Harrison Ford was born on July 13, 1942, in Chicago, Illinois, the son of Christopher Ford, an actor-turned-advertising executive of Irish and German descent, and Dorothy Nidelman, a radio actress of Russian Jewish descent. He grew up in Park Ridge, Illinois, in a Catholic household (his mother's heritage was Jewish but the family identified as Catholic), and attended Ripon College in Wisconsin, where he studied philosophy before dropping out in his senior year. He moved to Los Angeles with his first wife, Mary Marquardt, and worked as a studio contract actor for Columbia Pictures and Universal Pictures in the late 1960s, appearing in small roles but failing to achieve significant success. Frustrated and supporting a family, he turned to carpentry, a craft he practiced with genuine skill — he was installing a door at American Zoetrope when George Lucas asked him to read lines with other auditionees for American Graffiti (1973).
Harrison Ford's career is one of the most commercially remarkable in cinema history: he has appeared in five of the 20 highest-grossing films of all time — Star Wars (1977), The Empire Strikes Back (1980), Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), Return of the Jedi (1983), and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984) — and his collaborations with George Lucas and Steven Spielberg produced two of the most beloved film characters in popular culture history: Han Solo and Indiana Jones. His presence in each franchise is irreplaceable in a way that goes beyond mere audience familiarity — the characters have qualities that Ford brings specifically, a combination of sardonic wit, physical competence, and genuine vulnerability that makes the heroes human rather than merely heroic.
Ford's post-Lucas/Spielberg career has been distinguished by several significant performances: Blade Runner (1982, in which he plays a detective in a dystopian future who hunts artificial humans), Witness (1985, which earned him his only Academy Award nomination), The Mosquito Coast (1986, a challenging anti-hero turn opposite a screenplay by Paul Theroux), Presumed Innocent (1990), Patriot Games (1992) and Clear and Present Danger (1994) as Jack Ryan, and The Fugitive (1993). His return to established franchises — Harrison Ford reprised Indiana Jones four times after the original trilogy, and Han Solo in Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) — has been commercially significant, and the emotional quality of his Han Solo scenes in The Force Awakens, in which the character confronts the son who has become his enemy, was one of the most genuinely affecting moments in the franchise.
Harrison Ford's private aviation — he holds private pilot, commercial, and multi-engine instrument ratings, and owns multiple aircraft — has produced several accidents, most notably a 2015 emergency landing on the Penmar Golf Course in Venice, California after his vintage Ryan Aeronautical ST3KR experienced engine failure, which left him with a fractured pelvis and ankle. He has been an aviation advocate and has participated in search and rescue operations with California State Parks. He married actress Calista Flockhart in 2010, after a long relationship. He received the AFI Life Achievement Award in 2000 and the French Legion of Honor in 2019. Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023), in which he appeared at age 80, was the final installment of the Indiana Jones franchise.