Benicio del Toro
Template:Short description Template:Family name hatnote Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Benicio Monserrate Rafael del Toro Sánchez (Script error: No such module "IPA".; born February 19, 1967)[1] is a Puerto Rican actor. His accolades include an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe, a Goya Award, the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actor, and a Silver Bear. Films in which he has appeared have grossed over $5.9 billion worldwide.[2]
Del Toro made his film debut in Big Top Pee-wee (1988) before his breakout role playing an unintelligible crook in the crime thriller The Usual Suspects (1995), followed by roles in Basquiat (1996), Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998), and Snatch (2000). He received the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as a morally upright police officer in the Steven Soderbergh's crime drama Traffic (2000), and was nominated in the same category for playing an ex-con in Alejandro González Iñárritu's thriller 21 Grams (2003). He has since acted in Sin City (2005), Che (2008), Savages (2012), Inherent Vice (2014), Sicario (2015) and its sequel Sicario: Day of the Soldado (2018), No Sudden Move (2021), and One Battle After Another (2025).
He also took franchise roles such as Lawrence Talbot in The Wolfman (2010), the Collector in three films from 2013 to 2018 in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and DJ the Codebreaker in Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017). He acted in the Wes Anderson films The French Dispatch (2021) and The Phoenician Scheme (2025). On television, he portrayed Richard Matt in the Showtime miniseries Escape at Dannemora (2018), for which he received a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie.
Early life
Del Toro was born on February 19, 1967, in the Santurce neighborhood of San Juan, Puerto Rico,[3][4][5][6] to Gustavo Adolfo del Toro Bermúdez and Fausta Genoveva Sánchez Rivera (daughter of Benicio Sánchez Castaño and Lirio Belén Rivera),[7] who were both lawyers. He has an older brother, Gustavo, who is the Executive Vice President and Chief Medical Officer at the Wyckoff Heights Medical Center in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, New York.[8][9] He had a Catalan paternal great-grandfather and a Basque maternal great-grandmother.[10][11] Del Toro's great-grandfather was Rafael Rivera Esbrí, one of the heroes of the El Polvorin fire in Ponce, and who would also later become mayor of that city (1915–1917).[12]
He spent most of his infancy in Santurce, a barrio within San Juan. Del Toro, whose childhood nicknames were "Skinny Benny" and "Beno", was raised a Roman Catholic,[13][14] and attended Academia del Perpetuo Socorro (The Academy of Our Lady of Perpetual Help), a Roman Catholic school in Miramar, Puerto Rico.[15][16] When del Toro was nine years old, his mother died of hepatitis.[8] At age 15, he moved with his father and brother to Mercersburg, Pennsylvania, where he was enrolled at the Mercersburg Academy. He spent his adolescence and attended high school there. After graduation, del Toro followed the advice of his father and pursued a business degree at the University of California, San Diego. Success in an elective drama course encouraged him to drop out of college and study with noted acting teachers Stella Adler and Arthur Mendoza, in Los Angeles, as well as at the Circle in the Square Theatre School in New York City.[17]Template:Episode
Career
1987–1999: Early roles and breakthrough
Del Toro surfaced in small television roles during the late 1980s, playing mostly thugs and drug dealers on programs such as Miami Vice and the NBC miniseries Drug Wars: The Camarena Story. He appeared in the 1987 music video for Madonna's song "La Isla Bonita" as a background character sitting on a car hood. Film roles followed, beginning with his debut in Big Top Pee-wee (1988) and as Dario in the James Bond film Licence to Kill (1989).[17] Del Toro was noticed by directors and starred in such successful films as The Indian Runner (1991), China Moon (1994), Christopher Columbus: The Discovery (1992), Money for Nothing (1993), Fearless (1993) and Swimming with Sharks (1994).
