Tim Blake Nelson | |
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Born | Timothy Blake Nelson May 11, 1964 Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S. |
Education | Brown University (BA) Juilliard School (GrDip) |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1989–present |
Spouse | Lisa Benavides (m. 1994) |
Children | 3 |
Timothy Blake Nelson (born May 11, 1964) is an American actor and playwright. Described as a "modern character actor", [1] his roles include Delmar O'Donnell in O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), Gideon in Minority Report (2002), Doctor Steve Pendanski in Holes (2003), Doctor Jonathan Jacobo in Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004), Danny Dalton Jr. in Syriana (2005), Samuel Sterns in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Richard Schell in Lincoln (2012), the titular character of The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018) and Henry McCarty in Old Henry (2021). He portrayed Wade Tillman / Looking Glass in the HBO limited series Watchmen (2019), for which he received a Critics' Choice Television Awards nomination for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series in 2020.
Nelson's directorial credits include Eye of God (1997), which was nominated for the Sundance Grand Jury Prize and an Independent Spirit Award; O (2001), a modern-day adaptation of Othello; and the Holocaust drama The Grey Zone (2001). Eye of God and The Grey Zone were both adapted from Nelson's own plays. Nelson has also co-directed music videos for Billy Woods and Kenny Segal including "Babylon by Bus" and "Soft Landing". He also co-directed the music video for Armand Hammer feat. Pink Siifu's "Trauma Mic".
Nelson recently published his debut novel, City of Blows (2023), an epic group portrait of four men grappling for control of a script in a radically changing Hollywood.
Nelson was born to a Jewish family [2] [3] in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the son of Ruth Nelson ( née Kaiser), [4] [5] a noted Tulsa social activist and philanthropist, and Don Nelson, a geologist and wildcatter. [6] [7] His maternal uncle is businessman George Kaiser. [8]
His maternal grandparents Herman Geo. Kaiser and Kate Kaiser, daughter of businessman Max Samuel, were from Germany, and escaped the Nazis shortly before World War II. They moved to Britain in 1938, [9] : 96seq. where Nelson's mother was born, [9] : 87seq. [10] and immigrated to the United States in 1941. [11] [12] [13] His father's family were Russian-Jewish emigrants. [14]
Nelson attended the Oklahoma Summer Arts Institute at Quartz Mountain Resort Arts and Conference Center in Lone Wolf, Oklahoma. [15]
Nelson is a 1982 graduate of Holland Hall School in Tulsa, [4] and a graduate of Brown University, where he was a classics major as well as senior orator for his class of 1986. At Brown, he studied under philosopher Martha Nussbaum. [16] He is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. He won the Workman/Driskoll award for excellence in classical studies. [17] He graduated from Juilliard in 1990, a member of Group 19. [18]
This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification .(June 2017) |
Nelson's debut play, Eye of God, was produced at Seattle Repertory Theatre in 1992. The Grey Zone premiered at MCC Theater in New York in 1996, where his 1998 work Anadarko was produced. He was a co-star of the sketch comedy show The Unnaturals, which ran on HA! (later CTV, and would turn into Comedy Central) between 1989 and 1991, alongside Paul Zaloom, John Mariano and Siobhan Fallon Hogan. [19]
Nelson has appeared as an actor in film, TV and theatre. He had a featured role as Delmar in the film O Brother, Where Art Thou? According to directors Joel and Ethan Coen, he was the only one in the cast or crew who had read Homer's Odyssey , a story upon which the film is loosely based. [20] He sang "In the Jailhouse Now" on the film's soundtrack (which received a Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 2002). He has had a number of supporting performances in feature films such as Holes , Minority Report , Syriana and Lincoln . He also appeared in Marvel Comics adaptations The Incredible Hulk and Fantastic Four .
Nelson narrated the 2001 audiobook At the Altar of Speed: The Fast Life and Tragic Death of Dale Earnhardt, Sr. He appeared on stage extensively off-Broadway in New York at theatres including Manhattan Theater Club, Playwrights Horizons, Manhattan Class Company, Soho Repertory Theater, New York Theatre Workshop, and Central Park's Open Air Theater in the Shakespeare plays Richard III , Troilus and Cressida , and A Midsummer Night's Dream .
