Rami Malek
Rami Malek | |
---|---|
رامي مالك | |
Born | Rami Said Malek May 12, 1981 Torrance, California, U.S. |
Education | University of Evansville (BFA) |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 2004–present |
Awards | Full list |
Rami Said Malek (English:
Born in
Early life and education
There's no first-generation, or second-generation removed. I am Egyptian. I grew up listening to
Egyptian culture. It is the fabric of who I am.
Malek in September 2018[4]
Rami Said Malek was born in Torrance, California,[5] on May 12, 1981,[6] the son of Egyptian immigrant parents Nelly Abdel-Malek and Said Malek (d. 2006).[7][8][9] His parents and older sister left Cairo in 1978 after his father, a travel agent and tour guide, became intrigued with Western visitors.[5][9] They settled in Sherman Oaks, mostly staying in the San Fernando Valley.[10] As a child, Malek rarely ventured into Hollywood, saying "I grew up in the San Fernando Valley in LA, but somehow, I had no idea that I lived right next to Hollywood... I truly thought that that was a million miles away, and it's just a 10-minute drive".[10][11] His father sold insurance and was a travel agent,[12][13] while his mother worked as an accountant.[14] Malek was raised in his family's Coptic Orthodox Christian faith, and spoke Egyptian Arabic at home until the age of four.[15][16][17] He has an identical twin brother named Sami, who is younger by four minutes and later became an ESL and English teacher.[10][18][19] His older sister, Yasmine, is an ER doctor.[20] His parents emphasized to their children the importance of preserving their Egyptian roots, and his father would wake him up in the middle of the night to talk on the phone to his Arabic-speaking extended family in Samalut.[4]
As a first-generation American, Malek found it difficult to assimilate during his childhood because of cultural differences, even spending most of his childhood having his name mispronounced: "It only took me 'til high school where I found the confidence to tell everybody, 'No, my name is Rami.' It's a very upsetting thing to think about, that I didn't have the confidence to correct anyone at that point."[21] As a result, he said it was difficult to form a self-identity as a child and gravitated towards "creating characters and doing voices" as he searched for an outlet for his energy.[21][22]
Malek attended
After graduating in 1999,[23] Malek went on to study theater at the University of Evansville in Evansville, Indiana. He also spent a semester abroad in England, where he studied at Harlaxton College in Harlaxton, Lincolnshire.[28][29] During the summer before his senior year, he interned at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, Connecticut, where he became an acquaintance of playwright August Wilson.[5][30] Of his decision to attend the University of Evansville theater program, he said, "The level of talent at the University of Evansville was formidable from faculty to fellow actors. There's a commitment and dedication that the theater program required that unearthed a work ethic I didn't know I had."[31] He completed his BFA in 2003.[10][32] The college later honored him with a 2017 Young Alumnus Award, given to those who have "achieved personal success and contribute services to their community and to UE".[33]
Career
2004–2009: Early work
After his college graduation, Malek wanted to attend grad school for theater; with college debt growing, he moved to New York, where he shared a one-bedroom Lower East Side apartment with friends who were also in the theater community.[27][34] His network of friends included writers and directors, many of whom would come together to form the Slant Theatre Project, and they would perform their own plays around the city.[27][35][34] While visiting his family in Los Angeles, Malek met casting director Mali Finn, who convinced him to stay and look for work in Hollywood.[27] After moving back in with his parents,[27] he took jobs delivering pizzas and making falafel and shawarma sandwiches at a restaurant in Hollywood to make ends meet.[36] Despite sending his resume to production houses, he found it difficult to get work as an actor, which led to bouts of depression and a loss of confidence.[36] He considered getting a real estate license instead of pursuing an acting career.[37]
After a year and a half, Malek finally received a call from
2010–2015: Supporting roles
Malek returned to television in 2010 in a recurring role as the
