Read the complete write-up of Mark Ruffalo net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, movies, tv shows as well as other information you need to know.
Introduction
Mark Ruffalo is an American actor and producer. He began acting in the early 1990s and first gained recognition for his work in Kenneth Lonergan’s play This Is Our Youth (1998) and the drama film You Can Count On Me (2000). He went on to star in the romantic comedies 13 Going on 30 (2004) and Just like Heaven (2005) and the thrillers In the Cut (2003), Zodiac (2007) and Shutter Island (2010); and received a Tony Award nomination for his supporting role in the Broadway revival of Awake and Sing! in 2006.
Ruffalo gained international recognition for playing Hulk in the Marvel Cinematic Universe superhero films The Avengers (2012), Iron Man 3 (2013), Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Thor: Ragnarok (2017), Avengers: Infinity War (2018), Captain Marvel (2019), Avengers: Endgame (2019), and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021), as well as the upcoming Disney+ series She-Hulk (2022). Also in 2019, Ruffalo starred in and co-produced Dark Waters.
He gained nominations for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for playing a sperm-donor in the comedy-drama The Kids Are All Right (2010), Dave Schultz in the biopic Foxcatcher (2014), and Michael Rezendes in the drama Spotlight (2015). He won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actor in a TV Movie for playing a gay writer and activist in the television drama film The Normal Heart (2015), and the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie for his dual role in the miniseries I Know This Much Is True (2020). During his career, Ruffalo has been nominated for at least one Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony award, one of a select group to have been nominated for all four awards.
Early life
Name | Mark Ruffalo |
Net Worth | $40 million |
Occupation | Actor, Producer |
Height | 1.73m |
Age | 54 years |
Mark Alan Ruffalo was born on November 22, 1967 (age 54 years) in Kenosha, Wisconsin. His mother, Marie Rose (née Hébert), is a hairdresser and stylist and his father, Frank Lawrence Ruffalo Jr., worked as a construction painter. He has two sisters, Tania and Nicole, and a brother, Scott (died 2008). His father is of Italian descent, from Girifalco and his mother is of half French Canadian and half Italian ancestry. Ruffalo’s mother and stepfather live in Boothbay Harbor, Maine, where he and his family occasionally spend their summers.
On December 1, 2008, Ruffalo’s younger brother, Scott, was found outside his home on North Palm Drive in Beverly Hills with an execution-style bullet wound to the head. Scott was taken to a hospital but died the following week. The case remains unsolved. However, Ruffalo attended both Catholic and progressive schools throughout his education. Ruffalo has described himself as having been a “happy kid” although he struggled with undiagnosed dyslexia and ADHD as a child and a young adult.
Ruffalo spent his teen years in Virginia Beach, Virginia, where his father worked. He competed in wrestling in junior high and high school in Wisconsin and Virginia. Ruffalo graduated from First Colonial High School in Virginia Beach, where he acted for the Patriot Playhouse. He moved with his family to San Diego, California and later to Los Angeles, where he took classes at the Stella Adler Conservatory and co-founded the Orpheus Theatre Company. With the theater company, he wrote, directed and starred in a number of plays. He also spent close to a decade working as a bartender.
Career
Mark Ruffalo made his screen debut in an episode of CBS Summer Playhouse (1989), followed by minor film roles, and was part of the original cast of This Is Our Youth (1996). Ruffalo played ‘Vinnie Webber’, a minor character in Series 1 Episode 9 of Due South, first broadcast in Canada in 1994. He had minor roles in films including The Dentist (1996), the low-key crime comedy Safe Men (1998) and Ang Lee’s Civil War Western Ride with the Devil (1999). Through a chance meeting with writer Kenneth Lonergan, Ruffalo began collaborating with him and appeared in several of his plays, including the original cast of This is Our Youth (1996), which led to Ruffalo’s role as Laura Linney’s character’s brother in Lonergan’s Academy Award-nominated 2000 film You Can Count On Me.
Ruffalo received favorable reviews for his performance in this film, often earning comparisons to the young Marlon Brando, and won awards from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and Montreal World Film Festival. His next role was in 2001 in Rod Lurie’s The Last Castle playing a bookie in a military prison alongside Robert Redford. This led to other significant roles, including the films XX/XY (2002), Isabel Coixet’s My Life Without Me, John Woo’s Windtalkers (2003), Jane Campion’s In the Cut (2003), Michel Gondry’s Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), and We Don’t Live Here Anymore (2004), which is based on two short stories written by Andre Dubus. He appeared opposite Jamie Foxx and Tom Cruise as a narcotics detective in Michael Mann’s crime thriller Collateral (2004).
