#IFTAs16: Liam Neeson to be honoured in Dublin at the 2016 IFTA Awards on April 9th

The Irish Film & Television Academy has announced that acclaimed Irish Actor Liam Neeson will be honoured with the Irish Academy (IFTA) Award for his ‘Outstanding Contribution to Cinema’ at the 2016 annual IFTA Film & Drama Awards, taking place at the Mansion House, Dublin on Saturday 9th April.

The President of Ireland, Michael D Higgins will officially present the Award at the Ceremony on behalf of the Academy, the entire Irish film industry and his community of peers and friends, both North and South.

Born in Ballymena, County Antrim, Ireland, to Katherine and Bernard Neeson, Liam Neeson has established himself as a world renowned and outstanding actor of his generation.  His body of work has already spanned 30 years across a diverse range of projects; eighty four (84) films in total.  The Oscar nominated actor who has just completed work on Martin Scorsese’s new movie Silence, has garnered international recognition for his work in both major studio blockbusters and acclaimed independent features, delivering superb performances that have captivated audiences throughout the world.

Neeson has worked with some of the greatest filmmakers in the world; Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, John Boorman, Neil Jordan, Kathryn Bigelow, Christopher Nolan and Oliver Hirschbiegel among many others, and has collaborated multiple times with some of these directors.

He has received international Award recognition for various roles through his ability to depict real-life characters such as Michael Collins, Alfred Kinsey and Oskar Schindler – with the latter role universally acknowledged as an ‘exceptional’ performance.   He has also been entrusted to deliver iconic roles and fictional characters in numerous major blockbuster franchises such as Star Wars and Batman and the enormously successful blockbuster trilogy Taken.  His distinctive voice has also given life to animated characters including the Lion ‘Aslan’ in the Chronicles of Narnia, and he has narrated many international documentaries including the recent Irish series ‘1916’, a project close to Neeson’s heart.

In his home country of Ireland, Neeson is acknowledged as one of its most successful actors, beloved by Irish audiences and industry alike. His international achievement and status has made him an inspiring figure for young Irish actors and filmmakers. Alongside his work in major blockbuster movies, Neeson has always stayed connected with home productions, making at least seven Irish movies over the years and lending his distinctive voice to narrating important Documentaries.  He has collaborated with Irish Director Neil Jordan across three films including the epic and much loved Michael Collins for which he won numerous awards along with a Golden Globe nomination.  The film celebrates its 20th anniversary this year.

[quote title=”Áine Moriarty – Chief Executive of IFTA”]I’m delighted that Liam Neeson is to receive this Award from the Irish Academy on April 9th.  Liam is a luminary of film whose outstanding talent, craft and skill as an actor, along with his enormous achievements in the world of cinema, has made him an inspiration to young Irish filmmakers and actors coming through the ranks in our home industry today.  We look forward to welcoming Liam back home to acknowledge and celebrate his achievements.[/quote]

[quote title=”Liam Neeson”]I am honored and humbled to be recognized by the Irish Academy with this award, especially when I am following in the footsteps of an illustrious group of Irish filmmakers before me such as Boorman, Jordan, O’Hara and Sheridan.  I look forward to coming to Dublin to celebrate with our home industry and with my colleagues and friends.[/quote]

Work Overview

Liam Neeson is internationally recognized for his work in both major studio blockbusters and acclaimed independent features.  He has been honoured for his depictions of three very different real-life figures.  Neeson received Academy Award®, Golden Globe and BAFTA Award nominations for his performance as Oskar Schindler in Steven Spielberg’s 1993 Oscar-winning Best Picture Schindler’s List.  Three years later, he played the title role in Neil Jordan’s biopic Michael Collins, earning another Golden Globe nomination and winning an Evening Standard British Film Award and the 1996 Venice Film Festival’s Volpi Cup for his impassioned portrayal of the Irish Republican hero.  In 2004, Neeson starred as controversial sex researcher Alfred Kinsey in Bill Condon’s Kinsey, for which he garnered his third Golden Globe nomination, an Independent Spirit Award nomination, and won the best Actor Irish Academy (IFTA) Award and a Los Angeles Film Critics Award.

Neeson’s most recent projects include Taken 3, the final instalment of the blockbuster trilogy, and Run All Night, directed by Jaume Collet-Serra, which were released in 2015. Liam can be next seen in Silence, directed by Martin Scorsese and A Monster Calls in which he co-stars alongside Felicity Jones and Sigourney Weaver. Both movies are set for a 2016 release.

In 2014, Neeson appeared in Seth MacFarlane’s comedy A Million Ways to Die in the West as well as the hit comedy Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues. In that same year, he also starred in Scott Frank’s crime thriller A Walk among the Tombstones, director Jaume Collet-Serra’s Non-Stop, and in writer/director Paul Haggis’ romantic drama Third Person. Liam lent his voice to a number of animated features in 2014 including: The Nut Job, produced by Open Road Films and directed by Peter Lepeniotis; Phil Lord and Chris Miller’s hugely successful The Lego Movie; and the animated adaptation of Kahlil Gibran’s book The Prophet, where Neeson was joined by John Krasinski and Salma Hayek.

In 2012, Neeson reprised his role as unstoppable CIA operative Bryan Mills in Taken 2, the successful follow-up to the 2008 hit crime thriller Taken.  He also starred in Peter Berg’s actioner Battleship, appeared in The Dark Knight Rises for director Christopher Nolan, played Zeus in the blockbuster Wrath of the Titans, and starred in Joe Carnahan’s thriller The Grey, which topped the box office in its opening weekend.

A selection of his earlier film credits include Jaume Collet-Serra’s thriller Unknown; Paul Haggis’ thriller The Next Three Days; the 2010 remake of The A-Team; and Clash of the Titans; as well as the indie film Chloe, directed by Atom Egoyan. In 2008 Neeson starred in Taken, the runaway box-office hit.  Neeson also appeared in Disney’s box office success The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian where he reprised his role as the voice of the lion, Aslan, in the sequel to the 2005 hit The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. He also co-starred that year in Batman Begins, directed by Christopher Nolan.

Neeson made his Broadway debut in 1993 receiving a Tony® Award nomination in the Roundabout Theater’s revival of Eugene O’Neill’s 1921 drama Anna Christie, co-starring Natasha Richardson.  He also received a Tony Award nomination for Arthur Miller’s The Crucible in 2002 in the part of Proctor.

Key Credits

  • Silence – 2016
  • A Christmas Star – 2015
  • Run All Night– 2015
  • The Prophet– 2014
  • Taken 3 – 2014
  • A Walk Among the Tombstones – 2014
  • A Million Ways to Die in the West – 2014
  • Non-Stop – 2014
  • The Lego Movie – 2014
  • Third Person – 2013
  • Taken 2 – 2012
  • Wrath of the Titans – 2012
  • The Grey – 2011
  • Unknown –  2011
  • The Next Three Days – 2010
  • Clash of the Titans –  2010
  • Chloe – 2009
  • Five Minutes of Heaven – 2008 2009
  • Taken – 2008
  • Breakfast on Pluto –  2005
  • Batman Begins – 2005
  • Kingdom of Heaven –  2005
  • Kinsey –  2004
  • Love Actually – 2003
  • Gangs of New York–  2002
  • K-19: The Widowmaker – 2002
  • Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace – 1999
  • Some Mother’s Son – 1996
  • Michael Collins –  1996
  • Rob Roy –  1995
  • Schindler’s List –  1993
  • Crossing the Line –  1990
  • The Good Mother –  1988
  • A Prayer for the Dying –  1987
  • The Delta Force –  1986
  • Excalibur –  1981
  • Nailed –  1981