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Stage and screen actor Matthew Broderick was already a Tony Award-winning Broadway actor when film audiences fell in love with his 1986 performance as a highly evolved high school truant in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.” Apart from his onscreen successes, Broderick was one of the most respected musical and comedy stage actors of his generation, with highly acclaimed starring roles in “Brighton Beach Memoirs,” “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying” and “The Producers....

Filmography

Hurricane Season (New Line) - ( / / Announced / )
The Tale of Despereaux - ( Voice of Despereaux / 2008 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Marie and Bruce - ( Bruce / 2004 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Wonderful World - ( - Cast / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Diminished Capacity - ( Cooper / 2008 / Released / )
Finding Amanda - ( Taylor Mendon / 2008 / Released / )
Then She Found Me - ( Ben / 2008 / Released / )
Bee Movie - ( Song Performer / 2007 / Released / )
Bee Movie - ( Voice of Adam Flayman / 2007 / Released / )
Deck The Halls - ( Steve Finch / 2006 / Released / )
Deck The Halls - ( Song Performer / 2006 / Released / )
Strangers with Candy - ( Roger Beekman / 2006 / Released / )
The Producers - ( Leo Bloom / 2005 / Released / Universal Music and Video Distribution )
The Last Shot - ( Steven Schats / 2004 / Released / )
The Lion King 1 1/2 - ( Simba / 2004 / Released / )
The Stepford Wives - ( Walter Kresby / 2004 / Released / )
Good Boy! - ( Voice of Hubble / 2003 / Released / )
The Lion King - ( of Adult Simba / 2002 / Released / )
You Can Count on Me - ( Brian Everett / 2000 / Released / )
Election - ( Jim McAllister / 1999 / Released / )
Inspector Gadget - ( Inspector Gadget/John Brown / 1999 / Released / )
Inspector Gadget - ( RoboGadget / 1999 / Released / )
Godzilla - ( Dr Niko Tatopoulos / 1998 / Released / TM Toho Co Ltd )
The Lion King II: Simba's Pride - ( of Simba / 1998 / Released / )
Walking to the Waterline - ( / 1998 / Released / )
Addicted to Love - ( Sam / 1997 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Infinity - ( Director / 1996 / Released / )
Infinity - ( Producer / 1996 / Released / )
Infinity - ( Richard Feynman / 1996 / Released / )
The Cable Guy - ( Steven / 1996 / Released / )
Arabian Knight - ( of Tack the Cobbler / 1995 / Released / )
Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle - ( Charles MacArthur / 1994 / Released / Alliance Releasing )
The Road to Wellville - ( Will Lightbody / 1994 / Released / )
The Night We Never Met - ( Sam Lester / 1993 / Released / )
Out on A Limb - ( Bill Campbell / 1992 / Released / )
The Freshman - ( Clark Kellogg / 1990 / Released / Matlon )
Family Business - ( Adam / 1989 / Released / Neue Cactus )
Glory - ( Robert Gould Shaw / 1989 / Released / )
Biloxi Blues - ( Eugene Morris Jerome / 1988 / Released / )
Torch Song Trilogy - ( Alan / 1988 / Released / Alliance Films )
Project X - ( Jimmy Garrett / 1987 / Released / )
Ferris Bueller's Day Off - ( Ferris Bueller / 1986 / Released / )
On Valentine's Day - ( Brother Vaughn / 1986 / Released / )
1918 - ( Brother / 1985 / Released / )
Ladyhawke - ( Phillipe / 1985 / Released / 20th Century Fox Studio Facilities )
Max Dugan Returns - ( Michael McPhee / 1983 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
Wargames - ( David Lightman / 1983 / Released / )
TV Credits
Movies Rock ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
30 Rock ( 2006 / Released ): Actor
Reel Comedy: Deck the Halls ( 2006 / Released ): Actor
Mouthing Off: 51 Greatest Smartasses ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
The 57th Annual Tony Awards ( 2003 / Released ): Actor
The Music Man ( 2003 / Released ): Actor
The Barbara Walters Special (03/24/02) ( 2002 / Released ): Actor
Jazz ( 2001 / Released ): Voice
On the Record With Bob Costas ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The 55th Annual Tony Awards ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The First Ten Awards: Tony 2001 ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Are We There Yet? America on Vacation ( 2000 / Released ): Narrator
GQ's 2000 Men of the Year Awards ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
The 10th Annual IFP Gotham Awards ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
The 54th Annual Tony Awards (CBS) ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
Neil Simon: The People's Playwright ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Rescue at Sea ( 1999 / Released ): Voice
The 1999 ESPY Awards ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The 53rd Annual Tony Awards ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Margaret Sanger ( 1998 / Released ): Voice
The 1998 MTV Movie Awards ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
Cancer: A Personal Voyage ( 1997 / Released ): Narrator
Canned Ham: The Cable Guy ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Marlon Brando: Breaking All the Rules ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
The 50th Annual Tony Awards ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
The West ( 1996 / Released ): Voice
Inside the Actors Studio ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Movie News Hot Summer Sneak Preview ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
50th Annual Golden Globe Awards ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
A Life in the Theatre ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
Frasier ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
The 47th Annual Tony Awards ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
The Year of the Generals ( 1992 / Released ): Voice
The 44th Annual Tony Awards ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Neil Simon: Not Just For Laughs ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
The 3rd Annual American Comedy Awards ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
The 42nd Annual Tony Awards ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
Story of a Marriage ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The 59th Annual Academy Awards Presentation ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The 40th Annual Tony Awards ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
The 39th Annual Tony Awards ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
Faerie Tale Theatre ( Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

