Many happy returns to a brilliant Brit, Tom Hardy, who turns 47 years old today. The London actor got his start in Ridley Scott’s Black Hawk Down, and preceded along a course of action and adventure films to rival any actor of the 21st century, including Inception, Dark Knight Rises, and Mad Max: Fury RoadThe charismatic Londoner won a BAFTA Rising Star award and was nominated for an Oscar for his performance in The Revenant, alongside Leonardo Di Caprio. READ more about this star of stars… (1977)

Tom Hardy at San Diego Comic Con – Credit Gage Skidmore, CC 3.0. BY SA

He has named Gary Oldman, with whom he would later work on Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, as his “hero” and added that he mirrored scenes from Oldman while at drama school, which he attended near his birthplace of Hammersmith.

A burgeoning philanthropist, in 2010 Hardy became an ambassador for the Prince’s Trust, a UK youth charity that provides training, personal development, business start-up support, mentoring, and advice.

An avid practitioner of Brazilian jiu-jitsu, he has won a number of jiu-jitsu competitions, with one such occurrence being at the UMAC Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Open Championships in September 2022.

MORE Good News on this Day:

  • Commemorated as Independence Day (from Spain) for Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, and celebrated with marches by schoolchildren (1821)
  • The Royal Air Force inflicted heavy losses on the Luftwaffe as the tide turned in the Battle of Britain during World War II (1940)
  • Ron Shelton, the American film screenwriter/director and former minor league baseball player, who made his directorial debut in Bull Durham, was born (1945)
  • The first edition of USA Today—the first American newspaper to present content in colorful, simple, easy-to-read stories, and sold in all 50 states (1982)
  • U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Shevardnadze signed a treaty to establish centers to reduce the risk of nuclear war (1987)
  • IRA-allied Sinn Fein entered Northern Ireland’s peace talks for the first time (1997)
  • The name Google.com first appeared on the internet, as founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin registered the crazy term as their new company’s domain name while they were Ph.D. students at Stanford University (1998)

106 years ago today. Forbes Magazine was founded by Scottish-American financial columnist, B. C. Forbes. After being passed down the family for three generations, Forbes is one of the world’s biggest entrepreneurial magazines. 47 editions of Forbes are published in different countries, from Latvia to Uruguay to Thailand.

Forbes cover from 2014 – CC 4.0. Bilal Ahmed

The magazine is well known for its lists and rankings, including of the richest Americans (the Forbes 400), the 30 most notable young people under the age of 30 (Forbes 30 under 30), America’s Wealthiest Celebrities, the world’s top companies (the Forbes Global 2000), Forbes list of the World’s Most Powerful People, and The World’s Billionaires.

1,257 years ago, the Buddhist monk Saichō was born. The Japan into which this man was born was quite different from the iconic period of the shogunate and the samurai, but his contributions to his own civilization were to steer it firmly on that course. Saichō is credited with the foundation of the Tendai Lotus School of Buddhism, which became the most dominant Buddhist school in the country throughout much of the feudal era.

Saichō was already a fully ordained monk when he established Enryaku-ji temple upon Mount Hiei, which at its height was a complex of 3,000 buildings, and which today is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In 804 he paid a visit to one of the great Chinese imperial dynasties, the Tang, at the request of the Japanese Emperor who was interested in learning more about Tiantai Buddhism.

Saichō and his party traveled to Tiantai Mountain where they were introduced to the seventh Patriarch of Tiantai. Saichō spent the next several months copying various Buddhist works with the intention of bringing them back to Japan with him. He is also credited with bringing the tea plant back from China during that trip.

On his return, he founded the Tendai Lotus School. (767)

Happy 78th Birthday to Oliver Stone, the Oscar-winning New York film director, producer, and screenwriter.

He won an Academy Award for Best Screenplay as writer of Midnight Express in 1978, and wrote the gangster film Scarface in 1983. He then achieved prominence as writer and director of the war drama Platoon, which won him Oscars for Best Director and Best Picture. It was the first of a film trilogy based on the Vietnam War, in which Stone served as an infantry soldier. He continued the series with Born on the Fourth of July—for which Stone won his second Best Director Oscar.

2016 Photo by Gage Skidmore, CC license

Stone’s other works include the financial drama Wall Street, the Jim Morrison biopic The Doors (1991), the satirical black comedy crime film Natural Born Killers, and a trilogy of films on American Presidents: JFK, Nixon, and W.

Many of Stone’s films focus on controversial political conspiracies and issues, including Snowden in 2016—and he spent two years interviewing Vladimir Putin for a 4-part Showtime documentary, The Putin Interviews.

Recently his memoir Chasing the Light was published about his being wounded in war and his filmmaking years, including the harrowing demon of cocaine addiction, the failure of his first feature, and his risky on-the-ground research of Miami drug cartels for Scarface. WATCH a recent interview… (1946)

 

Also, Happy 78th Birthday to Tommy Lee Jones. Born in Midland, Texas, he won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance as a U.S. Marshal in The Fugitive.

tommy-lee-jones-2012-web

He is perhaps best loved for his role as “Agent K” in the Men In Black franchise. He attended Harvard University, and wrote his senior thesis on the role of Catholicism in the works of Flannery O’ Connor. (1946)

(left) Agatha Christie plaque, CC license by Violetriga; (right) as a girl

133 years ago today, Agatha Christie was born—and she was born to write mysteries! Best known for her 66 detective novels and 14 short story collections that earned her the nickname, ‘The Queen of Crime’, the British author and playwright went on to become the best selling novelist of all time. She wove such masterworks as Murder on the Orient Express, And Then There Were None, and The Mousetrap—the world’s longest-running play. WATCH a video about her life… (1890-1979)

 

And, 768 years ago today, the Venice merchant and writer Marco Polo was born. He became the first European to chronicle his travels through Asia—and his exotic details about life along the Silk Road inspired a new wave of explorers. His Book of the Marvels of the World, also known as The Travels of Marco Polo (c. 1300), gave Europeans their first comprehensive look at the mysterious culture and inner workings of the Eastern world, including the wealth and great size of China and its capital Peking. It also described cities in India, Japan and other Asian countries.

Marco journeyed for 24 years with his father and uncle, who had earlier traveled through Asia and met the emperor Kublai Khan. Upon his return back home, he became a wealthy merchant and raised a family. His detailed recollections influenced mapmakers before he died in 1324 and was buried in the church of San Lorenzo in Venice. WATCH a biography… (1254)

 

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