Explore about the Famous Movie Actor Heath Ledger, who was born in Australia on April 4, 1979. Analyze Heath Ledger’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Heath Ledger dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Heath Ledger?
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Heath Ledger Biography
Known for his role as the Joker in The Dark Knight, his death was voted the top entertainment story of 2008. His meteoric rise was also attributed to his acting in 10 Things I Hate About You, The Patriot, A Knight’s Tale, and Brokeback Mountain.
He was passionate about chess, and won the Western Australia’s junior chess championship at age 10. He debuted on three episodes of the television show, Ship to Shore, as a cyclist.
He suffered from insomnia after filming The Dark Knight, and died from an overdose of prescription medications, including oxycodone, doxylamine, hydrocodone, diazepam, alprazolam, and temazepam.
He was romantically involved with actress Michelle Williams from 2004 to 2007. The couple had a daughter named Matilda Rose Ledger in 2005.
He starred opposite Christian Bale in The Dark Knight.
Heath Andrew Ledger (4 April 1979 – 22 January 2008) was an Australian actor, photographer, and music video director. After performing roles in several Australian television and film productions during the 1990s, Ledger left for the United States in 1998 to further develop his film career. His work consisted of nineteen films, including 10 Things I Hate About You (1999), The Patriot (2000), A Knight’s Tale (2001), Monster’s Ball (2001), Lords of Dogtown (2005), Brokeback Mountain (2005), Candy (2006), The Dark Knight (2008), and The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009), the latter two being posthumous releases. He also produced and directed music videos and aspired to be a film director.
Ledger was born in Perth, Western Australia, the son of Sally Ramshaw, a French teacher, and Kim Ledger, a racing car driver and mining engineer whose family established and owned the Ledger Engineering Foundry. The Sir Frank Ledger Charitable Trust is named after his great-grandfather. He had English, Irish, and Scottish ancestry. Ledger attended Mary’s Mount Primary School in Gooseberry Hill, and later Guildford Grammar School, where he had his first acting experiences, starring in a school production as Peter Pan at the age of 10. His parents separated when he was 10 and divorced when he was 11. Ledger’s older sister Kate, an actress and later a publicist, to whom he was very close, inspired his acting on stage, and his love of Gene Kelly inspired his successful choreography, leading to Guildford Grammar’s 60-member team’s “first all-boy victory” at the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge. Ledger’s two half-sisters are Ashleigh Bell (b. 1990), his mother’s daughter with her second husband and his stepfather Roger Bell, and Olivia Ledger (b. 1996), his father’s daughter with his second wife Emma Brown.
After sitting for early graduation exams at age 16 to get his diploma, Ledger left school to pursue an acting career. With Trevor DiCarlo, his best friend since the age of three, Ledger drove across Australia from Perth to Sydney, returning to Perth to take a small role in Clowning Around (1992), the first part of a two-part television series, and to work on the TV series Sweat (1996), in which he played a cyclist. From 1993 to 1997, Ledger also had parts in the Perth television series Ship to Shore (1993); Ledger also had parts in the short-lived Fox Broadcasting Company fantasy-drama Roar (1997); in Home and Away (1997), one of Australia’s most successful television shows; and in the Australian film Blackrock (1997), his feature film debut. In 1999, he starred in the teen comedy 10 Things I Hate About You and in the acclaimed Australian crime film Two Hands, directed by Gregor Jordan.
From 2000 to 2005, he starred in supporting roles as Gabriel Martin, the eldest son of Benjamin Martin (Mel Gibson), in The Patriot (2000), and as Sonny Grotowski, the son of Hank Grotowski (Billy Bob Thornton), in Monster’s Ball (2001); and in leading or title roles in A Knight’s Tale (2001), The Four Feathers (2002), The Order (2003), Ned Kelly (2003), Casanova (2005), The Brothers Grimm (2005), and Lords of Dogtown (2005). In 2001, he won a ShoWest Award as “Male Star of Tomorrow”.
After his performance on stage at the 2005 Screen Actors Guild Awards, when he had giggled in presenting Brokeback Mountain as a nominee for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, the Los Angeles Times referred to his presentation as an “apparent gay spoof”. Ledger called the Times later and explained that his levity resulted from stage fright, saying that he had been told that he would be presenting the award only minutes earlier; he stated: “I am so sorry and I apologise for my nervousness. I would be absolutely horrified if my stage fright was misinterpreted as a lack of respect for the film, the topic and for the amazing filmmakers.”
In 2004, he met and began dating actress Michelle Williams on the set of Brokeback Mountain. Their daughter, Matilda Rose, was born on 28 October 2005 in New York City. Matilda’s godparents are Brokeback co-star Jake Gyllenhaal and Williams’ Dawson’s Creek co-star Busy Philipps. In January 2006, Ledger put his residence in Bronte, New South Wales up for sale and returned to the United States, where he shared a house with Williams in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn from 2005 to 2007. In September 2007, Williams’ father confirmed to The Daily Telegraph that Ledger and Williams had ended their relationship.