Stage and screen actor Matthew Broderick was already a Tony Award-winning Broadway actor when film audiences fell in love with his 1986 performance as a highly evolved high school truant in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.” Apart from his onscreen successes, Broderick was one of the most respected musical and comedy stage actors of his generation, with highly acclaimed starring roles in “Brighton Beach Memoirs,” “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying” and “The Producers.” On the big screen, he enjoyed occasional success with broad comedies like “The Cable Guy” (1996) and “Bee Movie” (2007) – as well as his first big hit, the nuclear thriller “Wargames” (1983) – but Hollywood often failed to find a solid place for the mild mannered, bookish-looking New Yorker and he was usually more memorable in independent, character-based films like “Election” (1999) and “You Can Count on Me” (2000).

The son of stage and screen actor James Broderick and playwright and artist Patricia Broderick, Matthew Broderick was born in New York City, NY on March 21, 1962. He grew up downtown in Greenwich Village where he attended liberal, arts-oriented private schools and hung out with his father backstage at theaters and movie sets. Broderick loved the atmosphere of the theater from an early age, but the shy kid could not imagine mustering up the nerve to perform, so he thought one day he might have a career as a set designer or a stage manager. But during his teen years at the Walden School, he still ached to be an actor; enough that that desire eventually overcame his fright. Jumping into his new passion, he took a starring role in a school production written by Kenneth Lonergan, the future Oscar-nominated screenwriter, but at that time, his then 15-year-old best friend. Broderick’s father believed in his son’s talent, and starred opposite him in Horton Foote’s “On Valentine’s Day” Off-Broadway. The teen graduated from high school and began taking acting classes with famed coach Uta Hagen, and in a very short period of time, was making a name for himself on the New York theater scene.

In 1981, Broderick won acclaim for his portrayal of David, the adopted gay son of drag queen Arnold Beckoff (Harvey Fierstein) in the Off-Broadway production of "Torch Song Trilogy." Sadly, after only a few early preview performances in his first big show, Broderick’s father and acting inspiration died from cancer. The devastated son soldiered on and a glowing review of his performance in The New York Times brought him wider attention and a starring role on Broadway in Neil Simon’s semi-autobiographical "Brighton Beach Memoirs." For over a year, Broderick portrayed Eugene Jerome — a Brooklyn teenager and aspiring author — in this Depression-era coming of age tale, winning a Tony Award and Theater World Award for his endearing performance.

