DAY-LEWIS QUITS ACTING
Triple Oscar winner walks away in ‘private decision’
Daniel Day-Lewis, one of NEW YORK the most widely respected actors of his generation and a three-time Oscar-winner, says he’s retiring from acting.
The 60-year-old actor announced this week that he has shot his last film and performed in his last play. That makes Paul Thomas Anderson’s already filmed Phantom
Thread, due out in December, his final film.
“Daniel Day-Lewis will no longer be working as an actor,” said his representative Leslee Dart. “He is immensely grateful to all of his collaborators and audiences over the many years. This is a private decision and neither he nor his representatives will make any further comment on this subject.”
The announcement sent shock waves through Hollywood, where Day-Lewis is revered as possibly the finest actor of his time. But Day-Lewis has also long been an exceptionally deliberate performer who often spends years preparing for a role, crafting his characters with an uncommon, methodical completeness.
“I don’t dismember a character into its component parts and then kind of bolt it all together, and off you go,” Day-Lewis said in 2012, discussing Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln. “I tend to try and allow things to happen slowly, over a long period of time. As I feel I’m growing into a sense of that life, if I’m lucky, I begin to hear a voice.”
He has stepped away from film before. In the late 1990s, he famously apprenticed as a shoemaker in Florence, Italy — a period he called “semi-retirement.” Phantom
Thread, which Focus Features will release Dec. 25, is his first film in five years, after Lincoln.
A five-time Academy Award nominee, Day-Lewis was named best actor three times. He earned Oscars for My Left Foot, Lincoln and There Will Be Blood.
Day-Lewis, who is married to writer-director Rebecca Miller with three children, broke through with 1985’s My Beautiful Laundrette, by Stephen Frears. His films since
then have included The Last of the Mohicans, The Age of Innocence, In the Name of the Father and Gangs of New York.
His last play was in 1989, a National Theatre production of Hamlet, in London. Day-Lewis infamously walked out in the middle of a performance, and never returned to the stage again.