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In the mid-2000s, Ruffalo appeared as a romantic lead in View From the Top (2002), 13 Going on 30 (2004), Just Like Heaven (2005) and Rumor Have It (2005). In 2006, Ruffalo starred in Clifford Odets’ Awake and Sing! at the Belasco Theatre in New York, for which he was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play. In March 2007, he appeared in Zodiac as SFPD homicide inspector Dave Toschi, who ran the investigation to find and apprehend the Zodiac killer from 1969 through most of the 1970s. In 2007, Ruffalo played divorced lawyer Dwight Arno, who accidentally kills a child and speeds away, in Terry George’s film Reservation Road, based on the novel by John Burnham Schwartz.
In 2008, Mark Ruffalo starred as a con man in The Brothers Bloom with Adrien Brody and Rachel Weisz and co-starred with Julianne Moore in Blindness. 2008 also saw Ruffalo in Brian Goodman’s What Doesn’t Kill You with Ethan Hawke and Amanda Peet, which was shown at the Toronto International Film Festival. In 2009, he played a brief role in the film Where the Wild Things Are as Max’s mother’s boyfriend. In 2010, he co-starred in the Martin Scorsese thriller Shutter Island as U.S. Marshal Chuck Aule, the partner of Leonardo DiCaprio’s character Teddy Daniels.
Mark Ruffalo starred in Lisa Cholodenko’s The Kids Are All Right, with Annette Bening and Julianne Moore in 2010. Ruffalo stated in an interview that he approached Cholodenko after watching High Art and said he would love to work with her. Years later, she called Ruffalo and said she wrote a script and had him in mind for the part. His performance earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. In March 2010, Ruffalo signed with the Creative Artists Agency (CAA); in June 2010, he signed on with the United Talent Agency (UTA).
Ruffalo starred in The Avengers (2012), the sixth installment of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, replacing Edward Norton as Dr. Bruce Banner / Hulk. He reprised the role again in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Thor: Ragnarok (2017), Avengers: Infinity War (2018), and Avengers: Endgame (2019). He has been noted for spoiling the endings of Avengers: Infinity War a year ahead of theatrical release, as well as Avengers: Endgame a few weeks ahead of release. Ruffalo also made cameo appearances as Banner in Iron Man 3, Captain Marvel, and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.
He starred as Ned Weeks in a television adaptation of Larry Kramer’s AIDS-era play in 2014, The Normal Heart; his performance earned him an Emmy nomination. He says he has had an outpouring of support for his performance: I’ve never had so sincere and vulnerable a response from people for anything that I’ve ever done. … And of everything that I’ve done since I’ve been on social media, which hasn’t been that long, by the way, I haven’t had such an overwhelmingly positive response as I have from The Normal Heart directly to me. And it’s a blessing, man. If this is it, if I have a piano dropped on me tomorrow, then I would go down thinking, “You know what, I did okay as far as my career goes, because that’s a gift. That’s rare.”
In 2014, Mark Ruffalo received his second Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of wrestler Dave Schultz in the biographical drama Foxcatcher. The next year in 2015, he starred as a father of two with bipolar disorder in the independent comedy film Infinitely Polar Bear, for which he earned a Golden Globe Award nomination, and he also appeared as journalist Michael Rezendes in the drama film Spotlight, for which he earned his third Academy Award nomination and a BAFTA Award nomination.
Political views
Mark Ruffalo is pro-choice. He has explained his opinion by saying: “I don’t want to turn back the hands of time to when women shuttled across state lines in the thick of night to resolve an unwanted pregnancy, in a cheap hotel room.” He has shown support for the LGBT community; however, he has received backlash from the transgender community for supporting the casting of a cisgender man, Matt Bomer, to play a trans woman in the film Anything, on which Ruffalo was an executive producer.
Ruffalo expressed concern that gas companies were eyeing his family’s land in Callicoon, New York in 2008. After doing his own investigation, New York magazine wrote, he became “anti-fracking’s first famous face.” On October 4, 2010, Ruffalo appeared on The Rachel Maddow Show to discuss hydraulic fracturing and the FRAC Act of 2009. He claimed in the December 2010 issue of GQ that after he organized screenings in Pennsylvania of a documentary about natural gas drilling called Gasland, he was placed on a terror advisory list. The Pennsylvania Governor’s Office of Homeland Security denied the claim.
In 2015, Ruffalo supported the “Education Is Not a Crime” campaign among a lot of artists and intellectuals including Nazanin Boniadi, Abbas Milani, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Azar Nafisi, Omid Djalili, Eva LaRue, Mohammad Maleki, former president of the University of Tehran and Nobel Peace laureates such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Shirin Ebadi, Tawakkol Karman, Jody Williams, and Mairead Maguire to draw attention to the Iranian government’s systematic denial of university education to young Baha’is.
