Intense middle-aged character player of film and TV who convinces as macho military hard-asses and tough cops (more often than not gone bad). Ermey made an indelible impression as the demanding and brutally derisive Marine drill sergeant in the basic training sequence of Stanley Kubrick's chilling Vietnam drama, "Full Metal Jacket" (1987). His earlier career as a Marine Staff Non-Commissioned Officer serving in Vietnam lent powerful authority to his performance.Ermey medically retired from active duty after sustaining injuries. He moved to Manila in the Philippines where he could afford to live on his disability pay and study for a degree in criminology on the GI Bill. Ermey started each day at the coffee shop of the Manila Hilton where many Hollywood filmmakers dined before the day's location shooting. Eventually one of them asked Ermey to model blue jeans for TV ads. Several macho ads later, the retired soldier landed a role in a local Tagalog-language film. Several other Filipino features followed before 1976 when Ermey wangled his way onto the set of Francis Ford Coppola's epic production "Apocalypse Now" (which would not be released until 1979). Hired to play a helicopter pilot, Ermey utilized his Vietnam memories to act as a technical advisor as well. This quickly led to a job as a technical advisor and actor on the Sidney J. Furie-directed 'Nam drama. "The Boys in Company C" (1977). Furie gave Ermey his next stateside film job as an actor-advisor in the war melodrama "Purple Hearts" (1984) but his career really took off with the Kubrick film.
Ermey has worked regularly in film and TV since the critical triumph of "Jacket". He played the mayor who hanged himself in "Mississippi Burning" (1988), a Southern televangelist in "Fletch Lives" (1989), and a succession of military officers, lawmen, athletic coaches and authority figures in various films, including "Leaving Las Vegas," "Se7en," "Dead Man Walking" (all 1995), "The Frighteners" (1996), "Prefontaine" (1997), "Saving Silverman" (2001), "The Salton Sea" (2002), "Willard" (2003), the remake of "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" (2003) and "Man of the House" (2005), as well as the telepics "Weapons of Mass Distraction" (1997) and "You Know My Name" (1999) --and yes, that's Ermey as the voice of the leader of the plastic green army men in the "Toy Story" films.
His TV work is comprised of guest shots, supporting roles in TV movies and a recurring role in the rousing, old-fashioned "The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr." (Fox, 1993-94), as the late father of the Western hero. He also played police lieutenant Fry on the short-lived American version of the British TV detective series "Cracker" (ABC, 1997), had a recurring role as Titus Scroad on the brief Fox Hollywood satire "Action." Ermey has lent his distinctive bark to numerous animated series and video games as a voiceover actor.
Profession(s):
Actor, technical advisor, screenwriter, model, soldier
Sometimes Credited As:
Lee Ermey
Boston Society of Film Critics Award Best Supporting Actor "Full Metal Jacket" 1987
2006 Reprised role of Sheriff Hoyt in the prequel "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning"
2003 Featured in the horror remake "Texas Chainsaw Massacre"
2003 Co-starred as Mr. Martin in "Willard"
2001 Cast as a football coach in "Saving Silverman"
1999 Played featured role in "Life"
1999 Provided the voice of Sarge in "Toy Story 2"
1997 Featured on the ABC drama series "Cracker"
1997 Portrayed coach Bill Bowerman in "Prefontaine"
1993 - 1994 Appeared in the recurring role of Brisco County Sr, on "The Adventures of Brisco County Jr."
1990 TV-movie debut, as a corrupt cop in "The Take" on USA
1989 First writing credit, additional dialogue for "The Siege of Firebase Gloria"
1988 First credit as R Lee Ermey, playing the mayor in "Mississippi Burning"
1987 Acclaimed for his portrayal of Gunnery Sgt. Hartman in Stanley Kubrick's "Full Metal Jacket" (also served as technical advisor)
1977 First released feature as an actor and technical advisor (as Lee Ermey), "The Boys of Company C"
1976 First work on an American feature, played a helicopter pilot and served as a technical advisor on Coppola's "Apocalypse Now" (released 1979)
Served in Vietnam as a Marine staff non-commissioned officer
Medically retired from active duty as the result of injuries
Moved to Manila in The Philippines
Attended college in Manila on the G.I. Bill; studied criminology
Frequented the coffee shop of the Manila Hilton where many Hollywood filmmakers would congregate during breaks in location shooting
Hired to model blue jeans in TV commercials
Appeared in other ads with a macho flavor
Made feature debut in a local Tagalog-language movie
Appeared in 4-5 Filipino movies over a three-year period
Approached Ken Metcalf, the only American casting director in The Philippines in that period, about getting on the set of Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocolypse Now"