Timothy Hutton
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (January 2009) |
Timothy Hutton | |
---|---|
Born | Timothy Tarquin Hutton August 16, 1960 Malibu, California, U.S. |
Occupation | Actor, director |
Years active | 1965–present |
Spouse(s) | Debra Winger
(m. 1986; div. 1990) |
Children | 2 |
Timothy Tarquin Hutton (born August 16, 1960)[1] is an American actor and film director. He is the youngest recipient of the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, which he won at age 20 for his performance as Conrad Jarrett in Ordinary People (1980). Hutton has since appeared regularly in feature films and on television, with featured roles in the drama Taps (1981), the spy film The Falcon and the Snowman (1985), and the horror film The Dark Half (1993), among others.
Between 2000 and 2002, Hutton starred as Archie Goodwin in the A&E drama series A Nero Wolfe Mystery. Between 2008 and 2012, he starred as Nathan "Nate" Ford on the TNT drama series Leverage. He also had a role in the first season of the Amazon streaming drama series Jack Ryan.
Early life[]
Timothy Hutton was born in Malibu, California. His father was actor Jim Hutton; his mother, Maryline Adams (née Poole), was a teacher. His parents divorced when Hutton was three years old, and his mother took him and his older sister, Heidi (born in 1959), with her to Boston, and then her hometown Harwinton, Connecticut.[2] The family returned to California when Hutton was 12.
"A lot of people think that because my father was an actor, I come from this big show-business background," Hutton told Bruce Cook of American Film magazine in 1981. "But that's not how I grew up at all. My mother took us to Cambridge because she wanted to get her M.A. She wound up teaching in Connecticut, but the way she saw it, after a while, if we all stayed there, my sister and I would just wind up as the proprietors of the local drugstore or something, so that was why she took us to Berkeley – to get us into the world, I guess. Now she's given up teaching and she's into printing miniature books."[3]
In 1976 when he was 15, Hutton sought out his father and moved in with him in Los Angeles.[4] At Fairfax High School, while playing Nathan Detroit in a school production of Guys and Dolls, he realized he wanted to become an actor. With encouragement from both of his parents, he began acting in television.[3]
On June 2, 1979, Jim Hutton died in Los Angeles from liver cancer, two days after his 45th birthday. In 1981, Hutton thanked his father during his Academy Award speech, which he had won for his role in the movie Ordinary People.[5]
Acting career[]
Timothy Hutton's career began with parts in several television movies, most notably the 1979 ABC TV film Friendly Fire. That year, he also played the son of Donna Reed in the Ross Hunter NBC television film The Best Place to Be. He then made two CBS made-for TV films in 1980: Young Love, First Love with Valerie Bertinelli, and Father Figure with Hal Linden. For his first feature film performance, as Conrad Jarrett in Ordinary People (1980), Hutton won both the Academy Award and the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor. His performance also earned him the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year in a Motion Picture – Male. Immediately following his success, he starred in the acclaimed 1981 ABC television film A Long Way Home co-starring Brenda Vaccaro.
Hutton's next feature film, Taps (with George C. Scott, Sean Penn, and Tom Cruise), was popular with critics and audiences, but during the next several years, his motion pictures, such as Iceman, Daniel, Turk 182, Made in Heaven, and Q&A, struggled at the box office. His only substantial hit was 1985's The Falcon and the Snowman which teamed him again with Sean Penn.
In 1984, he directed the music video for the song "Drive" by The Cars.
In 1989, he made his Broadway stage debut opposite his Ordinary People co-star Elizabeth McGovern in the A.R. Gurney play Love Letters. He followed this with another Broadway role in the Craig Lucas hit comedy, Prelude to a Kiss, which also starred Mary-Louise Parker and Barnard Hughes.
During the late 1980s and into the 1990s, Hutton began to take large supporting parts in films, most notably in Everybody's All-American with Jessica Lange and Dennis Quaid and French Kiss with Meg Ryan and Kevin Kline. In 1996, he starred in the popular ensemble film, Beautiful Girls, playing opposite 14-year-old Natalie Portman in one of her early standout film roles.
