Known for: Hope and Glory
Net worth: $6 million
Swinging Sixties performer, Sarah Miles is a BAFTA and Academy Award-nominated, English actress who remained in film until the early Seventies. It’s a wonder she was able to achieve such fame. As a child, she was unable to speak until the age of nine because of a stammer and struggled so desperately with dyslexia she was expelled from four different schools. Finally, at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), she excelled and was nominated for the BAFTA Newcomer Award in 1962 in Term of Trial .
She won an Oscar nomination for her role in David Lean’s Ryan’s Daughter which was an adapted script from “Madame Bovary” set during the Easter Rebellion of 1916 in Ireland. Miles’ husband, screenwriter Robert Bolt, adapted the play. It was a high point for Miles. After divorcing Bolt, Miles’ career flatlined but then sparkled one last time with Hope and Glory (1987).
Peter Ostrum
Known for: Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory
Net worth: $1 million
Child actor, Peter Ostrum, took a very different path than some of his American counterparts. As a boy in the 1970s, he won the role of Charlie Bucket in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory after being selected by talent scouts while performing with children’s theatre in Cleveland, Ohio. He was 12. The movie studio offered Ostrum a three-film movie contract once filming concluded. Ostrum turned it down. He credits the decision to having spared him the tough transition from child actor to adulthood.
Making the movie on the Munich set in West Germany set was a good experience. During the filming, he developed a close relationship with Gene Wilder (Willy Wonka). Ostrum considered going back to Hollywood for a showbiz career, but he never made the move. With the massive proceeds, he acquired a horse. It became his love and passion, ultimately leading to a career in veterinary medicine. Royalties are yet trickling in from the 1971 film.
Talia Shire
Known for: Rocky
Net worth: $20 million
“Adrian!” Yes, Talia Shire played Adrian, Rocky Balboa’s adoring girlfriend, in the most famous boxing movie of all time. But she also played Connie Corleone in The Godfather , another unbelievably epic movie.
Notably, Shire was born a Coppola and is the sister to the godfather of film, Francis Ford Coppola. She earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress in The Godfather: Part II . For her moving portrayal of Adrian in Rocky , Shire won a boatload of accolades: The New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress, the National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress, an Oscar nomination for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Drama.
Jeff Bridges
Known for: The Last Picture Show and “The Dude”
Net worth: $70 million
Born in Los Angeles to a silver screen family, Jeff Bridges quite literally grew up in Hollywood. As a child, he was in and out of studios and on and off film sets tagging along with his parents and older brother. Bridges had his big break with The Last Picture Show playing Duane Jackson in a coming-of-age role that earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. It typecast him as a clever slacker with a loose-cannon tendency that would find its climax as “The Dude” in The Big Lebowski , a pop-cult phenomenon.
He was also nominated for an Oscar in Starman, although his performance in Fearless is considered his best by some. Bridges has studied Buddhism and practice Transcendental Meditation. Politically, he supports ending childhood hunger. He was the spokesman for the No Kid Hungry campaign for Share Our Strength. He’s also a supporter of the environment and backs the Amazon Conservation Team.
Alan Arkin
Known for: The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming
Net worth: $15 million
Brooklyn-born and L.A.-transplant, Alan Arkin, moved out West with his family when he was 11. His father lost his teaching job in the early 1950s for refusing to answer questions about his political affiliation. It was young Alan’s introduction to the “Red Scare.” Arkin loved music and played the guitar. In 1956, he co-wrote the famous “Banana Boat Song.” His fame would come later. Acting lessons began at age 10, and he hooked up with the Second City comedy and theatre troupe in the Sixties.
It happened in 1966 with The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming. His performance as a Soviet submariner earned him a Best Actor Oscar nomination. He was nominated again for The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter. He received a BAFTA and an Oscar for Best Actor in Little Miss Sunshine, cracking us up as a foul-mouthed grandpa. In TV he was recognized for his part in The Pentagon Papers with a Primetime Emmy and, more recently, he’s been nominated three times for Best Supporting Actor in The Kominsky Method, two SAGs, and one Golden Globe.