| 1942 | Saboteur | Cameraman | Uncredited |
| 1957 | Oh, Men! Oh, Women! | Cobbler | |
| 1957 | Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? | Rockwell P. Hunter/Himself/Lover Doll | |
| 1957 | No Down Payment | Jerry Flagg | |
| 1959 | The Mating Game | Lorenzo Charlton | |
| 1959 | Pillow Talk | Jonathan Forbes | |
| 1960 | The Man in the Moon | TV movie | |
| 1960 | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | The King of France | |
| 1960 | Let’s Make Love | Alexander Coffman | |
| 1960 | Hooray for Love | TV movie | |
| 1960 | Open Windows | TV movie | |
| 1961 | Lover Come Back | Peter ‘Pete’ Ramsey | |
| 1962 | Arsenic & Old Lace | Mortimer Brewster | TV movie |
| 1962 | Boys’ Night Out | George Drayton | |
| 1962 | Two Weeks in Another Town | Ad Lib in Lounge | Uncredited |
| 1963 | Island of Love | Paul Ferris | |
| 1964 | 7 Faces of Dr. Lao | Dr. Lao / Merlin / Pan / Abominable Snowman / Medusa / Giant Serpent / Apollonius of Tyana | |
| 1964 | The Brass Bottle | Harold Ventimore | |
| 1964 | Robin and the 7 Hoods | Hood | Uncredited |
| 1964 | Send Me No Flowers | Arnold | |
| 1965 | Fluffy | Prof. Daniel Potter | |
| 1965 | The Alphabet Murders | Hercule Poirot | |
| 1966 | Our Man in Marrakesh | Andrew Jessel | Alternate title: Bang! Bang! You’re Dead! |
| 1969 | Hello Down There | Fred Miller | Alternate title: Sub-A-Dub-Dub |
| 1969 | The Littlest Angel | Democritus | TV movie |
| 1972 | Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask) | The Operator | |
| 1973 | The All-American Boy | Uncredited | |
| 1978 | Kate Bliss and the Ticker Tape Kid | Lord Seymour Devery | TV movie |
| 1979 | Scavenger Hunt | Henry Motley | |
| 1980 | The Gong Show Movie | Himself | |
| 1980 | Foolin’ Around | Peddicord | |
| 1981 | Sidney Shorr: A Girl’s Best Friend | Sidney Shorr | TV movie |
| 1982 | The King of Comedy | Himself | |
| 1984 | My Little Pony | The Moochick (voice) | TV movie |
| 1984 | Off Sides (Pigs vs. Freaks) | Rambaba Organimus | TV movie |
| 1985 | The Fantasy Film Worlds of George Pal | Himself | |
| 1985 | Hitler’s SS: Portrait in Evil | Putzi | TV movie |
| 1986 | My Little Pony: The Movie | The Moochick (voice) | |
| 1986 | Sunday Drive | Uncle Bill | TV movie (The Disney Sunday Movie) |
| 1987 | Lyle, Lyle Crocodile: The Musical – The House on East 88th Street | Narrator / Signor Valenti (voice) | TV movie |
| 1987 | The Gnomes’ Great Adventure | Gnome King / Ghost of the Black Lake (voice) | |
| 1988 | Save the Dog! | Oliver Bishop | TV movie |
| 1988 | The Man in the Brown Suit | Rev. Edward Chicester | Agatha Christie TV movie |
| 1989 | That’s Adequate | Host | Mockumentary |
| 1989 | It Had to Be You | Milton | |
| 1990 | Gremlins 2: The New Batch | Brain Gremlin (voice) | |
| 1991 | The Boss | Narrator (voice) | Short |
| 1991 | Dragon and Slippers | Merlin (voice) | |
| 1993 | The Odd Couple: Together Again | Felix Unger | TV movie |
| 1993 | Fatal Instinct | Judge Skanky | |
| 1996 | How the Toys Saved Christmas | Mr. Grimm (voice) | |
| 2003 | Down with Love | Theodore Banner | |
| 2005 | It’s About Time | Mr. Rosenberg |
Blog Archives
Talia Shire
| 1968 | The Wild Racers | 1st Girlfriend | As Talia Coppola |
| 1970 | The Dunwich Horror | Nurse Cora | Credited as Talia Coppola |
| Maxie | Sandy | Credited as Talia Coppola | |
| 1971 | Gas-s-s-s | Coralee | Credited as Talia Coppola |
| The Christian Licorice Store | Last Party Guest | Credited as Talia Coppola | |
| 1972 | The Godfather | Connie Corleone | |
| The Outside Man | Make-Up Girl | ||
| 1974 | The Godfather Part II | Connie Corleone | |
| 1976 | Rocky | Adrianna “Adrian” Pennino | |
| 1979 | Old Boyfriends | Dianne Cruise | |
| Prophecy | Maggie Verne | ||
| Rocky II | Adrianna “Adrian” Balboa | ||
| 1980 | Windows | Emily Hollander | |
| 1982 | Rocky III | Adrian Balboa | |
| 1985 | Rocky IV | Adrianna “Adrian” Balboa | |
| 1986 | Rad | Mrs. Jones | |
| Hyper Sapien: People from Another Star | Dr. Tedra Rosen | ||
| 1989 | New York Stories | Charlotte | Segment: Life Without Zoe |
| 1990 | Rocky V | Adrianna “Adrian” Balboa | |
| The Godfather Part III | Connie Corleone | ||
| 1991 | Cold Heaven | Sister Martha | |
| 1992 | Bed & Breakfast | Claire | |
| 1993 | Deadfall | Sam | |
| 1997 | A River Made to Drown In | Jaime’s Mother | |
| She’s So Lovely | Restaurant Owner | Uncredited | |
| 1998 | Divorce: A Contemporary Western | Lacey | |
| Can I Play? | Robert | Short film | |
| Caminho dos Sonhos | Ida Stern | ||
| The Landlady | Melanie Leroy | ||
| 1999 | Lured Innocence | Martha Chambers | |
| Palmer’s Pick Up | Mr. Price | ||
| The Black and the White | Tulip Clayton | ||
| 2000 | The Visit | Parole Board Member Marilyn | |
| 2001 | The Whole Shebang | Countess Bazinni | |
| 2002 | Kiss the Bride | Irena Sposato | |
| 2003 | Family Tree | Patricia | Short film |
| Dunsmore | Mildred Green | ||
| 2004 | I Heart Huckabees | Mrs. Silver | |
| 2005 | Pomegranate | Aunt Sophia | |
| 2006 | Rocky Balboa | Adrianna “Adrian” Balboa | Archival footage |
| 2007 | Homo Erectus | Ishbo’s Mother | |
| 2008 | Looking for Palladin | Rosario | |
| Dim Sum Funeral | Viola Gruber | ||
| My Father’s Will | aka My Secret Billionaire | ||
| 2009 | The Deported | Dina | |
| 2010 | |||
| Minkow | Carole Minkow | ||
| Scratching the Surface | Mrs. Shifman | ||
| 2011 | The Return of Joe Rich | Gloria Neiderman | |
| 2013 | Palo Alto | Mrs. Ganem | |
| 2016 | Dreamland | Victoria | |
| 2020 | Working Man | Iola Parkes |
Vera Miles
| 1950 | When Willie Comes Marching Home | Laughing Sergeant’s date | Uncredited |
| 1951 | Two Tickets to Broadway | Showgirl | Uncredited |
| 1952 | For Men Only | Kathy Hughes | |
| The Rose Bowl Story | Denny Burke | ||
| 1953 | The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms | Trailer Commentator | Uncredited |
| The Charge at Feather River | Jennie McKeever | ||
| So Big | Schoolgirl | Uncredited | |
| 1954 | Pride of the Blue Grass | Linda | a.k.a. Prince of the Blue Grass |
| 1955 | Tarzan’s Hidden Jungle | Jill Hardy | |
| Wichita | Laurie McCoy | ||
| 1956 | The Searchers | Laurie Jorgensen | |
| 23 Paces to Baker Street | Jean Lennox | ||
| Autumn Leaves | Virginia Hanson | ||
| The Wrong Man | Rose Balestrero | ||
| 1957 | Beau James | Betty Compton | |
| 1959 | Web of Evidence | Lena Anderson | a.k.a. Beyond This Place |
| The FBI Story | Lucy Ann Hardesty | ||
| A Touch of Larceny | Virginia Killain | ||
| 1960 | Five Branded Women | Daniza | |
| Psycho | Lila Crane | ||
| 1961 | The Lawbreakers | Angela Walsh | |
| Back Street | Liz Saxon | ||
| 1962 | The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance | Hallie Stoddard | |
| 1964 | A Tiger Walks | Dorothy Williams | |
| 1965 | Those Calloways | Lydia “Liddy” Calloway | |
| 1966 | One of Our Spies Is Missing | Madame Raine De Sala | |
| Follow Me, Boys! | Vida Downey | ||
| 1967 | The Spirit Is Willing | Kate Powell | |
| Gentle Giant | Ellen Wedloe | ||
| 1968 | Sergeant Ryker | Ann Ryker | |
| Kona Coast | Melissa Hyde | ||
| The Green Berets | Mrs. Lee Kirby | Scenes deleted | |
| Mission Batangas | Joan Barnes | ||
| Hellfighters | Madelyn Buckman | ||
| 1969 | It Takes All Kinds | Laura Ring | |
| 1970 | The Wild Country | Kate Tanner | |
| 1972 | Molly and Lawless John | Molly Parker | |
| 1973 | One Little Indian | Doris McIver | |
| 1974 | The Castaway Cowboy | Henrietta MacAvoy | |
| 1977 | Run for the Roses | Clarissa Stewart | a.k.a. The Thoroughbreds |
| 1982 | BrainWaves | Marian Koonan | |
| 1983 | Psycho II | Lila Loomis | |
| 1984 | The Initiation | Frances Fairchild | |
| 1985 | Into the Night | Joan Caper | |
| 1995 | Separate Lives | Dr. Ruth Goldin |
Jimmy Smits
Jimmy L. Smits (born July 9, 1955) is an American actor. He is best known for playing attorney Victor Sifuentes on the 1980s-1990s legal drama L.A. Law, NYPD Detective Bobby Simone on the 1990s-2000s police drama NYPD Blue, Matt Santos on the political drama The West Wing, and for appearing in Switch (1991), My Family (1995), The Jane Austen Book Club (2007), and In the Heights (2021). He also appeared as Bail Organa in the Star Wars franchise and as ADA Miguel Prado in Dexter. From 2012 to 2014, he joined the main cast of Sons of Anarchy as Nero Padilla. Smits also portrayed Elijah Strait in the NBC drama series Bluff City Law.
Early life and education[edit]
Smits was born in Brooklyn, New York. Smits’s father, Cornelis Leendert Smits (1929–2015), was from Paramaribo, Suriname, and was of Dutch descent.[1][2][3] Smits’s mother, Emilina (née Pola; 1930–2015), was Puerto Rican, born in Peñuelas.[4][5] He and his two sisters, Yvonne and Diana, grew up in a working-class neighborhood.[6][7] When he was ten years old, he moved to Puerto Rico for a couple of years. Until then he did not speak Spanish. He described attending a Spanish-only school as “jarring” and “traumatic.”[8]
Smits was raised in a strict, devout Roman Catholic family. He identifies as Puerto Rican[6][7][9] and frequently visits Puerto Rico.
Smits was an athlete in his youth. He graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Brooklyn College in 1980 and an MFA from Cornell University in 1982.[10]
Career[edit]

One of Smits’s early roles was playing Sonny Crockett‘s original partner on the first episode of Miami Vice in 1984. In the first five minutes of the episode he falls victim to a car bomb.