Moving on to television, he starred as Nero Wolfe's assistant and leg-man Archie Goodwin in the A&E television series A Nero Wolfe Mystery (2001–2002); he also served as an executive producer, and also directed several episodes of the series. His other directing credits include the family film Digging to China (1997). In 2001 Hutton starred in the television miniseries WW3, and in 2006 he had a lead role in the NBC series Kidnapped, playing Conrad Cain, the wealthy father of a kidnapped teenager. He appeared in 13 feature films from 2006 to 2008.
Hutton starred in the television series Leverage from 2008 to 2012, where he played former insurance investigator Nate Ford who led a group of thieves who acted as modern-day Robin Hoods.
In 2014, Hutton was cast opposite Felicity Huffman in John Ridley's ABC crime drama American Crime.[6]
Other pursuits[]
Hutton is one of the owners of the New York City restaurant and bar P. J. Clarke's. In 2003 he became president of Players, a New York actors' club, but he resigned in June 2008 due to work keeping him in Los Angeles. He has also made a few forays into directing, the most famous of which includes the music video for the Cars' hit single "Drive" in 1984. In 2010, he directed the music video for "The House Rules" by country rocker/Leverage co-star Christian Kane. He also directed several episodes of A&E's A Nero Wolfe Mystery, in which he also starred.
Hutton starred in a Groupon commercial during the 2011 Super Bowl which drew public ire for the parodying of the Tibetan resistance movement. The commercials were pulled from rotation on February 10 after continued negative response from the public and activist groups.[7]
Personal life[]
Hutton has been married twice. His first marriage (1986–1990) was to actress Debra Winger; they have a son, Noah, born in 1987.
Hutton dated Demi Moore,[8] Uma Thurman,[9] and Angelina Jolie.[10]
In 2000, he married illustrator Aurore Giscard d'Estaing, niece of former French president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing. Their son Milo was born in Paris in 2001.[11] In July 2009, US Weekly reported that Hutton and Giscard d'Estaing had separated.[12]
Hutton became a Freemason at Herder Lodge No. 698 in New York City in 2005.[13]
In March 2020, Sera Johnston, a former child model and actress, accused Hutton of raping her in 1983, when she was 14.[14] Johnston filed a criminal complaint against Hutton with the Vancouver Police Department the previous November.[15] Hutton, who was 22 when the alleged incident occurred, has "completely and unequivocally" denied the accusations and filed a criminal complaint against Johnston for extortion.[16] In July 2021, Canadian authorities closed their investigation into Johnston's accusations without filing charges.[17]
Filmography[]
Film[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1965 | Never Too Late | Boy running to his daddy | Uncredited |
1980 | Sultan and the Rock Star | Paul Winters | |
1980 | Ordinary People | Conrad Jarrett | Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actor Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated—BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles Nominated—National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor Nominated—New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor |
1981 | Teenage Suicide: Don't Try It! | Narrator | |
1981 | Taps | Cadet Major Brian Moreland | Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama |
1983 | Daniel | Daniel Isaacson | |
1984 | Iceman | Dr. Stanley Shephard | |
1985 | The Falcon and the Snowman | Christopher Boyce | |
1985 | Turk 182 | Jimmy Lynch | |
1987 | Made in Heaven | Mike Shea/Elmo Barnett | |
1988 | A Time of Destiny | Jack | |
1988 | Betrayed | Juggler at the fair | Uncredited |
1988 | Everybody's All-American | Donnie "Cake" McCaslin | |
1989 | Torrents of Spring | Dimitri Sanin | |
1990 | Q&A | Asst. District Attorney Aloysius Francis Reilly | |
1992 | Strangers | Tom | |
1993 | The Temp | Peter Derns | |
1993 | The Dark Half | Thad Beaumont/George Stark | Fantafestival Award for Best Actor Nominated—Fangoria Chainsaw Award for Best Actor |
1995 | French Kiss | Charlie Lytton | |
1995 | Martin Ryan | ||
1996 | Beautiful Girls | Willie Conway | |
