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Ed Harris

Who is ??

Birth name : Edward Allen Harris
Date of birth : 28 November 1950
Place of birth:  Englewood, New Jersey, USA
Nickname:  Ed

Height: 5' 9" (1.75 m)
Spouse: Amy Madigan (1983 - present) 1 child.

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Famous Quote

"I don't intentionally choose movies that aren't going to be successful commercially. It just happens that the most interesting scripts I read are outside the mainstream. I like characters who have an edge to them, who are going to do something unexpected. Acting is not a competition to me. One of the first things I learned about acting was, the only person you compete against is yourself."

Information

Here you can find almost everything about Ed Harris, Profile, Biography, Trivia, Filmography, Movies (you can purchase and buy), Photos Gallery, Magazines, Icons, Posters (if you want to see the posters all over your walls you can get them here) , Books, Famous Quotes, and a beautiful collection of Ed Harris Wallpapers for your computer desktops.
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Contact Address

Ed Harris
PMK/HBH
700 San Vicente Boulevard
Suite G 910
West Hollywood, CA 90069, USA


Biography Ed Harris Biography

 

Edward Allen Harris (born November 28, 1950) is an Academy Award-nominated American actor, known for his performances in The Rock, The Right Stuff, The Abyss, Glengarry Glen Ross, Apollo 13, Pollock, Enemy at the Gates, and The Truman Show, among many others. His hard features and intense blue eyes make Ed Harris an unlikely prospect for leading man roles, yet this award-winning stage and screen actor brings the requisite strength and conviction to the parts he plays. 

The New Jersey native began his career on stage in California in the mid-1970s, where he quickly earned a reputation for his talent and intensity. Harris moved into features with a small part in "Coma" (1978) and offered an impressive turn in his first leading role in George Romero's "Knightriders" (1980), an underrated modern spin on the Arthurian legends. Three years later, though, he emerged as a star with the one-two punch of the laconic cowboy with a troubled past and uncertain future in Sam Shepard's Off-Broadway hit "Fool for Love" and a stalwart turn as astronaut John Glenn in "The Right Stuff" (1983), Philip Kaufman's film about the US space program. While the expected accolades for his performance as Glenn failed to materialize, Harris nonetheless became an actor in demand.

Harris was born in Tenafly, New Jersey, the son of Margaret, a travel agent, and Robert L. Harris, who sang with the Fred Waring chorus and worked at the bookstore of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has an older brother, Robert, and a younger brother, Spencer. Harris was raised in a middle class Presbyterian family. He graduated from Tenafly High School in 1969, where he played on the football team, serving as the team's captain in his senior year. 

He was a star athlete in high school and competed in athletics at Columbia University in 1969. Two years later his family moved to Oklahoma and he followed after having discovered his interest in acting in various theater plays. He enrolled at the University of Oklahoma to study drama. After several successful roles in the local theater, he moved to Los Angeles, California, and enrolled at the California Institute of the Arts. Harris has been married to actress Amy Madigan since 1983. They have a daughter named Lily.

Harris's first important film role was in Borderline with Charles Bronson. In Knightriders he played a motorcycle stunt rider in a role modeled after that of King Arthur. In 1983, he became a star, playing NASA astronaut John Glenn in The Right Stuff; in 1995 he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of NASA mission director Gene Kranz, in the film Apollo 13.

He lent sexy charisma to the supporting role of Goldie Hawn's soldier husband in "Swing Shift" and made a strong impression as a cheating spouse in "Place in the Heart" (both 1984). The latter marked the actor's first screen pairing with Amy Madigan, whom he married before they headlined Louis Malle's "Alamo Bay" (1985). Also in 1985, Harris turned in a strong, believable performance as hard-drinking, good old Southern boy Charlie Dick who woos and weds ascendant star Patsy Cline in "Sweet Dreams". The actor then returned to his stage roots and made his Broadway debut opposite Judith Ivey as the stern but loving father in George Furth's autobiographical "Precious Sons" (1986), for which he earned the lion's share of critical praise and a Tony Award nomination. Segueing to the small screen, he undertook the role of an attorney who has quit at the height of his career and is seduced back to the law by his mistress in the 1987 HBO original "The Last Innocent Man". Harris rounded out that year in the title role of "Walker", Alex Cox's odd biopic of the 19th-century adventurer William Walker who declared himself president of Nicaragua. The actor offered an intense portrait of a real-life soldier of fortune who bore more than a passing resemblance to Oliver North, who was then dominating the news.