His career gained momentum in 1995 with his breakout performance in The Usual Suspects, where he played the mumbling, wisecracking Fred Fenster. The role won him an Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male and established him as a character actor. This led to stronger roles in independent and major studio films, including playing Gaspare in Abel Ferrara's The Funeral (1996) and winning a second consecutive Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male for his work as Benny Dalmau in Basquiat (1996), directed by his friend, film-maker and painter Julian Schnabel. Del Toro also shared the screen with Robert De Niro in the big-budget thriller The Fan (1996), in which he played Juan Primo, a charismatic Puerto Rican baseball star. He subsequently starred opposite Alicia Silverstone in Excess Baggage (1997), which Silverstone produced. For Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, the 1998 film adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson's famous book, despite the status of sex symbol he gained more than 40 lbs. (about 18 kg) to play Dr. Gonzo (a.k.a. Oscar Zeta Acosta), Thompson's lawyer and drug-fiend cohort.[17]
2000–2012: Traffic and other films
Del Toro's performances in four films in 2000 gained him a mainstream audience. First, the crime yarn The Way of the Gun reunited him with The Usual Suspects screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie. A few months later, he stood out among a first-rate ensemble cast in Steven Soderbergh's Traffic, a complex dissection of the North American drug wars. As Javier Rodriguez—a Mexican border policeman struggling to remain honest amid the corruption and deception of illegal drug trafficking—del Toro, who spoke most of his lines in Spanish, gave a performance that dominated the film.[17] His performance swept all of the major critics' awards in 2001. Del Toro won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, becoming the fourth living Oscar winner whose winning role was a character who speaks predominantly in a non-English language. Del Toro is also the third Puerto Rican actor to win an Oscar, after Jose Ferrer and Rita Moreno.[17] The year he won his Oscar marked the first time that two actors born in Puerto Rico were nominated in the same category (the other actor was Joaquin Phoenix). In his acceptance speech, del Toro thanked the people of both Nogales, Arizona and Nogales, Sonora and dedicated his award to them. In addition to the Oscar, he also won the Golden Globe Award and the Screen Actors Guild award for Best Actor. Traffic was also a success at the box office. This was soon followed by a small role as the diamond thief Franky Four Fingers in Guy Ritchie's hip caper comedy Snatch and a role as a mentally challenged Native American man in The Pledge, directed by his old friend Sean Penn.[17]
In 2003, del Toro appeared in two films: The Hunted, co-starring Tommy Lee Jones and the drama 21 Grams, co-starring Sean Penn and Naomi Watts. He went on to earn another Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for his performance in the latter. He then appeared in the film adaptation of Frank Miller's graphic novel Sin City, directed by Robert Rodriguez, and Things We Lost in the Fire, the English-language debut of celebrated Danish director Susanne Bier.
In 2008, del Toro was awarded the Prix d'interpretation masculine (or Best Actor Award) at the Cannes Film Festival for his portrayal of Che Guevara in the biographical films The Argentine and Guerrilla (together known as Che).[18] During his acceptance speech, del Toro dedicated his award "to the man himself, Che Guevara" along with director Steven Soderbergh.[19] Del Toro was also awarded the 2009 Goya Award as the Best Actor for his portrayal of Guevara.[20] Sean Penn, who won the 2009 Best Actor Oscar for his performance in Milk, remarked that he was surprised and disappointed that Che and del Toro were not also up for any Academy Award nominations. During his acceptance speech for the Best Actor award at the Screen Actors Guild Awards, Penn expressed his dismay stating, "The fact that there aren't crowns on Soderbergh's and del Toro's heads right now, I don't understand... that is such a sensational movie, Che."[21] For the final portions of the film (shown here), del Toro shed 35 pounds to show how ill Guevara had become near the end of his life in the jungles of Bolivia.[22] In 2010, del Toro starred in and produced the remake of Lon Chaney Jr.'s classic cult film The Wolf Man (1941).[23] He was chosen to be the face of the 2011 Campari calendar, becoming the first male model to be featured in the Italian liquor company's calendar.[24][25]
2013 - present: franchise films and expansion
Del Toro played The Collector in a mid-credits scene of Marvel Studios' superhero film Thor: The Dark World (2013) and later reprised his role in Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)[26] and Avengers: Infinity War (2018). In September 2015, del Toro played Alejandro Gillick in the critically acclaimed Sicario, about a Mexican ex-prosecutor seeking revenge for the slaying of his wife and daughter working with a CIA special ops team to bring down the leader of a powerful and brutal Mexican drug cartel. Film critics widely praised his performance.[27][28] Del Toro reprised his role in the sequel Sicario: Day of the Soldado (2018). In 2016, del Toro appeared in a Heineken television advertisement in its More Behind the Star series. The gag in the spot is that fans frequently mistake him for fellow actor Antonio Banderas, much to del Toro's chagrin.[29] In 2017, he played DJ (an abbreviation for "Don't Join", as DJ viewed the Resistance and the First Order as equally corrupt), a supporting antagonist in Star Wars: The Last Jedi,[30] who betrayed Rose and Finn to save himself when they were apprehended on the First Order's flagship.[31]
In 2021, del Toro starred in the Wes Anderson film The French Dispatch as Moses Rosenthaler, a mentally disturbed artist.[32] He collaborated with the director once again in 2025 with The Phoenician Scheme.
