series "Dan August"
1972 Breakthrough film, John Boorman's "Deliverance"
1972 Was one of the first-ever nude male centerfolds in a mainstream magazine in Cosmopolitan (April)
1974 First collaboration with Hal Needham, "W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings"; Needham was stunt coordinator
1974 Played an incarcerated former pro football player in "The Longest Yard"
1975 Co-starred with Liza Minnelli and Gene Hackman in "Lucky Lady"; sang "Ain't Misbehavin'"
1975 Sang and danced in the disastrous screen musical "At Long Last Love" directed by Peter Bogdanovich
1976 Feature directorial debut, "Gator"; also starred
1976 Reteamed with Bogdanovich for the period drama about early Hollywood, "Nickelodeon"
1977 First film with Needham as director, "Smokey and the Bandit"; also co-starred with future off-screen companion Sally Field
1978 Directed (also co-starred) the comedy "The End" oppsite Dom DeLuise
1978 Second film with Needham as director, "Hooper"
1979 Delivered one of his best screen performances as a divorced man finding love again in "Starting Over"
1980 Enjoyed a hit with "The Cannonball Run"; fourth film with Needham as director
1980 Reprised role of the Bandit in the sequel "Smokey and the Bandit II"; third film with Needham as director
1982 Cast as Sheriff Ed Earl Dodd opposite Dolly Parton's Miss Mona in the film musical "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas"
1983 Reprised role in the Needham-directed sequel, "Cannonball Run II"
1984 Teamed with Clint Eastwood in "City Heat"
1985 Directed and starred in "Stick"
1987 - 1990 Co-executive produced (with Bert Convy) and made frequent guest appearances on the NBC game show, "Win, Lose or Draw"
1988 Had the Cary Grant role opposite Kathleen Turner in "Switching Channels" a misguided remake of "His Girl Friday"
1988 Reteamed with Liza Minnelli for the misfire "Rent-A-Cop"
1989 Played an aging safecracker in "Breaking In"
1989 Provided character voice (and sang several songs) in the animated feature "All Dogs Go to Heaven"
1990 - 1994 Starred as Wood Newton in the popular CBS sitcom, "Evening Shade"; also directed and produced
1992 Appeared as himself in Robert Altman's "The Player"
1992 Hosted a number of CBS primetime specials, "Burt Reynolds' Conversations with..."; among earliest installments was one where he interviewed Ginger Rogers, June Allyson, Jane Powell, and Esther Williams
1992 Signed a one-year, $500,000, contract with the Florida Citrus Commission to appear in commercials
1993 Directed (also executive produced and starred) the CBS TV-movie "The Man From Left Field"
1993 Dropped as corporate spokesman by the Florida Citrus Commission and the Quaker State Motor Oil Corp. due to bad publicity generated by his bitter divorce from Loni Anderson
1996 Co-starred with Demi Moore in "Striptease" as a sleazy politician
1997 Career received major boost for starring in Paul Thomas Anderson's "Boogie Nights" as porn mogul Jack Horner; earned first Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor
1998 - 1999 Starred in a series of TV-movies for TNT, "Hard Time" playing an ex-con and former cop; third installment "Hostage Hotel" directed by Needham
1999 Co-starred as a hockey coach in "Mystery, Alaska"
2000 Directed and starred in "The Last Producer"; screened at Cannes; aired on USA Network in 2001
2001 Appeared alongside Sylvester Stallone in "Driven"
2004 Starred as a Vietnam veteran, opposite Raquel Welch in "Forget About It"
2005 Co-starred with Adam Sandler and Chris Rock in the remake of "The Longest Yard"
2005 Played Boss Hogg in the big-screen version of "The Dukes of Hazzard" based on the 1970's hit show
2006 Cast as King Konreid in Uwe Boll's "Dungeon Siege"
2008 Played a former poker player who tutors a younger player in "Deal"

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Quick Facts

Also known as

AKA : Buddy Reynolds
Birth Name : Burton Leon Reynolds Jr

Born

February, 11 1936 in Waycross, Georgia, USA

Education

  • Palm Beach High School, Palm Beach, FL:
  • Palm Beach Junior College, Palm Beach, FL:
  • Hyde Park Playhouse, New York, NY: Won a scholarship
  • Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL: Attended on football scholarship, becoming an all-star halfback; turned to drama after an accident ended football career; awarded honorary doctorate in 1981

Professions

actor, director, producer, bouncer, dishwasher

Burt Reynolds's Top Projects