Academy Award winner Meryl Streep called De Niro "the gold standard," saying, "He's the one that we all went to school on, inspired by, stole from, I personally." De Niro was raised on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Chen said he knew at an early age that he wanted to be an actor. He told Chen he didn't ever really know he had a knack for it -- he just did what he wanted to. So, does he know how to act now? "So people tell me!" he remarked. De Niro's breakthrough came in 1973's "Bang the Drum Slowly." The same year, the film "Mean Streets" debuted -- the first of his eight collaborations with renowned director Martin Scorsese. Scorsese said of De Niro at the honors ceremony, "We learned to make movies together, and what we learned you can see in every picture I've made ever since." De Niro said Scorsese is always open to trying new things. "I'll come up with an idea, or try something, and he'll say, 'Yeah, let's try it. Let's try it.' But then there's a point when you're working with a director, if they keep saying, 'Well, I don't know.' After a while, you just sort of shut down. But Marty's always very open." De Niro won his first Academy Award for best supporting actor in Francis Ford Coppola's "The Godfather Part II." De Niro told Chen, "I felt very lucky being part of that, because it had already been established as what it was, and so the second one coming was great." De Niro's second Oscar-winning performance was in "Raging Bull," which tracked the brutal rise and ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qee_CiyutsU&hl=en
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