Not surprisingly, Hollywood came calling. Broderick was flown to L.A. to film his first feature, the forgettable "Max Dugan Returns" (1982). His follow-up, however, the thriller “War Games” (1983), proved to be a huge summer smash that earned Broderick a following for his portrayal of a teen computer hacker who breaks into a military computer system and unwittingly begins a dangerous face-off between U.S. and Russian nuclear defense systems – a film timely in its premise, in that it was prior to the end of the Cold War.

Following his first big screen success, Broderick returned to Broadway where he reprised the role of Eugene Jerome in "Biloxi Blues,” which found Neil Simon’s character joining the Army during World War II. He was tapped to reprise his first stage role in the 1986 film version of "On Valentine's Day" (broadcast on PBS as "Story of a Marriage, Part 2") and also appeared Off-Broadway in "The Widow Claire.” In one of the most memorable roles of his film career, the 23-year-old actor went on to charm audiences as a resourceful high school student who orchestrates a highly complex day of hooky in John Hughes comedy classic "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (1986). Audiences loved the baby-faced actor as the clever school rebel they all wished they could be, but despite the impact of the film, Broderick rarely returned again to that type of “cool” character.

In the midst of all his newfound fame, Broderick’s happiness was shattered after a painful incident occurred which changed his life overnight. In August 1987, the actor and his fiancée, actress Jennifer Grey – who had played his sister in Ferris Bueller's Day Off -- were vacationing in Northern Ireland when Broderick caused a fatal collision that killed 63-year-old Margaret Doherty and her 30-year-old daughter, Anna Gallagher. Broderick was driving a rented BMW when he swerved into oncoming-traffic lane. Anna Gallagher, who was driving the other car, and her mother, were killed instantly. Broderick suffered a broken leg, concussion and collapsed lung. Jennifer Grey escaped with minor injuries. Initially charged with reckless driving, Broderick later plead guilty to a lesser charge of careless driving and was fined the equivalent of $175 in U.S. dollars. Not surprisingly, the victims' family considered the light sentence a miscarriage of justice. Stunned by what he had caused, Broderick would move on in life, but never forget that part of his life.

In 1988, Broderick appeared opposite Harvey Fierstein in the film version of "Torch Song Trilogy" (1988); this time not as his character’s son, but as his lover. The same year he helped make a Mike Nichols screen adaptation of “Biloxi Blues” a hit, finally bringing Simon’s beloved stage character to film audiences. From that light comedy, he delivered a strong dramatic performance as the young commander of the first Black Union regiment in the acclaimed Civil War drama, "Glory" (1989).

With his clean-cut looks and bookish demeanor, Broderick was well-cast to play the unwitting son of a crime family in Sidney Lumet's drama "Family Business" (1989), but despite a dream cast including Dustin Hoffman and Sean Connery, it proved to be a critical and commercial miss. Broderick fared slightly better as a naïve Vermont transplant to New York University in "The Freshman" (1990), which also starred Marlon Brando as a con man who disrupts the hapless student’s life. Sporting a beard, the baby-faced actor joined an ensemble of bright young talents for the forgettable romantic comedy "The Night We Never Met" (1993), but went on to score huge success as the voice of the adult Simba in Disney's animated blockbuster "The Lion King" (1994). The period drama “The Road to Wellville” (1994) failed to score with audiences or critics, but Broderick was redeemed by his association with another vintage offering based on the career of writer Dorothy Parker, “Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle” (1994), which was nominated for the Palm d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival.

After too many years away from the medium he loved, Broderick returned to the stage in the acclaimed 1995 Broadway revival of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying." In the original production, Robert Morse interpreted what would become his signature role as an outwardly simple soul who lucks into good fortune. In contrast, Broderick made his character a bit more knowing and openly ambitious, and that characterization – combined with his vocal mettle – earned the actor a Tony Award for Best Leading Actor in a Musical. Broderick took a leave from the show to film "The Cable Guy” (1996), where he played a hapless customer whose life becomes a nightmare after he becomes the object of obsession of Jim Carrey's title character in Ben Stiller's black comedy. When he returned to “How to Succeed” in early 1996, he was teamed with his future wife Sarah Jessica Parker in the female lead. Switching gears, Broderick made his film directing debut in "Infinity” (1996) a biopic of Nobel laureate Richard Feynman (whom he also played) in a script authored by Broderick’s mother. The following year Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker were married in a small ceremony in New York.

