George Clooney’s career to be celebrated at Venice Film Festival

LONDON (Reuters) — Hollywood star and filmmaker George Clooney will be honored with this year’s Venice Film Festival Golden ​Lion for Lifetime Achievement award, organizers announced on Monday.

Clooney, ‌65, is a Venice stalwart and made his first appearance at the film festival nearly three decades ago with “Out of Sight” in 1998.

The two-time ​Oscar-winner’s latest feature “Jay Kelly” premiered at Venice last year ​and he joined Brad Pitt on the festival’s red ⁠carpet for the world premiere of their movie “Wolfs” in 2024.

Clooney ​directed “Suburbicon,” “The Ides of March” and “Good Night, and Good Luck,” all launched ​at Venice and his other appearances include 2013’s festival opener “Gravity,” “The Men Who Stare at Goats” in 2009, “Burn After Reading” in 2008, “Michael Clayton” in 2007 and “Intolerable ​Cruelty” in 2003.

“I’ve had so many extraordinary moments in Venice. ​This festival is without question my favorite and to be given the ‌Golden ⁠Lion is a tremendous honor. It also probably means I’m old, but I’ll take it,” Clooney said in a statement shared by the festival.

Clooney, who shot to stardom with the hit 1990s ​medical drama series “ER”, ​married his ⁠wife Amal in a star-studded party in Venice in 2014.

“In his triple capacity as actor, director, ​and producer, George Clooney is a complete and ​charismatic artist, ⁠impassioned and original, who has transformed a deep vocation into one of the most luminous parabolas of contemporary film,” Venice Film Festival ⁠director ​Alberto Barbera said.

The 83rd edition of ​the Venice Film Festival will run from September 2 to 12, with the line-up ​announced later in July.

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