John Joseph Nicholson was born on April 22, 1937, in Neptune City, New Jersey. His family circumstances were complex in ways he did not discover until 1974: he was raised believing his grandmother was his mother and that his biological mother June was his sister; it was Time magazine reporters researching a profile who discovered the truth, which Nicholson confirmed before June's death. He was raised primarily by his grandmother Ethel May, who ran a beauty salon, and his grandfather John, in Manhasset, Long Island. After high school he moved to Los Angeles, where his aunt Lorraine worked as a dancer in the MGM music department, and secured work as an office boy in MGM's cartoon division.
Nicholson's early Hollywood career was the classic long apprenticeship of the Actor's Studio era: years of Roger Corman B-movies and television work before he was discovered by the right film at the right moment. Easy Rider (1969), in which he played the ACLU lawyer George Hanson who joins the protagonists' cross-country motorcycle journey, earned him his first Academy Award nomination and established him as the defining actor of the New Hollywood generation. Five Easy Pieces (1970), The Last Detail (1973), and Chinatown (1974) followed in rapid succession, demonstrating a range and intensity that placed him alongside Al Pacino and Dustin Hoffman as the era's essential dramatic talent.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) won Nicholson his first Academy Award and is perhaps the performance that best demonstrates his specific quality: the combination of manic energy, genuine warmth, and underlying melancholy that makes his most memorable characters feel not like performances but like encounters. He won his second Oscar for Terms of Endearment (1983) and his third for As Good as It Gets (1998) โ the most-nominated actor in Academy history at the time of his final major work. The Shining (1980), Batman (1989), A Few Good Men (1992), and The Departed (2006) extended his range across genre while maintaining the distinctive Nicholson quality that makes even his most extreme performances feel grounded in observable human behavior.
Nicholson effectively retired from acting after his last major role in How Do You Know (2010), citing his difficulty remembering lines โ a characteristic candor that reflects his lifelong commitment to honesty about his own experience and limitations. His private life โ the long friendship and complex relationship with Anjelica Huston, his numerous children, his season tickets to the Los Angeles Lakers and his courtside presence as a celebrity fan fixture โ has been conducted with a genuine enjoyment of life that seems consistent with his screen persona rather than a construction for public consumption. He has three Academy Awards from twelve nominations, and is widely considered one of the greatest actors in American film history.