Beginning in 1986, Smits played Victor Sifuentes in the first five seasons of the NBC television Steven Bochco legal drama L.A. Law,[11] for which he was nominated for six Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series, winning in 1990.[12]
Additionally, Smits played a repairman on Pee-wee’s Playhouse, and he starred in the multigenerational story of a Chicano family in the film My Family (1995), alongside Edward James Olmos and Jennifer Lopez.
One of Smits’s most acclaimed roles was that of Detective Bobby Simone on the ABC television program NYPD Blue, in which he starred from 1994 to 1998. He received several Emmy nominations for his performance on the series and was reunited with his former co-star Dennis Franz at the 2016 Emmy Awards presentation. He won the ALMA award twice.

Smits was scheduled to host the 2001 Latin Grammy Awards broadcast on September 11, 2001. It was canceled due to continuous news coverage and out of respect for the victims of the terrorist attacks earlier that day. He did host a non-televised press conference to announce the winners.
Smits appeared as Senator Bail Organa of Alderaan in Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (2002) and Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005), in which the character becomes Princess Leia‘s adoptive father. He reappeared as Bail Organa in the game Star Wars: The Force Unleashed (2008) and the spinoff movie Rogue One (2016). He later reprised the role for Obi-Wan Kenobi (2022).
Smits played the role of Congressman Matt Santos of Houston, Texas, in the final two seasons of the NBC television drama The West Wing,[13] joining fellow L.A. Law alumnus John Spencer. His character eventually ran for and won the U.S. presidency.
In Dexter season 3, Smits played the role of Miguel Prado, an assistant district attorney who befriends the title character.[14] Smits was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series for the role.
Additionally, Smits portrayed the character Alex Vega in the CBS TV series Cane, which aired from September 25, 2007, to December 18, 2007, and was subsequently canceled by the network due to the 2007 Screen Writer’s Guild strike.
Smits joined the Sons of Anarchy cast in season 5 as Nero Padilla, a high-level pimp who refers to himself as a “companionator”. He builds a relationship with Gemma Teller Morrow (Katey Sagal) and forms an alliance and mentorship with Gemma’s son, the central character Jax Teller (Charlie Hunnam).[15]
Smits starred in The Get Down, a musical drama television series which debuted in 2016 on Netflix.[16]
On February 25, 2019, news outlets reported that Smits was cast as Elijah Strait in NBC drama series Bluff City Law[17] and it was picked up to series on May 6, 2019.[18] Bluff City Law brings Smits back to TV courtrooms on a steady basis for the first time in over a quarter century since his role in L.A. Law.[19]
In 2021, Smits played Kevin Rosario in the musical film In the Heights.[20]
Stage performances[edit]
In the mid-1980s, Smits acted in numerous performances at the Hangar Theatre in Ithaca, New York, Cornell’s summer repertory program. In 1982 at the Hangar his roles included Max in Cabaret, Paul in Loose Ends, and the lead in Pudd’nhead Wilson. Smits has participated in the Public Theater‘s New York Shakespeare Festival, playing the role of Duke Orsino in Twelfth Night in 2002 and Benedick in Much Ado about Nothing in 2004. In 2003, Smits starred in the Broadway production of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Anna in the Tropics, by Nilo Cruz, performed at the Royale Theatre. From November 2009 to February 2010, he appeared opposite Christine Lahti, Annie Potts, and Ken Stott in the critically lauded Broadway play God of Carnage, replacing Jeff Daniels. In December 2012 through March 2013, he appeared in Chicago in The Motherfucker with the Hat, at Steppenwolf Theatre Company.
Filmography[edit]
Film[edit]
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1986 | Running Scared | Julio Gonzales | |
| 1987 | Hotshot | Stars Team Member | |
| 1987 | The Believers | Tom Lopez | |
| 1989 | Old Gringo | Gen. Tomas Arroyo | |
| 1990 | Vital Signs | Dr. David Redding | |
| 1991 | Switch | Walter Stone | |
| 1991 | Fires Within | Nestor | |
| 1993 | Gross Misconduct | Justin Thorne | |
| 1995 | My Family | Jimmy Sanchez | |
| 1995 | The Last Word | Actor (Martin) | |
| 1997 | Murder in Mind | Peter Walker | |
| 1997 | Lesser Prophets | Mike | |
| 2000 | Adventures in Wild California | Narrator | |
| 2000 | The Million Dollar Hotel | Geronimo | |
| 2000 | Price of Glory | Arturo Ortega | |
| 2000 | Bless the Child | Agent John Travis | |
| 2002 | Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones | Senator Bail Organa | |
| 2005 | Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith | ||
| 2007 | The Jane Austen Book Club | Daniel Avila | |
| 2009 | Backyard | Mickey Santos | Also known as El Traspatio |
| 2010 | Mother and Child | Paco | |
| 2016 | Rogue One: A Star Wars Story | Senator Bail Organa | |
| 2017 | Who We Are Now | Carl | |
| 2020 | The Tax Collector | Wizard | |
| 2021 | In the Heights | Kevin Rosario |
Brian Cox
Brian Denis Cox CBE (born 1 June 1946) is a Scottish actor. A classically trained Shakespearean actor, he is known for leading performances on stage and television, as well as supporting roles in film. Among his numerous accolades include two Laurence Olivier Awards, a Primetime Emmy Award, and a Golden Globe Award as well as a nomination for a British Academy Television Award. In 2003, he was appointed to the Order of the British Empire at the rank of Commander.[1] Empire Magazine awarded him the Empire Icon Award in 2006, and the UK Film Council named him one of the top 10 powerful British film stars in Hollywood in 2007.[2]
Cox trained at the Dundee Repertory Theatre before becoming a founding member of Royal Lyceum Theatre. He went on to train as a Shakespearean actor, starring in numerous productions with the Royal National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company, where he gained recognition for his portrayal of King Lear. Cox received two Laurence Olivier Awards for Best Actor for his roles in Rat in the Skull (1984) for the Royal Court and Titus Andronicus (1988). He received two more Olivier Award nominations for Misalliance (1986) and Fashion (1988).
Known as a character actor in film, he played Robert McKee in Spike Jonze‘s Adaptation (2002) and William Stryker in X2 (2003). For his starring role in L.I.E. (2001), he received an Independent Spirit Award nomination. His other notable films include Manhunter (1986), Rob Roy (1995), Braveheart (1995), Rushmore (1998), Super Troopers (2001), The Bourne Identity (2002), 25th Hour (2002), Troy (2004), The Bourne Supremacy (2004), Red Eye (2005), Zodiac (2007), Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009), Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011), and Churchill (2017).
Cox won the Primetime Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Limited Series for his portrayal of Hermann Göring in the television film Nuremberg (2001). The following year he guest starred on the NBC sitcom Frasier earning his second Emmy nomination in 2002. He portrayed Jack Langrishe in the HBO series Deadwood. He starred as Logan Roy on the HBO series Succession (2018–2023), for which he won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series and was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series.[3]
Early life and education[edit]
Cox was born on 1 June 1946 in Dundee, Scotland as the youngest of five children.[4][5] He is from a working-class Roman Catholic family of Irish and Scottish descent.[6][7] His mother, Mary Ann Guillerline (née McCann), was a spinner who worked in the jute mills and suffered several nervous breakdowns during Cox’s childhood.[4] His father, Charles McArdle Campbell Cox, was a police officer and later a shopkeeper, and died of pancreatic cancer when Cox was eight years old.[4][8] Cox was brought up by his three elder sisters, including Betty, with whom Cox has remained close.[9]
In Dundee, Cox attended St Mary’s Forebank Primary School and St Michael’s Junior Secondary School, which he left at the age of 15. After working at Dundee Repertory Theatre for a few years, he began his training at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art at age 17, graduating in 1965.[10]
Acting career[edit]
Theatre[edit]
1961–1979: Early work[edit]
Brian Cox began his acting career at age 14 at Dundee Repertory Theatre in 1961 and then as one of the founding members of the Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh, performing in its first show, The Servant O’ Twa Maisters, in October 1965.[11] From 1966, he worked at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre for two years, where he played the title role in Peer Gynt (1967) and made his West End debut in June 1967 as Orlando in As You Like It at the Vaudeville Theatre.[12]
1980s: Royal National Theatre[edit]
Cox is an accomplished Shakespearean actor, spending seasons with both the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal National Theatre in the 1980s and 1990s. In 1983, he portrayed the Duke of Burgundy opposite Laurence Olivier who played title role of King Lear. In 1984, he played the Royal Ulster Constabulary officer Inspector Nelson in the Royal Court‘s production of Rat in the Skull. He was subsequently awarded that year’s Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor in a New Play.[13] He made his Broadway debut in February 1985 as Edmund Darrell in Eugene O’Neill‘s Strange Interlude at the Nederlander Theatre for which he received his first British Theatre Association Drama Award for Best Actor.[2] In May that year, he made his off-Broadway debut, reprising his role as Inspector Nelson, in Rat in the Skull at the Public Theater.[14] He received two additional Laurence Olivier nominations for Misalliance (1984) and for Fashion (1988).[2]
He won his second Laurence Olivier Award, this time as Best Actor in a Revival, for his performance as the title character in Titus Andronicus (1988). Cox later said that he considers his performance in Titus Andronicus the greatest he has ever given on stage.[15] His performance as Petruchio in The Taming of The Shrew (1987) also garnered positive reviews and won him another British Theatre Association Drama Award for Best Actor.[16][2]
1990s: King Lear and St. Nicholas[edit]
Cox returned from some years teaching and directing at the Moscow Arts Theatre School to tour with the Royal National Theatre worldwide, delivering a highly acclaimed performance as the title role in King Lear (1990-1991).[11][17] His account of the emotional and physical difficulties that came with playing King Lear’s all-consuming role was detailed in The Lear Diaries (1995) which he authored. King Lear is one of Shakespeare‘s most difficult roles, and Cox’s portrayal broke new ground in the understanding of this most enigmatic figure.[18]
In 1995, he directed Open Air Theatre‘s chilling adaptation of Richard III which was well received by critics. During the same season, he also appeared in one of the theatre’s productions, The Music Man, as Professor Harold Hill.[19][20]
In 1997, he starred in Conor McPherson‘s St. Nicholas at the Bush Theatre in London, and in 1998 returned to the off-Broadway stage reprising his role for Primary Stages, where he won a Lucille Lortel Award and earned a Drama Desk and an Outer Critics Circle nomination for his New York performance.[21][2] In the same year, he played Marc in the Broadway production of Art.[14]
2000–2019: Return to Broadway[edit]
In 2000, Cox reunited with award-winning playwright Conor McPherson on The Royal Court Theatre‘s production of Dublin Carol in which he starred as grim alcoholic undertaker John Plunkett. In 2004, he played the title character in Uncle Varick for the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh. In 2005, he starred in The Ride Down Mt. Morgan in Los Angeles for the Los Angeles Theatre Works.[20]
From 2006 to 2007, he starred as Max at London’s West End production of Tom Stoppard’s Rock ‘n Roll, a role he reprised on Broadway until 2008.[2][21] In 2011, Cox appeared on Broadway opposite in a revival of Jason Miller‘s That Championship Season.[22] His portrayal of Jack in The Weir at the Donmar Theatre in April 2013 is reprised at Wyndham’s Theatre in January 2014.[23] In Fall 2015, Cox starred in a new production of Waiting for Godot, for Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh’s 50th anniversary.[2] In 2016, he became co-artistic director of the Mirror Theater Ltd.[24] Cox returned to the Broadway stage in 2019 to star as Lyndon B. Johnson in Robert Shenkkan’s The Great Society at the Vivian Beaumont Theater.[14] In 2020, he directed the UK premiere of Joshua Sobol‘s Sinners — The English Professor.[25] Cox has also previously directed I Love My Life, Mrs. Warren’s Profession, The Philanderer, The Master Builder, The Crucible, and Julius Caesar on stage.[2][25]
Film and television[edit]
1965–1989: Early work[edit]
Cox made his first television appearance as Nelson in an episode of The Wednesday Play in 1965 and made one-off appearances in Redcap, ITV Playhouse, and The Gamblers before taking a lead role in The Year of the Sex Olympics in 1968. His first film appearance was as Leon Trotsky in Nicholas and Alexandra in 1971.[14] In 1978 he played King Henry II of England in the acclaimed BBC2 drama serial The Devil’s Crown, then starred in many other television dramas.
