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James Woods

James Woods
James Woods
Born: Apr 18, 1947 in Vernal, Utah
Occupation: Actor,
Active: '70s-2000s
Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
Career Highlights: The Virgin Suicides, My Name is Bill W., Videodrome
First Major Screen Credit: The Visitors (1972)
Filmography
EYEWITNESS 1981
BEST SELLER 1987
SALVADOR 1986
AGAINST ALL ODDS 1984
BOOST, THE 1988
TRUE BELIEVER 1989
IMMEDIATE FAMILY 1989
ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA 1984
WOMEN AND MEN: STORIES OF SEDUCTION 1990
HARD WAY, THE 1991
BADGE OF THE ASSASSIN 1985
BLACK MARBLE, THE 1980
IN LOVE AND WAR 1991
CHOIRBOYS, THE 1977
DIGGSTOWN 1992
CITIZEN COHN 1992
HOLOCAUST SERIES 1978
NEXT DOOR 1994
SPECIALIST, THE 1994
CURSE OF THE STARVING CLASS 1994
CASINO 1995
KILLER, A JOURNAL OF MURDER 1996
GHOSTS OF MISSISSIPPI 1997
SUMMER OF BEN TYLER 1996
CONTACT 1997
JOHN CARPENTER'S VAMPIRES 1998
ANOTHER DAY IN PARADISE 1998
TRUE CRIME 1999
ANY GIVEN SUNDAY 1999
VIRGIN SUICIDES, THE 2000
DIRTY PICTURES 2000
FINAL FANTASY: THE SPIRITS WITHIN 2001
RIDING IN CARS WITH BOYS 2001
JOHN Q 2002
RACE TO SPACE 2002
NORTHFORK 2003
THIS GIRL'S LIFE 2003
EASTER EGG ADVENTURE, THE 2005
PRETTY PERSUASION 2005
END GAME 2006
SURF'S UP 2007
SHARK: SEASON 1 2006
SHARK: SEASON 2 2007
53 Videos for James Woods
An American Carol (2008) The General's Daughter (1999) Women and Men: Stories of Seduction (1990)
Shark: Season 02 (2007) The Virgin Suicides (1999) Immediate Family (1989)
Surf's Up (2007) True Crime (1999) True Believer (1989)
Shark: Season 01 (2006) Another Day In Paradise (1998) In Love and War (1988)
Be Cool (2005) Vampires (1998) The Boost (1988)
End Game (2005) Contact (1997) Wildfire (1988)
Pretty Persuasion (2005) Ghosts of Mississippi (1996) Best Seller (1987)
The Easter Egg Adventure (2004) Summer of Ben Tyler (1996) Salvador (1986)
Northfork (2003) Casino (1995) Badge of the Assassin (1985)
This Girl's Life (2003) Killer: A Journal of Murder (1995) Against All Odds (1984)
John Q. (2002) Curse of the Starving Class (1994) Once Upon a Time in America (1984)
Race To Space (2002) Next Door (1994) Eyewitness (1981)
Stuart Little 2 (2002) The Getaway (1994) The Black Marble (1979)
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001) The Specialist (1994) Holocaust (1978)
Riding in Cars With Boys (2001) Chaplin (1992) The Choirboys (1977)
Dirty Pictures (2000) Citizen Cohn (1992) The Way We Were (1973)
Any Given Sunday (1999) Diggstown (1992) Hickey and Boggs (1972)
Robbie the Reindeer: Hooves of Fire (1999) The Hard Way (1991)
Photos


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Biography:

One of Hollywood's most intense supporting and leading actors, James Woods has built a distinguished career on stage, screen, and television. Early in his career, Woods, with his lean body, close-set eyes, and narrow, acne-scarred face, specialized in playing sociopaths, psychopaths, and other crazed villains, but in the 1990s, he added a sizable number of good guys to his resumé. The son of a military man, Woods was born in Vermal, UT, on April 14, 1947.

Thanks to his father's job, he had a peripatetic childhood, living in four states and on the island of Guam. As a young man, he earned a scholarship to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; after obtaining a degree in political science, he set out to become a professional actor in New York. While in school he had appeared in numerous plays at M.I.T., Harvard, and with the {~Theater Company} of Boston, as well as at the {~Provincetown Playhouse} on Rhode Island.

After working off-Broadway, Woods debuted on Broadway in 1970, appearing in {+Borstal Boy}. Off-Broadway, he earned an Obie for his work in {+Saved}. In 1971, the actor made his first television appearance in All the Way Home, and the year after that debuted in Elia Kazan's thriller The Visitors (1972).

He then played a small part in The Way We Were (1973), but did not become a star until he played a vicious, remorseless cop killer in The Onion Field (1979). Subsequent film appearances quickly established Woods as a scene stealer, and though not among Tinseltown's most handsome actors, he developed a base of devoted female fans who found his rugged, ruthless appearance sexy.

This appearance would serve him well throughout his career, notably in one of his first major films, David Cronenberg's Videodrome (1983). Cast as the film's morally ambiguous hero, Woods gave a brilliantly intense performance that was further enhanced by his rough-hewn physical attributes.

Throughout the 1980s, Woods continued to turn in one solid performance after another, earning a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his portrayal of an American journalist in South America in Oliver Stone's Salvador (1986). He gave another remarkable performance as a Jewish gangster in Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in America (1984), and in 1989 tried his hand at playing nice in the adoption drama Immediate Family.

That same year, he won an Emmy for his portrayal of Alcoholics Anonymous co-founder Bill Wilson in My Name Is Bill W. After beginning the subsequent decade with an Emmy and Golden Globe-nominated performance in the title role of the made-for-TV Citizen Cohn (1992), Woods appeared in a diverse series of films, playing a boxing promoter in Diggstown (1992), H.R.

Haldeman in Nixon (1995), a drug dealer in Another Day in Paradise (1998), and a vampire slayer in John Carpenter's Vampires. In 1996, he won his second Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Medger Evers' suspected assassin in Ghosts of Mississippi. In 1999, the actor continued to demonstrate his versatility in a number of high-profile films.

For The General's Daughter, he played a shady colonel, while he appeared as a newspaper editor in Clint Eastwood's True Crime, the head of an emotionally disintegrating Michigan family in The Virgin Suicides, and a football team orthopedist in Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday.

~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide.