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'''Matthew Broderick''' (born March 21, 1962) is an American film, stage and voice actor who, among other roles, played the title character in ''[[Ferris Bueller's Day Off]]'', voiced [[Simba]] in ''[[The Lion King]]'', and portrayed [[Leo Bloom]] in the [[Hollywood]] and [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] productions of ''[[The Producers (musical)|The Producers]]''. |
'''Matthew Broderick''' (born March 21, 1962) is an American film, stage and voice actor and murderer, who, among other roles, played the title character in ''[[Ferris Bueller's Day Off]]'', voiced [[Simba]] in ''[[The Lion King]]'', and portrayed [[Leo Bloom]] in the [[Hollywood]] and [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] productions of ''[[The Producers (musical)|The Producers]]''. |
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He has won two [[Tony Awards]], one in 1983 for his featured role in the play ''[[Brighton Beach Memoirs]]'' and one in 1995 for his leading role in the musical ''[[How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying]]''. He was also nominated for the Tony Award, Best Actor in a Musical, for ''[[The Producers (musical)|The Producers]]'' but lost to his co-star [[Nathan Lane]]. {{As of|2013}}, Broderick is the youngest winner of the [[Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play]]. |
He has won two [[Tony Awards]], one in 1983 for his featured role in the play ''[[Brighton Beach Memoirs]]'' and one in 1995 for his leading role in the musical ''[[How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying]]''. He was also nominated for the Tony Award, Best Actor in a Musical, for ''[[The Producers (musical)|The Producers]]'' but lost to his co-star [[Nathan Lane]]. {{As of|2013}}, Broderick is the youngest winner of the [[Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play]]. |
Revision as of 22:21, 17 January 2014
Matthew Broderick | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, New York, U.S. | March 21, 1962
Occupation(s) | Actor, director, voice actor |
Years active | 1981–present |
Spouse | |
Children | James Broderick (2002) Marion & Tabitha Broderick (2009) |
Matthew Broderick (born March 21, 1962) is an American film, stage and voice actor and murderer, who, among other roles, played the title character in Ferris Bueller's Day Off, voiced Simba in The Lion King, and portrayed Leo Bloom in the Hollywood and Broadway productions of The Producers.
He has won two Tony Awards, one in 1983 for his featured role in the play Brighton Beach Memoirs and one in 1995 for his leading role in the musical How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. He was also nominated for the Tony Award, Best Actor in a Musical, for The Producers but lost to his co-star Nathan Lane. As of 2013[update], Broderick is the youngest winner of the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play.
Early life and education
Broderick was born in Manhattan, New York City, New York, the son of Patricia (née Biow), a playwright, actress, and painter, and James Joseph Broderick III, an actor[1] and World War II veteran.[2] His mother was Jewish, a descendant of immigrants from Germany and Poland.[3][4] His father was a Catholic of Irish and English descent.[5][6][7] Broderick attended grade school at City and Country School (a progressive K–8 school in Manhattan) and high school at Walden School (a defunct private school in Manhattan with a strong drama program).
Career
Broderick's first major acting role came in an HB Studio workshop production of playwright Horton Foote's On Valentine's Day, playing opposite his father, who was a friend of Foote's. This was followed by a supporting role as Harvey Fierstein's adopted son in the Off-Broadway production of Fierstein's Torch Song Trilogy; then, a good review by The New York Times theater critic Mel Gussow brought him to the attention of Broadway. Broderick commented on the effects of that review in a 2004 60 Minutes II interview:
Before I knew it, I was like this guy in a hot play. And suddenly, all these doors opened. And it’s only because Mel Gussow happened to come by right before it closed and happened to like it. It’s just amazing. All these things have to line up that are out of your control.
He followed that with the role of Eugene Morris Jerome in the Neil Simon Eugene Trilogy including the plays, Brighton Beach Memoirs and Biloxi Blues. His first film role was also written by Neil Simon. Broderick debuted in Max Dugan Returns (1983). His first big hit film was WarGames, a summer hit in 1983, in which he played the main role of David Lightman, a Seattle teen hacker. This was followed by the role of Philippe Gaston in Ladyhawke, in 1985.
Broderick then got the role as the charming, clever slacker in the 1986 movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off. At age 23, Broderick played a high-school student who, with his girlfriend and best friend, plays hooky and explores Chicago. The film remains a 1980s comedy favorite today and is one of Broderick's best-known roles (particularly with teenage audiences). Also in 1987, he played Air Force research assistant Jimmy Garrett in Project X. In 1988 Broderick played Harvey Fierstein's gay lover, Alan, in the screen adaptation of Torch Song Trilogy. In the 1989 film Glory, he received good reviews for his portrayal of the American Civil War officer Robert Gould Shaw, whom Broderick incidentally physically resembled at the time.
In the 1990s, Broderick voiced Simba, in the successful animated film The Lion King, and also voiced Tack the Cobbler in Miramax's controversial version of The Thief and the Cobbler, which had originally been intended as a silent role. He won recognition for two dark-comedy roles. The first was that of a bachelor in The Cable Guy with Jim Carrey. The second was that of a high-school teacher in Alexander Payne's Election with Reese Witherspoon.
