Tom Selleck | |
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Selleck on the red carpet at the 61st Annual Academy Awards, 1989 |
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Born | Thomas William Selleck January 29, 1945 Detroit, Michigan, United States |
Occupation | actor, film producer |
Years active | 1969–present |
Spouse | Jacqueline Ray (1972–1980) Jillie Mack (1987–present) |
Thomas William "Tom" Selleck (born January 29, 1945) is an American actor and film producer, best known for his starring role as Hawaii-based private investigator Thomas Magnum on the 1980s television show Magnum, P.I. He also plays Jesse Stone in a series of made-for-TV movies based on the Robert B. Parker novels.
He has appeared extensively on television in roles such as Dr. Richard Burke on Friends and A.J. Cooper on Las Vegas. In addition to his series work, Selleck has appeared in more than fifty made for TV and general release movies, including Mr. Baseball, Quigley Down Under, and Lassiter.
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Selleck was born in Detroit, Michigan, the son of Martha S. (née Jagger),[1] a homemaker, and Robert D. Selleck, an executive and real estate investor.[2][3] The family moved to Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California when Selleck was growing up. His siblings include brothers Robert (born 1944) and Daniel (born 1950), and sister Martha. Selleck graduated from Grant High School in 1962.[4]
Along with modeling, Selleck attended the University of Southern California on a basketball scholarship where he played for the Trojans.[5] He is 6 feet 4 inches tall. He is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity[6] and a member of the Trojan Knights. While he majored in business administration, a drama coach suggested Selleck try acting. He then studied acting at the Beverly Hills Playhouse, under Milton Katselas.
Selleck served in the 160th Infantry of the California Army National Guard[7] and was activated for the Watts Riots.
Selleck's first TV appearance was as a college senior on The Dating Game in 1965 and again in 1967—he lost both times. Soon after, he appeared in commercials for products such as Pepsi-Cola.
He began his career with bit parts in smaller movies, including the over-the-top Myra Breckinridge and Russ Meyer's The Seven Minutes with co-stars including Wayne Maunder and Harold J. Stone. He also appeared in number of TV series, mini-series and TV movies. Selleck also had a recurring role in the 1970s as Lance White in The Rockford Files. Lance was very trusting and always lucky, much to the annoyance of Jim Rockford, the show's star private eye played by James Garner. White would frequently say to Rockford, "Don't worry, Jim, clues will turn up" and then a clue would just turn up, much to Rockford's consternation, for whom obtaining clues required hard work and hard knocks. Selleck's character was based on one played in Garner's earlier TV series Maverick (1957) by Wayde Preston in that series' highest-rated episode, "The Saga of Waco Williams."
Selleck, an accessible but relatively untested actor from years of little serious interest from the entertainment industry, was cast, to the surprise of all, in the lead role as Thomas Magnum in Magnum, P.I.. The Magnum, P.I. producers would not release the actor for other projects, and, thus, Selleck had to pass on the equally enticing film project for the title role of Indiana Jones, which then went to the also recently discovered actor Harrison Ford. The career-influencing choice between the role of Indiana Jones vs. Magnum P.I. actually haunted Selleck so much that before making the decision, he consulted his best friend on what to do. Together they came to the conclusion that taking the high road and honoring the first contract with Universal Studios was the career-savvy direction. It turned out that the shooting of the pilot for Magnum was delayed for over six months (due to a writers' strike) which would have enabled him to complete the role as Indiana Jones, if he had had the option to do so.
He starred in the 1979 TV movie Concrete Cowboy with Jerry Reed. Selleck starred in a number of film roles during and after Magnum; among the most notable were as an acrophobic police detective in Runaway, as a stand-in father in Three Men and a Baby, and as an American cowboy in the Australian western Quigley Down Under, a role and film that he considers one of his best. His other films include Three Men and a Little Lady, High Road to China, Lassiter, Her Alibi, An Innocent Man, Folks!, Christopher Columbus: The Discovery, Mr. Baseball, In & Out and The Love Letter.
