Sydney Pollack

Biography: One of the first generation of feature filmmakers who learned their craft directing for television – a generation that included William Friedkin, Robert Altman, Sidney Lumet and John Frankenheimer – writer-producer-director Sydney Pollack forged a wide-ranging career that leaned heavily towards grown up, character-driven dramas while tossing in the occasional comedy curveballs, like the gender-bending hit Tootsie (1982). Pollack's work earned him two Oscars – both for Out of Africa (1985) – and nominations for five more, including a nod for his role in producing The Reader (2008), one of his last films. Born in Lafayette, Indiana, in 1934 and raised in South Bend, Pollack's father was a pharmacist who once boxed professionally; his mother was a homemaker who died when he was a teenager. Pollack fell in love with drama at South Bend High School and, despite his father's disapproval, opted to forgo college in favor of moving to New York City and trying to become a professionalOne of the first generation of feature filmmakers who learned their craft directing for television – a generation that included William Friedkin, Robert Altman, Sidney Lumet and John Frankenheimer – writer-producer-director Sydney Pollack forged a wide-ranging career that leaned heavily towards grown up, character-driven dramas while tossing in the occasional comedy curveballs, like the gender-bending hit Tootsie (1982). Pollack's work earned him two Oscars – both for Out of Africa (1985) – and nominations for five more, including a nod for his role in producing The Reader (2008), one of his last films. Born in Lafayette, Indiana, in 1934 and raised in South Bend, Pollack's father was a pharmacist who once boxed professionally; his mother was a homemaker who died when he was a teenager. Pollack fell in love with drama at South Bend High School and, despite his father's disapproval, opted to forgo college in favor of moving to New York City and trying to become a professional actor. He studied under the renowned Sandford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater and quickly earned roles in such Broadway productions as A Stone for Danny Fisher, with Zero Mostel, and The Dark Is Light Enough, starring legendary stage actress Katharine Cornell. He also made more than a dozen episodic television appearances, notably in the two-part Playhouse 90 production of For Whom the Bell Tolls (1959); the stellar cast included Maureen Stapleton, Eli Wallach, Jason Robards, Maria Schell, Nehemiah Persoff and legendary acting teacher Herbert Berghof, under the direction of Frankenheimer, who was only four years Pollack's senior. By the early 1960s, Pollack's agent -- powerhouse Lew Wasserman -- also secured some directing gigs for his young client Encouraged by Hollywood legend Burt Lancaster, whom he met through Frankenheimer, Pollack redirected his ambition behind the camera and didn't act again until 1982, with the exception of a brief, unbilled bit in his own The Electric Horseman (1979). But Pollack's return to acting was showstopper: He played Dustin Hoffman's exasperated agent in Tootsie, and if he didn't quite steal the show from his temperamental star – the two feuded throughout production -- he gave him a run for his money – this despite the fact that he was uncredited. Until his death, Pollack alternated between acting and directing, sometimes doing both, and left his mark on a generation television viewers playing the recurring role of Will's philandering father on Will & Grace. His last film roles were as George Clooney's boss and Patrick Dempsey's father in, respectively, Michael Clayton (2007) and Made of Honor (2008). Pollack was know for his skill at directing actors, which he attributed to his own experience as a performer. Over the course of a directing career that spanned five decades, Pollack directed 20 films, including critical and box office successes like They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969), The Way We Were (1973), Jeremiah Johnson (1972), Three Days of the Condor (1975) and The Firm (1993). Interspersed among the hits were some spectacular misses: The Harrison Ford-Julia Ormond remake of Sabrina (1995); Bobby Deerfield (1977), with Al Pacino; and the notorious Havana (1990), with Raul Julia, Lena Olin and Pollack's frequent collaborator, Robert Redford. Redford and Pollack eventually made seven films together, starting with This Property is Condemned (1966), becoming close friends in the process. He also worked on several films with his brother, Bernie Pollack, a costume designer whose credits include Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008). Their sister, Sharon, became a dance teacher. Pollack and his wife, actress Claire Griswold, were married in 1958, and had three children. One daughter, Rebecca Pollack-Parker, was a production executive at United Artists during the 1990s; the other, Rachel Pollack-Sorman, is a singer. Their son, Steven Pollack, died in a single-engine plane crash in 1993. Expand

Sydney Pollack's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
Average career score: 67
Highest Metascore: 94 Amazing Grace
Lowest Metascore: 37 Made of Honor
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 35 out of 49
  2. Negative: 3 out of 49
49 movie reviews
Title: Year: Credit: User score:
58 The Firm Jun 30, 1993 Director / Producer 8.5
84 Husbands and Wives Sep 18, 1992 Jack 5.5
86 The Player Apr 3, 1992 Dick Mellon / Dick Mellon tbd
66 Dead Again Aug 23, 1991 Executive Producer / Executive Producer tbd
66 White Palace Oct 19, 1990 Executive Producer / Executive Producer tbd
72 Presumed Innocent Jul 27, 1990 Producer 7.6
85 The Fabulous Baker Boys Oct 13, 1989 Executive Producer 7.9
51 Bright Lights, Big City Apr 1, 1988 Producer / Producer tbd
69 Out of Africa Dec 20, 1985 Director / Producer 7.0
76 Songwriter Oct 14, 1984 Producer tbd
88 Tootsie Dec 17, 1982 Director / Producer / George Fields 7.9
64 Absence of Malice Dec 18, 1981 Director / Director / Producer / Producer 8.0
64 The Electric Horseman Dec 21, 1979 Director / Director tbd
47 Bobby Deerfield Sep 29, 1977 Director / Producer tbd
63 Three Days of the Condor Sep 24, 1975 Director / Producer 7.3
61 The Way We Were Oct 19, 1973 Director 7.2
75 Jeremiah Johnson May 12, 1972 Director 7.5
72 They Shoot Horses, Don't They? Dec 10, 1969 Director 7.2