In a rare big budget actioner, Broderick was tapped to play a scientist in 1998’s “Godzilla.” That same year, he rejoined the cast of an earlier blockbuster hit in the direct-to-video sequel "The Lion King 2: Simba's Pride" (1998). He finished out a run of high profile, big budget offerings with a starring role in the family film “Inspector Gadget” (1999), where he played the tool-laden detective from the classic animated series to the tune of over $100 million dollars at the box office. But for Broderick fans, the actor was at his big screen best in the indie comedy “Election” (1999), where he played a high school teacher in a mid-life lull who is intent on stopping a perky, overachieving honor student (Reese Witherspoon) before she takes over as class president and surely goes on to enjoy a level of success that he was never able to attain. He again mined the depths of the middle-class, middle-American man trapped by his middle-of-the-road life choices in "You Can Count on Me" (2000), childhood pal Kenneth Lonergan’s brilliant and Oscar-nominated study of small town siblings on wildly different paths. On the New York stage, he appeared in the National Actors Theatre revival of "Night Must Fall" in 1999 and in Elaine May's comic misfire "Taller than a Dwarf" in 2000.

In 2001, Broderick was back on Broadway in a Tony-nominated turn as Leo Bloom, Nathan Lane's sidekick in the 2001 musical adaptation of Mel Brooks' "The Producers" (1968). The production was a sensation and Broderick and Lane’s electric pairing was credited with a widespread renewed interest in Broadway musicals. Broderick took a break from the show to shoot an ABC television version of the perennial favorite "The Music Man" (2003) and a Frank Oz-helmed remake of the cult classic "The Stepford Wives" (2004). This satirical-minded take of Stepford cast the actor alongside Nicole Kidman as an upwardly mobile couple whose lives are suddenly overwhelmed by their all-too-perfect community. He returned to Broadway to complete his run of “The Producers” and reprised his voice role in the direct-to-video sequel "The Lion King 1/2" (2004). After a 10-week engagement off-Broadway in Larry Shue’s comedy “Foreigner,” Broderick re-teamed with Nathan Lane for a big screen adaptation of “The Producers” (2005). The film was a moderate hit at the box office though critics were split, as well as confused about whether to judge it based on the original film or the recent Broadway production.

Lane and Broderick were back on stage the next year, reigniting Broadway in a revival of Neil Simon's "The Odd Couple" where Broderick essayed the role of fussy Felix Unger. In 2006, Broderick co-starred opposite Danny DeVito as warring neighbors in the Christmas comedy “Deck the Halls” (2006) and the following year he voiced the sidekick of Jerry Seinfeld’s lead in his animated “Bee Movie” (2007), a box office success despite backlash over its aggressive marketing. Broderick again played midlife crisis with aplomb in Helen Hunt’s directorial debut “Then She Found Me” (2008) and went on to enjoy a heavy year of film releases including Peter Tolan’s comedy “Finding Amanda,” where he played a floundering TV producer who sets off to rescue his niece (Brittany Snow) from a life of sin in Las Vegas, as well as “Diminished Capacity” and the slated Kenneth Lonergan drama “Margaret.”


Profession(s):
Actor, producer, director
Sometimes Credited As:
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Family
father:James Broderick (Played the father on the ABC TV show "Family" from 1976 to 1980; died of cancer in 1982 at age 55)
mother:Patricia Broderick (After her death in 2003, her work was shown at the Tibor de Nagy gallery in New York)
sister:Martha Broderick
sister:Janet Broderick (Married Broderick and Parker on May 19, 1997)
son:James Wilkie Broderick (Born Oct. 28, 2002; mother, Sarah Jessica Parker)
wife:Sarah Jessica Parker (Best known for her role as Carrie Bradshaw on the HBO series "Sex and the City"; met through Parker's brother, Timothy Britten Parker in 1992; married May 19, 1997 in a civil ceremony performed by Broderick's sister)
Companion(s)
Helen Hunt , Companion , ```..Met during the filming of "Project X" (1987); no longer together
Jennifer Grey , Companion , ```..Met on the set of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (1986); were briefly engaged in 1987; Grey was a passenger in the car Broderick was driving, which caused a fatal collision, while they were vacationing in Northern Ireland
Penelope Ann Miller , Companion , ```..Dated when they appeared on Broadway opposite one another in "Biloxi Blues" (1985); no longer together