In the 2016 election, Mark Ruffalo supported Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders. In March 2016, Ruffalo narrated and produced Dear President Obama: The Clean Energy Revolution Is Now, a documentary by director Jon Bowermaster which looks at President Barack Obama’s environmental tenure and legacy concerning the massive expansion of oil and natural gas drilling. In June 2017, Ruffalo posted a petition on Twitter urging NBC to stop hiring white conservative commentators. The same month, Ruffalo endorsed Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn in the 2017 UK general election. He tweeted: “Because @jeremycorbyn offers people an alternative to the corporate status quo, which never ends well for them, I humbly endorse Corbyn.” In October, Ruffalo actively supported the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in their opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline project.
In October 2019, Mark Ruffalo tweeted that “until George W. Bush is brought to justice for the crimes of the Iraq War, (including American-led torture, Iraqi deaths & displacement, and the deep scars—emotional & otherwise—inflicted on our military that served his folly), we can’t even begin to talk about kindness.” In November, while on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Ruffalo endorsed Senator Bernie Sanders for president, stating “you know when he gets in the office, he is going to be fighting for us”. The same month, along with other public figures, Ruffalo signed a letter supporting Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn describing him as “a beacon of hope in the struggle against emergent far-right nationalism, xenophobia and racism in much of the democratic world” and endorsed him for in the 2019 UK general election.
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Mark Ruffalo starred in and co-produced Dark Waters in 2019, which spotlighted another one of his environmental concerns with its true-life depiction of a corporate lawyer’s relentless pursuit of justice to expose poisonous pollution by chemical behemoth DuPont. In June 2020, Ruffalo appeared in a webinar conference for the Irish Green Party to encourage members to accept the recently negotiated programme for government, agreed upon between the party, Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil. In December 2019, Ruffalo called for an economic revolution, saying that “capitalism today is failing us, killing us, and robbing from our children’s future.”
In October 2020, speaking to Mehdi Hasan, Ruffalo condemned what he called Israel’s “asymmetrical warfare” against the Palestinians, stating, “There is no reason that an ally of America should not be held to the same standards as any other nation in the world.” Ruffalo also related that he had been called an antisemite for his views, saying, “It’s really tough to hear. And the fact that so many people will take it to that extreme when you’re talking about that kind of inequality, that kind of oppression, that kind of apartheid.” In 2021, he said it was “inflammatory” and “disrespectful” to suggest Israel is committing genocide. In November 2021, Ruffalo criticized the not-guilty ruling in the Kyle Rittenhouse case in his hometown of Kenosha, Wisconsin and said the people shot by Rittenhouse were murdered.
Support for conspiracy theories
Mark Ruffalo was interviewed by “We Are Change” at an anti-war rally in 2007. Ruffalo stated: “I’m baffled by the way all three buildings came down. My first reaction was that buildings don’t fall down like that”. In February 2016, Ruffalo tweeted a Tech Times article in which a group of Argentinian doctors attributed the cause of a microcephaly outbreak in Brazil to the use of a larvicide chemical added to reservoirs of drinking water to combat dengue fever, rather the Zika virus. The New York Times described the claim as “dubious” and stated that those “sounding the alarm”, did not mention that the larvicide did not work through the central nervous system and that it has been approved by the World Health Organization.
Wife
Mark Ruffalo is married to Sunrise Coigney, they had their wedding in 2000. His wife is an actress and they have three children: son Keen (b. 2001) and daughters Bella Noche (b. 2005) and Odette (b. 2007). After completing work on the film The Last Castle, Ruffalo was diagnosed with a vestibular schwannoma, a type of brain tumor also known as an acoustic neuroma. The tumor was found to be benign; however, the surgery to remove the mass resulted in partial facial paralysis and affected his hearing. The paralysis subsided after a year, but Ruffalo remains deaf in his left ear. Ruffalo, his wife and his children live in a private house in Sullivan County, New York, describing the Catskill Mountains as his “home”. Ruffalo also owns two apartments in New York City, one for business and another for investment.
Mark Ruffalo net worth
How much is Mark Ruffalo worth? Mark Ruffalo net worth is estimated at around $40 million. His main source of income is from his career as an actor and producer. Ruffalo successful career has earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. He is one of the richest and most influential actors in the United States. However, Ruffalo directed a number of plays during his time at the Orpheus Theatre Company and made his feature film directorial debut with the 2010 indie film Sympathy for Delicious, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and won the Special Jury Prize.