The one that hits me first is ** Greg Germann**. I think he’s a good actor and I’ve seen him execute some hard roles but they always seem to be shitty. Either the shitty boss who’s out to get someone, or the shitty co-worker that’s out to off someone, the list goes on.
Christine Baranski, a tall classy comedienne with a hoarse boudoir voice, a way with one-liners and about 9 miles of legs. Usually plays a stock society wife with nothing to do or say.
… I’m actually a big fan of his… and I think he plays a variety of different roles. Christ Almighty, you linked to his IMDB and that pretty much cinches it that he has a pretty broad range and works in that range quite a bit.
His character from Ned and Stacey (a pussywhipped husband) and his part on Ally McBeal (skirt chasing ruthless lawyer) couldn’t be farther a part.
And she was the recipients of one of the greatest bits of miscasting in cinema: Mary Sunshine in Chicago. Anyone who saw the play knows why (though, to be fair, the movie couldn’t have cast the role the same way).
I think of Cindy Williams. She showed great promise as an actress in two of the best films of the 70s – American Grafitti and The Conversation – but got cast in Laverne and Shirley was was never taken seriously again.
If you don’t mind, could you explain what you mean about the casting of the role in the play? I loved the movie but have never seen the play. (Someday, when I’ve got a little more cash lying around…) Hope this isn’t a hijack, I’m just very curious.
S’funny, but I just happened to watch Nashville last night and couldn’t help thinking about poor old Ned Beatty. A great actor who worked in some great flicks (Nashville, Superman, Network), and very good at playing a variety of roles. But still, when all is said & done, he’s the guy who ‘squealed like a pig.’
Jean-Claude Van Damme. I mean, the guy is probably the most subtle, most nuanced, the most flat-out gifted dramatic male lead since vintage Brando. Yet he’s most often cast as a [French/Franch-Canadian/Louisiana French] practitioner of [Karate/kickboxing] who is on the run from [The French Foreign Legion/The U.S. Army/drug dealers]. It’s really a shame.
Whoosh. Van Damme is horrible, even for an action movie star. He’s so bad that they had to write plot elements into all of his movies to explain his accent, which he’s never been able to lose. That was actually the joke of my post.
Fred Gwynne – the guy was a versatile actor (and children’s book author), but once he platyed Herman Munster, a lot of people couldn’t see him as anything else. Before that role (and before Car 54 Where Are You?, which woulda typecast him in a different way if The Munsters had never existed) he had some stuff, and at the end of his life he started getting good roles again. I saw him on Broadway shortly before he died, playing the lead in a mystery.
One of my high school teachers bemoaned the fact that Richard Baseheart got stuck playing Admiral Nelson on Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. He had range, too.
One of the great joys of Street Fighter (a movie full of innumerable great joys) is Van Damme’s role as red-blooded American soldier Guile, and his absolutely unintelligible accent. I probably saw it 20 times before I realized why he called Raul Julia a “six of a bitch” (“sick son of a bitch”). Oh well, six of a bitch, one half dozen of the other.
The late character actor Brion James occasionally got to play a sympathetic role, but typically played total A-holes – either psycho killers, low-life criminals or a variety of thugs and henchmen. Probably a nice guy in real life, but he happened to make a really good big, scary-looking guy who just might take a length of steel rebar and beat your head in.
Morgan Freeman has been typecast pretty badly over the last few years as the wise old fatherly sage. They even made him play God in that Jim Carrey movie a few years back for christsake. He’s a much better actor than the one dimensional roles that he has been getting let on.
I didn’t much care for Lucky Number Slevin but I was relieved to see Freeman finally play a bad guy. The scenes with him and Ben Kingsley soared.
I always thought Julia Duffy was capable of being, if not the second coming of Meryl Streep, at least a capable dramatic actress. However, she played the spoiled ice princess so well in Newhart and other sitcoms that she never had the chance.
She’s in her mid-50’s now, and a little past the ingenue stage.