Movies Tom Hanks' most iconic roles By Rachel Yang Rachel Yang Rachel Yang is a former digital news writer at Entertainment Weekly. She left EW in 2021. EW's editorial guidelines Updated on July 26, 2022 02:46PM EDT Trending Videos Close this video player 01 of 18 Everett Collection (3) To many people, Tom Hanks really is Forrest Gump, Woody from Toy Story, and Fred Rogers. Others might just know him as America's Dad. Since the 1980s, he's played characters that made us laugh, gave us comfort, and challenged our world views—and we're better for it. If the state of the world has gotten you down, why not have a Hanks movie marathon with flicks like Sleepless in Seattle, Philadelphia, and Cast Away in your rotation? Refresh your memory ahead on the best of Hanks, from the Oscar winner's iconic film roles to his work behind the scenes. We all get by with a little Hanks with our friends. 02 of 18 Early TV days Courtesy Everett Collection Hanks memorably guest-starred on a number of sitcoms in the early '80s, including Happy Days, Taxi, and Family Ties. But his breakthrough was his starring role on ABC's Bosom Buddies, a comedy that paired him with Peter Scolari, as businessmen who dressed up as women so they could move into the inexpensive Susan B. Anthony Hotel. Although the buddy comedy ended in 1982 after just two seasons, it put Hanks' charisma and comedy chops on the map. Ian Praiser, a producer on the show, told Rolling Stone, "I thought, 'Too bad he won't be in television for long.' I knew he'd be a movie star in two years." 03 of 18 Splash Everett Collection Praiser was right (mostly). Two years later, Hanks starred with Daryl Hannah in the 1984 rom-com Splash, which was critically and commercially successful. He was chosen over more established stars like Richard Gere and Jeff Bridges, as the producers had liked Hanks' performance on Happy Days and Bosom Buddies. 04 of 18 Big 20th Century Fox Film Corp./ Everett Collection It wasn't until the success of 1988's Big that Hollywood took notice of Hanks as a multidimensional actor. The film, featuring Hanks playing a 12-year-old boy in an adult's body, earned him his first Best Actor Oscar nomination and Golden Globe win. 05 of 18 A League of Their Own Everett Collection Hanks followed Big with more comedies like the middling Punchline and the memorable Turner & Hooch (which spawned a sequel series on Disney+), but his second home run came in 1992 with A League of Their Own. The ensemble film about a women's baseball league boasted a cast including Geena Davis and Madonna, and it's gone on to become an enduring classic (sparking a TV series of its own on Amazon Prime Video). Among many quotable lines from the film, Hanks as the team's grumpy manager Jimmy Dugan gave us the iconic, "There's no crying in baseball!" 06 of 18 Philadelphia Everett Collection With 1993's Philadelphia, many audiences saw Hanks in a more dramatic role for the first time, as AIDS patient Andy Beckett. Hanks' moving portrayal, coupled with Denzel Washington's powerful performance as Beckett's lawyer, helped educate the public on homophobia and the HIV/AIDS crisis. The role would earn Hanks his first Best Actor Oscar. 07 of 18 Forrest Gump Everett Collection A year later, Forrest Gump won us over with its invaluable life lessons from Hanks' lovable titular character. The actor once again nabbed the Oscar for Best Actor, making him only the second man to win the category back to back. 08 of 18 1995's winning double feature Everett Collection (2) Few actors have enjoyed a run like Hanks did in the early 1990s, churning out an astonishingly versatile output that began with A League of Their Own, continued with Philadelphia and Forrest Gump, and peaked in 1995 with the double whammy of Apollo 13 and Toy Story. Hanks, who once had aspirations to be an astronaut, got to live out his fantasy in the epic space film directed by Ron Howard. 09 of 18 Rom-com leading man Courtesy Everett Collection During the 1990s, Hanks starred in two Nora Ephron-directed features opposite Meg Ryan: 1993's Sleepless in Seattle and 1998's You've Got Mail. Both films made over $200 million at the box office, cementing Hanks as the ultimate leading man—appealing in a sensitive, everyman kind of way. Hanks earned a Golden Globe nomination for Sleepless in Seattle the same year he won for Philadelphia. 