Personal life
Del Toro was formerly romantically involved with Chiara Mastroianni, Alicia Silverstone and Valeria Golino.[33] In April 2011, del Toro's publicist announced that del Toro and Kimberly Stewart were expecting a child, although they were not in a relationship.[34] Stewart gave birth to a daughter, Delilah, on August 21, 2011.[35][34] They had their daughter baptized in Puerto Rico.[36]
On November 4, 2011, he acquired Spanish citizenship, along with fellow Puerto Rican Ricky Martin.[37] The request was granted by the Spanish government in recognition of his artistic talents[37] and for his Spanish ancestry (he has family in Barcelona).[38]
In March 2012, he was granted an honorary degree by the Interamerican University of Puerto Rico for his influence on the cinema enterprise, during the celebration of the institution's centenary.[39]
In 2003, del Toro became the spokesman of the educational campaign Yo Limpio a Puerto Rico, an environmental organization founded in 1997 by Ignacio Barsottelli, whose mission is to educate and mobilize Puerto Ricans in favor of recycling and the protection of the environment.[40]
Del Toro narrated the public service announcement entitled "Coral Reef", joining the Artists to the Rescue of the Environment campaign.[40]
He is not related to Mexican filmmaker Guillermo del Toro.
Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1988 | Big Top Pee-wee | Duke, The Dog-Faced Boy | |
| 1989 | Licence to Kill | Dario | |
| 1991 | The Indian Runner | Miguel Aguilera | |
| 1992 | Christopher Columbus: The Discovery | Alvaro Harana | |
| 1993 | Fearless | Manny Rodrigo | |
| Golden Balls | Bob, the friend from Miami | ||
| Money for Nothing | Dino Palladino | ||
| 1994 | Swimming with Sharks | Rex | |
| China Moon | Detective Lamar Dickey | ||
| 1995 | The Usual Suspects | Fred Fenster | |
| Submission | — | Short film; director, writer and producer only | |
| 1996 | The Funeral | Gaspare Spoglia | |
| The Fan | Juan Primo | ||
| Cannes Man | Himself | Cameo | |
| Basquiat | Benny Dalmau | ||
| Joyride | Detective López | ||
| 1997 | Excess Baggage | Vincent Roche | |
| 1998 | Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas | Dr. Gonzo | |
| 2000 | Traffic | Javier Rodríguez Rodríguez | |
| The Way of the Gun | Harold Longbaugh | ||
| Snatch | Franky "Four Fingers" | ||
| Bread and Roses | Himself | Uncredited cameo | |
| 2001 | The Pledge | Toby Jay Wadenah | |
| 2003 | 21 Grams | Jack Jordan | |
| The Hunted | Sergeant Aaron Hallam | ||
| 2005 | Sin City | Lieutenant Jack "Jackie Boy" Rafferty | |
| 2007 | Things We Lost in the Fire | Jerry Sunborne | |
| 2008 | Che | Che Guevara | Also producer |
| 2010 | The Wolfman | Lawrence Talbot / The Wolfman | |
| Somewhere | Himself | Uncredited cameo | |
| 2011 | The Upsetter | Narrator | Voice |
| 2012 | Savages | Miguel "Lado" Arroyo | |
| 7 Days in Havana | — | Director only; segment: El Yuma | |
| 2013 | Jimmy P: Psychotherapy of a Plains Indian | Jimmy Picard | |
| Thor: The Dark World | Taneleer Tivan / The Collector | Uncredited cameo; mid-credits scene | |
| 2014 | Guardians of the Galaxy | ||
| Inherent Vice | Sauncho Smilax | ||
| Escobar: Paradise Lost | Pablo Escobar | ||
| 2015 | A Perfect Day | Mambrú | |
| Sicario | Alejandro Gillick | ||
| The Little Prince | The Snake | Voice | |
| 2017 | Star Wars: The Last Jedi | D.J. | |
| 2018 | Avengers: Infinity War | Taneleer Tivan / The Collector | |
| Sicario: Day of the Soldado | Alejandro Gillick | ||
| 2019 | Dora and the Lost City of Gold | Swiper The Fox | Voice |
| 2021 | No Sudden Move | Ronald Russo | |
| The French Dispatch | Moses Rosenthaler | ||
| 2023 | Reptile | Detective Tom Nichols | Also co-writer and executive producer |
| 2025 | The Phoenician Scheme | Zsa-zsa Korda | |
| One Battle After Another | Sensei Sergio | ||
| TBA | All-Star Weekend | Dr. Phill | Completed[41][42] |
Television
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1987 | Shell Game | Pedroza | Episode: "The Upstairs Gardener" |
| Miami Vice | Pito | Episode: "Everybody's in Showbiz" | |
| Private Eye | Carlos | 2 episodes | |
