Appearing on
Broadway at the age of thirteen, Clift achieved success on the stage and starred there for 10 years before moving to
Hollywood, debuting in
1948's Red River opposite
John Wayne. In 1958 he turned down
Dean Martin's role in
Rio Bravo, which would have reunited him with Wayne. Clift was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Actor that same year for
The Search. Clift was billed as a new kind of leading man: sensitive, intense and broodingly handsome, the kind of man women would want to take care of. He had a highly successful film career, performing in many Oscar-nominated roles and becoming a matinee idol because of his good looks and sex appeal. His love scenes with
Elizabeth Taylor in
A Place in the Sun (
1951) set a new standard for romance in cinema. His roles in
A Place in the Sun, the
1953 classic
From Here to Eternity and
The Young Lions (
1958) are considered signatures of his career.
Clift and his screen rival,
Marlon Brando who was coincidentally born in the same city - Omaha, Nebraska, were popularly known in Hollywood as the "Golddust Twins" because of their rapid rise to stardom. Clift reportedly turned down the starring roles in
Sunset Boulevard and <i>
East of Eden.