A well-respected and prolific stage actor throughout the 1990s, John Slattery broke into screen acting at the end of the 1980s, and endured several failed series and guest spots in television movies and the occasional feature film. Recurring roles in a string of high-profile programs like “Will and Grace” (NBC, 1998-2006), “Sex and the City” (HBO, 1998-2004), “Ed” (NBC, 2000-04) and “Desperate Housewives” (ABC, 2004- ) made him a casting agent’s go-to for flinty and occasionally unyielding authority figures. Appearances in major motion pictures like “Traffic” (2000), “Flags of Our Fathers” (2006) and “Charlie Wilson’s War” preceded perhaps his most widely-recognized character, playing the hard-drinking, chain-smoking philanderer and advertising executive Roger Sterling on “Mad Men” (AMC, 2007- ), a role that earned Slattery his first-ever Emmy nomination.Born into a large family in Boston, MA on Aug. 13, 1962, Slattery received his bachelor of fine arts from the Catholic University of America in 1984 before launching his acting career in the late 1980s. He traveled to Yugoslavia to play a convicted forger in the short-lived television version of “Dirty Dozen: The Series” (Fox, 1987-90) before trekking back to the States for his theater debut opposite Nathan Lane in Terrance McNally’s “The Lisbon Traviata” (1989). Attempts to find a regular television gig were largely fruitless – the spy drama “Under Cover” (ABC, 1990-91) was quashed after only a month due to real-life tensions in the Middle East, while the World War II-era drama “Homefront” (ABC, 1991-1993) afforded him a meaty character in tough union organizer Al Kahn. But weak ratings sealed that show’s fate. Slattery kept busy, however, landing guest spots on television and supporting roles in films like “Eraser” (1996) and “Sleepers” (1997). But Slattery found more rewarding work on the New York stage, making his Broadway debut as a comedy writer based on Larry Gelbart in Neil Simon’s acclaimed “Laughter on the 23rd Floor” (1993). Slattery then enjoyed several collaborations with playwright Richard Greenberg, including “Night and Her Stars,” playing Charles Van Doren of 1950s quiz show scandal fame, and “Three Days of Rain” (1997), in which he played both a father and his own son.
In 1998, there was a revived interest in Slattery on the small screen, where he began to enjoy solid, attention-worthy parts on several top-rated and critically acclaimed shows. Supporting turns in the miniseries “A Woman of Independent Means” (1995) and the Hallmark Hall of Fame’s adaptation of Horton Foote’s “Lily Dale” (1996) preceded his appearance as Sam Truman, estranged brother to Eric McCormack’s Will and eventual one-night stand of Grace (Debra Messing), in the first season of “Will and Grace.” He then enjoyed two appearances as a politician with a particularly kinky fetish who dates Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) on “Sex and the City” in an episode aired in 2000. Both shows afforded him considerable exposure to a wider audience, as did a recurring role on the cult favorite “Ed,” playing Dennis Martino, a humorless principal who steals away Carol Vessey (Julie Bowen), the love of hero Ed Stevens’ (Thomas Cavanaugh) life, only to leave her at the altar at the end of the season. Slattery’s icy performance as Martino cemented his frequent on-screen persona as the no-nonsense, taciturn antagonist, though he later proved effective as a romantic figure, most notably in the short-lived comedy series, “Maggie” (Lifetime, 1998-99), and the made-for-TV movie “Catch a Falling Star” (2000), where he played a blue collar worker who falls for a glamorous actress (Sela Ward).
The buzz surrounding Slattery’s television appearances eventually brought him back to features, where he enjoyed solid supporting turns in Steven Soderbergh’s “Traffic” (2000), Thomas McCarthy’s “The Station Agent” (2003) and Mike Newell’s “Mona Lisa Smile” (2003). Soderbergh lured him back to television to play a troubled aide to real-life political consultant James Carville (as himself) in the lauded, but short-lived quasi-drama “K Street” (HBO, 2003-04). Though well-received by critics, the show proved too insider-ish for a mass audience and vanished after a handful of episodes. Slattery then played a college president for the highly-publicized “Jack and Bobby” (The WB, 2004-05), which also suffered from a fatal dose of low ratings. Slattery moved on to a string of diverse supporting roles in features ranging from a sympathetic handler for the Iwo Jima flag raisers in Clint Eastwood’s “Flags of Our Fathers” (2006) to a decidedly unlikable CIA boss in “Charlie Wilson’s War” (2007), followed by playing the mayor of a city under siege by Peter Dinklage’s super villain in “Underdog” (2007).