1996 | Mr. and Mrs. Loving | Richard Loving | Based on the true story of Richard and Mildred Loving, prosecuted for miscegenation in Loving v. Virginia. |
1996 | The Substance of Fire | Martin Geldhart | |
1997 | City of Industry | Lee Egan | |
1997 | Playing God | Raymond Blossom | |
1999 | The General's Daughter | Col. William Kent | |
1999 | Deterrence | Marshall Thompson | |
2000 | Just One Night | Isaac Alder | |
2002 | Sunshine State | Jack Meadows | |
2004 | Secret Window | Ted Milner | |
2004 | Kinsey | Paul Gebhard | |
2005 | Turning Green | Bill the Breaker | |
2006 | Last Holiday | Matthew Kragen | |
2006 | Stephanie Daley | Paul Crane | |
2006 | The Kovak Box | David Norton | |
2006 | Heavens Fall | Samuel Leibowitz | |
2006 | Falling Objects | Oscar Peters | Short film |
2006 | Off the Black | Mr. Tibbel | |
2006 | The Good Shepherd | Thomas Wilson | |
2007 | The Last Mimzy | David Wilder | |
2007 | When a Man Falls in the Forest | Gary | |
2008 | The Alphabet Killer | Richard Ledge | |
2008 | Reflections | Tom | |
2008 | Lymelife | Charlie Bragg | |
2009 | Broken Hill | George McAlpine | |
2009 | The Killing Room | Crawford Haines | |
2009 | Brief Interviews with Hideous Men | Subject No.30 | |
2009 | Multiple Sarcasms | Gabriel | |
2009 | Serious Moonlight | Ian | |
2010 | The Ghost Writer | Sidney Kroll | |
2013 | Louder Than Words | Bruce Komiske | |
2015 | #Horror | Dr. Michael White | |
2017 | All the Money in the World | Oswald Hinge | |
2018 | Beautiful Boy | Dr. Brown | |
2020 | The Glorias | Leo Steinem | |
TBA | The Long Home | Post-production |
Television series[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | The Wonderful World of Disney | N/A | Episode: "Dad, Can I Borrow the Car?" |
1980 | Paul Winters | Episode: "Sultan and the Rock Star" | |
1991 | Books: Feed Your Head | Man reciting 'Forty Stories' | Episode: "Forty Stories" |
2001–02 | A Nero Wolfe Mystery | Archie Goodwin | 20 episodes |
2004 | 5ive Days to Midnight | J.T. Neumeyer | 5 episodes |
2006–07 | Kidnapped | Conrad Cain | 13 episodes |
2008–12 | Leverage | Nathan Ford | 76 episodes Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Actor on Television (2009, 2011–13) |
2015 | Public Morals | Mr. O | 2 episodes |
2015 | American Crime | Russ Skokie | 11 episodes Satellite Award for Best Cast – Television Series Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie Nominated—Satellite Award for Best Actor – Television Series Drama |
2016 | American Crime | Coach Dan Sullivan | 10 episodes |
2017 | American Crime | Nicholas Coates | 5 episodes |
2018 | Jack Ryan | Nathan Singer | 5 episodes |
2018–19 | How to Get Away with Murder | Emmett Crawford | 12 episodes |
2018 | The Haunting of Hill House | Hugh Crain | 6 episodes Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Streaming Presentation |
2019–20 | Almost Family | Leon Bechley | 13 episodes |
Television films[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1978 | Zuma Beach | Art | |
1979 | Friendly Fire | John Mullen | |
1979 | The Best Place to Be | Tommy Callahan | |
1979 | And Baby Makes Six | Jason Cramer | |
1979 | Young Love, First Love | Derek Clayton | |
1980 | The Oldest Living Graduate | Cadet Whopper Turnbill | |
1980 | Father Figure | Jim | |
1981 | A Long Way Home | Donald Branch | Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film |
1993 | Zelda | F. Scott Fitzgerald | |
1996 | Mr. and Mrs. Loving | Richard Loving | |
1997 | Dead by Midnight | John Larkin/Sam Ellis | |
1997 | Aldrich Ames: The Traitor Within | Aldrich Ames | |
1998 | Vig | Frankie | |
2000 | The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery | Archie Goodwin | |
2000 | Deliberate Intent | Rod Smolla | |
2001 | WW3 | Larry Sullivan | |
2006 | Avenger | Frank McBride |
Director[]
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1986 | Amazing Stories | Episode: "Grandpa's Ghost" |
1997 | Digging to China | Children's Jury Award Chicago International Children's Film Festival |
2001–02 | A Nero Wolfe Mystery | 7 episodes |
See also[]
- Lists of American actors
- List of oldest and youngest Academy Award winners and nominees – Youngest winners for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
- List of actors with Academy Award nominations
References[]
- ^ "Timothy Hutton". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved July 21, 2021.