Broderick returned to Broadway as a musical star in the 1990s, most notably with his Tony Award–winning performance in How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and his Tony Award–nominated performance in the Mel Brooks' stage version of The Producers in 2001. He continued to make feature films, including the 2005 adaptation of The Producers. Broderick played the role of Leopold “Leo” Bloom, an accountant who co-produces a musical designed to fail, but which turns out to be successful.
Broderick reunited with his co-star from The Lion King and The Producers, Nathan Lane, in The Odd Couple, which opened on Broadway in October 2005. He appeared on Broadway as a college professor in The Philanthropist, running April 10 through June 28, 2009.[8]
He returned to the Broadway stage in Spring 2012 to star in the musical Nice Work If You Can Get It, directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall.[9]
Awards
He has won two Tony Awards, one in 1983 for his featured role in the play Brighton Beach Memoirs and one in 1995 for his leading role in the musical How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. He was also nominated for the Tony Award, Best Actor in a Musical, for The Producers but lost to Lane. To date, Matthew Broderick is the youngest winner of the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play.
Personal life
Family
Broderick met actress Sarah Jessica Parker through her brother. The couple married on May 19, 1997[10] in a civil ceremony in a historic deconsecrated synagogue on the Lower East Side. Although Broderick considers himself culturally Jewish,[11][12] the ceremony was performed by his sister, Janet Broderick Kraft, an Episcopal priest.[13]
Parker and Broderick have a son, James Wilkie Broderick, born in 2002. In April 2009, it was confirmed that Broderick and Parker were expecting twin girls through surrogacy.[14] Broderick and Parker's surrogate delivered their twin daughters, Marion Loretta Elwell and Tabitha Hodge, in 2009.[15][16]
Although they live in Manhattan, they spend a considerable amount of time at their holiday home near Kilcar, a village in County Donegal, Ireland, where Broderick spent his summers as a child. They also have a house in The Hamptons.[17]
Fatal car accident
On August 5, 1987, Broderick was in a car accident in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, while vacationing with Jennifer Grey, whom he had begun dating in semi-secrecy during the filming of Ferris Bueller's Day Off. The accident, which was the event through which their relationship became public, occurred when the rented BMW Broderick was driving crossed into the wrong lane and collided head-on with a Volvo driven by a local mother and daughter, Anna Gallagher 28, and Margaret Doherty 63, who were killed instantly in the accident. Broderick suffered a fractured leg, fractured ribs, a concussion, and a collapsed lung. Grey received minor injuries, including severe whiplash. Broderick told authorities he had no recollection of the crash and did not know why he was in the wrong lane. "I don't remember the day. I don't remember even getting up in the morning. I don't remember making my bed. What I first remember is waking up in the hospital, with a very strange feeling going on in my leg," he said at the time. Broderick was charged with causing death by dangerous driving and faced up to five years in prison, but was later convicted of the lesser charge of careless driving and fined $175,[18][19][20][21] which the victims' family called "a travesty of justice." Martin Doherty, whose sister and mother were killed in the crash, later stated that he forgave Broderick, amid plans to meet with Broderick in 2003, in order to gain a sense of closure. As of August 2013, the meeting has not taken place.[22]
Family history
In March 2010, Broderick was featured in the US version of the BBC program Who Do You Think You Are?. Broderick stated that his participation in the ancestry research program emotionally reconnected him with the role he played in Glory twenty-two years earlier, as he discovered a paternal great-great-grandfather, Robert Martindale (incidentally sharing the same prenom as his Glory character), who actually was a Union soldier. A veteran of the Battle of Gettysburg, Martindale, who belonged to the 20th Connecticut, was killed in the aftermath of the Battle of Atlanta, and was eventually interred in an unnamed grave at the Marietta National Cemetery. Having identified the grave with the help of historian Brad Quinlin, Broderick's research enabled him to give his ancestor his name back.[23] In the same program Broderick discovered that his paternal grandfather, James Joseph Broderick II, whom he had never known, had been a highly decorated combat medic in World War I, having earned his distinctions during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive.[2]
Work
Filmography
Stage
Stage | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1981 | Torch Song Trilogy | David | |
1983 | Brighton Beach Memoirs | Eugene Jerome | |
1985 | Biloxi Blues | ||
1995 | How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying | J. Pierrepont Finch | |
1999 | Night Must Fall | Dan | |
2000 | Taller Than a Dwarf | 'Howard Miller | |
2001–2002, 2003 | The Producers | Leopold "Leo" Bloom | |
2002 | Short Talks on the Universe | ||
2004 | The Foreigner | Charlie Baker | |
2005 | The Odd Couple | Felix Unger | |
2009 | The Philanthropist | Phillip | |
The Starry Messenger | Mark | ||
2012–2013 | Nice Work If You Can Get It | Jimmy Winter |
|
Television
Television | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1981 | Lou Grant | Episode: "Generations" | |
1985 | Faerie Tale Theatre | Episode: "Cinderella" | |
"Master Harold"...and the Boys | |||
1993 | A Life in the Theater (1993) | ||
1995 | Frasier | Episode: "She's the Boss" | |
1997 | Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery | ||
2003 | The Music Man (2003) | ||
2008 | 30 Rock | Cooter Burger | Episode: "Cooter" |
2009 | Cyberchase | Episode: "Father's Day" | |
2010 | Who Do You Think You Are? | ||
Louie | Himself | Episode: "Heckler/Cop Movie" | |
Beach Lane | TV Pilot | ||
2012 | Adventure Time | The Dream Warrior | Episode: "Who would Win?" |
30 Rock | Cooter Burger | Episode: "Governor Dunston" | |
Modern Family | Dave | Episode: "Mistery Date" |
References
- ^ "Biography: Patricia Broderick". Tibor de Nagy. 2008. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
- ^ a b Smolenyak, Megan (February 18, 2011). "Matthew Broderick, Who Do You Think You Are?". Huffington Post.
