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A Glance At Richard Dreyfuss' Career In Hollywood

Veteran actor Richard Dreyfuss can boast a decades long career working with the best and winning several awards and nominations while landing roles that show his incredible varied talent. He was a part of the first summer blockbuster hit, Jaws, directed by friend and peer Steven Spielberg and he’s made headlines for everything from addiction to bankruptcy to saving the world.

With a net worth of $5 million today, Dreyfuss hasn’t stopped chasing his passions and speaking up during a time most are told to stay quiet. The Mr. Holland’s Opus star isn’t afraid to accept the ups and downs of his career and call attention to national and global issues.

The Brooklyn born actor was raised in Queens, New York before moving to Los Angeles when Dreyfuss was nine. After acting in the school play and landing gigs in community theater, he landed his first television appearance at the age of 15. Those small roles in Gunsmoke and Bewitched eventually led to a role in American Graffiti, the classic film directed by George Lucas and was packed with up and coming stars like Harrison Ford and childhood actors like Ron Howard.

In 1975, Dreyfuss landed a starring role in the blockbuster hit Jaws and two years later, worked with Spielberg again in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. His role in Neil Simon’s The Goodbye Girl earned the celebrity his first Academy Award for Best Actor and he became the youngest actor to have received the honor at that time.

In the late 1970’s and early 80’s, Dreyfuss battled a cocaine addiction. According to Celebrity Net Worth, he drove into a tree after blacking out behind the wheel and the accident led the movie star entering rehab. The rehab was successful and Dreyfuss was able to reclaim his career on the big screen.

Dreyfuss has also publicly discussed his bipolar diagnosis – both a blessing and a curse to his career. While he had the ability to work long hours and share his creativity during manic periods of his life, there was a downside, resulting in drug use and depression at times.

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The setback to regain his health didn’t seem to phase the What About Bob star and during the mid-80’s Dreyfuss landed films like Stakeout, with a young cast of Emilio Estevez, Madeleine Stowe and Aidan Quinn and Moon Over Parador with Jonathan Winters and Sammy Davis Jr.. The 1995 film Mr. Holland’s Opus gained critical acclaim and he received an Oscar nomination and Golden Globe for his role.

Since the mid-90’s Dreyfuss has continued to act, but less frequently. He appeared in the 2006 film Poseidon and 2019’s The Last Laugh alongside Chevy Chase and Andie MacDowell.

Despite the ups and downs throughout his career, Dreyfuss has a list of honors and awards to show for his work. In 1994, he participated in partnership with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at the Papal Concert to Commemorate the Shoah at the Vatican in the presence of Pope John Paul II.

He earned a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1996. Dreyfuss has one Oscar and a Golden Globe for his role in The Goodbye Girl, the 2010 Lifetime Achievement Award from California’s Independent Film Festival and numerous additional recognitions.

Recently, the Hollywood A-lister has turned his attention to an issue he finds just as important as the next role. He spent four years in the early 2000’s as a senior research advisor at St. Antony’s College, Oxford and according to The Guardian, explored the decline of civics education in schools across the country.

The actor created a nonprofit, The Dreyfuss Civics Initiative, to develop and implement new programs in K-12 schools and strongly feels without civic education, damage will be done to the United States, with young people growing up without the critical thinking skills and knowledge needed to be empowered in the future.

According to Fox News, the 75-year-old released his book, “One Thought Scares Me” in the fall of 2022, sharing his education and personal take on the downfall of omitting civics in public education.

In 1995, Dreyfuss co-authored the book “The Two Georges” with science fiction writer Harry Turtledove. The fiction work was hit among history and mystery readers, describing what would have happened if the American Revolution had been avoided.

The thrice married millionaire has been known for clashing with his co-stars and directors over the years. Both Robert Shaw of Jaws and Bill Murray of What About Bob didn’t gel well with Dreyfuss’ personality. According to People, he’s publicly acknowledged in films like Once Around with Holly Hunter, his disorder affected his performance.

In 2017, Dreyfuss claimed he was broke saying he was unable to retire fully and take his wife on cruises. The bipolar disorder paired with mismanagement of finances led the former actor to reassess his situation and with speaking engagements and educational novels published, he appears to be back on his feet.

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Sources: Celebrity Net Worth, The Guardian, Fox News, People



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