In 1986, he portrayed Hannibal Lecter in Manhunter, the character’s first appearance on film.[26]
1990–1999: Career breakthrough[edit]
In 1990, Cox portrayed Andrew Neil in Secret Weapon based on Mordechai Vanunu‘s life story. In the same year, he guest-starred as Father Amedy in the comedy series Perfect Scoundrels and starred as police investigator Kerrigan in the political thriller Hidden Agenda.[27] In 1991, he played the role of Owen Benjamin, the closeted father of a gay man, in the BBC production of David Leavitt‘s novel, The Lost Language of Cranes, which is set in the 1980s.[28] For his performance he was nominated as Best Actor at the 1993 BAFTA TV Awards.[29] He also played Geoffrey Harrison in the ITV thriller Red Fox based on Gerald Seymour‘s international best-seller.[30] In 1992, he appeared in another ITV adaptation as Carl May in The Cloning of Joanna May based on Fay Weldon‘s sci-fi novel.[31] He also appeared as Stefan Szabo in the first episode of the fifth season of Van der Valk. He played the title role in the short film The Cutter and “The Director” in BBC’s anthology series of classic and contemporary plays Performance.[32] He also starred as Carlton Heard in Deceptions and as Edward Hoyland in The Big Battalions, a series about three religious families of differing faith.[33]
In 1993, he appeared as spymaster Major Hogan in two episodes of Sharpe, and as Brother Shaw in Sean’s Show.[34] He played P.O. Garvey in BBC’s anthology series Scene featuring plays and documentaries originally broadcast for educational purposes. In the same year, he was seen in an episode of Inspector Morse, where he portrayed Michael Steppings, a retired bookmaker whose daughter is in a permanent coma.[35] In 1994, he appeared alongside Kevin Spacey as Angus Mcleague in Iron Will.[36] He portrayed Aethelwine alongside Christian Bale and Hellen Mirren in Royal Deceit, an adaptation of the Danish legend of Prince Amleth.[37] He also played the role of Colonel Grushko, ‘a policeman who sees greed and rapacity in Russia’s new mood’, in Grushko, a British-made crime drama set in Russia.[38] He then starred in The Negotiator as Charlie King, a “street copper” who had a heart attack.
He shot to superstardom in the mid-1990s thanks to roles in the likes of Rob Roy as Killearn and Braveheart as Argyle Wallace in 1995.[14][39] His performance in the former earned him a BAFTA Scotland Award nomination for Best Actor.[40] In 1996, he starred with Helen McRory as Judge Freisler in Witness Against Hitler which tells the true story of a Prussian intelligence officer and aristocrat who, with his fellow devout Christians, plotted to assassinate Hitler.[41] In the same year he played Lyman Earl Collier, a murderous CEO in Chain Reaction.[42] He also appeared with Steven Seagal in The Glimmer Man as the CIA superior Mr Smith, and with Samuel L. Jackson in The Long Kiss Goodnight as Nathan Waldman.[43][44]
Cox made a guest appearance in the 1997 Red Dwarf episode “Stoke Me a Clipper“, as a medieval king in a virtual reality game.[45] In the same year, he appeared alongside Morgan Freeman in the neo-noir psychological thriller Kiss the Girls based on James Patterson‘s best-selling novel.[46] He also played Nye Bevan in the drama Food for Ravens and ranking IRA member Joe Hamill in the Irish sports drama The Boxer alongside Daniel Day-Lewis.[47] In 1998, he appeared as police captain Jeremiah Cassidy in Desperate Measures, Uncle Vladimir in the romantic comedy Merchants of Venus, Clayton Blackstone in HBO’s neo-noir film Poodle Springs, and in the drama Family Brood.[48][49] In the same year he appeared alongside Bill Murray in Wes Anderson‘s Rushmore as the school headmaster Dr. Nelson Guggenheim.[50] The film is preserved by the Library of Congress in 2016 due to its cultural, historical, and aesthetic significance.[51] In 1999, he appeared opposite Owen Wilson as postal worker Doug Durwin in the thriller The Minus Man.[52] He also played Sean Wallace in The Corruptor alongside Chow Yun-Fat and Mark Wahlberg, and appeared as Gary Wheeler in the sports drama For Love of the Game.[53][54] His New York theatre credits include St. Nicholas (1999), which earned him a Drama Desk Award nomination.[2]
2000–2005: Franchise films[edit]
In 2000, Cox portrayed Lord Morton in Longitude, a dramatisation of Dava Sobel‘s book. He starred as the title character in The Invention of Dr. Morel, who invents a VR machine as a duplicate of the woman he loved. He also starred opposite Jonny Lee Miller as Inspector McDunn in Complicity, and as Sidney McLoughlin in the romantic comedy Mad About Mambo. He won an Emmy Award as Best Supporting Actor and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award as Best Actor for his portrayal of Hermann Göring in Nuremberg.[55][56] He appeared in the Irish drama Saltwater as George Beneventi, a chip-shop-owning father troubled by loan sharks.
In 2001, he played the fatherly police Captain O’Hagan in Super Troopers. In the same year, he received critical acclaim for his performance as the paedophile Big John Harrigan in Michael Cuesta‘s L.I.E., winning a Satellite Award for Best Actor in Motion Picture Drama, and receiving nominations for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Lead Actor and the AFI Award for Featured Male Actor of the Year.[57][58][59][60] In Strictly Sinatra, he played mob enforcer Chisolm who helps an aspiring musician passionate on Frank Sinatra. He also portrayed Baron de Breteuil in The Affair of the Necklace based on the diamond necklace incident that fuelled dissent against the French monarchy and led to the French Revolution.
In 2002, Cox appeared in A Shot at Glory as Rangers manager Martin Smith. He starred as Cyr in Bug in which a diverse group is propelled to a common fate by a series of cause-and-effect chain reactions. He played Jim Morris, Sr. in the sports drama The Rookie, based on the true story of Jim Morris. In the same year, he guest-starred as Harry Moon in two episodes of the critically acclaimed series Frasier for which he would receive an Emmy nomination as Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series.[61] He then starred as corrupt CIA official Ward Abbott in the blockbuster film The Bourne Identity, opposite Matt Damon. He appeared as Michael O’Mara in The Biographer, and also starred as Richard Morgan in the supernatural horror thriller The Ring, a remake of the 1998 Japanese film. It was one of the highest grossing horror remakes, paving the way for other English-version horror remakes. He played Edward Norton‘s father James Brogan in 25th Hour, and also appeared in Spike Jonze‘s Adaptation as the real-life screenwriting teacher, Robert McKee, giving advice to Nicolas Cage in both his roles as Charlie Kaufman and Charlie’s fictional twin brother, Donald. He shared a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination as part of the ensemble cast of the latter.[62]
In 2003, he played Tobias in The Reckoning, a murder mystery drama set in the medieval period. He also played the villain William Stryker in X2: X-Men United and Captain Oakes in the direct-to-video crime thriller Sin. In 2004, Cox played an alternate, villainous version of King Agamemnon opposite Brad Pitt in Troy. He also reprised his role as Ward Abbott in The Bourne Supremacy, the second instalment of the Bourne franchise. In the short film Get the Picture, he played Harry Sondheim, a journalist who doubts the guilt of four suspected terrorists. He portrayed King Lear in episode 4 of season 6 of French and Saunders, BBC’s sketch comedy series as satire to popular culture. He was honoured at the 2004 BAFTA Scotland Awards with an Outstanding Achievement Award, and at the 2004 Great Scot Awards with a Lifetime Achievement Award.[63][64]
In 2005, Cox starred as Robert Smith in Blue/Orange, a BBC film adaptation of Joe Penhall‘s play exploring race, mental illness, and modern British life. He played Alec Hewett, patriarch of the wealthy family in Woody Allen‘s psychological thriller Match Point. He also played Rachel McAdams‘ father Joe Reisert in Red Eye. In the biographical drama The Strange Case of Sherlock Holmes & Arthur Conan Doyle, he portrayed Doyle‘s mentor Dr. Joseph Bell. The television film explored how Doyle created Holmes and how he applied Bell’s techniques in his novels. In the sports comedy The Ringer, he played Gary Barker who suggests to his nephew to enter and fix a Special Olympics to solve their financial woes.
2006–2010[edit]
In 2006, Cox played Dr Hunt in A Woman in Winter which explores the nature of obsessive love. In The Flying Scotsman, based on the life of Scottish amateur cyclist Graeme Obree, he portrayed Douglas Baxter, a boatyard owner and minister who befriends the atheist cyclist. He appeared as Jack Langrishe in the HBO series Deadwood. In ITV‘s The Outsiders, he played Gabriel, the head of the spy agency. In the comedy drama Running with Scissors, based on Augusten Burroughs‘ best-selling memoir about his childhood, he portrayed Dr Finch, the psychiatrist of Burroughs’s mother and patriarch of an eccentric family with whom Burrough was sent to live.
In 2007, Cox portrayed prominent US lawyer Melvin Belli in David Fincher‘s mystery thriller Zodiac, based on Robert Graysmith‘s book which follows the manhunt for the Zodiac Killer. He also played old Angus in the fantasy drama The Water Horse, Mr Kreeg in the anthology horror Trick ‘r Treat, Daniel Tennant in Shoot on Sight based on Operation Kratos, and Drosselmeyer in The Secret of the Nutcracker.