Those opportunities led to Malek securing supporting roles in a series of major films. In August 2010, it was announced that he had been cast as the "Egyptian coven" vampire, Benjamin, in
2015–present: Breakthrough and acclaim
Screenwriter
Though he was among 3000
In 2018, Malek portrayed Freddie Mercury in the Queen biopic, Bohemian Rhapsody. The film premiered in London on October 23, 2018, and became a major box office success, grossing over $900 million worldwide on a production budget of about $50 million.[78] It became the sixth highest-grossing film of 2018 worldwide,[79] and the highest-grossing musical biographical film of all time.[80] Though the film received mixed reviews overall, Malek's performance was acclaimed by critics.[81] He won the Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama,[82] the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role,[83] the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role[84] and the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in the film.[85] In preparation for the role as Mercury, Malek moved to London where he worked with a dialect coach and a movement coach, and took piano and singing lessons.[15] For four hours each day,[15] he studied videos of Mercury with his movement coach, Polly Bennett.[86] This included watching the 1985 Live Aid concert video on YouTube at least 1,500 times to perfect his performance for the film.[15][87] He also had to get used to speaking and singing with a set of false teeth that mimicked Mercury's overbite.[15] Brian May, Queen's guitarist who often attended filming, is quoted as saying that Malek's performance was so accurate that "we sometimes forgot he was Rami".[10] Malek considers his role as Mercury the most important of his career, saying:
This is a role I don't think can be outdone. I think we're always searching for that next great role, and I guess I'm fortunate that I've already been met with it. I'd like to think that there is more out there for me to do, and there is, but I do doubt that there is anything that lives up to how precious this role and this human being have been in my life.[88]
In December 2018, it was announced that Malek would produce and star in an eight-episode podcast called
Malek was part of the all-star ensemble cast in David O. Russell's Amsterdam;[102] the film was produced in early 2021 and released in October 2022. In December 2021, it was announced that Malek was joining the cast of Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer.[103] In it he portrayed physicist David L. Hill.[104] The film premiered on July 11, 2023.[105]
Malek will next star in the thriller film The Amateur,[106] as well as star as Douglas Kelley in the historical drama Nuremberg.[107]
Acting style
People didn't know where to place me with my ethnicity, and never was I ever up for leading anything. The fact that Rami Malek got to play the lead character, called Elliot Alderson, in Mr. Robot was somewhat of a coup, I think. I never saw that possibility when I was younger.
Malek to The New Yorker, October 2018[15]
Malek's early roles established him as a
To prepare for a role, he describes an initial stage of panic, followed by research into the character to create a world for that person. This includes finding music he thinks the character would listen to, as well as creating and imagining memories for that person to the point he has to perform as them.[25] His most creative times are mornings and evenings.[25] Malek likes to do experimental takes until he finds a take that will work.[108] Director Sam Esmail noted that Malek is often dissatisfied with his work even when the director feels he has completed a perfect take.[10] Because of their mutual insistence on getting a scene the best it can be, Esmail considers Malek a "co-creator".[115] The actor has also been noted for his physical transformations to play his characters. He lost significant weight to play Elliot Alderson,[116] Freddie Mercury,[117] and Snafu Shelton, where Tom Hanks required that he maintain between six and eight-percent body fat.[50] During the filming of The Pacific, Malek found it difficult to separate himself from his character, Snafu Shelton, which led to "some pretty intense mental anguish during and after filming".[118] He noted the most valuable lesson from that experience was learning to distance himself from his characters, otherwise he would not have been able to take on complex roles later in his career, like Elliot Alderson in Mr. Robot.[118]
Public image
Malek's appearance has inspired commentary in the industry and in the media.
