DAVID STRATHAIRN
'David Russell Strathairn' (born January 26 1949) is an Academy Award-nominated American film, television, and stage actor.
| Contents |
| Biography |
| Personal life |
| Career |
| Filmography |
| References |
| External links |
Biography
Personal life
Strathairn was born in San Francisco, California. His father was a physician."David Strathairn Biography (1949-)", ''Film Reference.com'', accessed August 7, 2007. He is of Scottish ancestry through his paternal grandfather, Thomas Scott Strathairn (a native of Crieff, Perthshire) and Native Hawaiian ancestry through his paternal grandmother, Lei.[1][2]
Strathairn attended Redwood High School in Larkspur, California and graduated from Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts in 1970. He studied at the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Clown College in Venice, FloridaFull biography of "David Strathairn", ''Yahoo! Movies'', Copyright © 2007, accessed August 7, 2007. and worked as a clown in a traveling circus.
He is married to Logan Goodman Strathairn, a nurse, and the couple have two sons and live in the mid-Hudson Valley area of upstate New York, near Poughkeepsie, about 90 minutes by Metro-North Railroad from New York City.[3] Their son Tay Strathairn, an actor and musician who plays jazz piano, appeared in John Sayles's films ''Eight Men Out'' (as "Bucky") and ''Lone Star'' (as "Young Sam").
Career
Some of Strathairn's best-known film roles are his portrayals of the title character in ''Harrison's Flowers'' (2000), the wisecracking blind techie in ''Sneakers'' (1992), Joe St. George in ''Dolores Claiborne'' (1995), Theseus in the 1999 version of ''A Midsummer Night's Dream'', and corrupt baseball player Eddie Cicotte in 1988's ''Eight Men Out''. However, he is often seen more as a character actor, often appearing in supporting roles in many independent and Hollywood films. He has co-starred in ''Twisted'' as Ashley Judd's psychiatrist, in ''The River Wild'' as Meryl Streep's husband, as Tom Cruise's jailbird brother in ''The Firm'', and as Kim Basinger's pimp in ''L.A. Confidential''.
He has worked frequently with director John Sayles, beginning with his film debut ''Return of the Secaucus 7'', and including the films ''Passion Fish'', ''Matewan'', ''Limbo'', ''Lone Star'' and ''City of Hope'', for which Strathairn won the Independent Spirit Award. Notably, alongside Sayles, he played one of the Men in Black in Sayles's 1983 film ''The Brother from Another Planet''
Strathairn's television work includes a wide range of roles, including "Moss", the bookselling nebbish on the critically acclaimed ''The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd''; Captain Keller, the father of Helen in the 2000 remake of ''The Miracle Worker''; and a far-out (both figuratively and literally) televangelist in ''Paradise'', the pilot episode for a TV series on Showtime that did not move forward. Strathairn also had a recurring role on the hit TV drama ''The Sopranos''.
In 2005, he appeared in the leading role in ''Good Night, and Good Luck.,'' a theatrical biopic in which he portrayed the famed CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow in his clash with Senator Joseph McCarthy over his Communist "witch hunt" in the 1950s. Strathairn received ''Best Actor'' Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild (SAG), and Academy Award nominations for his performance in the film. Among his recent films are: ''We Are...Marshall'', a 2006 film about the resurrection of Marshall University's football program after the 1970 plane crash that killed most of the team; and ''Hereafter'', set in the aftermath of the 2004 Sumatran tsunami, directed by Michael Patwin (in pre-production)., accessed August 7, 2007.
Strathairn plays the lead role opposite Andrew Walker in the 2007 independent film, "Steel Toes", a film by David Gow (writer/director/producer). The film is based on Gow's stage play "Cherry Docs" in which Strathairn starred for its American Premiere at The Wilma Theatre in Philadelphia.
Strathairn plays a lead role opposite Matt Damon in the summer 2007 film ''The Bourne Ultimatum'' and appears in Paramount Pictures' forthcoming children's film "The Spiderwick Chronicles" (2008) as "Arthur Spiderwick".
