actors/actresses who are one-trick-ponies

True enough, although, as others have pointed out, he did this in Hill Street Blues well beofre NYPD Blue even aired. As the storyline over the last few seasons of NYPD Blue got sillier, one thing that kept me watching was Franz’s performance as Sipowicz. And seasons 2-8, where he partnered with Jimmy Smits and Rick Schroeder, were fantastic television. Even season 1 was OK, but even the best show is ruined for me by the presence of David Caruso.

Goldblum is one of the people i dropped in to nominate. His one-trick act gets really annoying after a while.

Now for my own nomination, and the person whose face immediately appears in my head whenever the subject of one-dimensional actors comes up:

Meg Ryan.

While Elijah Wood has broken away from Frodo and looks poised and ready for Big Things, I’ve yet to see Orlando Bloom play a different character–same goes Topher Grace, too, although admittedly he hasn’t done much yet.

Interesting thing about Woody Allen is how when he started getting too old to be Woody Allen, he hired other actors to be Woody Allen for him.

And Kenneth Branagh did a bang-up job of it in Celebrity.

His next big challenge will be to pull off playing Venom in Spider-Man 3.

What about Will Smith? Has the the former Fresh Prince ever played a character that did not make any wisecracks?

Whoops! I skipped over page 2 of this thread. Please ignore my previous post. :smack:

(Plus, I forgot about Smith’s role in Ali.)

It’s not acting, per se, but Jaleel White did the voice of Sonic the Hedgehog in the cartoons. Sonic’s personality is about as far from Steve Urkel as you can possibly get.

Also Six Degrees of Separation. (Or was it Seven Degrees…?)

You’re forgetting the tough but good NCO character he plays in things like Saving Private Ryan, Pearl Harbor, and Black Hawk Down. At the very least he is a two trick pony. His filmography is pretty large.

I would have said that Ben Stiller is a one-trick pony, seeming always to play the same sympathetic character in everything he does. But he was brilliant in Dodgeball, playing a manic, self-important gym owner that you loved to hate.

For anyone who’s been avoiding Dodgeball because they think it’s just juvenile shtick, I recommend it mainly for Stiller’s performance.

I probably wouldn’t have watched it myself, except for the fact that I am a tiny cog in the Fox machine, and they gave copies of Dodgeball to all the employees last year.

Okay…:: braces self:: Tom Hanks. I like him a lot, but he’s always another version of Tom Hanks. The closest he seemed to get to really immersing himself in the character was in Private Ryan. Otherwise, he’s just a personable guy with impeccable comedic timing.

I hate to say it, but Jodie Foster seems in danger of becoming that, as her last two movies were virtually identical.

[Family Guy]
Brian: And remember that time you had an Irish coffee the day we went to see Philadelphia?
(Scene cuts to Peter in the movie theater and everyone is crying, except him.)
Peter: I got it! Thats the guy from “Big,” uh–Tom Hanks! Funny guy Tom Hanks, everything he says is a stitch.
Tom Hanks’ Character: I have aids.
(Peter laughs hysterically.)
[/Family Guy]