He has also garnered attention for his fashion sense, particularly for his bold color choices and "quirky touches".[119] He was chosen (along with
Over time, Malek's prominence in the industry has grown. In 2015, The Hollywood Reporter included him on Next Gen 2015, its annual list of stars who are 35 and under and "on the rise".[125] Time magazine named Malek one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2019 under the category of Artists.[126]
The actor has lent his support to charities, such as the
Personal life
Malek tends to be reserved in interviews,[37] having mentioned in one of them his desire to stay "anonymous" abroad. He avoids social media.[4] The New York Times called him "extremely reluctant to dish about himself".[10] He says he is the opposite of the introverted character of Elliot that he plays in Mr. Robot, saying, "I'm an exuberant person. I thrive on affection. I like chit chat ... One of the great things about living in New York is that you meet so many strangers, and I love encounters with strangers; I love meeting people and hearing their stories".[131]
In 2009, Malek moved into a house in the
From 2017 to 2023, Malek was in a relationship with actress Lucy Boynton.[134][135][136]
Awards and nominations
Malek has been nominated for and won several major industry awards. For his work on Mr. Robot, he has been nominated for three
He is the first actor of Egyptian heritage to win the Academy Award for Best Actor.[138] While his win was celebrated in Egypt by the media and some government officials,[139] Member of Parliament Mohamed Ismail criticized Malek's win: "I was surprised by the Egyptian media's celebration of Rami Malek, because the role played by Rami Malek in the film is far from his real character. He is trying to [spread] homosexuality among the youth... The award has a specific goal, which is to corrupt morality in the Arab world. Rami Malek is a bad example. If he was in Egypt, he would have been hanged".[140] The organization Human Rights Watch stated that the country deserved an Oscar for hypocrisy for praising Malek, given its prohibition on LGBT people being celebrated in the media.[139]
Filmography
Film
† | Denotes works that have not yet been released |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Night at the Museum | Pharaoh Ahkmenrah | ||
2009 | Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian | Pharaoh Ahkmenrah | ||
2011 | Larry Crowne | Steve Dibiasi | ||
2012 | Battleship | Lieutenant Hill | ||
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 | Benjamin | |||
The Master | Clark Massey | [141] | ||
2013 | Ain't Them Bodies Saints | Will | ||
Short Term 12 | Nate | |||
Oldboy | Matt Browning | |||
2014 | Need for Speed | Finn | ||
Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb | Pharaoh Ahkmenrah | |||
Da Sweet Blood of Jesus | Seneschal Higginbottom | [142] | ||
2016 | Project X | Co-Narrator (voice) | Short film | [143] |
Buster's Mal Heart | Buster | [143] | ||
2017 | Papillon | Louis Dega | [144] | |
2018 | Bohemian Rhapsody | Freddie Mercury | [21] | |
2019 | The Ben Cobb Show | Harry Bardo | Short film | [145] |
2020 | Dolittle | Chee-Chee (voice) | [146] | |
2021 | The Little Things | Jim Baxter | [147] | |
No Time to Die | Lyutsifer Safin | [148] | ||
2022 | Amsterdam | Tom Voze | [149] | |
2023 | Oppenheimer | David Hill | [150] | |
2025 | The Amateur † | Charles Heller | Post-production | [106] |
TBA | Nuremberg † | Douglas Kelley | Filming | [151] |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Gilmore Girls | Andy | Episode: "In the Clamor and the Clangor" | |
2005 | Over There | Hassan | 2 episodes | |
2005 | Medium | Timothy Kercher | Episode: "Time Out of Mind" | |
2005–2007 | The War at Home | Kenny Al-Bahir | Recurring role, 21 episodes | |
2010 | 24 | Marcos Al-Zacar | 3 episodes | |
2010 | The Pacific | Merriell "Snafu" Shelton | 6 episodes | |
2012 | Alcatraz | Webb Porter | Episode: "Webb Porter" | |
2012 | The Legend of Korra | Tahno (voice) | 3 episodes | |
2014 | Believe | Dr. Adam Terry | Episode: "Pilot" | |
2015–2019 | Mr. Robot | Elliot Alderson | Main role; also producer (seasons 3–4) | [152] |
2017–2018 | BoJack Horseman | Flip McVicker (voice) | 10 episodes | |
2021 | Saturday Night Live | Himself (host) | Episode "Rami Malek/Young Thug" |
Theater
Year | Title | Role | Venue | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | Fascination | National Playwrights Contest: July 2002 | [30] | |
2002 | The Bebop Heard in Okinawa | National Playwrights Contest: July 2002 | [30][153][154] | |
2004 | Johnny Boy | Paul | Falcon Theatre: March 31 – May 23, 2004 | [155] |
2004 | Shoes | Slant Theatre Project: August 2004 | [39][40] | |
2007 | The Credeaux Canvas | Jamie | Elephant Theatre: March 22 – April 8, 2007 | [47] |
2025 | Oedipus | Oedipus | The Old Vic: 21 Jan–29 Mar 2025 | https://www.oldvictheatre.com/stage/event/oedipus |
Video games
Year | Title | Voice role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Halo 2 | Additional voices | Only in I Love Bees | [41] |
2014 | The Legend of Korra | Tahno | [157] | |
2015 | Until Dawn | Joshua "Josh" Washington | Also likeness and motion capture performance | [59] |
Podcasts
Year | Title | Voice role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Blackout | DJ Simon Itani | Also producer | [89] |
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External links
- Rami Malek at IMDb