Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. John Hawkes is an American actor. He is the recipient of two Independent Spirit Awards and has been nominated for an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award . Hawkes is known for his roles in the films Winter's Bone (2010) and The Sessions (2012), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama , respectively.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0370035John Hawkes - IMDb

    John Hawkes. Actor: The Sessions. John Hawkes is an award-winning actor known for crafting memorable performances across a wide range of styles and genres. He will next be seen in the upcoming fourth season of HBO's "True Detective" with Jodie Foster.

  3. John Clendennin Talbot Burne Hawkes, Jr. (August 17, 1925 – May 15, 1998) was a postmodern American novelist, known for the intensity of his work, which suspended some traditional constraints of narrative fiction.

  4. John Hawkes. Actor: The Sessions. John Hawkes is an award-winning actor known for crafting memorable performances across a wide range of styles and genres. He will next be seen in the upcoming fourth season of HBO's "True Detective" with Jodie Foster. Previous projects include the indie film "Roving Woman," "The Peanut Butter Falcon" with Shia LaBouf, which won a number of critics' honors as well as being recognized by the...

  5. John Hawkes: ‘I play a lot of characters who you might want to avoid’. The Oscar-nominated actor and star of Winter’s Bone, Deadwood and now End of Sentence found fame later in life, often ...

  6. Feb 9, 2024 · John Hawkes is no stranger to playing shifty guys in bleak places (see Winter’s Bone, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri). In True Detective: Night Country, the 64-year-old actor inhabits ...

  7. May 11, 2024 · John Hawkes (born Aug. 17, 1925, Stamford, Conn., U.S.—died May 15, 1998, Providence, R.I.) was an American author whose novels achieve a dreamlike (often nightmarish) intensity through the suspension of traditional narrative constraints. He considered a story’s structure his main concern; in one interview he stated that plot, character, and theme are “the true enemies of the novel.”