He has directed film versions of his plays The Grey Zone and Eye of God (for which he received an Independent Spirit Awards nomination for the Someone to Watch Award), and directed two of his original screenplays: Kansas (1998) and Leaves of Grass (2009). He directed the film O , based on Othello and set in a modern-day high school. For Eye of God, he received the Tokyo Bronze Prize at the Tokyo International Film Festival (1997) and the American Independent Award at the Seattle International Film Festival (1997); for O, the Best Director Award at the Seattle International Film Festival (2001); and for The Grey Zone, the National Board of Review's Freedom of Expression Award (2002). Holocaust film historian Rich Brownstein, in his 2021 book "Holocaust Cinema Complete: A History and Analysis of 400 Films, with a Teaching Guide," regards The Grey Zone as the finest Holocaust film ever made. Nelson is on the boards of directors of The Actors Center in New York City and the Soho Rep Theatre. [21]
Nelson guest-starred on the CSI: Crime Scene Investigation season 10 episode "Working Stiffs". In the episode "My Brother's Bomber" (aired September 29, 2015) of the PBS investigative series Frontline , he talked about the loss of his friend David Dornstein in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. [22]
In 2018, Nelson played the title character in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs , a western anthology film by Joel and Ethan Coen, [23] after receiving the original script 16 years prior, in 2002. The film was released on Netflix on November 16, after a limited theatrical run, [24] and received positive reviews, [25] [26] with many highlighting Nelson's performance and his overall segment. He portrayed Ralph Myers in the drama/legal drama Just Mercy (2019). In January 2023, he joined the cast of Dune: Part Two , [27] though his role was ultimately cut out of the film. [28]
Nelson's play Socrates opened at The Public Theater in 2019, starring Michael Stuhlbarg. [29] It was favorably received by numerous publications, including the New York Times. [30]
Nelson resides in New York City with his wife, Lisa Benavides, and their three sons. [4] One of his sons is Henry Nelson, a film director who directed Asleep in My Palm . [31] On May 8, 2009, he was inducted as an honorary member of the University of Tulsa's Beta of Oklahoma chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa national collegiate honor society. [32] Nelson currently serves on the Board of Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, the school from which his mother Ruth Nelson graduated in 1958. [33] [34]
† | Denotes productions that have not yet been released |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | This Is My Life | Dennis | |
1993 | Motel Blue 19 | Adult Luther (voice) | Uncredited |
1994 | Amateur | Young Detective | |
1995 | Heavyweights | Roger Johnson | |
1996 | Joe's Apartment | Cockroach (voice) | |
1997 | Eye of God | — | Director and writer |
Donnie Brasco | FBI Technician | ||
Prix Fixe | Busboy | Short film | |
1998 | The Thin Red Line | Pvt. Lysander Tills | |
Kansas | — | Short film; director and writer | |
2000 | Hamlet | Flight captain | |
O Brother, Where Art Thou? | Delmar O'Donnell | ||
2001 | O | — | Director |
The Grey Zone | — | Director, writer, producer and editor | |
2002 | The Good Girl | Bubba | |
Cherish | Daly | ||
Minority Report | Gideon | ||
2003 | A Foreign Affair | Jake Adams | Also executive producer |
Holes | Dr. Kiowa "Mom" Pendanski | ||
Wonderland | Billy Deverell | ||
2004 | Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed | Dr. Jonathan Jacobo | |
The Last Shot | Marshal Paris | ||
Bereft | Dennis | ||
Meet the Fockers | Officer Vern LeFlore | ||
2005 | The Amateurs | Barney Macklehatton | |
My Suicidal Sweetheart | Various | ||
The Big White | Gary | ||
Syriana | Danny Dalton | ||
2006 | Come Early Morning | Uncle Tim | |
The Darwin Awards | Perp | ||
Hoot | Curly | ||
Fido | Mr. Theopolis | ||
2007 | The Astronaut Farmer | Kevin Munchak | |
2008 | The Incredible Hulk | Samuel Sterns | |
American Violet | David Cohen | ||
2009 | Saint John of Las Vegas | Militant Ned | |
Leaves of Grass | Bolger | Also director, writer and producer | |
2011 | Flypaper | Peanut Butter | |
Yelling to the Sky | Coleman | ||
Detachment | Mr. Wiatt | ||
The Big Year | Fuchs | ||
2012 | Big Miracle | Pat Lafayette | |
Lincoln | Richard Schell | ||
2013 | Blue Caprice | Ray | |
As I Lay Dying | Anse | ||
Child of God | Sheriff Fate | ||