In the early 1990s, Selleck held a press conference to say that he was not gay after a Queer Nation poster allegedly tried to out him. He also sued a tabloid for printing a story that he was gay, which later was settled with an apology and a financial sum that Selleck donated to the University of Southern California journalism program to promote ethics in media. He insisted that he was not anti-gay, however, saying "I would have had the same problem, felt the same kind of righteous indignation, if somebody had said I was having an affair with some actress I had never met," and would later portray an openly gay character in In & Out with Kevin Kline.[8]
Selleck is an avid outdoorsman, and a marksman and knowledgable firearms collector. These interests led him to leading man cowboy roles in Western films, starting with his role as Orrin Sackett in the 1979 film The Sacketts, opposite Sam Elliott, Jeff Osterhage, and Western legends Glenn Ford and Ben Johnson. He was easily accepted playing a cowboy, and the roles seemed to "fit" him. He followed The Sacketts with The Shadow Riders in 1982, then with Lassiter in 1984. Quigley Down Under is probably one of his best known Western films, however he also won a "Western Heritage Award" for his 1997 role in Last Stand at Sabre River. His last two cowboy roles to date were in the 2001 TNT movie Crossfire Trail (based on a Louis L'Amour novel of the same name), and the 2003 motion picture Monte Walsh.
He most recently appeared in the film Killers, along with Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher.
Selleck played the role of Thomas Magnum in 1980 after six failed TV pilots. The show would go on for eight seasons and 162 episodes until 1988, winning him an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 1984. Selleck was famous for his moustache, a Hawaiian-style aloha shirt, and Detroit Tigers baseball cap. Magnum drove a Ferrari 308GTSi in the series. The model became so identified with the role that Ferrari fans now refer to the red painted model as a "Magnum" Ferrari.
Selleck has confirmed that he is the most popular choice by fans to play the role of Magnum in the rumoured upcoming Magnum P.I. movie.[9]
In February 1998, Selleck accepted the lead role in a sitcom for CBS called The Closer. In it he played Jack McLaren, a legendary publicist heading up a brand new marketing firm. His costars included Ed Asner, David Krumholtz, and Penelope Ann Miller. Despite the high pedigree, and the expectations for his first series since Magnum, P. I., low ratings caused the show to be cancelled after 10 episodes.
Selleck played the recurring role of Dr. Richard Burke on Friends, a love interest to the character of Monica Geller (Courteney Cox). Richard Burke is an ophthalmologist who is 21 years older than Monica and close friends with her parents. Monica and Richard have a very close and deep relationship until Monica discovers that Richard is not willing to have more children, whereupon the two break up. However, later on, he returns, telling Monica he still loves her and would do anything to be with her, all the while knowing she was in a serious relationship with Chandler Bing (Matthew Perry). Monica later chooses Chandler over Richard. Richard Burke appears in Seasons 2, 3 and 6 of Friends and is referred to often throughout the series. The role helped revitalize Selleck's career, garnering him a 2000 Emmy Award nomination for "Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series". Friends producers apparently had to stop having live audiences on the set, as the audience became too excitable when Selleck was appearing.
Since 2005, Selleck has starred in the role of transplanted lawman Jesse Stone in a series of made-for-TV movies based on Robert B. Parker's novels. To date, the series comprises six films, with a seventh due for release in late 2010.[10] In addition to his portrayal of the films' protagonist, Selleck also acts as producer for the series. The fifth film, Jesse Stone: Thin Ice, was not adapted from Parker's novels, but rather an original story by Selleck.[11]
He joined the cast of the NBC drama Las Vegas in the season-five premiere on September 28, 2007. He played A.J. Cooper, the new owner of the Montecito Casino. He replaced James Caan who left the cast in the same episode. This is Selleck's first regular role on a drama show since he played Thomas Magnum on Magnum, P.I..
Selleck has also appeared in a number of made-for-TV movies in recent years. In particular, he has sought to help bring back to popularity of the western, often playing one of that genre's typical characters but thrust into a modern context.
Surprising many of his fans, Selleck unexpectedly played the role of General Dwight D. Eisenhower in the History Channel's 2004 made-for-TV movie Ike: Countdown to D-Day. The movie showed the planning, politics, and preparation for the 1944 Invasion of Normandy, and Selleck was critically lauded for playing a cool, calm Eisenhower.
Most recently, Selleck has appeared in a recurring role on the acclaimed ABC drama Boston Legal as Ivan Tiggs, the troubled ex-husband of Shirley Schmidt (Candice Bergen), and as novelist Robert B. Parker's character Jesse Stone in several CBS made-for-TV movies, earning a 2007 Emmy nomination for Jesse Stone: Sea Change.