Ledger received “Best Actor of 2005” awards from both the New York Film Critics Circle and the San Francisco Film Critics Circle for his performance in Brokeback Mountain, in which he plays Wyoming ranch hand Ennis Del Mar, who has a love affair with aspiring rodeo rider Jack Twist, played by Jake Gyllenhaal. He also received a nomination for Golden Globe Best Actor in a Drama and a nomination for Academy Award for Best Actor for this performance, making him, at age 26, the ninth-youngest nominee for a Best Actor Oscar. In The New York Times review of the film, critic Stephen Holden writes: “Both Mr. Ledger and Mr. Gyllenhaal make this anguished love story physically palpable. Mr. Ledger magically and mysteriously disappears beneath the skin of his lean, sinewy character. It is a great screen performance, as good as the best of Marlon Brando and Sean Penn.” In a review in Rolling Stone, Peter Travers states: “Ledger’s magnificent performance is an acting miracle. He seems to tear it from his insides. Ledger doesn’t just know how Ennis moves, speaks and listens; he knows how he breathes. To see him inhale the scent of a shirt hanging in Jack’s closet is to take measure of the pain of love lost.”
Ledger was “widely reported to have struggled with substance abuse”. Following Ledger’s death, Entertainment Tonight aired video footage from 2006 in which Ledger stated that he “‘used to smoke five joints a day for 20 years'” and news outlets reported that his drug abuse had prompted Williams to request that he move out of their apartment in Brooklyn. Ledger’s publicist asserted that some reportage regarding Ledger and drugs had been inaccurate.
Ledger was quoted in January 2006 in Melbourne’s Herald Sun as saying that he heard that West Virginia had banned Brokeback Mountain, which it had not; actually, a cinema in Utah had banned the film. He had also mistakenly claimed that lynchings had occurred in West Virginia as recently as the 1980s; state scholars disputed his statement, asserting that no documented lynchings had occurred in West Virginia since 1931.
Ledger’s relationship with the press in Australia was sometimes turbulent, and it led to his abandonment of plans for his family to reside part-time in Sydney. In 2004, he strongly denied press reports alleging that “he spat at journalists on the Sydney set of the film Candy”, or that one of his relatives had done so later, outside Ledger’s Sydney home. On 13 January 2006, “Several members of the paparazzi retaliated … squirting Ledger and Williams with water pistols on the red carpet at the Sydney premiere of Brokeback Mountain”.
Speaking of editing The Dark Knight, on which Ledger had completed his work in October 2007, Nolan recalled, “It was tremendously emotional, right when he passed, having to go back in and look at him every day. … But the truth is, I feel very lucky to have something productive to do, to have a performance that he was very, very proud of, and that he had entrusted to me to finish.” All of Ledger’s scenes appear as he completed them in the filming; in editing the film, Nolan added no “digital effects” to alter Ledger’s actual performance posthumously. Nolan dedicated the film in part to Ledger’s memory, as well as to the memory of technician Conway Wickliffe, who was killed during a car accident while preparing one of the film’s stunts.
Directors who have worked with the actor praised him for his creativity, seriousness and intuition. “I’ve never felt as old as I did watching Heath explore his talents,” The Dark Knight director Christopher Nolan has written, expressing amazement over the actor’s working process, genuine curiosity and charisma. Marc Forster, who directed Ledger in Monster’s Ball, complimented him as taking the job “very seriously”, being disciplined, observant, and understanding and intuitive. In 2007, director Todd Haynes compared Ledger’s presence to actor James Dean, casting Ledger as Robbie Clarke, a fictive personification of Bob Dylan in I’m Not There. Drawing on the similar characteristics between the actors, Haynes further highlighted Ledger’s “precocious seriousness” and intuition. He also felt that Ledger had a rare maturity beyond his years.” Ledger, however, disconnected himself and acting from perfectionism. “I’m always gonna pull myself apart and dissect [the work]. I mean, there’s no such thing as perfection in what [actors] do. Pornos are more perfect than we are, because they’re actually fucking.”
In their New York Times interview, published on 4 November 2007, Ledger told Sarah Lyall that his recently completed roles in I’m Not There (2007) and The Dark Knight (2008) had taken a toll on his ability to sleep: “Last week I probably slept an average of two hours a night. … I couldn’t stop thinking. My body was exhausted, and my mind was still going.” At that time, he told Lyall that he had taken two Ambien pills, after taking just one had not sufficed, and those left him in “a stupor, only to wake up an hour later, his mind still racing”.
