Because the figures portrayed are actual people, whose actions and characteristics are known to the public (or at least historically documented), biopic roles are considered some of the most demanding of actors and actresses.
Warren Beatty,
Faye Dunaway,
Ben Kingsley,
Johnny Depp,
Jim Carrey,
Jamie Foxx,
Robert Downey Jr.,
Brad Pitt,
Emma Thompson,
Tom Hanks,
Eddie Redmayne, and
Cillian Murphy all gained new-found respect as dramatic actors after starring in biopics: Beatty and Dunaway as
Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker in
Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Kingsley as
Mahatma Gandhi in
Gandhi (1982), Depp as
Ed Wood in
Ed Wood (1994), Carrey as
Andy Kaufman in
Man on the Moon (1999), Downey as
Charlie Chaplin in
Chaplin (1992) and as
Lewis Strauss in
Oppenheimer (2023), Foxx as
Ray Charles in
Ray (2004), Thompson and Hanks as
P. L. Travers and
Walt Disney in
Saving Mr. Banks (2013), Redmayne as
Stephen Hawking in
The Theory of Everything (2014), and Murphy as
J. Robert Oppenheimer in
Oppenheimer (2023). Some biopics purposely stretch the truth.
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind was based on
game show host
Chuck Barris' widely debunked yet popular
memoir of the same name, in which he claimed to be a
CIA agent.
Kafka incorporated both the life of author
Franz Kafka and the
surreal aspects of his fiction. The
Errol Flynn film
They Died with Their Boots On tells the story of
Custer but is highly romanticized. The
Oliver Stone film
The Doors, mainly about
Jim Morrison, was highly praised for the similarities between Jim Morrison and actor
Val Kilmer, look-wise and singing-wise, but fans and band members did not like the way Val Kilmer portrayed Jim Morrison, and a few of the scenes were even completely made up. In rare cases, sometimes called
auto biopics, the subject of the film plays themself. Examples include
Jackie Robinson in
The Jackie Robinson Story (1950),
Muhammad Ali in
The Greatest (1977),
Audie Murphy in
To Hell and Back (1955),
Patty Duke in
Call Me Anna (1990),
Bob Mathias in
The Bob Mathias Story (1954),
Arlo Guthrie in ''
Alice's Restaurant (1969), Fantasia in Life Is Not a Fairytale (2006), and Howard Stern in Private Parts'' (1997). In 2018, the
musical biopic
Bohemian Rhapsody, based on the life of
Queen singer
Freddie Mercury, became the highest-grossing biopic in history at the time. In 2023, it was surpassed by
Oppenheimer, based on the life of
J. Robert Oppenheimer and the creation of the
atomic bomb in World War II. The musical biopic
Michael, based on the life of King of Pop
Michael Jackson, achieved the highest grossing
opening weekend for a biopic in April 2026 with takings of $217 million USD. ==See also==