- ^ Gritten, David (February 8, 1982). "Riding on Taps, Teens and Talent". People. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Cook, Bruce, "Doing What Comes Naturally." American Film, March 1981, pp. 62–65 and 74.
- ^ "Timothy Hutton is Too Good to Be True," Rolling Stone, February 1982
- ^ Hutton, Timothy. "Academy Award Acceptance Speech, March 31, 1981". oscars.org. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved February 2, 2016.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie. "ABC New Series Pickups: 'Selfie', 'Forever', Galavant', 'Whispers', 'How To Get Away With Murder', 'American Crime', 'Black-ish', Jeff Lowell Comedy". Deadline.com. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
- ^ Dallke, Jim (February 5, 2016). "5 Years Later, a Look Back at Groupon's Disastrous Super Bowl Ad". Chicagoinno. Retrieved September 2, 2017.
- ^ "Show Biz Q&A". Public Opinion. February 17, 1984.
Demi and husband musician Freddy Moore separated a few months ago, and Demi has been seeing eligible and wonderful Tim Hutton.
- ^ E! True Hollywood Story: "Uma Thurman" (April 18, 2004)
- ^ Cahalan, Susannah (August 1, 2010). "Angelina: The girl with the bangin' tattoo". The New York Post. Retrieved August 28, 2010.
- ^ Hampson, Sarah. Timothy Hutton interview, The Toronto Globe and Mail (December 28, 2002).
- ^ "It's Over!" US Weekly (July 20, 2009).
- ^ Lotven, Amy (March 17, 2005). "Masons Seek New Members As Elder Brothers Pass On". Queens Chronicle Newspaper. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
- ^ Aurthur, Kate; Vary, Adam B. (March 2, 2020). "Oscar-Winning Actor Timothy Hutton Raped Me When I Was 14, Says Canadian Ex-Model". Buzzfeed News. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
- ^ Crucchiola, Jordan (March 2, 2020). "A Canadian Woman Says Timothy Hutton Raped Her When She Was 14". Vulture. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
- ^ Aquilina, Tyler (March 2, 2020). "Timothy Hutton denies allegation that he raped a 14-year-old girl in 1983". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
- ^ "Timothy Hutton to Face No Charge for 1983 Rape Allegation". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 30, 2021.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Timothy Hutton. |
- Timothy Hutton at IMDb
- Timothy Hutton at the Internet Broadway Database
- Timothy Hutton at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
- 1960 births
- 20th-century American male actors
- 21st-century American male actors
- American male film actors
- American male television actors
- American music video directors
- American television directors
- Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winners
- Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe (film) winners
- Fairfax High School (Los Angeles) alumni
- Film directors from Los Angeles
- Film directors from Massachusetts
- Living people
- Male actors from Malibu, California
- New Star of the Year (Actor) Golden Globe winners
- People from Arlington, Massachusetts