At a news conference at the 2007 Venice Film Festival, Ledger spoke of his desire to make a documentary film about the British singer-songwriter Nick Drake, who died in 1974, at the age of 26, from an overdose of an antidepressant. Ledger created and acted in a music video set to Drake’s recording of the singer’s 1974 song about depression “Black Eyed Dog” – a title “inspired by Winston Churchill’s descriptive term for depression” (black dog); it was shown publicly only twice, first at the Bumbershoot Festival, in Seattle, held from 1 to 3 September 2007; and secondly as part of “A Place To Be: A Celebration of Nick Drake”, with its screening of Their Place: Reflections On Nick Drake, “a series of short filmed homages to Nick Drake” (including Ledger’s), sponsored by American Cinematheque, at the Grauman’s Egyptian Theatre, in Hollywood, on 5 October 2007. After Ledger’s death, his music video for “Black Eyed Dog” was shown on the Internet and excerpted in news clips distributed via YouTube.
For his portrayal of Ennis Del Mar in Brokeback Mountain, Ledger won the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor and the Best International Actor Award from the Australian Film Institute; he was the first actor to win the latter award posthumously. He was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role and the Academy Award for Best Actor. Posthumously, he shared the 2007 Independent Spirit Robert Altman Award with the rest of the ensemble cast, the director, and the casting director for the film I’m Not There, which was inspired by the life and songs of American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan. In the film, Ledger portrayed a fictional actor named Robbie Clark, one of six characters embodying aspects of Dylan’s life and persona.
On 11 December 2008, it was announced that Ledger had been nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture for his performance as the Joker in The Dark Knight; he subsequently won the award at the 66th Golden Globe Awards ceremony telecast on NBC on 11 January 2009 with Dark Knight director Christopher Nolan accepting on his behalf.
Ledger received numerous awards for his Joker role in The Dark Knight. On 10 November 2008, he was nominated for two People’s Choice Awards related to his work on the film, “Best Ensemble Cast” and “Best Onscreen Match-Up” (shared with Christian Bale), and Ledger won an award for “Match-Up” in the ceremony aired live on CBS in January 2009.
Released in July 2008, The Dark Knight broke several box office records and received both popular and critical accolades, especially with regard to Ledger’s performance as the Joker. Even film critic David Denby, who does not praise the film overall in his pre-release review in The New Yorker, evaluates Ledger’s work highly, describing his performance as both “sinister and frightening” and Ledger as “mesmerising in every scene”, concluding: “His performance is a heroic, unsettling final act: this young actor looked into the abyss.” Attempting to dispel widespread speculations that Ledger’s performance as the Joker had in any way led to his death (as Denby and others suggest), Ledger’s co-star and friend Christian Bale, who played opposite him as Batman, has stressed that, as an actor, Ledger greatly enjoyed meeting the challenges of creating that role, an experience that Ledger himself described as “the most fun I’ve ever had, or probably ever will have, playing a character”. Terry Gilliam also refuted the claims that playing the Joker made him crazy, calling it “absolute nonsense” and going on to say, “Heath was so solid. His feet were on the ground and he was the least neurotic person I’ve ever met.”
Ledger’s death affected the marketing campaign for Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight (2008) and also both the production and marketing of Terry Gilliam’s film The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, with both directors intending to celebrate and pay tribute to his work in these films. Although Gilliam temporarily suspended production on the latter film, he expressed determination to “salvage” it, perhaps using computer-generated imagery (CGI), and dedicated it to Ledger. In February 2008, as a “memorial tribute to the man many have called one of the best actors of his generation,” Johnny Depp, Jude Law, and Colin Farrell signed on to take over Ledger’s role, becoming multiple incarnations of his character, Tony, transformed in this “magical re-telling of the Faust story”. The three actors donated their fees for the film to Ledger’s and Williams’s daughter.
As the news of Ledger’s death became public, throughout the night of 22 January 2008, and the next day, media crews, mourners, fans, and other onlookers began gathering outside his apartment building, with some leaving flowers or other memorial tributes.
On 27 September 2008, Ledger’s father Kim stated that “the family has agreed to leave the US$16.3 million fortune to Matilda,” adding: “There is no claim. Our family has gifted everything to Matilda.” In October 2008, Forbes estimated Ledger’s annual earnings from October 2007 through October 2008 – including his posthumous share of The Dark Knight’ s gross income of “US$1 billion in box office revenue worldwide” – as “US$20 million”.
On 15 July 2008, Fife-Yeomans reported further, via Australian News Limited, that “While Ledger left everything to his parents and three sisters, it is understood they have legal advice that under Western Australia law, Matilda Rose is entitled to the lion’s share” of his estate; its executors, Kim Ledger’s former business colleague Robert John Collins and Geraldton accountant William Mark Dyson, “have applied for probate in the West Australian Supreme Court in Perth, advertising for ‘creditors and other persons’ having claims on the estate to lodge them by 11 August 2008 … to ensure all debts are paid before the estate is distributed….” According to this report by Fife-Yeomans, earlier reports citing Ledger’s uncles, and subsequent reports citing Ledger’s father, which do not include his actual posthumous earnings, “his entire fortune, mostly held in Australian trusts, is likely to be worth up to $20 million.”