Slattery returned to the Broadway stage on several occasions during this period, most notably as a grief-stricken father in David Linsday-Abaire’s Tony- and Pulitzer Prize-winning “Rabbit Hole” (2006). In the production, Slattery’s real-life son provided the voice of his character’s child in several home movies screened during the course of the play. Then in 2007, Slattery enjoyed a recurring role on “Desperate Housewives” as Victor Lang, a calculating politician who woos and eventually weds Gabriella (Evan Longoria Parker), only to discover that she was carrying on with ex-husband Carlos (Ricardo Antonio Chavira). The situation was complicated by her discovery that their marriage was merely a gesture to court the Latino vote in his bid for state governor. Lang appeared to die in a botched murder attempt by Gabriella and Carlos, but revived and prepared to spill the beans about their scheme. But in true “Housewives” fashion, the storyline was brought to an absurdly spectacular conclusion when Victor was impaled by a falling fence post while trying to kill Carlos in the middle of a raging tornado. Slattery shared a Screen Actors Guild nomination with his fellow “Housewives” in 2008.
That same year, Slattery joined the cast of AMC’s first scripted drama, “Mad Men,” which explored the lives of Madison Avenue advertising executives at a major New York firm in the early 1960s. His character, Roger Sterling, seemed to personify the show’s depiction of ad men as hard-living, misogynistic, shoot-from-the-hip types. A former Navy man with a wealth of war stories, Sterling enjoys the privileges afforded to partners at the agency, Sterling Cooper, but eventually goes overboard in his pursuit of the good life. A notorious philanderer, he makes advances on the wife of his friend, Don Draper (Jon Hamm), and drinks and smokes to excess, which precipitates two heart attacks. The character would have been unbearable were it not for a degree of regret and casual humor injected by Slattery and the writers. Sterling instead became a comic-tragic figure, one to be pitied as much as feared or admired. For his efforts, Slattery was rewarded with an Emmy nomination in 2008, the first of his career.
Profession(s):
Actor
Sometimes Credited As:
2007 Cast as Roger Sterling on AMC's "Mad Men"; earned an Emmy nomination in 2008 for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series
2006 Cast in Clint Eastwood's WWII drama, "Flags of Our Fathers"
2004 Cast as Peter Benedict on the short-lived WB series, "Jack & Bobby"
2004 Played the father in the film "Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights"
2003 Featured in "The Station Agent"
2003 Starred as Tommy Flanegan in the HBO series "K Street"
2002 Cast in the film "Bad Company"
2001 Had a recurring role as Dennis Martino on the NBC comedy "Ed"
2000 Starred opposite Sela Ward as a steelworker romancing a movie actress in "To Catch a Falling Star" (CBS)
2000 Guest-starred as a politician with kinky sex habits romancing Sarah Jessica Parker's Carrie in "Sex and the City" (HBO)
2000 Returned to Broadway co-starring with Liev Schreiber and Juliette Binoche in "Betrayal"
1999 Portrayed Amy's estranged (later divorced) husband in the CBS drama series "Judging Amy"
1999 Played Will's brother in a memorable two-part episode of "Will & Grace" (NBC)
1998 Portrayed Walter Mondale in the HBO miniseries "From the Earth to the Moon"
1998 Played Miguel Ferrer's partner Murphy in the busted pilot "Where's Marlowe?"; after shooting additional footage, released as a feature film in 1999
1998 Co-starred as a goofy but sexy veterinarian in the Lifetime comedy series "Maggie"
1997 Returned to series TV in the short-lived "Feds" (CBS)
1997 Co-starred with Patricia Clarkson and Jon Tenney in Richard Greenberg's drama "Three Days of Rain", produced at South Coast Repertory before moving to Off-Broadway
1996 Cast as Will, the suitor to Mary Stuart Masterson's "Lily Dale" (Showtime)
1996 Feature film debut "City Hall"
1995 Had featured role in the NBC miniseries "A Woman of Independent Means"
1995 Portrayed Charles Van Doren in Richard Greenberg's Off-Broadway play "Night and Her Stars", about the 1950s quiz show scandals
1993 Broadway debut in Neil Simon's "Laughter on the 23rd Floor"; played Kenny, a writer patterned on Larry Gelbart; play starred Nathan Lane
1991 Co-starred in the ABC series "Under Cover"
1991 Appeared in Richard Greenberg's play "The Extra Man"
1991 - 1993 Played regular role of Al Kahn on the ABC period drama "Homefront"
1989 Acted in the Off-Broadway play "The Lisbon Traviata", starring Nathan Lane
1988 TV series debut as regular, "The Dirty Dozen: The Series" (Fox); among co-stars was Jon Tenney
Raised outside of Boston, Massachusetts in Newton and Wellesley