10 of 18 Behind the scenes force 20th Century Fox/Courtesy Everett Collection While he's most famous for being in front of the camera, the Hollywood legend is also a powerful voice behind the lens. Hanks first made his directorial debut with 1996's That Thing You Do!, a musical comedy film he also penned. Some of his producing credits demonstrate his interest in a wide swath of genres, lending his expertise to such films as My Big Fat Greek Wedding, The Ant Bully, Mamma Mia!, and the HBO series Big Love, through his production company Playtone. 11 of 18 Turn of the millennium Courtesy Everett Collection Hanks in the late-'90s and early-2000s continued to pick film roles that showcased his range. The year 1999 saw Hanks reprise his role as Woody in Toy Story 2 and star in The Green Mile alongside Michael Clarke Duncan. In 2000, Hanks took on the challenging role of a marooned engineer in Robert Zemeckis' Cast Away, garnering his fifth Oscar nomination and fourth Golden Globe win. 12 of 18 Dynamic duo: Hanks and Spielberg Everett Collection Some of Hanks' most memorable projects came out of collaborating with director Steven Spielberg. Arguably the most gripping was the 1998 World War II film Saving Private Ryan, which nabbed star Hanks his fourth Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe, while director Spielberg received his second Oscar win for directing. 13 of 18 Band of Brothers Band of Brothers on HBO. Everett Collection Spielberg and Hanks were behind the lauded 2001 HBO WWII miniseries Band of Brothers, along with its 2010 companion series The Pacific. The duo won Emmys for their work on both limited series, with Hanks winning an additional Emmy for directing an episode of Band of Brothers. 14 of 18 Box office king Everett Collection The 2000s saw Hanks starring in some of his most crowd-pleasing movies. He lent his voice to 2004's The Polar Express, the first all-digital motion capture film, as well as 2006's Cars. That same year, he played Professor Robert Langdon in an adaptation of the popular novel The Da Vinci Code, and he'd go on to reprise his role in 2009's Angels & Demons and 2016's Inferno. 15 of 18 Dramatic roles in the 2010s Courtesy Everett Collection In the 2010s, Hanks embodied a litany of dramatic characters based on real people throughout history. He portrayed the titular captain who's taken hostage by pirates in 2013's Captain Phillips (for which he earned another Golden Globe nom), while 2015 saw Hanks playing lawyer James B. Donovan in the Cold War picture Bridge of Spies. The next year, Clint Eastwood's Sully featured Hanks as hero pilot Chesley Sullenberger, and 2017's The Post starred the actor as Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee and gave him his ninth Globe nod. 16 of 18 A star for the people Steve Granitz/WireImage The name "Tom Hanks" is pretty much synonymous with the nicest guy in Hollywood, and his reputation as a salt-of-the-earth guy may be one of the reasons Americans flock to his movies. Hanks once helped the Girl Scouts sell cookies. Another time, he personally refunded a couple who hated Larry Crowne, a movie he not only starred in, but also directed. Spielberg may have captured Hanks' essence the best, saying if "Norman Rockwell were alive today, he would paint a portrait of Tom." 17 of 18 Hanks as Mister Rogers Courtesy Everett Collection In 2019, Hanks once again portrayed Woody in Toy Story 4, but his most anticipated role of the year was in Marielle Heller's A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood. When Hanks was announced to play beloved TV personality Fred Rogers, a.k.a. Mister Rogers, everyone collectively went, "Yup, that makes sense." Both are seen by audiences as a friend or fatherly figure, and Hanks' role reminded us that, decades into his career, he's not nearly done moving and inspiring us. In addition to scoring a long-overdue sixth Oscar nomination nearly 20 years after Cast Away, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association gave Hanks his 10th Globe nomination for the role and named him the Cecil B. DeMille Award honoree for lifetime achievement. 18 of 18 Loved by fans and respected by his peers John Barr/Liaison Amassing mulitple Oscars, Emmys, and Golden Globes, Hanks has certainly felt the love of his peers in the industry over the years. Perhaps one day he'll even nab the elusive EGOT. After all, Hanks did score a Tony nomination for Lucky Guy—all he's missing is a win, plus a Grammy. On top of the Cecil B. DeMille Award, the Hollywood legend already has an AFI Life Achievement Award (he was the youngest recipient) and was a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2014. We can't wait to see what he does next.