Snake and Mongoose | Mike McAllister | ||
2014 | The Homesman | Freighter | |
The Sound and the Fury | Father | ||
Kill the Messenger | Alan Fenster | ||
Rickover: The Birth of Nuclear Power [35] | Admiral Hyman Rickover | Documentary | |
2015 | Anesthesia | Adam Zarrow | Also director, writer and producer |
Fantastic Four | Dr. Harvey Allen | ||
2016 | The Confirmation | Vaughn | |
Colossal | Garth | ||
Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk | Wayne Pfister | ||
2017 | Deidra & Laney Rob a Train | Truman | |
The Vanishing of Sidney Hall | Johan Tidemand | ||
The Institute | Dr. Lemelle | ||
The Long Home | Hovington | Unreleased | |
2018 | Monster | Leroy Sawicki | |
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs | Buster Scruggs | Segment: "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs" | |
2019 | The Report | Raymond Nathan | |
Arara | Thomas | ||
The Hustle | Portnoy | Uncredited | |
Angel Has Fallen | Vice President Martin Kirby | ||
Just Mercy | Ralph Myers | ||
Zeroville | Professor Kohn | ||
The True Don Quixote | Don Quixote | ||
The Jesus Rolls | Doctor | ||
2021 | Naked Singularity | Angus | |
Old Henry | Henry | Also executive producer | |
Ghosts of the Ozarks | Torb | ||
National Champions | Rodger Cummings | ||
Nightmare Alley | Carny Boss | ||
2022 | Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio | The Black Rabbits (voice) | |
2023 | Ghosted | Borislov | |
Ninety-Five Senses | Coy (voice) | Short film | |
Asleep in My Palm | Tom | Also producer | |
2024 | The Bricklayer | O'Malley | |
Bang Bang | Bernard 'Bang Bang' Rozyski | [36] | |
Greedy People | Wallace Chetlo | [37] | |
The Invisibles | Charlie | ||
2025 | Captain America: Brave New World † | Samuel Sterns / Leader | Post-production |
On The End† | Tom Ferreira | Post-production [38] | |
TBA | The Long Home † | Hovington | Complete but no official release date [39] |
Ann Lee † | TBA | Post-production |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1989–1991 | The Unnaturals | Recurring characters | |
1995 | House of Buggin' | Kidnapper | Episode: "The Paco Vasquez Story" |
1996 | Dead Man's Walk | Johnny Carthage | 3 episodes |
2005 | Stella | Mountain Man | Episode: "Camping" |
Warm Springs | Tom Loyless | Television film | |
2006 | Haskett's Chance | — | Pilot; director |
2009 | CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | Paulie Krill | Episode: "Working Stiffs" |
2011 | CHAOS | Casey Malick | 13 episodes |
Modern Family | Hank | Episode: "Dude Ranch" | |
2012–2015 | Black Dynamite | Chief Humphrey Magillahorn / Donald Sterling / PBS Executive / XXX Film Director (voice) | 4 episodes |
2014 | Klondike | Meeker | 6 episodes |
2015, 2019 | Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt | Randy | 4 episodes |
2015 | Z: The Beginning of Everything | — | Episode: "Pilot"; director |
For Justice | Ochs Rainey | Pilot | |
2017 | Wormwood | Sidney Gottlieb | 4 episodes |
2018 | Dallas & Robo | The Woodsman (voice) | 8 episodes |
2019 | Watchmen | Wade Tillman / Looking Glass | 6 episodes |
2020 | Big City Greens | Grampa Ernest Green (voice) | Episode: "Garage Tales" |
2022 | Lost Ollie | Zozo (voice) | 4 episodes |
Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities | Nick Appleton | Episode: "Lot 36" | |
George & Tammy | Roy Acuff | Episode: "The Race Is On" | |
2023 | Poker Face | Keith Owens | Episode: "The Future of the Sport" |
TBA | The Sensitive Kind | TBA | Upcoming series |
Year | Game | Role |
---|---|---|
2008 | The Incredible Hulk | Samuel Sterns (voice) |
Year | Artist(s) | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2023 | Billy Woods and Kenny Segal | "Soft Landing" | Director, with Henry Nelson [40] |
Billy Woods and Kenny Segal featuring ShrapKnel | "Babylon by Bus" | Director, with Henry Nelson [41] | |
Armand Hammer featuring Pink Siifu | "Trauma Mic" | Director, with Henry Nelson [42] | |
2024 | ShrapKnel | "Deep Space 9 Millie Pulled a Pistol" | Director, with Henry Nelson [43] |
Joel Daniel Coen and Ethan Jesse Coen, together known as the Coen brothers, are an American filmmaking duo. Their films span many genres and styles, which they frequently subvert or parody. Among their most acclaimed works are Blood Simple (1984), Raising Arizona (1987), Miller's Crossing (1990), Barton Fink (1991), Fargo (1996), The Big Lebowski (1998), O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), No Country for Old Men (2007), A Serious Man (2009), True Grit (2010) and Inside Llewyn Davis (2013).
