Benicio Del Toro

Producer / Writer / Director

Birthdate – February 19, 1967 (57 Years Old)

Birthplace – San Germán, Puerto Rico

A leading member of the contemporary generation of Method actors carrying on the tradition of psychological realism innovated on stage and screen by Marlon Brando, Benicio del Toro (birthname: Benicio Monserrate Rafael del Toro Sanchez) is also one of the most successful and awarded Latino actors in Hollywood and American indie cinema. At the same time, Del Toro can’t be pegged as simply “Method”: His borderline mumbling verbal and antsy physical style is unique, as individual and signature as young Dustin Hoffman’s behavioral quirks or Christopher Walken’s eccentric verbal flourishes.

After small roles in some notable films such as Sean Penn’s The Indian Runner (1991) and Peter Weir’s Fearless (1993), with Jeff Bridges, Del Toro’s eye (and ear)-catching breakthrough was in Bryan Singer/Christopher McQuarrie’s The Usual Suspects (1995), with a colorful cast including Kevin Spacey, Gabriel Byrne, and Stephen Baldwin, and earning him his first major prize as Best Supporting Male in the Independent Spirit Awards, which Del Toro duplicated the following year in Julian Schnabel’s stylish biopic, Basquiat (1996).  

Benicio del Toro began an impressive run of memorable performances in films by major filmmakers, including Abel Ferrara (The Funeral, with Christopher Walken in 1996); Tony Scott (The Fan, with Robert De Niro in 1996); Terry Gilliam (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, with Johnny Depp in 1998); McQuarrie (The Way of the Gun, with Ryan Phillippe in 2000); Penn, once again (The Pledge, in 2001), and William Friedkin (The Hunted, with Tommy Lee Jones and Connie Nielsen, in 2003).

Del Toro won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his acclaimed performance in Steven Soderbergh’s sprawling ensemble epic, Traffic (2000), with Michael Douglas, Don Cheadle, Dennis Quaid, and Catherine Zeta-Jones. Del Toro’s second Oscar nomination came just three years later, in 2003, for Alejandro González Iñárritu’s drama, 21 Grams, with Sean Penn, Naomi Watts, Melissa Leo, and Charlotte Gainsbourg.

Known as a selective actor with an acute script sense, Del Toro has tended to perform in only one to two features per year, and even less frequently than that. By 2008, Del Toro was participating as a producer: First, in his most ambitious starring role to date, as Che Guevara in Soderbergh’s epic two-part biopic, Che (2008), with Demian Bichir, Rodrigo Santoro, Lou Diamond Phillips, and Joaquim de Almeida; then as the star/title role of Joe Johnston’s The Wolfman (2010), with Anthony Hopkins and Emily Blunt. 

After contrasting roles in Oliver Stone’s dark crime thriller, Savages (2012), and with the title role in Arnaud Desplechin’s English-language debut, Jimmy P. (2013), with Mathieu Almaric, Benicio Del Toro was cast in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Taneleer Tivan/The Collector. This placed Del Toro firmly in the worlds of several Marvel Studios blockbusters, including Thor: The Dark World (2013); James Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy (2014), with Chris Pratt and Zoe Saldana; and the mega-blockbuster Avengers: Infinity War (2018), with Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth, and Scarlett Johansson.

Del Toro has also performed in the Star Wars Universe, by way of Rian Johnson’s Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017), and has played the recurring role of ex-prosecutor turned assassin Alejandro Gillick in Denis Villeneuve’s Sicario (2015), with Emily Blunt and Josh Brolin, and Stefano Sollima’s sequel, Sicario: Day of the Soldado (2018), again with Brolin.

Recently, Del Toro has been working with some of the most prominent American independent filmmakers, including Paul Thomas Anderson’s anticipated adaptation of Thomas Pynchon’s Inherent Vice (2014); Del Toro’s third project with Soderbergh (No Sudden Move, in 2021); and Wes Anderson (The French Dispatch, also in 2021, with Adrien Brody, Owen Wilson, Tilda Swinton, and Jeffrey Wright).

Del Toro is serving as executive producer and star of Grant Singer’s writer-director debut, Reptile (date to be announced), with Justin Timberlake and Alicia Silverstone. Del Toro reunites with filmmaker Oliver Stone for the multi-generational drama, White Lies (date to be announced), and is attached to the Cuban mafia crime drama, The Corporation (date to announced), in which he will portray crime kingpin Jose Miguel Battle.

Read Full Bio

Personal Details

Benicio del Toro was born in the southwest Puerto Rico town of San Germán and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico by his mother Fausta and father Gustavo, both lawyers. His brother is also named Gustavo, who is the Chief Medical Officer of the Brooklyn-based Wyckoff Heights Medical Center. Del Toro has Spanish roots—from Catalan on his father’s side, from Basque-speaking northwest Spain on his mother’s side.

After his mother Fausta died of hepatitis, Del Toro moved with his family to the southern Pennsylvania town of Mercersburg, where he attended school and the college prep school Mercersburg Academy. He dropped out of UC San Diego when he discovered acting at the university, leading to acting studies using the Stanislavsky Method at the Stella Adler Studio and at actor and acting teacher Arthur Mendoza’s Actors Circle Theatre, as well as Circle in the Square Theatre School in New York.     

Filmography

Savages

Lado (2012)

Sicario

Alejandro (2015)

Sicario: Day of the Soldado

Alejandro (2018)

No Sudden Move

(2021)

The French Dispatch

Moses Rosenthaler (2021)

Guardians of the Galaxy

The Collector (2014)

Dora and the Lost City of Gold

Swiper (2019)

Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi

DJ (2017)

Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi

DJ (2017)

Some Facts About Benicio Del Toro

International Citizen: Benicio del Toro is a joint citizen of the United States and Spain.

Environmental Activist: Del Toro has organized major environmental efforts in his native Puerto Rico, including a project to save the island’s endangered coral reef.

 

Awards

Winner, Best Supporting Actor, Academy Awards (2001); Nominee, Best Actor in Limited Series or Movie, Emmy Awards (2019); Winner, Best Supporting Actor, BAFTA Awards (2001); Winner, Best Actor Silver Bear, Berlin Film Festival (2001); Winner, Best Actor, Cannes Film Festival (2008); Winner, Male Star of the Year, CinemaCon (2018); Winner, Best Supporting Actor, Golden Globe Awards (2001); Winner, Best Actor, Goya Awards (2009); Four-time Winner, Best Supporting Male/Robert Altman Award/Special Distinction Award, Independent Spirit Awards (1996-1997, 2004, 2015); Two-time Nominee, Best Supporting Actor, Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards (2000, 2004); Winner, Best Supporting Actor, National Society of Film Critics Awards (2001); Winner, Best Actor, New York Film Critics Circle Awards (2000); Recipient, Donostia Lifetime Achievement Award, San Sebastian Film Festival (2014); Recipient, Heart of Sarajevo Honorary Award, Sarajevo Film Festival (2015); Winner, Best Actor/Best Motion Picture Cast, Screen Actors Guild Awards (2001); Recipient, Tribute to Independent Vision Award, Sundance Film Festival (2002).