On 31 March 2008, stimulating another controversy pertaining to Ledger’s estate, Gemma Jones and Janet Fife-Yeomans published an “Exclusive” report, in The Daily Telegraph, citing Ledger’s uncle Haydn Ledger and other family members, who “believe the late actor may have fathered a secret love child” when he was 17, and stating that “If it is confirmed that Ledger is the girl’s biological father, it could split his multi-million dollar estate between … Matilda Rose … and his secret love child.” A few days later, reports citing telephone interviews with Ledger’s uncles Haydn and Mike Ledger and the family of the other little girl, published in OK! and Us Weekly, “denied” those “claims”, with Ledger’s uncles and the little girl’s mother and stepfather describing them as unfounded “rumors” distorted and exaggerated by the media.
After Ledger’s death, in response to some press reports about his will, filed in New York City on 28 February 2008, and his daughter’s access to his financial legacy, his father, Kim Ledger, said that he considered the financial well-being of Heath’s daughter Matilda Rose an “absolute priority”, whilst also stating that her mother, Michelle Williams, was “an integral part of our family”. He added, “They will be taken care of and that’s how Heath would want it to be”. Some of Ledger’s relatives may be challenging the legal status of his will signed in 2003, prior to his involvement with Williams and the birth of their daughter and not updated to include them, which divides half of his estate between his parents and half among his siblings; they claim that there is a second, unsigned will, which leaves most of that estate to Matilda Rose. Williams’ father, Larry Williams, has also joined the controversy about Ledger’s will as it was filed in New York City soon after his death.
Eleven months after Ledger’s death, on 23 December 2008, Jake Coyle, writing for the Associated Press, announced that “Heath Ledger’s death was voted 2008’s top entertainment story by U.S. newspaper and broadcast editors surveyed by The Associated Press”. He claimed that this was partially a result of the “shock and confusion” surrounding the circumstances of Ledger’s death, as well as due to Ledger’s “legacy […] in a roundly acclaimed performance as the Joker in the year’s biggest box office hit The Dark Knight”.
After a flurry of further media speculation, on 6 August 2008, the US Attorney’s Office in Manhattan closed its investigation into Ledger’s death without filing any charges and rendering moot its subpoena of Olsen. With the clearing of the two doctors and Olsen, and the closing of the investigation because the prosecutors in the Manhattan US Attorney’s Office “don’t believe there’s a viable target,” it is still not known how Ledger obtained the oxycodone and hydrocodone in the lethal drug combination that killed him.
After a flurry of further media speculation, on 6 August 2008, the US Attorney’s Office in Manhattan closed its investigation into Ledger’s death without filing any charges and rendering moot its subpoena of Olsen. With the clearing of the two doctors and Olsen, and the closing of the investigation because the prosecutors in the Manhattan US Attorney’s Office “don’t believe there’s a viable target,” it is still not known how Ledger obtained the oxycodone and hydrocodone in the lethal drug combination that killed him.
Late in February 2008, a DEA investigation of medical professionals relating to Ledger’s death exonerated two American physicians, who practice in Los Angeles and Houston, of any wrongdoing, determining that “the doctors in question had prescribed Ledger other medications – not the pills that killed him.”
While the medications found in the toxicological analysis may be prescribed in the United States for insomnia, anxiety, pain, or common cold symptoms (doxylamine), the vast majority of physicians in the U.S. are extremely reluctant to prescribe multiple benzodiazepines (e.g., diazepam, alprazolam, and temazepam) to a single patient, let alone to prescribe such medications to a patient already taking a mix of oxycodone and hydrocodone. Although the Associated Press and other media reported that police had estimated that Ledger’s death had occurred between 1 pm and 2:45 pm” on 22 January 2008, the Medical Examiner’s Office announced that it would not publicly disclose the official estimated time of death. The official announcement of the cause and manner of Ledger’s death heightened concerns about the growing problems of prescription drug abuse or misuse and combined drug intoxication (CDI).
On 6 February 2008, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of New York released its conclusions. Those conclusions were based on an initial autopsy that occurred 23 January 2008 and a subsequent complete toxicological analysis. The report concluded that Ledger died “as the result of acute intoxication by the combined effects of oxycodone, hydrocodone, diazepam, temazepam, alprazolam and doxylamine”. It added: “We have concluded that the manner of death is accident, resulting from the abuse of prescribed medications.”
What's Heath Ledger Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Heath Ledger Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |