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After decades of work in regional theater and made-for-television movies, American character actor Richard Jenkins began to attract the attention of critics and audiences in the late 1990s with quiet but engrossing performances in a wide variety of feature films. Equally capable at both broad comedy and drama, he frequently essayed tightly controlled men of authority – judges, government agents, detectives and medical professionals – to whom Jenkins brought depth and soul....

Filmography

Burn After Reading - ( - Cast / 2008 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Step Brothers - ( Robert Doback / 2008 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Broken - ( John McVey / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
The Visitor - ( Walter Vale / 2008 / Released / )
The Kingdom - ( James Grace / 2007 / Released / )
Fun With Dick and Jane - ( Frank Bascombe / 2005 / Released / )
North Country - ( Hank Aimes / 2005 / Released / )
Rumor Has It... - ( Earl Huttinger / 2005 / Released / )
Shall We Dance? - ( Devine / 2004 / Released / Buena Vista Worldwide Home Entertainment )
The Mudge Boy - ( Edgar Mudge / 2004 / Released / )
Cheaper by the Dozen - ( Shake / 2003 / Released / )
Intolerable Cruelty - ( Freddy Bender / 2003 / Released / )
The Core - ( General Thomas Purcell / 2003 / Released / )
Changing Lanes - ( Walter Arnell / 2002 / Released / )
Stealing Harvard - ( Mr Cook / 2002 / Released / )
One Night At Mccool's - ( Father Jimmy / 2001 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
Say It Isn't So - ( Walter Wingfield / 2001 / Released / )
The Man Who Wasn't There - ( Walter Abundas / 2001 / Released / Asmik Corporation )
Me, Myself and Irene - ( Agent Boshane / 2000 / Released / Gemini Kinomir )
What Planet Are You From? - ( Don Fisk / 2000 / Released / )
Outside Providence - ( Barney / 1999 / Released / )
Random Hearts - ( Truman Trainor / 1999 / Released / )
Snow Falling on Cedars - ( Sheriff Art Moran / 1999 / Released / )
The Mod Squad - ( Detective Mothershed / 1999 / Released / )
The Impostors - ( Johnny / 1998 / Released / )
A Couch in New York - ( Compton / 1997 / Released / )
Absolute Power - ( Michael McCarty / 1997 / Released / )
Eye of God - ( Willard Sprague / 1997 / Released / )
Eddie - ( Assistant Coach Zimmer / 1996 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Flirting With Disaster - ( Paul / 1996 / Released / Nordisk Film )
How to Make An American Quilt - ( Howell / 1995 / Released / )
The Indian in the Cupboard - ( Victor / 1995 / Released / )
It Could Happen to You - ( C Vernon Hale / 1994 / Released / )
Trapped in Paradise - ( Shaddus Peyser / 1994 / Released / )
Wolf - ( Detective Bridger / 1994 / Released / 20th Century Fox International (Russia) )
Undercover Blues - ( Frank Cortese / 1993 / Released / )
Blue Steel - ( Attorney Mel Dawson / 1990 / Released / Svensk Filmindustri )
Blaze - ( Picayune / 1989 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
How I Got Into College - ( Bill Browne / 1989 / Released / )
Rachel River - ( Cordell / 1989 / Released / )
Sea of Love - ( Gruber / 1989 / Released / )
Little Nikita - ( Richard Grant / 1988 / Released / )
Stealing Home - ( Hank Chandler / 1988 / Released / )
The Witches of Eastwick - ( Clyde Alden / 1987 / Released / )
Hannah and Her Sisters - ( Dr Wilkes / 1986 / Released / )
On Valentine's Day - ( Bobby Pate / 1986 / Released / )
Silverado - ( Kelly / 1985 / Released / Columbia TriStar Home Video )
The Falls - ( / 1980 / Released / British Film Institute )
TV Credits
Sins Of The Father ( 2002 / Released ): Actor
Six Feet Under ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
TV Episode Nathaniel Fisher

All Alone ( 2005 )
TV Episode Nathaniel Fisher

Ecotone ( 2005 )
TV Episode Nathaniel Fisher

Time Flies ( 2005 )
TV Episode Nathaniel Fisher

Untitled ( 2004 )
TV Episode Nathaniel Fisher

Jilting Joe ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The Confession ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Into Thin Air: Death on Everest ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The Boys Next Door ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Getting Out ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
And the Band Played On ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
Queen ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
Afterburn ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
Crossroads ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
Carolina Skeletons ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Doublecrossed ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
The Perfect Tribute ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Challenger ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Descending Angel ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Rising Son ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
When You Remember Me ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Fatal Flaw ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Out on the Edge ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
In the Line of Duty: The FBI Murders ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
Story of a Marriage ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The Little Sister ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
Concealed Enemies ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
Parole ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Ally McBeal ( Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

After decades of work in regional theater and made-for-television movies, American character actor Richard Jenkins began to attract the attention of critics and audiences in the late 1990s with quiet but engrossing performances in a wide variety of feature films. Equally capable at both broad comedy and drama, he frequently essayed tightly controlled men of authority – judges, government agents, detectives and medical professionals – to whom Jenkins brought depth and soul. Occasionally, his characters spun wildly out of control – a DEA agent who experiences a spectacular LSD trip in “Flirting With Disaster” (1996), or staid funeral director Richard Fisher, whose sudden death reveals a long-hidden secret life to his children in the HBO series “Six Feet Under” (2001-05) – which was often the highlight of the project. A favorite performer of both the Coen Brothers and the Farrelly Brothers, Jenkins finally graduated to leading man in the independent film “The Visitor,” for which he received excellent notices.

Born May 4, 1947 in DeKalb, IL, Jenkins earned a degree in drama from Wesleyan University before attending a graduate theater program at Indiana State College. While there, he began studying with acclaimed acting coach Harold Guskin, whose exploratory approach greatly informed Jenkins’ style of performance. He later developed a long and distinguished career in regional theater, most notably with the Trinity Repertory Theater in Rhode Island (his home for over 30 years), where he also served as artistic director. Jenkins began appearing in films and television in the mid-1970s, starting with a 1974 PBS broadcast of a Trinity Repertory performance of the play “Feasting With Panthers,” about the imprisonment of playwright Oscar Wilde. The following year, Jenkins briefly relocated with his wife and family to Los Angeles, CA to try his hand at more on-camera work, but he found the experience unrewarding, returning to Providence after only 10 months.

He slowly began building more TV and feature credits in the early 1980s, including turns as Veronica Cartwright’s husband in “The Witches of Eastwick” (1987) and a string of cops, agents, and other serious types in “Little Nikita” (1988), “Sea of Love” (1989), and the TV-movie “Challenger” (1990), in which he played engineer Gregory Jarvis, who perished aboard the space shuttle when it exploded in 1986. After a decade of mostly dramatic roles, Jenkins earned his widest notices for David O. Russell’s “Flirting With Disaster,” a smart comedy of errors with an all-star cast, including Ben Stiller, Patricia Arquette, Lily Tomlin, Alan Alda, and George Segal. However, Jenkins received some of the best reviews for the film as a by-the-books DEA agent who not only revealed that he was in love with his partner (Josh Brolin), but experienced a show stopping acid freakout in the film’s final third. The dichotomy between Jenkins’ staid exterior and his unbridled performance yielded considerable laughs – as well as a 1997 Independent Spirit nomination – and roles in comedies soon began popping up between his more straight-laced performances. He was well utilized by Bobby and Peter Farrelly, who first cast him in an uncredited turn as a psychiatrist in “There’s Something About Mary” (1999) before tapping him for supporting turns in their Jim Carrey feature “Me, Myself and Irene” (2000) and as the stroke-stricken dad to Heather Graham in “Say It Isn’t So” (2001).

Another set of famous filmmaking siblings – Joel and Ethan Coen – also made excellent use of Jenkins’ versatile skills. The filmmakers first became aware of him after he auditioned for William H. Macy’s role in “Fargo” (1996), but did not cast him in one of their films until their neo-noir “The Man Who Wasn’t There” (2001), where he played the hard-drinking lawyer father to femme fatale Scarlett Johansson. Two years later, he turned up as a more sober legal figure in “Intolerable Cruelty” (2003), the Coen’s lightweight tribute to screwball comedies, and reunited with them in 2008 as a gym manager in the dark comedy “Burn This,” about a former CIA agent (John Malkovich) who loses his memoirs to a pair of Jenkins’ employees (Brad Pitt and Frances McDormand).