In 2008 Cox starred as Avery Ludlow in Red, and also played institutionalised convict Frank Perry, the protagonist in Rupert Wyatt‘s film, The Escapist (2008), appearing alongside Joseph Fiennes, Dominic Cooper, and Damian Lewis.[65] For the latter, he won that year’s BAFTA Scotland Award for Best Acting Performance.[66] In 2009, he appeared as Lewis Serrocold in the ITV series Marple loosely based on Agatha Christie’s books and short stories. He starred as Philip Van Doren in the Ridley Scott produced Tell-Tale, a film based on the short story The Tell Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe.[67] He starred as the legendary criminal godfather Ozzy in The Take, and portrayed King Vesper Abaddon, the former king of Carmel in Kings loosely based on the biblical King David and set in a modern absolute monarchy. He also starred as the short-tempered bartender Jacques in the Icelandic film The Good Heart, and as Burt Macey in the crime drama Lost & Found. He also appeared as Dennis in The Day of the Triffids based on John Wyndham‘s best-selling post-apocalyptic novel.[68]
In 2010, he played Reverend Kalahan, cult leader and pastor whose death is the backdrop of the story in the crime thriller As Good as Dead. He portrayed former Speaker of the House of Commons Michael Martin in the television film On Expenses. He also starred as Wally, an old rogue who fulfills his old friend’s dying wish for a sea burial in the black comedy All at Sea. In the same year, Cox played Laura Linney‘s father in the Showtime series The Big C,[69] and appeared as Ivan Simonov in RED.[citation needed]
2011–2017[edit]
In 2011, he starred as Captain Rudolph Sharp in The Sinking of the Laconia, BBC Two‘s television film about the sinking of the British ocean liner RMS Laconia during World War II.[70] He co-starred with Gerald Butler and Ralph Fiennes as a quietly reasonable senator in Coriolanus, a modern British film adaptation of the Shakespeare tragedy.[71] He portrayed Baron William d’Aubigny, a lordly wool merchant against King John‘s tyranny in Ironclad, a war film set after the ratification of the Magna Carta.[72] In the American thriller The Key Man, he shared the screen with Hugo Weaving as Irving, a sociopathic con man and a Shakespearian actor. He then starred in The Veteran as a British intelligence officer who recruits a war veteran to track a female contact infiltrating a group of suspected terrorists.[73] He also starred as John Landon in the science-fiction film Rise of the Planet of the Apes.[74] He appeared as Glover Boyd, the retired policeman father of the protagonist in the Canadian biographical drama Citizen Gangster.[75]
In 2012, Cox appeared in the Australian drama The Straits as the patriarch of the Montebello family crime syndicate, Harry Montebello.[76] He appeared as Raymond Huggins, an associate of two corrupt businessmen brothers, in the political satire film The Campaign, and as Bill Ball in A Touch of Cloth, a parody of British police procedural dramas.[77] He starred in Blood as Lenny Fairburn, a retired cop and father of two fraternal detectives played by Paul Bettany and Stephen Graham. He also appeared as an old man in the short film I Missed My Mother’s Funeral.[78]
In January 2013, Cox played the title character in the British comedy series Bob Servant. He said he played Servant, the creation of Dundonian author Neil Forsyth, based on memories of his late brother Charlie.[79] He played Ivan Simanov in RED 2, reprising his role from the 2010 original film.[80] In Blumenthal, he played the title role as the legendary playwright Harold Blumenthal who made a career out of parodying his family and died laughing at his own joke.[81] He starred in Believe as the legendary Scottish football manager Sir Matt Busby who returns from retirement to coach a group of young working-class boys.[82] He also starred in the psychological thriller Mindscape (original title Anna) as Sebastian, a superior in top memory detective agency Mindscape, which employs psychics to assist in solving criminal cases.[83] He portrayed FBI director J. Edgar Hoover in The Curse of Edgar, an original docudrama based on the best-selling novel by Marc Dugain about Hoover’s battle to keep power away from the Kennedys.[84] In November 2013, he starred in the BBC television docudrama, An Adventure in Space and Time, about the creation of the British science-fiction series Doctor Who.[85] Cox portrayed Canadian television executive Sydney Newman, the driving force behind the creation of the iconic programme.[85] He appeared in Tooned, an animated cartoon about Formula One racing, as an old mechanic, and as Magnus Bain in the crime drama series Shetland (2013-2014) which was initially based on Ann Cleeves‘ novels.[86][87]
In 2014, Cox appeared in The Anomaly as Lloyd Langham, Ian Somerhalder‘s father in the sci-fi thriller, who conducted nightmarish experiments on the protagonist.[88] He also appeared in the documentary The Great War: The People’s Story as Reverend Andrew Clark, and in BBC’s Cold War spy thriller series The Game as an MI5 superior codenamed “Daddy”.[89][90] He also reprised his role in the second series of Bob Servant.[91]
In 2015, he starred in The Slap, an American adaptation of the Australian series based on Christos Tsiolka‘s novel, as Manolis Apostolou, the father of the main character played by Peter Sarsgaard.[92] He appeared in the sci-fi comedy Pixels as a military heavyweight starring alongside Adam Sandler, and in the Canadian revisionist western film Forsaken as a local gang leader.[93][94] He also starred in the short film Killing Thyme as a grumpy old man with a squandered allotment and a death wish.
In 2016, he starred in the British-Hungarian comedy The Carer as Sir Michael Gifford, an ageing Shakespearian actor, and in BBC‘s historical drama series adaptation of Leo Tolstoy‘s novel War & Peace as General Mikhail Kutuzov.[95][96] He was nominated at the BAFTA Scotland Awards for Best Actor for his portrayal in the former.[97] He also received a Career Achievement Award at the Stony Brook Film Festival for the same role.[98] He appeared in season 3 of the horror drama series Penny Dreadful as Jared Talbot, a ruthless, powerful American rancher and the estranged father of Josh Hartnett‘s character.[99] He also appeared in the sci-fi thriller Morgan as Jim Bryce, and starred alongside Emile Hirsch in The Autopsy of Jane Doe as Tommy.[100][101] In the first series of the Italian-British historical drama series Medici, he portrayed Bernardo Guadagni, an officer of the Signoria.[102]
In 2017, he appeared as Marlon Brando in Urban Myths, a biographical comedy drama series in which each episode features a story about popular culture icons.[103] In June, Cox starred in the critically acclaimed historical war drama Churchill, playing the title role as Winston Churchill.[104]
2018–2023: Succession[edit]
In April 2018, Cox reprised his role of Captain John O’Hagen in Super Troopers 2. Early drafts of the script excluded Cox’s character from the movie, with reservations on whether Cox would want to return or not for the sequel.[105] It was later announced he would return, Cox himself joking that it was on the condition that he receive a “big action scene with rockets and explosions”.[106] In May, he starred in The Etruscan Smile as Rory MacNeil, a dying man who reunites with his estranged son.[107][108] He starred in the first season of Succession, HBO‘s satirical drama which premiered in June to positive reviews, as Logan Roy, the patriarch of the dysfunctional Roy family and the billionaire founder of the global media and entertainment conglomerate Waystar RoyCo.[109] In November, he starred as Henry in James Franco‘s drama The Pretenders.[110]
In June 2019, he played William “Bill” Erwin in Strange But True, a thriller adaptation of John Searles‘ novel.[111] In August, he starred as Shane in the romantic comedy Remember Me.[112] In the same month, the second season of Succession premiered in which Cox reprised his role, earning him the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama and a nomination for the Emmy Award for Best Lead Actor in a Drama Series.[113][114][115][116] The series garnered critical acclaim receiving numerous awards and nominations, winning the British Academy Television Award for Best International Programme, the Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Drama, and the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series.[117][118][119][120] In the same year, he played Father Reilly in the comedy drama The Last Right.[121]
In 2020, Cox starred as Gilles in the American neo-noir thriller Last Moment of Clarity.[122] In The Bay of Silence, he played Milton Hunter, a powerful art dealer and stepfather to a celebrated artist.[123] In 2021, he played Paul Rivers in the horror film Separation.[124]
In July 2021, it was announced that Cox would join the cast of the family drama Prisoner’s Daughter which tells the story of an ex-con trying to reconnect with his daughter and grandson.[125] The film was released at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival to mixed critical reviews, with Cox’s performance praised as one of the highlights.[126]
Upcoming projects[edit]
In November 2020, it was announced that Cox is joining the cast of the “audio movie series” Unsinkable told in 11 20-minute episodes based on the oil tanker MV San Demetrio, set on fire by a German battleship in 1940; the crew was ordered to abandon ship, but reboarded the burning vessel two days later and with no charts or radio sailed her to Britain.[127] He will also appear in Wittgenstein’s Poker as Bertrand Russell, and in Skelly.[128]
In August, he signed on to executive produce Mending the Line and star as a Vietnam veteran who teaches a young injured soldier how to fly fish hoping it would help him cope with his physical and emotional trauma.[129] In September, it was announced that he will star in the political thriller The Independent which centers on a young journalist who teams up with her idol (Cox) to uncover a major conspiracy.[130]
Brian Cox will be starring in the upcoming movie The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim. [131]
Audio and voice work[edit]
Film and television[edit]
Cox narrated in the short film Zulu 9 (2001), the short film The Legend of Loch Lomond (2001), the docudrama Smallpox (2002), and the short film The Martyr’s Crown (2007). He provided live-action narration for the television miniseries Terry Pratchett’s The Colour of Magic (2008).[132] He voiced Malcolm Young in Exit Humanity (2011) which follows a man’s battle with the walking dead in post-Civil War America. In 2017, he narrated the multi award-winning short film Kubrick by Candlelight which takes place behind the scenes of Stanley Kubrick‘s film Barry Lyndon.[133] In 2018, he provided the opening narration for the horror film Dark Highlands.[134] In 2019, he was The Voice in a A Modern Magician, a supernatural black comedy short film based on William Olaf Stapledon‘s story exploring mental health, morality, perception, and desire.[135]
He was the voice of the Ood Elder in part one of the Doctor Who Christmas special, “The End of Time” (2009), the narrator in the pseudo-scientific documentary The Revelation of the Pyramids, supporting antisemitic and negationnist conspiracy theories (2010),[136][137] Bob Servant in Neil Forsyth‘s The Bob Servant Emails: Series 1 (2012),[138] The Mastermind in the action series M.I. High (2013), Alan Watts in the award-winning sci-fi romantic drama Her (2013), Chorus in Arkangel Shakespeare‘s dramatised recording of Shakespeare’s Henry V (2014),[139] and Death in Good Omens (2019).[140]
From 2020 to 2021, he voice-acted in the sci-fi series From Now as Hunter, the formerly identical brother of Richard Madden‘s character.[141] He voiced Augustus in Neil Gaiman‘s The Sandman: Act II (2021), the second instalment of Audible‘s New York Times best-selling original.[142] He is set to star in Lawrence: After Arabia, a retelling of the events that led to the enigmatic death of the famed T. E. Lawrence.[143]
Radio[edit]
His radio work include roles in multiple BBC/BBC Radio 4 productions such as the title character in the series McLevy (1999–2016), based on the real-life detective James McLevy,[144] Alec Leamas in The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (2009),[145] John Bernard Books in the dramatisation of The Shootist (2018),[139] and a talking head in the impressions show Dead Ringers: Series 18 (2018).[146] He also narrated in the epic full-cast drama The Stuarts (2019) and in Alexander: The Story of a Legendary Leader (2020).[139]
Books[edit]
Cox narrated the abridged audiobook version of John Aubrey‘s Brief Lives (1995), Joseph Conrad‘s novellas Youth and Heart of Darkness (1996), and Sir Walter Scott‘s Ivanhoe (2001). He read the unabridged audiobook version of Bram Stoker‘s Dracula (1997), Ruth Rendell‘s To Fear a Painted Devil (2014), William McIlvanney‘s The Dark Remains book series, and his own autobiography Putting the Rabbit in the Hat (2021). He also voiced in Murder Most Foul (Vol. 1), a collection of classic crime short fiction, and in its sequel Murder Most Foul (Vol. 2) both in 2003.[139]
He has collaborated with HarperCollins on an audiobook of Tolkien’s epic poem The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún (2010),[147] and on the abridged audiobook version of Gerald Seymour‘s 2011 works including The Fighting Man, The Heart of Danger, The Journeyman Tailor, The Glory Boys, Red Fox, Killing Ground, Condition Black, and Field of Blood. In 2012, he read Penguin Classics‘ audiobook version of H.G. Wells‘ The Time Machine, and in 2014, The Human Table by Marvin Cohen in WordTheatre‘s Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses (Vol. 2). He narrated The Gospel of John (2014), the first ever word for word film adaptation of all four gospels, and in religious audiobooks for The New Testament such as RSV-CE‘s Truth & Life Dramatized Audio Bible (2020) and The Word of God Audio Bible (2021).[139]
Animation[edit]
Cox also worked in animation, providing the voice of Macbeth in Shakespeare: The Animated Tales (1992), Earl Garver in Superman: The Animated Series (1997), Pariah Dark in Danny Phantom (2005), General Hemmer in Battle for Terra (2007), Spanners in Agent Crush (2008), the Green Dragon in the direct-to-video film Scooby-Doo! and the Samurai Sword (2009), Action 12 Reporter in Wes Anderson‘s Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009), and Conrad and Crunch in the UK and US version of Bob the Builder: Mega Machines (2017). Cox narrated the first episode of the first series of Animated Tales of the World (2000). In 2018, he voiced Mr Widdershins, a gentleman whose life is pampered by automated machines, in Widdershins. He voices the English version of Niander Wallace Sr. in the Japanese-American animated series Blade Runner: Black Lotus (2021) based on the Blade Runner franchise.
