George Chakiris

George Chakiris

Acting 1932-09-16 Norwood, Ohio, USA

George Chakiris (born September 16, 1932) is an American dancer, singer and actor. He is best known for his role as Bernardo in the 1961 film version of West Side Story, which earned him an Academy Award and Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor. Prior to West Side Story, Chakiris appeared uncredited in many musicals such as Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), White Christmas (1954), and Brigadoon (1954) as a dancer or chorus member. After West Side Story, he had starring roles in several lesser-known critical and commercial failures such as Diamond Head (1962), Kings of the Sun (1963), and The High Bright Sun (1965). On stage, his most notable role was as Bobby in the first national tour of Stephen Sondheim's Company. He had guest roles in many television series throughout the 1970s and 1980s, including appearances on Dallas, Superboy, and the series finale of The Patridge Family. Chakiris emerged from retirement to act in the film Not to Forget (2021), which aims to raise awareness of Alzheimer's disease.

代表作

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1985 Bernardo
1985 Ric Montenez
1984 Eric Bowman
1983 Angelo Spinelli
1982 George Chakiris
1982 Brett Cole
1982 Clark Sawyer
1979 George Clark
1978 Pierre
1977 Bernard DeJardine
1975 Carlo Indrezzano
1975 Self
1975 Self - Host
1975 Self (archive footage)
1975 Self
1975 Self
1974 Robert Stone
1974 Frédéric Chopin
1973 Robert Stone
1970 Captain Chuck Corwin
1969 Johnny Allen
1969 Robert Bowman
1969 Dr. John Martins
1969 Alex Solkin
1969 Dr. Christopher
1968 Eric Ericson
1968 Chris Lahani
1967 The Caliph
1967 Etienne
1967 Self
1966 GI in Tank
1966 Vincent
1964 Lieutenant Erik Bergman
1964 Bube
1964 2nd Lt. John Gregg
1964 Haghios
1963 Balam
1962 Dr. Dean Kahana
1962 Larry Curado
1961 Bernardo
1961 Dancer (song "Chop Suey") (uncredited)
1961 Self
1957 Pvt. Steiner
1956 Young Groom
1955 Dancer
1954 Dancer (uncredited)
1954 Dancer (uncredited)
1954 Specialty Dancer (uncredited)
1954 Dancer (uncredited)
1954 Dancer in Play (uncredited)
1953 Dancer
1953 Dancer
1953 Chorus Boy (uncredited)
1953 Dancer in The Ocarina Number (uncredited)
1953 Self
1951 Dancer (uncredited)
1947 Choir Boy
1944 Self - Nominee
1944 Self - Presenter