He is also an accomplished stage actor and has performed over thirty theatrical roles on stage. Most recently, he performed several roles in stage plays by 2005 Nobel Laureate Harold Pinter. He played Stanley in two consecutive New York Classic Stage Company (CSC) productions of Pinter's 1957 play ''The Birthday Party'', directed by Carey Perloff (since 1992 artistic director of the American Conservatory Theatre), in 1988 Performance revs. by Susan Hollis Merritt, "The Birthday Party" (CSC Repertory Theatre, New York, 17 April 1988, 12 Apr. 1988–22 May 1988) and Bernard Dukore, "The Birthday Party" (CSC Repertory Theatre, New York, April–May 1988), ''The Pinter Review'' 2.1 (1988): 66-70; 71-73. (Cover photograph features Strathairn in his role as Stanley.) and 19891989 CSC production, ''HaroldPinter.org'' (official site), accessed August 7, 2007.; the dual roles of prison Officer and Prisoner in Pinter's 1989 play ''Mountain Language'' (in a double bill with the second CSC Rep production of ''The Birthday Party'')Susan Hollis Merritt, "A Conversation with Carey Perloff, Bill Moor, Peter Riegert, Jean Stapleton, and David Strathairn: After Matinee of ''Mountain Language'' and ''The Birthday Party'' by CSC Repertory Ltd., Bruno's, New York, 12 Nov. 1989", ''The Pinter Review: Annual Essays 1989'' (TPR) (Tampa: U of Tampa P, 1989) 59-84 (interview); cf. performance rev. by Francis Gillen, "Mountain Language, The Birthday Party" ''TPR'' 93-97. (Cover photograph features Strathairn and Stapleton in their roles as a prison Officer and the Elderly Woman in ''Mountain Language''; his other role, the Prisoner, is the Elderly Woman's son.); and Devlin, opposite Lindsay Duncan's Rebecca, in Pinter's 1996 two-hander ''Ashes to Ashes'' in the 1999 New York premiere by the Roundabout Theatre Company.Performance revs. by Katherine H. Burkman, "''Ashes to Ashes'' in New York: Roundabout Theatre Company at the Gramercy Theatre, March 30, 1999" and by Susan Hollis Merritt, "''Ashes to Ashes'' in New York: Roundabout Theatre Company, Gramercy Theatre, New York, 3 April 1999", ''The Pinter Review: Collected Essays 1997 and 1998'' (Tampa: U of Tampa P, 1999) 154-59.
Filmography
★ ''Return of the Secaucus 7'' (1980)
★ ''Lovesick'' (1983)
★ ''Silkwood'' (1983)
★ ''The Brother from Another Planet'' (1984)
★ ''When Nature Calls'' (1985)
★ ''At Close Range'' (1986)
★ ''Broken Vows'' (1987) (TV)
★ ''Matewan'' (1987)
★ ''Stars and Bars'' (1988)
★ ''Eight Men Out'' (1988)
★ ''Memphis Belle'' (1990)
★ ''Heat Wave'' (1990) (TV)
★ ''Son of the Morning Star'' (1991) (TV)
★ ''City of Hope'' (1991)
★ ''A League of Their Own'' (1992)
★ ''Bob Roberts'' (1992)
★ ''Sneakers'' (1992)
★ ''Passion Fish'' (1992)
★ ''Lost in Yonkers'' (1993)
★ ''The Firm'' (1993)
★ ''The River Wild'' (1994)
★ ''Losing Isaiah'' (1995)
★ ''Dolores Claiborne'' (1995)
★ ''Home for the Holidays'' (1995)
★ ''Mother Night'' (1996)
★ ''Bad Manners'' (1997)
★ ''L.A. Confidential'' (1997)
★ ''The Climb'' (1998)
★ ''Simon Birch'' (1998)
★ ''A Midsummer Night's Dream'' (1999)
★ ''Limbo'' (1999)
★ ''A Map of the World'' (1999)
★ ''Freedom Song'' (2000) (TV)
★ ''Harrison's Flowers'' (2000)
★ ''Ball in the House'' (2001)
★ ''Blue Car'' (2002)
★ ''Lathe of Heaven'' (2002) (TV)
★ '' (2002) (TV)
★ ''Twisted'' (2004)
★ ''The Notorious Bettie Page'' (2005)
★ ''Missing in America'' (2005)
★ ''Good Night, and Good Luck'' (2005)
★ ''Heavens Fall'' (2006)
★ ''We Are Marshall'' (2006)
★ ''The Sensation of Sight'' (2007)
★ ''Steel Toes" (2007)
★ ''Fracture'' (2007)
★ ''The Bourne Ultimatum'' (2007)
★ "Hereafter" (expected release date 2008; in pre-production)
★ ''The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond'' (2008)
References
1. http://www.sundaymail.co.uk/lifestyle/features/tm_objectid=16749011&method=full&siteid=64736&headline=secret-scottish-roots-of-best-actor-nominee-david-name_page.html
2. "David Strathairn Finds the Spotlight: David Strathairn Is the Kind of Actor You Know by Face, If Not by Name, But an Oscar Nomination on Tuesday for Best Actor Could Change All That", ''BBC.co.uk'' January 26, 2006, Entertainment, accessed August 7, 2007. (Includes video clip.)
3. "Profile: David Strathairn", ''Hello!'', Copyright © 2001-2007 , accessed August 7, 2007.
External links
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