In 2001, Selleck played the lead role of Murray in a Broadway revival of Herb Gardner's comedic play "A Thousand Clowns." It ran for only two months. Critics, though far from uniformly negative about Selleck's performance, generally compared it unfavorably to that of Jason Robards Jr., who won awards in the 1960s for playing the character on the stage and in a movie version. (It remains the role with which Robards is most identified.) Playwright Gardner, however, actually preferred Selleck to Robards in the part, and even said that Selleck was the way he had always envisioned Murray.
He did the voice over for the 1993 AT&T advertising campaigns titled "You Will." These advertisements had a futuristic feel, and posed the question of, "What if you had the technology to ______ ? Well, you will ... and the company that will bring it to you? AT&T." As of December 30, 2007, he began doing commercial voice-overs for Florida orange juice, a move that one writer quipped would have a "magnum" impact on sales (referring to the actor's role in Magnum, P.I).[12]
On April 28, 2000, he received an honorary doctorate from Pepperdine University. He was chosen because of his outstanding character and ethic. He is a board member of the non-profit Joseph and Edna Josephson Institute of Ethics and co-founder of the Character Counts Coalition.[13] Selleck received a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1986. The star is situated at 6925 Hollywood Blvd.[14]
In 1993, during the brief run of the late night The Chevy Chase Show on Fox, Selleck guest-starred. As a gag, he asked to be presented his 1992 Worst Supporting Actor Razzie award for his performance as King Ferdinand of Spain in Christopher Columbus: The Discovery. When the Razzie was presented to him on the air, Selleck took it in stride and asked the entire studio audience to "blow me a raspberry." Thus Selleck became the third person in Razzie history to voluntarily accept one of the Worst Achievements in Film statuettes.
Selleck was married to model Jacqueline Ray from 1970–1982, a marriage during which he adopted her son, Kevin (born 1966), from a previous marriage.
On August 7, 1987, Selleck married Jillie Mack.[15] They have one daughter, Hannah Margaret Mack Selleck[16] (born December 16, 1988).[6][17] The family lives in Freedom, California, and Thousand Oaks, California.[18] Selleck has summer residences in Jonesboro, Maine, United States and a recent acquisition in the northern regions of the Shetland Isles. In the 1980s – specifically around the time of filming Three Men and a Baby – Selleck owned a home on upscale Lakeshore Road in Oakville, Ontario, a suburb southwest of Toronto.
Selleck lives on an avocado ranch. The following quote is from a Good Housekeeping interview titled "Man of the House: Tom Selleck", "So I like to get outside and work on the farm, from fixing roads to clearing brush. I hate going to the gym, so sweating outdoors sure beats sitting on a stationary bike staring at my navel. And I work cheaper than anyone I could hire to do it."
Selleck is an avid hockey fan and has been seen attending multiple Los Angeles Kings games at the Staples Center. He lists Anze Kopitar and Alexander Frolov as two of his favorite players.
One of Selleck's "Magnum" co-stars, Larry Manetti, in his 1996 memoir "Aloha Magnum," was lavish in his praise of Selleck. Manetti lauded Selleck for his extraordinary work ethic on a grueling show (shooting for hours in the midday Hawaiian sun), Selleck's work with Hawaiian charities and his willingness to go to bat for the program's cast and crew members.
To promote his movie The Love Letter, Selleck was invited to be on The Rosie O'Donnell Show on May 19, 1999. However, he found himself defending an ad in which he appeared supporting the National Rifle Association (NRA) and his position on gun ownership. Selleck said: "It's your show, and you can talk about it after I leave." O'Donnell was highly criticized, criticism which led her to make an apology to Selleck by saying: "For him feeling embarrassed and humiliated by me, I strongly do apologize to him personally, but I do not apologize for my feelings about the issue of gun control."[19]
Selleck is a member of the Board of Directors and public spokesman of the four-million-member NRA.[20] After close friend and fellow avid outdoorsman Charlton Heston stepped down, due to failing health, as the highly visible public spokesman of the NRA in 2003, Selleck has stepped up in comparable manner to succeed him.[21] In 2002, Selleck donated the rifle he used in Quigley Down Under (a custom 13-pound [6 kg], single-shot rifle, 1874 Sharps Rifle, with a 34-inch [86-cm] barrel),[22] along with six other firearms from his other films, to the National Rifle Association, as part of the NRA's exhibit "Real Guns of Reel Heroes" at the National Firearms Museum in Fairfax, Virginia.[20]
For a number of years Selleck appeared in television advertising for William F. Buckley's magazine The National Review (he also subscribes to The New Republic).[23]
Selleck describes himself politically as "a registered independent with a lot of libertarian leanings."[24] He also endorsed John McCain during the 2008 US Presidential Election.