O Brother, Where Art Thou? is a 2000 satirical comedy-drama musical film written, produced, co-edited, and directed by Joel and Ethan Coen. It stars George Clooney, John Turturro, and Tim Blake Nelson, with Chris Thomas King, John Goodman, Holly Hunter, and Charles Durning in supporting roles.
Ellen Tyne Daly is an American actress whose six-decade career included many leading roles in movies and theater. She has won six Emmy Awards for her television work, a Tony Award, and is a 2011 American Theatre Hall of Fame inductee.
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A singing cowboy was a subtype of the archetypal cowboy hero of early Western films. It references real-world campfire side ballads in the American frontier. The original cowboys sang of life on the trail with all the challenges, hardships, and dangers encountered while pushing cattle for miles up the trails and across the prairies. This continues with modern vaquero traditions and within the genre of Western music, and its related New Mexico, Red Dirt, Tejano, and Texas country music styles. A number of songs have been written and made famous by groups like the Sons of the Pioneers and Riders in the Sky and individual performers such as Marty Robbins, Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Tex Ritter, Bob Baker and other "singing cowboys". Singing in the wrangler style, these entertainers have served to preserve the cowboy as a unique American hero.
Jeff Danna is a Canadian film composer. He has composed or co-composed scores for a wide range of films and television, including The Boondock Saints (1999), Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004), Silent Hill (2006), The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009), The Good Dinosaur (2015), Storks (2016), The Breadwinner (2017), The Addams Family (2019), Onward (2020), Guillermo Del Toro’s Tales of Arcadia (2019-2021), Nora Twomey’s My Father’s Dragon (2022) and Julia (2022).
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The Ballad of Buster Scruggs is a 2018 American Western anthology film written, directed, produced, and edited by the Coen brothers. It stars Tim Blake Nelson, Tyne Daly, James Franco, Brendan Gleeson, Bill Heck, Grainger Hines, Zoe Kazan, Harry Melling, Liam Neeson, Jonjo O'Neill, Chelcie Ross, Saul Rubinek, and Tom Waits. It consists of six vignettes set on the American frontier.
The 75th Venice International Film Festival was held from 29 August to 8 September 2018.
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The 23rd San Diego Film Critics Society Awards were announced on December 10, 2018.
The Tragedy of Macbeth is a 2021 American historical thriller film written, directed and produced by Joel Coen, based on the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare. It is the first film directed by one of the Coen brothers without the other's involvement. The film stars Denzel Washington, Frances McDormand, Bertie Carvel, Alex Hassell, Corey Hawkins, Harry Melling, Kathryn Hunter, and Brendan Gleeson.
Old Henry is a 2021 American western action drama film written and directed by Potsy Ponciroli. It stars Tim Blake Nelson as the titular character, a farmer who must protect his son from outlaws, with Scott Haze, Gavin Lewis, Trace Adkins, and Stephen Dorff in supporting roles. The film had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival on September 7, 2021, and was theatrically released in the United States by Shout! Studios on October 1. It was critically acclaimed, with praise to the story, Ponciroli's direction, and Nelson's performance. The National Board of Review selected the film in its annual list of the Top Ten Independent Films of the year.