Video games[edit]
Cox has also been involved in the video game industry. He voice-acted the ruthless emperor Scolar Visari in Killzone (2004), and its two sequels, Killzone 2 (2009) and Killzone 3 (2011). He was also the voice of Lionel Starkweather, the main antagonist in Manhunt (2003), a video game for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2 and Xbox.[148] In Electronic Arts’ reboot of Syndicate (2012), Cox played Jack Denham, the “ruthless power behind the boardroom throne” of the malicious corporation EuroCorp. The game was released on PlayStation 3, PC and Xbox 360.[149]
Television advertisements[edit]
He provided the voiceover for Virgin TV‘s cross-platform advertising campaign promoting its new streamlined service, Virgin TV Anywhere, in January 2017.[150] Cox has also voiced TV ads for McDonald’s since 2020.[151][152] In April 2021, he provided voiceovers for TV ads for the launch of the online property portal Boomin.[153][154]
Soundtrack[edit]
Cox also performed soundtracks in a few of his projects. In the series Sharpe in the episode “Sharpe’s Rifles” (1993), he sang Here’s Adieu to all Judges and Juries. In L.I.E. (2001), he performed Danny Boy and Harrigan Song. He also sang The Butcher Boy in The Escapist.
| 1971 | Nicholas and Alexandra | Leon Trotsky | |
| 1975 | In Celebration | Steven Shaw | |
| 1986 | Manhunter | Dr. Hannibal Lecktor | |
| 1990 | Hidden Agenda | Peter Kerrigan | |
| 1993 | The Eye of Vichy | Narrator | Documentary |
| 1994 | Iron Will | Angus McTeague | |
| 1994 | Prince of Jutland | Æthelwine of Lindsey | |
| 1995 | Rob Roy | Killearn | |
| 1995 | Braveheart | Argyle Wallace | |
| 1996 | Chain Reaction | Lyman Earl Collier | |
| 1996 | The Glimmer Man | Mr. Smith | |
| 1996 | The Long Kiss Goodnight | Dr. Nathan Waldman | |
| 1997 | Kiss the Girls | Chief Hatfield | |
| 1997 | The Boxer | Joe Hamill | |
| 1997 | Food for Ravens | Aneurin Bevan | Profile drama |
| 1998 | Desperate Measures | Captain Jeremiah Cassidy | |
| 1998 | Rushmore | Dr. Nelson Guggenheim | |
| 1999 | The Minus Man | Doug Durwin | |
| 1999 | The Corruptor | Sean Wallace | |
| 1999 | For Love of the Game | Gary Wheeler | |
| 2000 | Complicity | Inspector McDunn | |
| 2000 | Mad About Mambo | Sidney McLoughlin | |
| 2000 | A Shot at Glory | Martin Smith | |
| 2000 | Saltwater | George Beneventi | |
| 2001 | Super Troopers | Captain John O’Hagen | |
| 2001 | L.I.E. | Big John Harrigan | |
| 2001 | Strictly Sinatra | Chisolm | |
| 2001 | The Affair of the Necklace | Minister Baron de Breteuil | |
| 2002 | Bug | Cyr | |
| 2002 | The Rookie | Jim Morris Sr. | |
| 2002 | The Bourne Identity | Ward Abbott | |
| 2002 | The Ring | Richard Morgan | |
| 2002 | Adaptation. | Robert McKee | |
| 2002 | 25th Hour | James Brogan | |
| 2002 | The Trials of Henry Kissinger | Narrator | Documentary |
| 2003 | X2 | William Stryker | |
| 2003 | The Reckoning | Tobias | |
| 2003 | Sin | Captain Oakes | |
| 2004 | Troy | Agamemnon | |
| 2004 | The Bourne Supremacy | Ward Abbott | |
| 2004 | Get the Picture | Harry Sondheim | Short film |
| 2005 | Match Point | Alec Hewett | |
| 2005 | Red Eye | Joe Reisert | |
| 2005 | The Ringer | Gary Barker | |
| 2006 | A Woman in Winter | Dr. Hunt | |
| 2006 | The Flying Scotsman | Douglas Baxter | |
| 2006 | Running with Scissors | Dr. Finch | |
| 2007 | Zodiac | Melvin Belli | |
| 2007 | Battle for Terra | General Hemmer | Voice |
| 2007 | The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep | Old Angus | |
| 2007 | Trick ‘r Treat | Mr. Kreeg | |
| 2007 | Shoot on Sight | Daniel Tennant | |
| 2008 | Red | Avery Ludlow | |
| 2008 | The Escapist | Frank Perry | |
| 2008 | Agent Crush | Spanners | Voice |
| 2009 | Scooby-Doo! and the Samurai Sword | Green Dragon | Voice Direct-to-DVD |
| 2009 | Tell-Tale | Detective Van Doren | |
| 2009 | Fantastic Mr. Fox | Dan Peabody | Voice |
| 2009 | The Good Heart | Jacques | |
| 2010 | Wide Blue Yonder | Wally | |
| 2010 | Red | Ivan Simanov | |
| 2010 | As Good as Dead | Reverend Kalahan | |
| 2011 | Coriolanus | Menenius Agrippa | |
| 2011 | Ironclad | William d’Aubigny | |
| 2011 | The Veteran | Gerry | |
| 2011 | Rise of the Planet of the Apes | John Landon | |
| 2011 | Citizen Gangster | Glover Boyd | |
| 2011 | Exit Humanity | Malcolm Young | Voice |
| 2011 | The Revelation of the Pyramids | Narrator | Documentary[1] |
| 2012 | The Campaign | Raymond Huggins | |
| 2012 | My City | The Journalist | Short film |
| 2012 | Blood | Lanny Fairburn | |
| 2013 | Red 2 | Ivan Simanov | |
| 2013 | Blumenthal | Harold | |
| 2013 | Mindscape | Sebastian | |
| 2013 | Her | Alan Watts | Voice |
| 2013 | Believe | Sir Matt Busby | |
| 2014 | The Anomaly | Dr. Langham | |
| 2015 | Pixels | Admiral Porter | |
| 2015 | Forsaken | James McCurdy | |
| 2015 | Killing Thyme | Norman | Short film |
| 2016 | Morgan | Jim Bryce | |
| 2016 | The Carer | Sir Michael Gifford | |
| 2016 | The Autopsy of Jane Doe | Tommy Tilden | |
| 2017 | Bob the Builder: Mega Machines | Conrad / Crunch | Voices |
| 2017 | Churchill | Winston Churchill | |
| 2017 | Kubrick By Candlelight | Narrator | Short film |
| 2018 | Super Troopers 2 | Captain John O’Hagan | |
| 2018 | The Etruscan Smile | Rory MacNeil | Also released under the title, Rory’s Way[2] |
| 2018 | The Pretenders | Henry | |
| 2019 | Remember Me | Shane | |
| 2019 | Strange but True | Bill Erwin | |
| 2019 | The Last Right | Father Reilly | |
| 2020 | John Rebus: The Lockdown Blues | John Rebus | Short film |
| 2020 | Last Moment of Clarity | Gilles | |
| 2020 | The Bay of Silence | Milton | |
| 2021 | Separation | Paul Rivers | |
| 2022 | Prisoner’s Daughter | Max | |
| 2022 | The Independent | Nick Booker | |
| 2022 | Mending the Line | Ike Fletcher |
Blythe Danner
Blythe Katherine Danner (born February 3, 1943)[1] is an American actress. Accolades she has received include two Primetime Emmy Awards for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series for her role as Izzy Huffstodt on Huff (2004–2006), and a Tony Award for Best Actress for her performance in Butterflies Are Free on Broadway (1969–1972). Danner was twice nominated for the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for portraying Marilyn Truman on Will & Grace (2001–06; 2018–20), and the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or Movie for her roles in We Were the Mulvaneys (2002) and Back When We Were Grownups (2004). For the latter, she also received a Golden Globe Award nomination.
Danner played Dina Byrnes in Meet the Parents (2000) and its sequels Meet the Fockers (2004) and Little Fockers (2010). She has collaborated on several occasions with Woody Allen, appearing in three of his films: Another Woman (1988), Alice (1990), and Husbands and Wives (1992). Her other notable film credits include 1776 (1972), Hearts of the West (1975), The Great Santini (1979), Mr. and Mrs. Bridge (1990), The Prince of Tides (1991), To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar (1995), The Myth of Fingerprints (1997), The X-Files (1998), Forces of Nature (1999), The Love Letter (1999), The Last Kiss (2006), Paul (2011), Hello I Must Be Going (2012), I’ll See You in My Dreams (2015), and What They Had (2018).
Danner is the sister of Harry Danner and the widow of Bruce Paltrow. She is the mother of actress Gwyneth Paltrow and director Jake Paltrow.
