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On May 11, 2007, Clint was given an honourary doctorate degree of humane letters from the University of Southern California.
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Clint Eastwood is an anagram for 'old west action'.
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Clint's mother, Francesca Ruth Eastwood, died on 7 February 2006 at the age of ninety-seven.
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In early 2005 Clint revealed that he would supply the voice for a
Dirty Harry video game.
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At the 2005 National Board of Review awards dinner in New York City, Clint joked that he would kill filmmaker
Michael Moore if
Moore ever showed up at his home with a camera (an evident reference to
Moore's controversial interview with Clint's friend, actor/Second Amendment advocate
Charlton Heston, for the movie
Bowling for Columbine (2002)). After the crowd laughed, Clint said, "I mean it." Moore's spokesman said, "Michael laughed along with everyone else, and took Mr Eastwood's comments in the light-hearted spirit in which they were given." Publicly, Clint has not commented further.
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The boots that Clint wore in
Unforgiven are the same boots that he wore in the TV series
Rawhide. These boots are now a part of Clint's private collection and were on loan to the 2005
Sergio Leone exhibit at the
Gene Autry Museum of Western Heritage in Los Angeles, California. In essence, these boots have book-ended Clint's career in the Western genre.
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Clint whistles on the track
Big Noise from his son
Kyle's jazz CD
Paris Blue which was released in 2004.
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Clint was sworn in as parks commissioner for the state of California at Big Basin Redwood Park, Santa Cruz, California, on 8th June 2002. Holding up his new commissioner's badge, he told the crowd, "You're all under arrest."
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Until his pride was displaced by discovery of a larger version of the same tree in 2002, Clint used to be the proud owner of the tree believed to be the nation's largest known hardwood - a blue gum eucalyptus.
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In 2000 Clint received the Career Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, received an honorary Doctorate from Wesleyan University in Connecticut and was the recipient of John F. Kennedy Center Honours.
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Clint was offered
Al Pacino's role in
Any Given Sunday (1999), but turned it down because Warner Bros. wouldn't let him direct it as well.
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In 1998, Clint received an honorary Cesar award in Paris, France for his body of work.
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Clint was appointed to serve on the National Council of the Arts by President Nixon in 1972. In 1994 he became President of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival.
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Clint declined an offer from President George Bush to campaign for him in the 1992 Presidential election.
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Clint appeared on
T.G. Sheppard's hit single
Make My Day, which reached #12 on 'Billboard's Hot Country Singles' chart in 1984 and also reached #62 on that magazine's 'Hot 100 singles' survey.
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Clint is mentioned in the theme song of the 1980s TV hit
The Fall Guy.
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In 1973, at the 45th Annual Academy Awards, Clint presented the 1972 Best Picture Oscar to
Albert S. Ruddy, the producer of
The Godfather (1972). Thirty-two years later, they would jointly accept the 2004 Best Picture Oscar at the 77th Annual Academy Awards, along with fellow
Million Dollar Baby (2004) co-producer
Tom Rosenberg.
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When
Don Siegel fell ill during production of
Dirty Harry (1971), Clint stepped in as director during the attempted-suicide/jumper sequence.
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Clint's production company is 'Malpaso Productions', which he formed in 1968.
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Clint's first screen appearance was an uncredited role in
Revenge of the Creature (1955), as the goofy white coated lab assistant who does the silly mouse gag in the lab scene with the monkey. His only line in the film is: "I've lost my white mouse".
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Two of Clint's army pals convinced him to try acting. He took their advice and signed a contract with Universal Studios in 1954. He got his first acting role in 1959, with a role in
Rawhide while visiting a friend at CBS, when a studio exec spotted him because he "looked like a cowboy".
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Clint is a partial owner of the Pebble Beach Golf Country Club in Monterey Peninsula, California. Every year the PGA tour plays at the golf club, for a celebrity golf tournament where celebrities team up with the professionals. Clint has participated in this every year from 1962-2002 and has been the longest running participant. He now serves as Host.
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Clint has been named to Quigley Publications' annual Top 10 Poll of Money-Making Stars 21 times, making him #2 all-time for appearances in the top 10 list. Only
John Wayne, with 25 appearances in the Top 10, has more. Clint, who first appeared in the Top Ten at #5 in 1968, finished #2 to
Wayne at the box office in 1971 after finishing #2 to
Paul Newman in 1970. After his first two consecutive #1 appearances in 1972 and 1973, he dropped back to #2 in 1974, trailing
Robert Redford at the box office. Clint was again #2 in 1979, 1981 and 1982 (topped by
Burt Reynolds all three years), before leading the charts in 1983 and '84. He last topped the poll in 1993.
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Clint was scheduled to play the villain 'Two-Face' in an episode of the Batman series, but the show was cancelled before the project began.
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Clint weighed 11 lbs 6 oz at birth and is of a mixed heritage that includes Dutch, Scottish, Irish and English blood.
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At the end of movies Clint directs, during the credits the camera will move around the location it was filmed in, then freeze-frame for the rest of the credits.
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Clint was elected mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea in California.
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Clint owns the Mission Ranch Inn in California.
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When Clint was just starting out as an actor, he worked at digging swimming pools in between roles.
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Clint served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He was stationed at Ft. Ord across from Monterey, California (over the hill from where he lives and served as mayor, Carmel-by-the-Sea) as a swimming instructor.
On leave as a G.I., his aeroplane crashed into the Pacific Ocean, forcing Clint to swim approx. three miles to shore. Following this, Clint was given the job as boot camp swimming instructor and therefore confined to base.
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Clint is a vegetarian.
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Clint's appearances on various lists include:
Harris Poll
1993 - #1 position 'America's Favourite Movie Star'
1994 - #1 position 'America's Favourite Movie Star'
1997 - #1 position 'America's Favourite Movie Star'
2006 - #4 position 'Top ten favorite movie stars'
Premiere Magazine
2006 - #92 position '100 Greatest Performances of All Time' for
Dirty Harry
1996 - #50 position '100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time' for
The Good The Bad The Ugly
Empire Magazine
1997 - #2 position 'Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time'
2005 - #43 position Greatest Movie Stars of All Time'
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Clint became the oldest person to ever win an Oscar for 'Best Director'. He won the award for
Million Dollar Baby at the age of 74.