This prolific and extremely versatile character player's expressive and rubbery mug has served him well in a variety of disparate roles and genres on stage, film and TV. Hedaya had substantial theater experience with the New York Shakespeare Festival and has appeared in over 25 features since 1980 but he is most widely known for his extensive TV work. "Cheers" cultists fondly remember him as Nick Tortelli, the unscrupulous and hirsute ex-husband of Rhea Perlman's Carla and the star of a subsequent short-lived spin-off, "The Tortellis" (NBC, 1987). Hedaya is a familiar TV face appearing in series ("Hill Street Blues"; "Family Ties"; "Law and Order"; "NYPD Blue"), TV-movies ("Courage" 1986, with Sophia Loren), various busted pilots and as a regular in several fleeting series ("Mama's Boy", NBC, 1988; "One of the Boys", NBC, 1989). Hedaya has played many flavorful character parts in features, often portraying cops ("The Hunger" 1983; "Tightrope" 1984; "Running Scared" 1986; "The Usual Suspects" 1995), crime figures, or crusty regular guys. His most indelible impression was made in "Blood Simple" (1984), the landmark independent feature debut of the Coen brothers. In a rare substantial role, Hedaya was Marty, the cuckolded husband who hires a sleazy detective to kill his unfaithful wife and her lover. In this unsympathetic but strangely poignant characterization, the actor's sloped nose and ample jowls take on a haunting Nixonian quality. Hedaya continued to demonstrate his prowess in six features in 1993 including "Searching for Bobby Fischer" as the tournament director, and "Mr. Wonderful" as a buddy of working class hero Matt Dillon.
Hedaya did very little film work the following year--just a supporting role in "Maverick" (1994)--opting to devote more time to TV, playing a bail bondsman in three syndicated telefilms derived from the 1988 feature "Midnight Run". He began making up for lost time in 1995 with character turns in several high-profile features including "To Die For", "Nixon" and "Clueless". The latter was a sleeper teen satire which cast Hedaya in the atypical role of a well-to-do lawyer raising a fashion-conscious daughter on his own. He also found time to appear in two ambitious dramatic anthology series on cable, "Fallen Angels" and "Picture Windows" (both Showtime, 1995).
The actor continued to remain busy in 1996: he was Bette Midler's ex-husband in the hit "The First Wives Club", appeared as Robert De Niro's brother in "Marvin's Room", and was featured in the ensembles of Ron Howard's "Ransom" (with Mel Gibson and Rene Russo) and "Daylight" (alongside Sylvester Stallone).
Profession(s):
Actor, waiter, junior high school teacher, floral shop manager, abstract painter
Sometimes Credited As:
Daniel Hedaya
2000 Cast as a corrupt policeman in "Shaft"
2000 Co-starred in "The Crew"
1999 Played Nixon in Andrew Fleming's comedy "Dick"
1995 Joined cast of NBC sitcom "Home Court"
1987 Starred as Nick Tortelli on the "Cheers"-spinoff, "The Tortellis"
1984 Acted with Kevin Kline in "Henry V" at the New York Shakespeare Festival in Central Park (summer)
1984 Received excellent notices for a rare lead in "Blood Simple", the first film from the Coen Brothers
1979 American film debut, "The Seduction of Joe Tynan"
1977 TV-movie debut, "The Prince of Central Park"
1977 Performed on the NY stage with Al Pacino in "The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel"
1976 Feature debut (under the name Daniel Hedaya), "The Passover Plot", an Israeli-produced Biblical suspense movie
1973 Returned to stage full-time with an appearance in a Joseph Papp production of "Macbeth"
Began acting during his undergraduate years at Tufts
Stage debut in a small part in a college production of Arthur Miller's "The Crucible"
Taught junior high school English and math in NYC for seven years
Appeared in recurring role of Nick Tortelli, Carla's (Rhea Perlman) first ex-husband, on the popular 80s TV sitcom, "Cheers"