| Ohara | Mike | Episode: "And a Child Shall Lead Them" | |
| 1990 | Drug Wars: The Camarena Story | Rafael Caro Quintero | Television miniseries |
| 1994 | Tales from the Crypt | Bill | Episode: "The Bribe" |
| 1995 | Fallen Angels | Paco | Episode: "Good Housekeeping" |
| 2008 | Todos Contra Juan | Himself | Episode: "Juan & La Critica" |
| 2018 | Escape at Dannemora | Richard Matt | 7 episodes |
| 2021 | What If...? | Taneleer Tivan / The Collector (voice) | Episode: "What If... T'Challa Became a Star-Lord?" |
| 2025 | Saturday Night Live | Himself (cameo) | Episode: "Bad Bunny/Doja Cat" |
Theme park attractions
| Year | Title | Role | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | Guardians of the Galaxy – Mission Breakout! | Taneleer Tivan / The Collector | Disney California Adventure |
Awards and nominations
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See also
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References
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- ↑ This Is My Life: Benicio Del Toro - Memories of a bittersweet childhood. Template:Webarchive Gabriel de Lerma. The Miami Herald - El Nuevo Herald. 10 October 1997. Accessed 27 November 2020.
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- ↑ a b 'Dammit, this guy is cool' - The Guardian - published 2008-11-29, retrieved June 29, 2009.
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- ↑ Historic Buildings and Structures in Ponce, Puerto Rico. Jorge L. Perez (El Nuevo Dia) and Jorge Figueroa (Ponce Municipal Historian). Text accompanying Drawing #20, titled "Tumba de los Bomberos". Puerto Rico Historic Buildings Drawings Society. 2019. Accessed 4 February 2019.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ 'Traffic Stopper', - People, 2001-04-16, retrieved May 14, 2010.
- ↑ 'Benicio del Toro: Mild at heart', Irish Independent, 2010-02-05, retrieved May 14, 2010.
- ↑ a b c d e f Stated in interview on Inside the Actors Studio
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- ↑ [1], reviewed Aug. 16, 2016. Template:Webarchive
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External links
- Template:Trim/ Template:PAGENAMEBASE at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Script error: No such module "navboxes". Template:AcademyAwardBestSupportingActor 1981-2000 Template:BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor 1985-2009 Template:Prix d'interprétation masculine 2000–2019 Template:Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:Donostia Award Template:Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:GoldenGlobeBestSuppActorMotionPicture 1981-2000 Template:Goya Award for Best Actor Template:Independentspiritbestsupportingmale 1987-1999 Template:National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:Platino Honorary Award Template:San Diego Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor Template:ScreenActorsGuildAward MaleLeadMotionPicture 1994-2000 Template:Silver Bear for Best Actor Template:TFCA Award for Best Actor Template:Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Outstanding Supporting Performance Template:Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor Template:Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting ActorScript error: No such module "navboxes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- Pages with script errors
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- 1967 births
- Living people
- American male voice actors
- Best Actor Goya Award winners
- Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winners
- Best Supporting Actor BAFTA Award winners
- Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe (film) winners
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- Circle in the Square Theatre School alumni
- Hispanic and Latino American male actors
- Best Supporting Male Independent Spirit Award winners
- Mercersburg Academy alumni
- Naturalised citizens of Spain
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- People from Mercersburg, Pennsylvania
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