| 1972 | To Kill a Clown | Lily Frischer | |
| 1972 | 1776 | Martha Jefferson | |
| 1974 | Lovin’ Molly | Molly Taylor | |
| 1975 | Hearts of the West | Miss Trout | |
| 1976 | Futureworld | Tracy Ballard | Saturn Award for Best Actress |
| 1979 | The Great Santini | Lillian Meechum | |
| 1983 | Inside the Third Reich | Margarete Speer | |
| 1983 | Man, Woman and Child | Sheila Beckwith | |
| 1985 | Guilty Conscience | Louise Jamison | |
| 1986 | Brighton Beach Memoirs | Kate Jerome | |
| 1988 | Another Woman | Lydia | |
| 1990 | Mr. and Mrs. Bridge | Grace Barron | |
| 1990 | Alice | Dorothy Smith | |
| 1991 | The Prince of Tides | Sally Wingo | |
| 1992 | Husbands and Wives | Rain’s Mother | |
| 1995 | Napoleon | Mother Dingo | |
| 1995 | Homage | Katherine Samuel | |
| 1995 | To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar | Beatrice | |
| 1997 | The Myth of Fingerprints | Lena | |
| 1997 | Mad City | Mrs. Banks | |
| 1998 | The Proposition | Syril Danning | |
| 1998 | No Looking Back | Claudia’s Mother | |
| 1998 | The X-Files | Jana Cassidy | |
| 1999 | Forces of Nature | Virginia Cahill | |
| 1999 | The Love Letter | Lillian MacFarquhar | |
| 1999 | Things I Forgot to Remember | Mrs. Bradford | |
| 2000 | Meet the Parents | Dina Byrnes | Nominated – Blockbuster Entertainment Award for Favorite Supporting Actress in a Comedy |
| 2001 | The Invisible Circus | Gail O’Connor | |
| 2003 | Three Days of Rain | Woman in Cab | |
| 2003 | Sylvia | Aurelia Plath | |
| 2004 | Howl’s Moving Castle | Madam Suliman | Voice role (English dub) |
| 2004 | Meet the Fockers | Dina Byrnes | |
| 2006 | Stolen | Isabella Stewart Gardner | |
| 2006 | The Last Kiss | Anna | Nominated – Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture |
| 2008 | The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 | Greta Randolph | |
| 2009 | Waiting for Forever | Miranda Twist | |
| 2009 | The Lightkeepers | Mrs. Bascom | |
| 2010 | Little Fockers | Dina Byrnes | |
| 2011 | Paul | Tara Walton | |
| 2011 | What’s Your Number? | Ava Darling | |
| 2011 | Detachment | Mrs. Perkins | |
| 2012 | The Lucky One | Ellie Green | |
| 2012 | Hello I Must Be Going | Ruth Minsky | |
| 2014 | Murder of a Cat | Edie Moisey | |
| 2015 | I’ll See You in My Dreams | Carol Petersen | Nominated – Gotham Award for Best Actress Nominated – Satellite Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture |
| 2015 | Tumbledown | Linda Jespersen | |
| 2018 | What They Had | Ruth O’Shea | |
| 2018 | Hearts Beat Loud | Marianne Fisher | |
| 2018 | The Chaperone | Mary O’Dell | |
| 2019 | The Tomorrow Man | Ronnie Meisner | |
| 2019 | Strange but True | Gail Erwin |
Television[edit]
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1970 | George M! | Agnes Nolan Cohan | Television film |
| 1971 | Dr. Cook’s Garden | Janey Rausch | Television film |
| 1972 | Columbo | Janice Benedict | Episode: “Etude in Black” |
| 1973 | Adam’s Rib | Amanda Bonner | 13 episodes |
| 1974 | F. Scott Fitzgerald and ‘The Last of the Belles’ | Zelda Fitzgerald | Television film |
| 1974 | Sidekicks | Prudy Jenkins | Television film |
| 1975 | Great Performances | Nina Zarechnaya | Episode: “The Seagull” |
| 1976 | M*A*S*H | Carlye Breslin Walton | Episode: “The More I See You” |
| 1976 | A Love Affair: The Eleanor and Lou Gehrig Story | Eleanor Twitchell Gehrig | Television film |
| 1976 | Great Performances | Alma Winemiller | Episode: “Eccentricites of a Nightingale” |
| 1977 | The Court-Martial of George Armstrong Custer | Mrs. Custer | Television film |
| 1978 | Are You in the House Alone? | Anne Osbourne | Television film |
| 1979 | Too Far to Go | Joan Barlow Maple | Television film |
| 1979 | You Can’t Take It with You | Alice Sycamore | Television film |
| 1982 | Inside the Third Reich | Margarete Speer | Television film |
| 1983 | In Defense of Kids | Ellen Wilcox | Television film |
| 1984 | Guilty Conscience | Louise Jamison | Television film |
| 1984 | Helen Keller: The Miracle Continues | Anne Sullivan | Television film |
| 1988–1989 | Tattingers | Hillary Tattinger | 13 episodes |
| 1989 | Money, Power, Murder | Jeannie | Television film |
| 1990 | Judgment | Emmeline Guitry | Television film |
| 1992 | Getting Up and Going Home | Lily | Television film |
| 1992 | Cruel Doubt | Bonnie Van Stein | Television film |
| 1992 | Tales from the Crypt | Margaret | Episode: “Maniac at Large” |
| 1992 | Lincoln | Elizabeth Todd Edwards | Television film |
| 1993 | Tracey Ullman Takes on New York | Eleanor Levine | Television film |
| 1993 | Great Performances | Narrator | Episode: “The Maestros of Philadelphia” |
| 1994 | Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All | Bianca Honicut | Television film |
| 1994 | Leave of Absence | Elisa | Television film |
| 1997 | Thomas Jefferson | Martha Jefferson | Television film |
| 1997 | A Call to Remember | Paula Tobias | Television film |
| 1998 | From the Earth to the Moon | Narrator | Episode: “Le voyage dans la lune” |
| 1998 | Saint Maybe | Bee Bedloe | Television film |
| 1998 | Murder She Purred: A Mrs. Murphy Mystery | Mrs. Murphy | Television film |
| 2001–2006, 2018–2020 |
Will & Grace | Marilyn Truman | 14 episodes Nominated – Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series (2005–2006) |
| 2002 | We Were the Mulvaneys | Corinne Mulvaney | Television film Nominated – Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie |
| 2002 | Presidio Med | Dr. Harriet Lanning | 3 episodes |
| 2003 | Two and a Half Men | Evelyn Harper | Episode: “Most Chicks Won’t Eat Veal” |
| 2004 | Back When We Were Grownups | Rebecca Holmes Davitch | Television film Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film Nominated – Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie |
| 2004–2006 | Huff | Isabelle Huffstodt | 25 episodes Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series (2005–2006) |
| 2009 | Medium | Louise Leaming | Episode: “A Taste of Her Own Medicine” |
| 2009 | Nurse Jackie | Maureen Cooper | Episode: “Tiny Bubbles” |
| 2011–2012 | Up All Night | Dr. Angie Chafin | 3 episodes |
| 2015 | The Slap | Virginia Latham | Episode: “Anouk” |
| 2016 | Madoff | Ruth Madoff | 4 episodes |
| 2016 | Odd Mom Out | Jill’s Mom | Episode: “Fasting and Furious” |
| 2017 | Gypsy | Nancy | 4 episodes |
| 2018 | Patrick Melrose | Nancy Valance | Mini-series |
| 2021 | American Gods | Demeter | 2 episodes |
| 2021 | Ridley Jones | Sylvia Jones | 12 episodes |
Harry Morgan
Harry Morgan (born Harry Bratsberg; April 10, 1915 – December 7, 2011) was an American actor and director whose television and film career spanned six decades. Morgan’s major roles included Pete Porter in both December Bride (1954–1959) and Pete and Gladys (1960–1962); Officer Bill Gannon on Dragnet (1967–1970); Amos Coogan on Hec Ramsey (1972–1974); and his starring role as Colonel Sherman T. Potter in M*A*S*H (1975–1983) and AfterMASH (1983–1985). Morgan also appeared as a supporting player in more than 100 films.
Early life and career[edit]
Morgan was born Harry Bratsberg in Detroit, the son of Hannah and Henry Bratsberg.[1][2][3] His parents were of Swedish and Norwegian ancestry.[4] In his interview with the Archive of American Television, Morgan spelled his Norwegian family surname as “Brasburg”.[2] Many sources, however, including some family records, list the spelling as “Bratsburg”. According to one source, when Morgan’s father Henry registered at junior high school, “the registrar spelled it Brasburg instead of Bratsberg. Bashful Henry did not demur.”[5]
Morgan was raised in Muskegon, Michigan, and graduated from Muskegon High School in 1933, where he achieved distinction as a statewide debating champion.[6] He originally aspired to a J.D. degree, but began acting while a junior at the University of Chicago in 1935.
He began acting on stage under his birth name, in 1937, joining the Group Theatre in New York City formed by Harold Clurman, Cheryl Crawford, and Lee Strasberg in 1931.[7][8] He appeared in the original production of the Clifford Odets play Golden Boy, followed by a host of successful Broadway roles alongside such other Group members as Lee J. Cobb, Elia Kazan, John Garfield, Sanford Meisner, and Karl Malden. Morgan also did summer stock at the Pine Brook Country Club located in the countryside of Nichols, Connecticut.
Film work[edit]
Morgan made his screen debut (originally using the name “Henry Morgan”) in the 1942 movie To the Shores of Tripoli. His screen name later became “Henry ‘Harry’ Morgan” and eventually Harry Morgan, to avoid confusion with the popular humorist of the same name.
In the same year, Morgan appeared in the movie Orchestra Wives as a young man pushing his way to the front of a ballroom crowd with his date to hear Glenn Miller‘s band play. A few years later, still credited as Henry Morgan, he was cast in the role of pianist Chummy MacGregor in the 1954 biopic The Glenn Miller Story.
Morgan continued to play a number of significant roles on the big screen in such films as The Ox-Bow Incident (1943) with Henry Fonda, Wing and a Prayer (1944), A Bell for Adano (1945), State Fair (1945), Dragonwyck (1946) with Walter Huston, The Gangster (1947), The Big Clock (1948) with Charles Laughton, The Well (1951), High Noon (1952) with Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly, Torch Song (1953) with Joan Crawford, and several films in the 1950s for director Anthony Mann starring James Stewart, including Bend of the River (1952), Thunder Bay (1953), The Glenn Miller Story (1954), The Far Country (1955), and Strategic Air Command (1955). In his later film career, he appeared in Inherit the Wind (1960) with Spencer Tracy and Fredric March, How the West Was Won (1962) (as Ulysses S. Grant) with John Wayne, John Goldfarb, Please Come Home! (1965) with Peter Ustinov, Frankie and Johnny (1966) with Elvis Presley and Donna Douglas, The Flim-Flam Man (1967) with George C. Scott, Support Your Local Sheriff! (1969) with James Garner, Support Your Local Gunfighter (1971) also with James Garner, Snowball Express (1972) with Keenan Wynn, The Shootist (1976) with John Wayne and Lauren Bacall, The Wild Wild West Revisited (1979) with Robert Conrad, and as Captain Gannon in the theatrical film version of Dragnet (1987) with Dan Aykroyd and Tom Hanks.
