Character actor: Difference between revisions
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A '''character actor''' is one who predominantly plays a particular type of role rather than [[leading actor|leading]] ones. Character actor roles can range from [[bit part]]s to [[leading actor|secondary leads]]. However, character actors often play supporting roles, for characters who do not undergo a major reveal in the course of the plot, and whose role is less prominent. |
A '''character actor''' is one who predominantly plays a particular type of role rather than [[leading actor|leading]] ones. Character actor roles can range from [[bit part]]s to [[leading actor|secondary leads]]. However, character actors often play supporting roles, for characters who do not undergo a major reveal in the course of the plot, and whose role is less prominent. |
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Character actors such as [[John Turturro]], [[Richard Jenkins]], [[Steve Buscemi]], and [[Kevin Bacon]] have built their careers around small, yet distinctive roles. Some character actors play essentially the same character over and over, and get [[Typecasting (acting)|typecast]], as with [[Andy Devine]], who often played a humorous but resourceful sidekick or [[Dennis Farina]], who often plays a tough cop or gangster. |
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See [[stock character]] and ''[[commedia dell'arte]]'' for a discussion of related theatrical traditions. |
See [[stock character]] and ''[[commedia dell'arte]]'' for a discussion of related theatrical traditions. |
Revision as of 22:45, 8 April 2009
A character actor is one who predominantly plays a particular type of role rather than leading ones. Character actor roles can range from bit parts to secondary leads. However, character actors often play supporting roles, for characters who do not undergo a major reveal in the course of the plot, and whose role is less prominent.
Character actors such as John Turturro, Richard Jenkins, Steve Buscemi, and Kevin Bacon have built their careers around small, yet distinctive roles. Some character actors play essentially the same character over and over, and get typecast, as with Andy Devine, who often played a humorous but resourceful sidekick or Dennis Farina, who often plays a tough cop or gangster.
See stock character and commedia dell'arte for a discussion of related theatrical traditions.
Career paths
There are many reasons people might become character actors. Actors may also simply seem better suited to character roles than to leading roles. Another fact worth noting is that while any film has a handful of leading roles, it may also require dozens of smaller supporting roles, and that there are arguably more opportunities for professional success as a character actor than as a movie star. Some actors become character actors by choice. Others may find character work because they are seen as typecast (strongly identified with, or only suitable for certain types of roles), often due to an early success with a particular role or genre; J.T. Walsh and Dennis Hopper made a career of playing villainous characters, and Steve Buscemi has made a career of playing scheming deadbeats and offbeat villains. As well, some actors may become character actors because casting agents may believe they lack some of the admittedly subjective physical attributes associated with movie stars: they may be regarded as too tall, too short, unattractive, overweight, or somehow lacking an ephemeral "star quality".
Some actors may have a perceived over-the-top style or presence which cannot be helped, that overwhelms or threatens to upstage other actors, which means that directors often choose to limit their screentime which in effect often gives more power and value to their performance. An example of strong screen presence is the talented Peter Greene, the Jersey raised actor who brings a strong vibe to the screen along with a striking, unique look. Some other well known examples include Christopher Lee due to his physical presence and distinctive voice and Malcolm McDowell due to certain idiosyncracies associated with his style dating back to A Clockwork Orange. Actors may be deemed too old or too young for leading roles; being "too old" is more of a problem for women, who may find that their range of acting jobs drops precipitously after the age of forty (see ageism). Actors from marginalized or minority groups (such as certain ethnic or racial groups or women) might be barred from roles for which they were otherwise suited. Actors from outside of the U.S. may be famous in their own countries, but find their roles limited in the U.S. for any number of reasons (see Marcel Dalio, Cantinflas and Jet Li).
Some character actors have distinctive voices or accents which limit their roles. Actors such as James Earl Jones, Tim Curry, Gilbert Gottfried, Selma Diamond and Julie Kavner have been able to turn this to their advantage, often in voice-over work. Sometimes character actors have developed careers because they had specific talents that are required in genre films, such as dancing, horsemanship or swimming ability. The stars of a movie that fails badly at the box office are often considered part of the reason it failed, and they may have trouble finding work later. Character actors are almost never blamed for these failures, and can continue to find work relatively easily.
Crossover actors
Some character actors have eventually gained star status and have become widely known, or perhaps even become lead actors or actresses. Examples include Don Cheadle, Vincent Price, Robert Downey Jr, Lon Chaney, Alec Guiness, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Dustin Hoffman, Dennis Hopper, Anne Bancroft, Gene Hackman, Kevin Spacey, Johnny Depp, Leonardo DiCaprio, Bette Davis, Brendan Gleeson, Morgan Freeman, Samuel L. Jackson, Bob Hoskins, Peter Sellers, Alan Arkin, Gary Oldman, Harvey Keitel, George C. Scott, Christopher Plummer, Angela Lansbury, Ralph Fiennes, Edward G. Robinson, Donald Sutherland, James Brolin, Elliott Gould, Robert Duvall, Anthony Hopkins, Lee Marvin, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Robert Stack, Mickey Rourke, Ben Kingsley, Christopher Lloyd, Nicolas Cage, Meryl Streep, Michael Douglas, Alec Baldwin, Jack Lemmon, Michael Keaton, Gene Wilder, John Malkovich, Ed Harris, Paul Giamatti, Jack Nicholson, Christopher Walken, and Jeff Goldblum.
Many characters actors such as Peter Lorre, Claude Rains, Thelma Ritter, Sydney Greenstreet, Harry Dean Stanton, Eli Wallach, John Cazale, M. Emmet Walsh, John Hurt, Luis Guzmán, Michael Lerner, James Whitmore, Jack Warden, Martin Balsam, Donald Pleasance, Pat Hingle, Burt Young, Brock Peters, Martin Landau, Albert Brooks, Hal Holbrook, Herbert Lom, Burt Mustin, Frank Morgan, Thomas Mitchell, Keenan Wynn, John Saxon, Brad Dourif, Danny Aiello, Telly Savalas, Maria Ouspenskaya, Cesar Romero, Ward Bond, Gloria Grahame, Telly Savalas, Strother Martin, Victor Buono, Beulah Bondi, Joe Pesci, Burgess Meredith, Ted Levine, Jason Miller, Lloyd Bridges, Denholm Elliott, Dan Hedaya, Joe Don Baker and J. Pat O'Malley earned acclaim for their performances but rarely earned leading roles.
Character actors sometimes become film directors who have either made the crossover to acting or worked in front of the camera before, such as John Huston, Sydney Pollack, Paul Mazursky, Orson Welles, Lindsay Anderson, John Cassavetes, Woody Allen, Roman Polanski, Mark Rydell and Tim Blake Nelson to name a few.
Typical Roles for Character Actors
- Sidekick
- Town drunk or Village Idiot
- Villain
- Scene stealer
- Main Character's Best friend
- Confidant
- Loud or Angry Boss
- Small Time Crook
- Old Male Mentor
- Matriarch
- Supportive Wife