In James Cameron's big-budgeted underwater spectacle "The Abyss" (1989), Harris provided the anchor as the foreman of a civilian crew (which includes his estranged wife) tapped to rescue a US nuclear submarine. The balding performer teamed romantically with Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio displayed his sex appeal and the pair transcended the maudlin dialogue to offer a mature and adult look at a troubled but thoroughly credible relationship. Harris returned to the small screen in two cable films that allowed him to capitalize on this same aspect of his screen persona. In "Paris Trout" (Showtime, 1991), he was cast as a lawyer hired to defend a racist who finds himself drawn to his client's wife. "Running Mates" (HBO, 1992) saw Harris play a presidential candidate who romances an eccentric author. Both parts allowed the actor to demonstrate a light, almost playful side that enhanced his standing as an unlikely sex symbol.

The 90s saw Harris deliver more complex and even chilling characterizations. He was the brain behind the heist in the machofest of "Glengarry Glen Ross" (1992), a frustrated FBI agent smoking out corruption in "The Firm" (1993) and stepped to the other side of the law as a creepy serial killer in "Just Cause" (1995). Harris stood out in the ensemble of Ron Howard's "Apollo 13" (also 1995), playing NASA mission control flight director Gene Krantz, a performance that earned him The Actor (the Screen Actors Guild Award) and his first Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination. After turns as Watergate co-conspirator E Howard Hunt in Oliver Stone's "Nixon" (1995), a military hero who precipitates a hostage crisis at Alcatraz in "The Rock" (1996) and a homicide detective investigating a crime at the White House in "Absolute Power" (1997), he received nearly unanimous praise and a second Best Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination as the God-like creator-director of a popular 24-hour-a-day TV series in "The Truman Show" (1998). Harris later played up his softer side as the man caught between his ex-wife and his new girlfriend in the comedy-drama "Stepmom" (also 1998).

In 2000, Harris realized a ten-year dream, directing and starring in "Pollack", about the abstract painter Jackson Pollock. Ever since his own father had sent him two biographies of the artist, the actor harbored a desire to portray Pollock on screen. The resulting motion picture (which premiered at the 2000 Venice Film Festival and was selected as the centerpiece of the 2000 New York Film Festival) earned generally positive critical reviews, with many citing Harris' skills both behind and in front of the cameras. The actor continued to add to his growing galaxy of film performances as the new millennium unfolded, portraying a German assassin sent to take out a Russian sharpshooter in the WWII drama "Enemy of the Gates", a high-ranking intelligence officer dealing with a mathematician who is a paranoid-schizophrenic in "A Brilliant Mind" (both 2001), and co-starred with Meryl Streep in "The Hours" (2002) as an honored author dying of AIDS. In "The Hours" Harris delivered another of his more riveting and fiery performances as his character struggles with his disease, his relationships with the crucial women in his life and his reasons for continuing to stay alive. His captivating turn was rewarded with an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, his third in that category and fourth overall. The following year, he reunited with Nicole Kidman as her abusive ex-husband in a supporting role in "The Human Stain" (2003) and was then next seen as a southern football coach-turn-town hero in the feelgood hit "Radio" (2003), which also starred Cuba Gooding, Jr. 

Further Oscar nominations arrived in 1999, 2001 and 2003, for The Truman Show, Pollock and The Hours, respectively. More recently, he appeared as a vengeful mobster in David Cronenberg's A History of Violence. He also had a role alongside Casey Affleck and Morgan Freeman in Gone, Baby, Gone, directed by actor Ben Affleck. In 2007 he appeared in National Treasure: Book of Secrets as Mitch Wilkinson. Harris has shown interest in directing. He made his debut in 2000 with Pollock, as well as directing various plays. Harris has also starred in television adaptations of Riders of the Purple Sage (1996) and Empire Falls (2005).

Harris had an exceptional year in 2005, appearing first in the humorous, poignant HBO miniseries "Empire Falls" as New England restaurantuer Miles Roby, for whom the promising opportunities of youth have given way to the demands of family obligations, especially those concerning his cantankerous father (Paul Newman) and impressionable daughter (Danielle Panabaker). Unable to escape the town or the dominating shadow of his employer (Joanne Woodward), who owns the restaurant he runs, Miles copes with a recent divorce from his wife (Helen Hunt) while piecing together the shared events that shaped the lives. 

Harris was Emmy nominated for his affecting performance. Next was his standout suporting turn in director David Cronenberg's masterful drama "A History of Violence" (2005), playing the menacing and acerbic Carl Fogarty, a shadowy, scarred figure who arrives in small town Indiana to confront a loving, rock-solid father and husband (Viggo Mortensen) whose brief notoriety after foiling a violent robbery has attracted Fogarty's attention and has him insisiting he recognizes the man from a secret, bloody past 20 years earlier. Harris' perfectly measured mix of threat and gallows humor was one of the highlights of the film. 

Harris also has an active stage acting career. Most notably, he starred in the production of Neil LaBute's one-man play Wrecks at the Public Theater in New York City. Wrecks premiered at the Everyman Theater in Cork, Ireland and then in the US at the Public Theater in New York. He has been nominated for several major awards for this role.

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