In 2001, Jenkins began the first of several recurring appearances on the acclaimed HBO series “Six Feet Under.” His character, Nathaniel Fisher Sr., was killed in a horrific traffic accident within the first 10 minutes of the pilot episode, but returned sporadically throughout the series’ run to impart advice and warnings to his eldest son Nate (Peter Krause) from beyond the grave. His appearances underscored the series’ theme of regret and loss, as the conversations (imagined or not) revealed that the elder Fisher had a rich and occasionally wild hidden life that belied the bland, emotionless exterior he showed to his family. Jenkins was nominated along with the rest of his “Six Feet Under” castmates for a 2002 Screen Actors Guild award.

The acclaim of these and other projects helped to make Jenkins one of the busiest character actors in Hollywood, and one of the most well-regarded. He received some of his best notices for “North Country” (2005) as a father who slowly rises to the defense of his daughter (Charlize Theron) when she is assaulted at her mine working job. In 2007, actor Tom McCarthy cast Jenkins in his first leading role for “The Visitor,” an affecting drama about a mild-mannered professor whose empty life is suddenly enriched by the presence of three Syrian immigrants facing deportation. Jenkins suddenly found himself the subject of numerous interviews and on the receiving end of considerable praise, include the top prize from the Method Fest in 2008.

True to form, Jenkins balanced this soulful performance with a pair of comedies – as the stepfather to Will Ferrell in the Farrelly Brothers’ comedy “Step Brothers” (2008), and the aforementioned “Burn This.” Ferrell and “Step Brothers” director Adam McKay were reportedly so taken with Jenkins’ performance that they featured him in several short comic films on their web site, funnyordie.com. One such short, “Hollywood Tales with Richard Jenkins,” had the actor spinning outrageous stories of missed opportunities, including a chance to “make it with Michelle Pfeiffer in “The Witches of Eastwick.”


Profession(s):
Actor, artistic director
Sometimes Credited As:
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Family
daughter:Sarah Pamela Jenkins (Mother is Sharon Frederick)
father:Dale Stevens Jenkins
mother:M Elizabeth Jenkins
son:Andrew Dale Jenkins (Mother is Sharon Frederick)
wife:Sharon Frederick (Married Aug. 23, 1969)

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Education
Illinois Wesleyan University Bloomington, IL theater
Milestones (Back to top)
2008 Starred in the comedy/drama "The Visitor" directed by Thomas McCarthy
2007 Cast in the Peter Berg directed, "The Kingdom"
2005 Played Charlize Theron's father in "North Country" a fictionalized account of the first major successful sexual harassment case in the United States
2005 Cast in "Fun with Dick and Jane" an update of the 1977 comedy, where a married couple turn to robbery to pay the bills
2004 Played the father of a fourteen year old boy (Emile Hirsch) trying to deal with the death of his mother in "The Mudge Boy"
2004 Cast in David O Russell's "I Heart Huckabees" starring Mark Wahlberg, Jude Law and Naomi Watts
2003 Portrayed Freddy Bender in the Coen's brothers comedy "Intolerable Cruelty"
2003 Appeared in the film "Cheaper by the Dozen"
2002 Co-starred in the FX original movie "Sins of the Father"
2001 Played Sally Field's husband in "Say It Isn't So"
2001 - 2005 Had recurring role of family patriarch Nathaniel Fisher in the acclaimed HBO series "Six Feet Under"
1999 Featured in "The Mod Squad" and "Snow Falling on Cedars"
1997 Played the parole officer in Tim Blake Nelson's atmospheric "Eye of God"
1996 Was featured in the CBS special "The Boys Next Door"
1993 Co-starred in the CBS miniseries "Queen"
1990 Portrayed an attorney in "Blue Steel"
1988 Was featured in "Little Nikita"
1987 Had supporting role in "The Witches of Eastwick"
1987 Reprised role of Bobby Pate in "Courtship"; another film based on a Horton Foote play
1986 Co-starred as Bobby Pate in "On Valentine's Day"; adapted from a play by Horton Foote
1985 Feature film debut, "Silverado"
1984 Acted in the award-winning PBS miniseries "Concealed Enemies"
1975 Appeared in the Trinity production "Brothers to Dragons"; filmed for broadcast on PBS
In the 1970s, was artistic director of Trinity Square Repertory Company in Providence, Rhode Island


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