Ever since I was a kid, I was drawn to the
"sidekick" characters; the henchmen, the assistants, the murder suspects and the school teachers. Movie stars
are great and all that jazz, but the heart and soul of an ensemble often lies within the supporting cast: the horny best
friend, the abusive boss, the comic relief, etc. ... Over the years I've made a habit out of putting all those faces to
all those names, and I often find myself telling friends, "Oh, you know this actor. Not by his name,
maybe, but trust me -- you've seen this guy." And there are hundreds of 'em to pick through: professional
character constructors who toil just outside the spotlights afforded to your Jamie Foxxes and your Russell Crowes. C'mon, who would you rather sit down and have dinner with: Tom Cruise or ... William H. Macy? I rest my case.
So since the recognition and appreciation of modern-day character actors is something the hardcore movie nuts enjoy, we thought it might be fun to throw some love at a few different performers each week. (And yes, the phrase "character actor" includes women too!) We'll call this column "The J.T. Walsh Award," simply because J.T. Walsh was one of the very coolest character players ever to hold a SAG card, and (despite never earning one measly Oscar nomination) we think J.T. Walsh deserves to have an award named after him.
Beginning in 1982 with a not-bad little time-waster called Eddie Macon's Run, J.T. Walsh found himself working for directors like Sidney Lumet (Power), Woody Allen (Hannah and Her Sisters), Christopher Guest (The Big Picture), Stephen Frears (The Grifters), Ron Howard (Backdraft), Rob Reiner (A Few Good Men), William Friedkin (Blue Chips), and Oliver Stone (Nixon). Walsh worked twice with Barry Levinson (Tin Men & Good Morning Vietnam), twice with John Dahl (Red Rock West & The Last Seduction), and thrice with David Mamet (House of Games, Things Change & Hoffa).
Throughout the 80s & 90s, J.T. Walsh would pop up just about anywhere. Some of his most memorable performances were small ones -- or ones he didn't even receive screen credit for: a state trooper in Rob Reiner's Misery, a desperate blowhard in Fraser Heston's Needful Things, a grim politician in Wolfgang Petersen's Outbreak, a scary bastard in Jonathan Mostow's Breakdown. ...
He was in The Client and The Russia House and Tequila Sunrise and Sling Blade and Executive Decision and Narrow Margin and The Negotiator -- usually playing a really hateful jerkface of one form or another. And the guy was like a movie-watcher magnet. Whenever J.T. Walsh was on a movie screen, it was his scene to steal. And the guy stole hundreds. J.T. Walsh died of a heart attack in February of 1998. His final performance was a really memorable one: It came in Gary Ross' Pleasantville, and it's the very best thing in a truly excellent little movie.
So that's why we'll be calling this "The J.T. Walsh Award" and not "The All-Time Coolest Character Actor Award." Because, basically, they mean the same thing.













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
4-25-2006 @ 9:42PM
Dan said...
Wait... So are you taking nominations here?
I've got a list of ready favorites: Danny Trejo, James Rebhorn, Gregg Henry, the immortal Joey Pants...
I could go on and on probably. Those are four guys who have never been nomination for Oscars. Steve Buscemi doesn't have an Oscar nomination either, but he's much too well known at this point to qualify...
I'll let other people jump in now...
-Dan
Reply
4-26-2006 @ 12:26AM
Megan said...
I would like to nominate John C. Reilly.
He is definitely worthy of an award like the J.T. Walsh, because he is a consummate actor. Take the year 2003 for example. In addition to being nominated for best supporting actor in Chicago (and completely showing up Richard Gere), he was in not one, but THREE of the best Picture nominees (Chicago, The Hours, and Gangs of New York).
One could go on about Reilly forever. The Good Girl, The River Wild, The Thin Red Line, and The Perfect Storm are just a few more credits to his name. Heck, he even makes his roles in Anger Management and Never Been Kissed his own.
But even if none of this is convincing enough, I've saved the best for last: Magnolia. He consumes that movie. You can say "Tom Cruise this" and "Julianne Moore that", but at the end of the movie, it's Reilly's performance that is the most true, and one of the best (and underrated) performances in film.
So yeah, I'm a movie geek. Viva John C. Reilly!
-Megan
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4-26-2006 @ 12:37AM
Dan said...
Might be to well known for this but Dan Hedaya and David Paymer. Guys you know as well as any star but most people would struggle for the name.
Reply
4-26-2006 @ 2:21AM
Dmnkly said...
Such an award could not ask for a better (or more appropriate) namesake.
As much as I adore John C. Reilly (and I do), I wonder if he he hasn't risen above "that guy" status? J.T., while omnipresent and omniawesome(tm), was only on the fringe of the general populace's consciousness. I think of Reilly as being more like Philip Seymour Hoffman or Paul Giamatti -- former J.T. Walshes who, through a couple of key roles, came to transcend their anonymousness. I may also feel the same way about Joey Pants. But then, I can't think of any films offhand that STAR either of them, so maybe they do belong.
In any case, I wholeheartedly second the nominations of Danny Trejo, James Rebhorn, Dan Hedaya and David Paymer.
Furthermore, I would like to nominate Victor Wong, M. Emmet Walsh, Lane Smith, William Hickey, Catherine O'Hara, Vincent Schiavelli, Tony Plana, Jeffrey Jones, Katherine Helmond, Brad Dourif and David Warner.
Reply
4-26-2006 @ 12:01PM
Tara Ariano said...
We kind of beat you to it in 1999: The J.T. Walsh Memorial Hey! It's That Guy!.
Reply
4-26-2006 @ 8:11PM
Scott Weinberg said...
Yep, I know. Found out a little late:
http://www.cinematical.com/2006/04/26/ok-how-about-the-walken-award/
;)
Reply