- ^ Stated on Inside the Actors Studio, 2005
- ^ Tugend, Tom (December 16, 2005). "Bialystock and Bloom Tell the Truth". JewishJournal. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
- ^ Betit, Kyle J. (April 13, 2010). "Matthew Broderick: 'Who Do You Think You Are?'". ProGenealogists. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ McGee, Celia (April 18, 2001). "Broderick's Set to Bloom in 'Producers'". Daily News. Retrieved December 13, 2006 – via Shinanat Mahamaytakit.
- ^ Seal, Mark (January 1, 2006). "Magical Mystery Tour". American Way. Retrieved May 19, 2008 – via Shinanat Mahamaytakit.
- ^ Jones, Kenneth (February 20, 2009).Broadway's Philanthropist, Starring Broderick, Goes On Sale". Playbill.
- ^ Jones, Kenneth."Kathleen Marshall To Make Matthew Broderick Tap-Happy in Broadway's 'Nice Work' Musical in 2012" playbill.com, June 16, 2011
- ^ "Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker Wedding". Celebrity Bride Guide. Retrieved September 2, 2013.
- ^ Unreich, Rachelle (June/July 1996). "Matthew Broderick: one of the guys". Detour. pp. 38–42. Archived from the original on 2006-11-16. Retrieved 2008-05-19 – via Shinanat Mahamaytakit.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ Bloom, Nate (December 16, 2005). "Celebrity Jews". Jewish News Weekly. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
- ^ Kappes, Serena (November 10, 2000). "Friend Finds He Can Count on Broderick". People. Retrieved May 19, 2008 – via Shinanat Mahamaytakit.
- ^ Fleeman, Mike (April 28, 2009). "Sarah Jessica Parker & Matthew Broderick to Have Twins!". People.
- ^ Fleeman, Mike (June 23, 2009). "Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick Reveal Twins' Names – Babies, Matthew Broderick, Sarah Jessica Parker". People.
- ^ Mitovich, Matt (June 23, 2009). "Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick Welcome Twin Girls". TV Guide. Retrieved June 23, 2009.
- ^ "Sarah Jessica Parker & Matthew Broderick's Hamptons House". Hooked on Houses. June 18, 2009. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
- ^ Hutchings, David (September 14, 1987). "Jennifer Grey (Joel's Baby and Matthew Broderick's Lady) Turns Up the Heat in Dirty Dancing". People. Vol. 28. No. 11. September 14, 1987.
- ^ Hoffmann, Bill (September 2, 2002). "Broderick's Guilt". New York Post. Retrieved May 24, 2012.
- ^ "Broderick To Be Tried In Car Crash Death". The New York Times. AP. September 8, 1987. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
- ^ "Matthew Broderick Injured in Car Crash". The New York Times. AP. August 7, 1987. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
- ^ Saunderson, Sarah (February 9, 2012). "Broderick not a great choice". Impartial Reporter. Ireland: William Trimble Ltd. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
- ^ "Robert Martindale (1823 - 1864) - Find A Grave Memorial". Findagrave.com. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
External links
- Matthew Broderick at the Internet Broadway Database
- Please use a more specific IOBDB template. See the template documentation for available templates.
- Matthew Broderick at IMDb
- Template:Allmovie name
- "The Films of Matthew Broderick", movie clip compilation, 4 min.
- 2004 Story from 60 Minutes II
- Matthew Broderick – Downstage Center 2004 interview at American Theatre Wing.org
- TonyAwards.com Interview with Matthew Broderick
- 1962 births
- Male actors from New York City
- American male film actors
- American male singers
- American male musical theatre actors
- American people of Irish descent
- American people of German-Jewish descent
- American people of Polish-Jewish descent
- American people of English descent
- American male stage actors
- American male voice actors
- Jewish American male actors
- Tony Award winners
- People from Manhattan
- Living people
- 20th-century American male actors
- 21st-century American male actors