Vin Diesel

THE LATEST
NEWS & GOSSIP

Celebrity gossip Hot Celebrity Gossip

Who's hooking up, who's breaking up and who's cracking up

tv news TV News Daily

Casting, cancellations & more

BIOGRAPHY

Vin Diesel photo
Born: 7/18/1967

Actor, producer, writer, and director Vin Diesel had a charmed entry into the world of screen acting: after seeing Multi-Facial, a short that Diesel wrote, produced, financed, directed, and starred in, Steven Spielberg created the role of Private Caparzo specifically for the talented young newcomer in his Saving Private Ryan (1998).

Born in New York City on July 18, 1967, Diesel made his stage debut at the age of seven in "Theatre for the New City," which was produced in Greenwich Village. He continued to be involved with the theatre throughout his adolescence, and he went on to attend the city's Hunter College, where his studies in creative writing led him to begin writing screenplays. Diesel became active in filmmaking in the early '90s, first earning notice for the short Multi-Facial, which was selected for screening at the 1995 Cannes Festival. He followed up Multi-Facial with his first feature-length film, 1997's Strays, an urban drama in which he cast himself as a gang boss whose love for a woman inspires him to try to change his ways. Written, directed, and produced by Diesel, the film was selected for competition at the 1997 Sundance Festival, which led to a deal with MTV to turn it into a series.

Following the success of Saving Private Ryan, Diesel could be heard voicing the title character of the animated The Iron Giant (1999), another critically praised feature. He then starred with fellow young actors Giovanni Ribisi, Ben Affleck, Jamie Kennedy, and Nicky Katt in Boiler Room, an off-Wall Street drama that cast him as one of the members of a shady brokerage firm. He also flexed his sci-fi muscles in Pitch Black (2000), an interplanetary thriller that featured him and fellow Earthlings doing battle with a host of nasty alien mutants. Diesel jumped genres yet again as a devious, determined hot-rodder in The Fast and the Furious (2001), a cheeky, action-packed street racing picture in the vein of '50s exploitation flicks. The low-profile, star-free summer release left skid marks at the box office as it grossed over $40 million dollars in its first weekend alone -- more than enough to cover its production costs, and enough to lead many to believe that Diesel had finally arrived as a bankable leading man.

Indeed Diesel was growing increasingly comfortable in his role as a tough guy action icon, though the ex-NYC club bouncer's prominant smirky scowl (usually accompanied by a hearty smile and laugh) proved almost a wink to his fans that while it worked well for him, he didn't take the image altogether seriously. The following year found Diesel teetering on the edge of mega-stardom with the release of his eagerly anticipated reteaming with The Fast and the Furious director Rob Cohen, XXX. With images of a bulky Diesel adorning movie theaters nationwide and an advertising campaign that left almost no viable stone unturned, the duo were undoubtably aiming to repeat the success of the muscle-car extravaganza. This time setting their sights on breathing life into the ailing secret agent action adventure genre, XXX's protagonist, a former extreme sports athlete recruited by the government to take on a dangerous mission, would prove a large-scale attempt at bringing James Bond style thrills into the 21st century. - Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide

ADVERTISEMENT
Twitter

CELEBRITY WATCH

Users tweet about Vin Diesel
See all tweets about Vin Diesel

TOP FIVE CELEBS

#
1
TODAY
01
LAST WEEK
00
#
2
TODAY
02
LAST WEEK
00
#
3
TODAY
03
LAST WEEK
00
#
4
TODAY
04
LAST WEEK
00
#
5
TODAY
05
LAST WEEK
00
Thu. Dec 03

TV Listings


Primetime Tonight
   *All Times ET
8:00PM 8:30PM
WDCW The Vampire Diaries
WRC Community Parks and Recreation
WTTG Bones
WJLA FlashForward
WUSA Survivor: Samoa

TV on Your Terms

Watch 1000s of full TV episodes and movies at SlashControl.com

Free online TV shows

AOL TELEVISION TO GO

Send to cell

On Your Phone

Get TV listings sent to your cell.
New on AOL

On Your Website

All of our new features via RSS feed.
TV's Top 5

On Facebook

Watch TV's Top 5 clips, every morning.
Around the Web >>>