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J. T. Walsh

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J. T. Walsh
Born
James Thomas Patrick Walsh

James Thomas Patrick "J. T." Walsh (September 28, 1943 – February 27, 1998) was an American character actor known for his roles as "quietly sinister white-collar sleazeballs" (quote from Leonard Maltin) in numerous feature films and "everybody's favorite scumbag" from Playboy magazine.

Early life

Walsh was born in San Francisco, California. He had three siblings, Christopher, Patricia, and Mary. After studying at Clongowes Wood College in Ireland, Walsh attended the University of Rhode Island, where he starred in many college theater productions. In 1974, he was discovered by a director and began working in off-Broadway shows.

Career

Walsh did not appear in feature films until 1983, when he had a minor role in Eddie Macon's Run. Over the next 15 years, he played in over 50 feature films, increasingly taking the bad guy role for which he is so well known, e.g. the loudly irascible Master Sergeant Dickerson in Good Morning, Vietnam. Walsh had one of his best[citation needed] roles as Wayne in Red Rock West (1992).

On television, Walsh again portrayed a consummately evil character, prison Warden Brodeur on The X Files episode "The List" (1995). Brodeur beats a hand-cuffed inmate to death because the inmate informs Brodeur that he will be next on the list of people a former inmate has threatened to kill.

Walsh wanted to show his range as an actor and play good guy parts despite being typecast as a villain. Although he did get to play a few decent people such as the White House Chief of Staff in Outbreak and Chester Van Damme in Sniper, even those roles had Walsh putting an amoral streak within his characters. Walsh played a member of Majestic-12 in the 1996-1997 sci-fi/drama television series Dark Skies.

Death and legacy

The 1997 thriller Breakdown featured Walsh as the villainous truck driver, which raised his profile to movie audiences. It was his last starring film released during his lifetime.

In his last year, he starred in Hidden Agenda, Pleasantville, and The Negotiator. All three movies were dedicated to his memory, after he died from a heart attack on February 27, 1998. He died while a guest of the Optimum Health Institute in Lemon Grove, California.

In addition, Jack Nicholson dedicated his Academy Award for As Good as It Gets to the memory of Walsh, with whom he had starred in A Few Good Men and Hoffa in 1992.

In his later years, Walsh was befriended by actor Scott Marlowe.[citation needed] He was the father of actor John West and was the inspiration for Fametracker's The J.T. Walsh Memorial "Hey! It's That Guy!" feature on character actors.

Selected Filmography

Year Film Role Notes
1985 Right to Kill? Maj. Eckworth
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters Ed Smythe
1987 Good Morning, Vietnam Sgt. Major Dickerson
1988 Tequila Sunrise DEA Agent Hal Maguire
1990 Misery State Trooper Sherman Douglas Uncredited
The Grifters Cole
1991 Backdraft Alderman Marty Swayzak
1992 A Few Good Men Lt. Col. Matthew Markinson
Red Rock West Wayne
Hoffa Frank Fitzsimmons
1993 Needful Things Danforth 'Buster' Keeton III
Sniper Chester Van Damme
1994 The Last Seduction Frank Griffith
Blue Chips Happy
The Client Jason McThune
Silent Fall Sheriff Mitch Rivers
1995 Nixon John Ehrlichman
Black Day Blue Night Lt. John Quinn
1996 Executive Decision Senator Mavros
Sling Blade Charles Bushman
1997 Breakdown Warren 'Red' Barr
1998 The Negotiator Inspector Terence Niebaum This film is dedicated to Walsh, who died before the movie's release.
Pleasantville Big Bob This film is dedicated to Walsh, who died before the movie's release.
Hidden Agenda Jonathan Zanuck This film is dedicated to Walsh, who died before the movie's release.