- To the Shores of Tripoli (1942) as Mouthy
- The Loves of Edgar Allan Poe (1942) as Ebenezer Burling
- The Omaha Trail (1942) as Henchman Nat
- Orchestra Wives (1942) as Cully Anderson
- Crash Dive (1943) as Brownie
- The Ox-Bow Incident (1943) as Art Croft
- Happy Land (1943) as Anton ‘Tony’ Cavrek
- The Eve of St. Mark (1944) as Pvt. Shevlin
- Roger Touhy, Gangster (1944) as Thomas J. ‘Smoke’ Reardon
- Wing and a Prayer (1944) as Ens. Malcolm Brainard
- Gentle Annie (1944) as Cottonwood Goss
- A Bell for Adano (1945) as Capt. N. Purvis
- State Fair (1945) as Barker
- From This Day Forward (1946) as Hank Beesley
- Johnny Comes Flying Home (1946) as Joe Patillo
- Dragonwyck (1946) as Klaas Bleecker
- Somewhere in the Night (1946) as Bath Attendant (uncredited)
- It Shouldn’t Happen to a Dog (1946) as Gus Rivers
- Crime Doctor’s Man Hunt (1946) as Jervis (uncredited)
- The Gangster (1947) as Shorty
- The Big Clock (1948) as Bill Womack
- All My Sons (1948) as Frank Lubey
- Race Street (1948) as Hal Towers
- The Saxon Charm (1948) as Hermy
- Moonrise (1948) as Billy Scripture
- Yellow Sky (1948) as Half Pint
- Down to the Sea in Ships (1949) as Britton
- The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend (1949) as Hoodlum (uncredited)
- Madame Bovary (1949) as Hyppolite
- Strange Bargain (1949) as Lt. Richard Webb
- Red Light (1949) as Rocky
- Holiday Affair (1949) as Police Lieutenant
- Hello Out There (1949) as The Young Gambler
- Outside the Wall (1950) as Garth
- The Showdown (1950) as Rod Main
- Dark City (1950) as Soldier
- Belle Le Grand (1951) as Abel Stone
- When I Grow Up (1951) as Father Reed (modern)
- Appointment with Danger (1951) as George Soderquist
- The Highwayman (1951) as Tim
- The Well (1951) as Claude Packard
- The Blue Veil (1951) as Charles Hall
- Boots Malone (1952) as Quarter Horse Henry
- Scandal Sheet (1952) as Biddle
- Bend of the River (1952) as Shorty
- My Six Convicts (1952) as Dawson
- High Noon (1952) as Sam Fuller
- What Price Glory? (1952) as Sgt. Moran (uncredited)
- Big Jim McLain (1952) as Narrator (voice, uncredited)
- Apache War Smoke (1952) as Ed Cotten
- Toughest Man in Arizona (1952) as Verne Kimber
- Stop, You’re Killing Me (1952) as Innocence
- Thunder Bay (1953) as Rawlings
- Arena (1953) as Lew Hutchins
- Champ for a Day (1953) as Al Muntz
- Torch Song (1953) as Joe Denner
- The Glenn Miller Story (1954) as Chummy
- Prisoner of War (1954) as Maj. O.D. Hale
- The Forty-Niners (1954) as Alf Billings
- About Mrs. Leslie (1954) as Fred Blue
- The Far Country (1954) as Ketchum
- Strategic Air Command (1955) as Sgt. Bible (flight engineer)
- Not as a Stranger (1955) as Oley
- Pete Kelly’s Blues (1955) (uncredited)
- The Bottom of the Bottle (1956) as Felix – Barkeep
- Backlash (1956) as Tony Welker
- Operation Teahouse (1956) as Himself
- UFO (1956) as “Red Dog 1” (voice)
- Star in the Dust (1956) as Lew Hogan
- The Teahouse of the August Moon (1956) as Sgt. Gregovich
- Under Fire (1957) as Sgt. Joseph C. Dusak
- It Started with a Kiss (1959) as Charles Meriden
- The Mountain Road (1960) as Sgt. ‘Mike’ Michaelson
- Inherit the Wind (1960) as Judge Mel Coffey
- Cimarron (1960) as Jesse Rickey
- How the West Was Won (1962) as Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
- John Goldfarb, Please Come Home (1965) as Secretary of State Deems Sarajevo
- Frankie and Johnny (1966) as Cully
- What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? (1966) as Maj. Pott
- The Flim-Flam Man (1967) as Sheriff Slade
- Star Spangled Salesman (1968) as TV Cop
- Support Your Local Sheriff! (1969) as Olly Perkins
- Viva Max! (1969) as Chief of Police Sylvester
- The Barefoot Executive (1971) as E.J. Crampton
- Support Your Local Gunfighter! (1971) as Taylor
- Scandalous John (1971) as Sheriff Pippin
- Snowball Express (1972) as Jesse McCord
- Charley and the Angel (1973) as The Angel formerly Roy Zerney
- The Apple Dumpling Gang (1975) as Homer McCoy
- The Shootist (1976) as Marshall Thibido
- Maneaters Are Loose! (1978) as Toby Waites
- The Cat from Outer Space (1978) as General Stilton
- The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again (1979) as Maj. T.P. Gaskill
- The Wild Wild West Revisited (TV, 1979) as Robert T. Malone
- More Wild Wild West (TV, 1980) as Robert T. Malone
- Scout’s Honor (TV, 1980) as Mr. Briggs
- The Flight of Dragons (1982) as Carolinus (voice)
- Sparkling Cyanide (TV, 1983) as Captain Kemp
- Dragnet (1987) as Gannon
- 14 Going on 30 (TV, 1988) as Uncle Herb
- The Incident (TV, 1990) as Judge Bell
- Against Her Will: An Incident in Baltimore (TV, 1992) as Judge Bell
- Incident in a Small Town (TV, 1994) as Judge Bell
- Wild Bill: Hollywood Maverick (1996)
- Family Plan (1997) as Sol Rubins
- Crosswalk (1999) as Dr. Chandler
Harry Dean Stanton
Harry Dean Stanton (July 14, 1926 – September 15, 2017) was an American actor, musician, and singer.[1] In a career that spanned more than six decades, Stanton played supporting roles in films including Cool Hand Luke (1967), Kelly’s Heroes (1970), Dillinger (1973), The Godfather Part II (1974), Alien (1979), Escape from New York (1981), Christine (1983), Repo Man (1984), One Magic Christmas (1985), Pretty in Pink (1986), The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), Wild at Heart (1990), The Straight Story (1999), The Green Mile (1999), The Man Who Cried (2000), Alpha Dog (2006) and Inland Empire (2006). He had rare lead roles in Wim Wenders‘ Paris, Texas (1984) and in Lucky (2017).
Early life[edit]
Stanton was born in West Irvine, Kentucky, to Sheridan Harry Stanton, a tobacco farmer and barber, and Ersel (née Moberly), a cook.[2] His parents divorced when Stanton was in high school; both later remarried.[3]
Stanton had two younger brothers and a younger half-brother. His family had a musical background. Stanton attended Lafayette High School[3] and the University of Kentucky in Lexington where he performed at the Guignol Theatre under the direction of theater director Wallace Briggs,[4] and studied journalism and radio arts. “I could have been a writer,” he told an interviewer for a 2011 documentary, Harry Dean Stanton: Crossing Mulholland, in which he sings and plays the harmonica.[5] “I had to decide if I wanted to be a singer or an actor. I was always singing. I thought if I could be an actor, I could do all of it.” Briggs encouraged him to leave the university and become an actor. He studied at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, California, where his classmates included his friends Tyler MacDuff and Dana Andrews.[6]
During World War II, Stanton served in the United States Navy, including a stint as a cook aboard the USS LST-970, a tank landing ship, during the Battle of Okinawa.[7][8]
Career[edit]
Stanton appeared in indie and cult films (Two-Lane Blacktop, Cockfighter, Escape from New York, Repo Man) as well as mainstream Hollywood productions, including Cool Hand Luke, The Godfather Part II, Alien, Red Dawn, Alpha Dog, Pretty in Pink, Stephen King’s Christine, and The Green Mile. He was a favorite actor of the directors Sam Peckinpah, John Milius, David Lynch, and Monte Hellman, and was also close friends with Francis Ford Coppola and Jack Nicholson. He was best man at Nicholson’s wedding in 1962.[9]
He made his first television appearance in 1954 in Inner Sanctum. He played Stoneman in the Have Gun – Will Travel 1959 episode “Treasure Trail”, credited under Dean Stanton. He made his film debut in 1957 in the Western Tomahawk Trail.[2] He appeared (uncredited) as a complaining BAR man at the beginning of the 1959 film Pork Chop Hill starring Gregory Peck. Then in 1962, he had a very small part in How the West Was Won, portraying one of Charlie Gant’s (Eli Wallach) gang. The following year he had a minor role as a poetry-reciting beatnik in The Man from the Diner’s Club. Early in his career, he took the name Dean Stanton to avoid confusion with the actor Harry Stanton.[2]
His breakthrough part[10] came with the lead role in Wim Wenders‘ Paris, Texas. Playwright Sam Shepard, who wrote the film’s script, had spotted Stanton at a bar in Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1983 while both were attending a film festival in that city. The two fell into conversation. “I was telling him I was sick of the roles I was playing,” Stanton recalled in a 1986 interview. “I told him I wanted to play something of some beauty or sensitivity. I had no inkling he was considering me for the lead in his movie.”[10] Not long afterward, Shepard phoned him in Los Angeles to offer Stanton the part of the protagonist, Travis,[10] “a role that called for the actor to remain largely silent … as a lost, broken soul trying to put his life back together and reunite with his estranged family after having vanished years earlier.”[11]
Stanton was a favorite of film critic Roger Ebert, who said that “no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad.” However, Ebert later admitted that Dream a Little Dream (1989), in which Stanton appeared, was a “clear violation” of this rule.[12]
He had eight appearances between 1958 and 1968 on Gunsmoke, four on the network’s Rawhide, three on The Untouchables, two on Bonanza, and an episode of The Rifleman. He later had a cameo in Two and a Half Men (having previously appeared with Jon Cryer in Pretty in Pink and with Charlie Sheen in Red Dawn). Beginning in 2006, Stanton featured as Roman Grant, the manipulative leader/prophet of a polygamous sect on the HBO television series Big Love.[9]
Stanton also occasionally toured nightclubs as a singer and guitarist, playing mostly country-inflected cover tunes.[8] He appeared in the Dwight Yoakam music video for “Sorry You Asked”,[13] portrayed a cantina owner in a Ry Cooder video for “Get Rhythm”,[13] and participated in the video for Bob Dylan‘s “Dreamin’ of You“.[13] He worked with a number of musical artists, Dylan, Art Garfunkel, and Kris Kristofferson[14] among them, and played harmonica on The Call’s 1989 album Let the Day Begin.[15]

In 2010, Stanton appeared in an episode of the TV series Chuck, reprising his role in the 1984 film Repo Man. In 2011, the Lexington Film League created an annual festival, the Harry Dean Stanton Fest, to honor Stanton in the city where he spent much of his adolescence.[3][nb 1] In 2012, he had a brief cameo in The Avengers and a key role in the action-comedy Seven Psychopaths. He also appeared in the Arnold Schwarzenegger action film The Last Stand (2013). Stanton was the subject of a 2013 documentary, Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction, directed by Sophie Huber and featuring film clips, interviews with collaborators (including Wenders, Shepard, Kris Kristofferson, and David Lynch), and Stanton’s singing.
In 2017, he appeared in Twin Peaks: The Return, a continuation of David Lynch’s 1990–91 television series.[2] Stanton reprised his role as Carl Rodd from Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me.[2] His last on-screen appearances are as a sheriff in Frank & Ava and a starring role as a 90-year-old man nicknamed “Lucky” and his struggles against encroaching old age in Lucky.
Death[edit]
Stanton died aged 91 on September 15, 2017 from heart failure, at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California.[20][2][9] His cremated remains were scattered in a cemetery in Nicholasville, Kentucky.[citation needed]
In popular culture[edit]
Stanton was celebrated in “I Want That Man“, a 1989 song recorded by Deborah Harry which begins with the line “I want to dance with Harry Dean”.[21] In her memoir, Harry writes that Stanton heard the song and arranged to meet her at a club in London.