In February 2009, Selleck joined the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund as national spokesman for the new Education Center being built on the National Mall.[7]
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Year | Film | Role | Notes | ||||
1970 | Myra Breckinridge | ||||||
1971 | The Seven Minutes | ||||||
1972 | Daughters of Satan | James Robertson | |||||
1973 | Sons of God | ||||||
Shadow of Fear | Mark Brolin | ||||||
Terminal Island | Dr. Milford | ||||||
1976 | Midway | Aide to Capt. Cyril Simard | |||||
1977 | The Washington Affair | Jim Hawley | |||||
1978 | Coma | Sean Murphy | |||||
1979 | The Sacketts | Orrin Sackett | |||||
1983 | High Road to China | Patrick O' Malley | |||||
1984 | Lassiter | Nick Lassiter | |||||
Runaway | Sgt. Jack R. Ramsay | ||||||
1987 | Three Men and a Baby | Peter Mitchell | Lead Role | ||||
1989 | Her Alibi | Phil Blackwood | |||||
An Innocent Man | Jimmie Rainwood | ||||||
1990 | Quigley Down Under | Matthew Quigley | Lead Role | ||||
Three Men and a Little Lady | Peter Mitchell | Lead Role | |||||
1992 | Folks! | Jon Aldrich | |||||
Christopher Columbus: The Discovery | King Ferdinand | Supporting Role | |||||
Mr. Baseball | Jack Elliot | ||||||
1995 | Open Season | Rock Maninoff | |||||
1996 | The Magic of Flight | Short Subject / Narrator | |||||
Kids for Character | Direct to Video / Narrator | ||||||
1997 | In & Out | Peter Malloy | Supporting Role | ||||
1999 | The Love Letter | George Matthias | |||||
2001 | Crossfire Trail | Rafael "Rafe" Covington | TV Movie | ||||
2000 | Running Mates | Gov. James Reynolds Pryce | TV Movie | ||||
2004 | Monte Walsh | Monte Walsh | TV Movie | ||||
2007 | Meet the Robinsons | Cornelius Robinson | Voice | ||||
2010 | Killers | Mr. Kornfeldt | Supporting Role | ||||
2012 | Three men and a Bride (In development) | Peter Mitchell | Lead Role | ||||
Television | |||||||
Year | Title | Role | Notes | ||||
1970 | The Movie Murderer | ||||||
1974 | A Case of Rape | ||||||
1974–1975 | The Young and the Restless | Cast member from 1974–1975 & 2005 | |||||
1975 | Returning Home | ||||||
1976 | Most Wanted | ||||||
1977 | Bunco | ||||||
1978 | Superdome | ||||||
1978 | The Gypsy Warriors | ||||||
1978–1979 | The Rockford Files | PI Lance White | Two appearances | ||||
1979 | The Chinese Typewriter | ||||||
1979 | The Sacketts | ||||||
1979 | The Concrete Cowboys | Cowboy | |||||
1980 | Stone Ninjas | Ninja | |||||
1981 | Pirates of Rock | Pirate | |||||
1980–1988 | Magnum, P.I. | Thomas Magnum | 1982 | Divorce Wars: A Love Story | |||
1982 | The Shadow Riders | ||||||
1986 | Murder, She Wrote | ||||||
1995 | Broken Trust | ||||||
1996 | Ruby Jean and Joe | Also Executive Producer | |||||
1996 | Friends | Richard | Recurring role | ||||
1997 | Last Stand at Saber River | Also Executive Producer | |||||
1998 | The Closer | ||||||
2000 | Running Mates | ||||||
2001 | Crossfire Trail | Also Executive Producer | |||||
2003 | Monte Walsh | Also Executive Producer | |||||
2003 | Twelve Mile Road | ||||||
2004 | Reversible Errors | ||||||
2004 | Ike: Countdown to D-Day | Gen. Dwight D Eisenhower | |||||
2005–2010 | Jesse Stone series | Jesse Stone | TV movies / Also Executive Producer & Producer
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2006 | Boston Legal | Ivan Tiggs | Recurring role | ||||
2007–2008 | Las Vegas | A.J. Cooper | Cast member from 2007–2008 | ||||
2009 | Family Guy (TV series) | Tom Selleck | |||||
2010- | Blue Bloods (TV series) | Chief Frank Reagan |
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