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Education
HB Studio New York, NY
Walden School New York, NY 1980
Awards (Back to top)
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Actor in a Musical "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" 1995
Tony Award Actor in a Musical "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" 1995
Theatre World Award "Brighton Beach Memoirs" 1983
Tony Award Featured Actor in a Play "Brighton Beach Memoirs" 1983
Outer Critics Circle Award Debut Performance "Torch Song Trilogy" 1982

Milestones (Back to top)
2008 Featured in Helen Hunt's directorial debut, "Then She Found Me"
2008 Played the lead in the comedy, "Finding Amanda"
2006 Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (January)
2006 Played an astronomy teacher in the Broadway play, "The Starry Messenger"; second collaboration with director Kenneth Lonergan
2006 Co-starred with Danny DeVito in the holiday comedy "Deck the Halls"
2005 Re-united with Nathan Lane to play Oscar and Felix in the Broadway revival of "The Odd Couple" directed by Joe Mantello
2005 Reprised his role as Leo Bloom, opposite Nathan Lane in the feature adaptation of "The Producers"
2004 Co-starred with Nicole Kidman in the Frank Oz remake of the 1975 cult classic, "The Stepford Wives"
2004 Starred as a movie director in "The Last Shot" with Alec Baldwin, Toni Collette and Tony Shalhoub
2003 Portrayed Professor Harold Hill in the ABC television remake of the "Music Man"
2001 With Nathan Lane, co-starred in the Mel Brooks' stage version of "The Producers"; received a Tony nomination
2000 Played a bank manager in the Sundance hit "You Can Count on Me" directed by Kenneth Lonergan
2000 Acted opposite Parker Posey in the ill-fated Broadway comedy "Taller Than a Dwarf"
1999 Offered a winning performance as a teacher out to thwart an overachieving female student in in Alexander Payne's "Election"
1999 Had title role in the live-action film, "Inspector Gadget"
1999 Starred in the National Actors Theater Broadway revival of "Night Must Fall"
1998 Played a scientist tracking the lizard in the blockbuster, "Godzilla"
1996 Co-produced (also directed and co-starred) the biopic "Infinty"; film scripted by his mother Patricia Broderick
1996 Played the customer in whose life comes Jim Carrey's "The Cable Guy"
1995 Returned to Broadway to star in the revival of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying"; wife Sarah Jessica Parker co-starred in the final months of the show's run
1994 Voiced the adult Simba in Disney's animated blockbuster "The Lion King"; also sang
1993 Made rare TV acting appearance opposite Jack Lemmon in the TNT movie "A Life in the Theatre"
1990 Offered a comic turn opposite Marlon Brando in "The Freshman"
1989 Delivered a fine turn as Robert Gould Shaw, the white commander of a black infantry during the Civil War in "Glory"
1988 Recreated stage role of Eugene Jerome in Mike Nichols film adaption of "Biloxi Blues"
1986 Reprised his stage role of Brother Vaughn in the film "On Valentine's Day"
1986 Breakthrough film performance in title role of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off"
1985 Appeared in the Showtime production of Athol Fugard's "'Master Harold'... and the Boys"
1984 - 1985 Reprised role of Eugene Jerome in Simon's "Biloxi Blues" on Broadway
1983 Had leading role in the summer hit "WarGames"
1983 Broadway debut as Eugene Jerome in Neil Simon's semi-autobiographical play "Brighton Beach Memoirs"
1982 Film acting debut in "Max Dugan Returns"
1982 TV acting debut in an episode of "Lou Grant" (CBS)
1981 Played lead role in the off-Broadway production of Harvey Fierstein's "Torch Song Trilogy"
1980 Acting debut as Brother Vaughn in Horton Foote's play "Valentine's Day"; also starred his father James
Began acting after a knee injury
Appeared in the Off-Broadway production of Horton Foote's "The Widow Claire"