Timothy Hutton | |
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Hutton at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival |
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Born | Timothy Tarquin Hutton August 16, 1960 Malibu, California, United States |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1965–present |
Spouse | Debra Winger (1986–1990) Aurore Giscard d'Estaing (2000–present) |
Timothy Tarquin Hutton (born August 16, 1960) is an American actor.[1] He is the youngest actor to win the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, which he won at the age of 20 for his performance as Conrad Jarrett in Ordinary People (1980). He currently stars as Nathan "Nate" Ford on the TNT series Leverage.
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Timothy Hutton was born in Malibu, California. His father was actor Jim Hutton; his mother, Maryline Adams (née Poole), was a teacher. His parents' marriage dissolved when Hutton was three years old, and his mother took him and his older sister with her to Boston. 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."[2]
When he was 16, Hutton sought out his father, living with him in Los Angeles while attending Fairfax High School. There, while playing Nathan Detroit in a school production of Guys and Dolls, Hutton realized he wanted to become an actor. With encouragement from both of his parents, Hutton carefully built himself a career in television.[2]
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 great success, he starred in the acclaimed 1981 ABC television film A Long Way Home co-starring Brenda Vaccaro.
However, Hutton soon fell victim to the "Oscar Jinx." His next feature film, Taps (with George C. Scott, Sean Penn, and Tom Cruise), while popular with audiences, received mixed reviews from critics. During the next several years, his motion pictures, such as Iceman, Daniel, Turk 182, Made In Heaven, and Q & A, all flopped at the box office. His only substantial hit was 1985's The Falcon and the Snowman which teamed him again with Sean Penn.
During the late 1980s and into the 1990s, Hutton began to take featured 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 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.
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 (1998). 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 15 feature films from 2006 to 2008.
Hutton is currently starring in the television series Leverage, where he plays former insurance investigator Nate Ford who leads a group of thieves who act as modern-day Robin Hoods.
Hutton is one of the owners of the New York City restaurant and bar P. J. Clarke's. In 2003 he became president of the prestigious 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.
Hutton starred in a Groupon commercial during the 2011 Super Bowl which drew public ire from the parodization of the Tibetan resistance movement. The commercials were pulled from rotation on February 10 after continued negative response from the public and activist groups.
Hutton has married twice. His first marriage (1986–1990) was to actress Debra Winger; they have a son, Noah. 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 on September 11, 2001.[3] In July 2009, US Weekly reported that Hutton and his second wife had separated.[4]
Hutton became a Freemason at Herder Lodge No. 698 in New York City in 2005.[5] Hutton dated Angelina Jolie[6] for a few years before she married Billy Bob Thornton.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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1965 | Never Too Late | Boy running to his daddy | uncredited |
1972 | The Wonderful World of Disney | "Dad, Can I Borrow the Car" | |
1978 | Zuma Beach | Art | (TV) |
1979 | Friendly Fire | John Mullen | (TV) |
1979 | The Best Place to Be | Tommy Callahan | (TV) |
1979 | And Baby Makes Six | Jason Cramer | (TV) |
1979 | Young Love, First Love | Derek Clayton | (TV) |
1980 | The Oldest Living Graduate | Cadet | (TV) |
1980 | Disney's Wonderful World | Paul Winters | "The Sultan and the Rock Star" |
1980 | Ordinary People | Conrad Jarrett | Golden Globe for New Actor of the Year Best Supporting Actor awards: |
1980 | Father Figure | Jim | (TV) |
1981 | Teenage Suicide: Don't Try It! | narrator | |
1981 | A Long Way Home | Donald Branch | (TV) |
1981 | Taps | Cadet Major Brian Moreland | Golden Globe Nominee for Best Actor in a 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" | |
1989 | Torrents of Spring | Dimitri Sanin | |
1990 | Q&A | Asst. District Attorney Aloysius Francis Reilly | |
1991 | Strangers | Tom | |
1993 | The Temp | Peter Derns | |
1993 | The Dark Half | Thad Beaumont/George Stark | |
1993 | Zelda | F. Scott Fitzgerald | (TV) |
1995 | French Kiss | Charlie | |
1995 | The Last Word | Martin Ryan | |
1996 | Beautiful Girls | Willie Conway | |
1996 | Mr. and Mrs. Loving | Richard Loving | (TV) |
1996 | The Substance of Fire | Martin Geldhart | |
1997 | City of Industry | Lee Egan | |
1997 | Playing God | Raymond Blossom | |
1997 | Dead by Midnight | John Larkin/Sam Ellis | (TV) |
1997 | Aldrich Ames: The Traitor Within | Aldrich Ames | (TV) |
1998 | Vig | Frankie | |
1999 | The General's Daughter | Col. William Kent | |
1999 | Deterrence | Marshall Thompson | |
2000 | The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery | Archie Goodwin | (TV) |
2000 | Deliberate Intent | Rod Smolla | (TV) |
2000 | Just One Night | Isaac Alder | |
2001 | WW3 | Larry | (TV) |
2001–2002 | A Nero Wolfe Mystery | Archie Goodwin | (TV series) |
2002 | Sunshine State | Jack Meadows | |
2004 | Secret Window | Ted Milner | |
2004 | 5ive Days to Midnight | J.T. Neumeyer | (TV miniseries) |
2004 | Kinsey | Paul Gebhard | |
2005 | Turning Green | Bill the Breaker | |
2006 | Last Holiday | Matthew Kragen | |
2006 | Stephanie Daley | Paul | |
2006 | Avenger | Frank McBride | (TV) |
2006 | The Kovak Box | David Norton | |
2006 | Heavens Fall | Samuel Leibowitz | |
2006 | Falling Objects | Oscar Peters | |
2006 | Off the Black | Mr. Tibbel | |
2006 | The Good Shepherd | Thomas Wilson | |
2006–2007 | Kidnapped | Conrad Cain | (TV series) |
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 | |
2008–present | Leverage | Nathan Ford | (TV series) |
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 |
Year | Title | Notes |
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1986 | Amazing Stories (TV series) | "Grandpa's Ghost" |
1998 | Digging to China | Children's Jury Award, Chicago International Children's Film Festival |
2001–2002 | A Nero Wolfe Mystery (TV series) | "The Doorbell Rang" "Champagne for One" "Over My Dead Body" "Death of a Doxy" |
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