Pop Will Eat Itself released a track titled “Harry Dean Stanton” on their album The Looks or the Lifestyle? His lead role in the film Paris, Texas, was memorialized in Hayes Carll‘s 2019 song “American Dream” with the lyrics, “like Harry Dean Stanton on a drive-in screen, a tumbleweed blowing through Paris, Texas, he fell down into the American dream.”[22]
Ian McNabb recorded the song “Harry Dean Stanton” on his album Utopian, released in January 2021. McNabb noted the following about the track: “I didn’t know too much about him and didn’t really want to because I knew I had to write a song using his name as the title, so I wrote these lyrics for and around him – I imagined what it must be like to be him – while dropping some of my own experiences into the narrative. I was lurking around Dylan’s Blind Willie McTell and Lenny Bruce – I wanted that atmosphere. I’ve never claimed to be original.”[23]
Selected filmography[edit]
- Revolt at Fort Laramie (1957)[24]
- Ride in the Whirlwind (1966)[24]
- Cool Hand Luke (1967)
- Day of the Evil Gun (1968) [24]
- Kelly’s Heroes (1970)[24]
- Two-Lane Blacktop (1971)[24]
- Dillinger (1973)[24]
- Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid (1973)[24]
- Where the Lilies Bloom (1974)[24]
- The Godfather Part II (1974)[24]
- Farewell, My Lovely (1975)[24]
- The Missouri Breaks (1976)[24]
- Straight Time (1978)[24]
- Alien (1979)[24]
- The Rose (1979)
- Wise Blood (1979)[24]
- Escape from New York (1981)[24]
- Christine (1983)[24]
- Repo Man (1984)[24]
- Paris, Texas (1984)[24]
- Red Dawn (1984)[24]
- One Magic Christmas (1985)[24]
- Pretty in Pink (1986)[24]
- The Last Temptation of Christ (1988)[24]
- Wild at Heart (1990)[24]
- Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)[24]
- Down Periscope (1996)[24]
- Fire Down Below (1997)[24]
- Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998)[24]
- The Green Mile (1999)[24]
- The Straight Story (1999)[24]
- The Man Who Cried (2000)
- The Wendell Baker Story (2005)
- Alpha Dog (2006)
- Inland Empire (2006)[24]
- Rango (2011)[24]
- The Avengers (2012)[2]
- The Last Stand (2013)
- Lucky (2017)[2]
Ed Lauter
| The Magnificent Seven Ride! | Scott Elliot | ||
| The New Centurions | Galloway | ||
| Hickey & Boggs | Ted | ||
| Bad Company | Orin | ||
| Dirty Little Billy | Tyler | ||
| Rage | Simpson | ||
| 1973 | Lolly-Madonna XXX | Hawk Feather | |
| The Last American Hero | Burton Colt | ||
| Executive Action | Operations Chief, Team A | ||
| 1974 | The Midnight Man | Leroy | |
| The Longest Yard | Captain Wilhelm Knauer | ||
| 1975 | Satan’s Triangle | Strickland | |
| French Connection II | General Brian | ||
| Breakheart Pass | Major Claremont | ||
| 1976 | Family Plot | Joseph Maloney | |
| King Kong | First Mate Carnahan | ||
| 1977 | The White Buffalo | Tom Custer | |
| The Chicken Chronicles | Mr. Nastase | ||
| 1978 | Loose Shoes | Sheriff Bob | |
| Magic | Duke | ||
| 1981 | Death Hunt | Hazel | |
| The Amateur | Anderson | ||
| 1982 | Timerider: The Adventure of Lyle Swann | Padre Quinn | |
| 1983 | Eureka | Charles Perkins | |
| Cujo | Joe Camber | ||
| The Big Score | Parks | ||
| 1984 | Lassiter | “Smoke” | |
| Finders Keepers | Josef Sirola | ||
| Nickel Mountain | W.D. Freund | ||
| 1985 | Girls Just Want to Have Fun | Colonel Robert Glenn | |
| Real Genius | David Decker | ||
| Death Wish 3 | Police Chief Richard Shriker | ||
| 1986 | Youngblood | Murray Chadwick | |
| Raw Deal | Detective Baker | ||
| 3:15 | Moran | ||
| 1987 | Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise | “Buzz” | |
| 1989 | Gleaming the Cube | Mr. Kelly | |
| Tennessee Waltz | Unknown | ||
| Fat Man and Little Boy | Whitney Ashbridge | ||
| Born on the Fourth of July | Legion Commander | ||
| 1990 | My Blue Heaven | Robert Underwood | |
| 1991 | The Rocketeer | FBI Agent Fitch | |
| 1992 | Judgement | Dallas Hale | |
| School Ties | Alan Greene | ||
| 1993 | Extreme Justice | Captain Shafer | |
| True Romance | Captain Quiggle | Uncredited | |
| Under Investigation | Captain Maguire | ||
| 1994 | Wagons East | John Slade | |
| Trial by Jury | John Boyle | ||
| 1995 | Leaving Las Vegas | Mobster #3 | |
| Girl in the Cadillac | Ben Wilmer | ||
| Digital Man | General Roberts | ||
| Breach of Trust | Colin Kreuger | ||
| 1996 | Rattled | Murray Hendershot | |
| Raven Hawk | Sheriff Daggert | ||
| Mulholland Falls | Detective Earl | ||
| Coyote Summer | Mitchell Foster | ||
| Mercenary | Jack Cochran | ||
| The Sweeper | Molls | ||
| 1997 | Top of the World | Mel Ridgefield | |
| Allie & Me | Detective Frank Richards | ||
| 1999 | Out in Fifty | Ed Walker | |
| Night of Terror | Father Connelly | ||
| 2000 | Farewell My Love | Sergei Karpov | |
| Python | Pilot | ||
| Thirteen Days | General Marshall Carter | ||
| Civility | Detective Erickson | ||
| 2001 | Knight Club | Fire Marshall | |
| Not Another Teen Movie | The Coach | ||
| 2002 | Go for Broke | Warden Lessen | |
| 2003 | Gentleman B. | Harry Koslow | |
| 2003 | Seabiscuit | Charles Strub | |
| Nobody Knows Anything | Gun Expert | ||
| The Librarians | John Strong | ||
| 2004 | Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation | General Jack Gordon Shepherd | |
| Art Heist | Victor Boyd | ||
| 2005 | Into the Fire | Captain Dave Cutler | |
| The Longest Yard | Duane | ||
| Venice Underground | Captain John Sullivan | ||
| Brothers in Arms | Mayor Crawley | ||
| Purple Heart | Civilian | ||
| 2006 | The Lost | Ed Anderson | |
| Love Hollywood Style | Lawrence | ||
| Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby | John Hanafin | Uncredited (scenes deleted) | |
| Seraphim Falls | Parsons | ||
| 2007 | The Number 23 | Father Sebastian | |
| A Modern Twain Story: The Prince and the Pauper | Pop | ||
| 2008 | Camille | Sheriff Steiner | |
| The American Standards | Harry | ||
| Something’s Wrong in Kansas | Amos | ||
| 2009 | Expecting a Miracle | Walter Enright | |
| Godspeed | Mitch | ||
| 2011 | The Frankenstein Syndrome | Dr. Walton | |
| The Artist | Peppy’s Butler | ||
| 2012 | The Fitzgerald Family Christmas | Jim Fitzgerald | |
| Trouble with the Curve | Max | ||
| 2014 | The Town That Dreaded Sundown | Sheriff Underwood | |
| 2016 | Chief Zabu | Skip Keisel |
Stephen Lang
Stephen Lang (born July 11, 1952) is an American actor. He is known for roles in films such as Manhunter (1986), Gettysburg, Tombstone (both 1993), Gods and Generals (2003), Public Enemies, The Men Who Stare at Goats (both 2009), Conan the Barbarian (2011) and Don’t Breathe (2016). Outside of these roles, he has had an extensive career on Broadway, and has received a Tony Award nomination for his role in the 1992 production of The Speed of Darkness. He won the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in James Cameron‘s Avatar (2009). From 2004 to 2006, he was co–artistic director of the Actors Studio.
Early life[edit]
Lang was born in New York City, the youngest child of Theresa (née Volmar, d. 2008) and Eugene Lang (1919–2017), a prominent entrepreneur and philanthropist.[1] Lang’s mother was Catholic of German and Irish descent, while his father was Jewish. Lang’s paternal grandparents were Jewish emigrants from Hungary and Russia.[2][3] He has two elder siblings—Jane, an attorney and activist, and David, who served as an executive at REFAC, the company their father founded in 1952.[2] Lang’s father donated much of his net worth (in excess of $150 million) to charity and did not leave an inheritance to his children, believing they each needed to learn to become self-sufficient.[4]
Lang attended elementary school in Jamaica Estates, Queens.[5][6][failed verification] His middle school was a New York City public school, George Ryan Junior High School, in nearby Fresh Meadows.[7] For high school, he attended George School, a Quaker boarding school in Newtown, PA and graduated from there a year early (1969). He graduated from Swarthmore College in 1973 with a degree in English Literature.
| 1985 | Twice in a Lifetime | Keith | |
| 1986 | Band of the Hand | Joe Tegra | |
| 1986 | Manhunter | Freddy Lounds | |
| 1987 | Project X | Watts | |
| 1989 | Last Exit to Brooklyn | Harry Black | |
| 1991 | The Hard Way | The Party Crasher | |
| 1991 | Another You | Rupert Dibbs | |
| 1993 | Guilty as Sin | Phil Garson | |
| 1993 | Gettysburg | Maj. Gen. George E. Pickett | |
| 1993 | The Making of Gettysburg | Himself/Maj. Gen. George E. Pickett | Video documentary |
| 1993 | Tombstone | Ike Clanton | |
| 1994 | Murder Between Friends | Kerry Myers | [38] |
| 1995 | Tall Tale | Jonas Hackett | |
| 1995 | The Amazing Panda Adventure | Dr. Michael Tyler | |
| 1996 | Loose Women | Prophet Buddy | |
| 1996 | Gang in Blue | Moose Tavola | |
| 1996 | An Occasional Hell | Alex Laughton | |
| 1997 | Shadow Conspiracy | The Agent | |
| 1997 | Niagara, Niagara | Claude | |
| 1997 | Fire Down Below | Earl Kellogg | |
| 1998 | Escape: Human Cargo | Aramco Contractor | |
| 1999 | The Story of a Bad Boy | Spygo | |
| 2000 | Trixie | Jacob Slotnick | |
| 2001 | The Proposal | Simon Bacig | |
| 2002 | D-Tox | Jack Bennett | |
| 2002 | The Making of Tombstone | Himself/Ike Clanton | |
| 2003 | The I Inside | Mr. Travitt | |
| 2003 | Code 11-14 | Justin Shaw | |
| 2003 | Gods and Generals | Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson | |
| 2003 | Gods and Generals: Journey to the Past | Himself/Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson | |
| 2006 | The Treatment | Coach Galgano | |
| 2006 | We Fight to Be Free | James Craik | |
| 2007 | Save Me | Ted | |
| 2008 | From Mexico with Love | Big Al Stevens | |
| 2009 | Public Enemies | Charles Winstead | |
| 2009 | The Men Who Stare at Goats | General Hopgood | |
| 2009 | Avatar | Colonel Miles Quaritch | Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated—Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Villain Nominated—Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Fight (with Sam Worthington) Nominated—MTV Movie Award for Best Villain Nominated—MTV Movie Award for Best Fight (with Sam Worthington) Nominated—Scream Award for Best Villain |
| 2010 | Christina | Inspector Edgar Reinhardt | |
| 2010 | False Creek Stories | Narrator | |
| 2010 | White Irish Drinkers | Patrick Leary | |
| 2011 | Conan the Barbarian | Khalar Zym | |
| 2011 | Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You | Barry Rogers | |
| 2013 | Officer Down | Lieutenant Jake LaRussa | |
| 2013 | Pawn | Charlie | |
| 2013 | The Gettysburg Story | Himself/narrator | Documentary |
| 2013 | Pioneer | John Ferris | |
| 2013 | The Monkey’s Paw | Tony Cobb | |
| 2013 | The Girl on the Train | Det. Lloyd Martin | |
| 2014 | The Nut Job | King | Voice |
| 2014 | In the Blood | Casey | |
| 2014 | Jarhead 2: Field of Fire | Major James Gavins | |
| 2014 | A Good Marriage | Holt Ramsey | |
| 2014 | Gutshot Straight | Duffy | |
| 2014 | 23 Blast | Coach Farris | |
| 2015 | Exeter | Father Conway | |
| 2015 | Band of Robbers | Injun Joe | |
| 2015 | Gridlocked | Korver | |
| 2015 | Beyond Glory: Tour of Duty | Vice Adm. James B. Stockdale, Senator Daniel K. Inouye, First Lt. Vernon Baker, Specialist Clarence Sasser, Staff Sgt. Nick Bacon, Chief Petty Officer John William Finn, Captain Lewis L. Millet and PFC Hector Caffareta[39] | Documentary |
| 2015 | Isolation | William | |
| 2016 | Don’t Breathe | Norman Nordstrom / The Blind Man | |
| 2016 | Beyond Valkyrie: Dawn of the 4th Reich | Major General Emil F. Reinhardt | |
| 2017 | Hostiles | Colonel Abraham Biggs | |
| 2017 | Justice | Mayor Pierce | |
| 2018 | Braven | Linden Braven | |
| 2018 | Mortal Engines | Shrike | |
| 2018 | The Gandhi Murder | Sunil Raina | |
| 2019 | VFW | Fred Parras | |
| 2019 | Rogue Warfare | President | |
| 2019 | Rogue Warfare 2: The Hunt | President | |
| 2020 | Rogue Warfare: Death of a Nation | President | |
| 2020 | Death in Texas | John | |
| 2021 | The Seventh Day | Archbishop | |
| 2021 | Don’t Breathe 2 | Norman Nordstrom / The Blind Man | Also executive producer |
| 2022 | The Lost City | Fantasy Villain | Credited as Slang |
| 2022 | Mid-Century | Frederick Banner | Also executive producer |
| 2022 | Old Man | Old Man | |
| 2022 | The Independent | Gordon White | |
| 2022 | My Love Affair with Marriage | Jonas | Voice |
| 2022 | Avatar: The Way of Water | Colonel Miles Quaritch[40] |