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Bob Balaban

 
Actor: Bob Balaban
  • Born: Aug 16, 1945 in Chicago, Illinois
  • Occupation: Actor, Director, Writer
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Ghost World, Waiting for Guffman, Altered States
  • First Major Screen Credit: Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)

Biography

Playing a succession of bespectacled, soft-spoken, yet vaguely superior characters, Bob Balaban carved himself a niche as a reliable character actor in the last quarter of the 20th century, while also getting the occasional opportunity to write and direct for the screen.

The nephew and cousin of industry personages, Balaban got the acting bug at Colgate University and N.Y.U., inspiring him to study with Uta Hagen and Viola Spolin. After some exposure on and off-Broadway in the late 1960s, Balaban made his film debut in Midnight Cowboy (1969), playing the high school student who meets Jon Voight in the movie theater for a tryst. Working sporadically through the '70s, more in theater and TV than film, Balaban developed a more familiar face with such roles as the cartographer and French translator from Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1978) and the attorney hired to help Richard Dreyfuss' quadriplegic choose to die in Whose Life Is It Anyway? (1981).

Balaban's major contribution to the industry in the 1980s was as a director, first of the disappointing Showtime movie The Brass Ring (1983) and then of the macabre weekly TV series Tales of the Darkside (1984) and Amazing Stories (1985). His big-screen directorial debut, the cannibal-themed black comedy Parents (1989), was considered either an objectionable failure by some or a devious cult classic by others; two later forays into directing (My Boyfriend's Back in 1993, The Last Good Time in 1994) were better received.

In the 1990s, Balaban returned his focus to acting, especially as he caught on with more regular parts in the latter half of the decade. His most widely seen role was the NBC executive who accepts, then declines, then accepts again the pilot written by George and Jerry on the popular sitcom Seinfeld. His Russell Dalrymple appeared in only six episodes in the 1992-1993 season but was featured prominently in the season finale, lost at sea and presumed dead in his all-consuming quest to win Elaine's affections. It was this Seinfeld gig that netted Balaban the most regular and prominent work of his career in the years that followed. Although often still appearing in serious roles, Balaban indulged his talent for subtle comedy by linking up with actor/director Christopher Guest and appearing in two of his acclaimed faux documentaries, Waiting for Guffman (1996) and Best in Show (2000).

Balaban scored a major art-house and critical successes producing and playing one of the main characters in Robert Altman's murder-mystery Gosford Park, and appearing as an ineffective father in Ghost World. That same year he appeared in important supporting roles in such big-budget fare as The Mexican and The Majestic. He maintained his carer in the independent world hooking up again with Christopher Guest for A Mighty Wind, and making a cameo appearance in the Oscar nominated Capote. Balaban appeared in and helped produce the animated Hollywood satire Hopeless Pictures, which ran on IFC in 2005. 2006 proved to be a very busy year for the multi-talented Balaban. In addition to another ollaboration with Guest, For Your Consideration, he played a film critic in M. Nght Shyamalan's The Lady in the Water. He also directed Ralph Finnes and Susan Sarandon in Doris and Bernard. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Bob Balaban
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Bob Balaban
Born Robert Elmer Balaban
August 16, 1945 (1945-08-16) (age 64)
Chicago, Illinois
Occupation Film, television actor

Robert Elmer "Bob" Balaban (born August 16, 1945) is an American actor, author and director.

Contents

Biography

Personal life

Balaban was born in Chicago, Illinois, the son of Eleanor (née Pottasch) and Elmer Balaban, who owned several movie theatres and later was a pioneer in cable television.[1][2] His family was a dominant force in the theatre business; his uncles founded the Balaban and Katz Theatre circuit in Chicago, a chain which included the Chicago and Uptown theatres (a 2006 documentary, Uptown: Portrait of a Palace, features one of these theatres). Balaban and Katz operated some of the most beautiful movie palaces in the United States beginning the 1920s. Bob Balaban's father and his uncle Harry founded the H & E Balaban Corporation in Chicago. H & E Balaban Corporation operated their own movie palaces including the Esquire Theatre in Chicago. They later owned a powerful group of television stations and cable television franchises. His uncle Barney Balaban was president of Paramount Pictures[3] for nearly 30 years from 1936 to 1964. His grandmother's second husband, Sam Katz, was a vice president at MGM beginning in 1936. Sam had early partnered with Bob's uncles Abe, Barney, John and Max to form Balaban and Katz. Sam also served as President of the Publix theatre division of Paramount Pictures.

Balaban is an alumnus of Colgate University and New York University and lives on the Upper West Side of Manhattan with his family. He is a member of the Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity. He is Jewish,[4] with his paternal grandparents having immigrated from Russia to Chicago.[5]

Career

One of his earliest appearances in film was in 1969's Midnight Cowboy. Prior to that, he filled the role of "Linus" in the original New York off-Broadway production of "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown" in 1967.[6] Among his early roles in the 1970s were those of Orr in Catch-22, and the interpreter David Laughlin in the 1977 Steven Spielberg science fiction film Close Encounters of the Third Kind. In 1979 he received a Tony Award nomination for his role in The Inspector General. During the 1980s he appeared in films such as Altered States and 2010, and directed the Randy Quaid picture Parents.

Balaban has had supporting roles in films such as Absence of Malice, Bob Roberts, Deconstructing Harry, Ghost World, The Majestic, Lady in the Water and all of Christopher Guest's films: Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show, A Mighty Wind and For Your Consideration. Balaban appeared in Miami Vice as reporter Ira Stone, a nemesis of G. Gordon Liddy's character. In the 1990s, Balaban had a recurring role on the fourth season of Seinfeld as Russell Dalrymple, the fictional president of NBC and eventually Elaine's love interest. He also played Warren Littlefield, a real-world NBC executive, in The Late Shift, about the battle between Jay Leno and David Letterman for NBC's The Tonight Show. In 1999 Balaban made a guest appearance in the sitcom Friends as Phoebe's father Frank Buffay in "The One With Joey's Bag".

In 2001 Balaban produced the Robert Altman picture Gosford Park, for which he received a nomination for Best Picture; he also appeared in the movie as Morris Weissman, a Hollywood producer. He recently appeared in an episode of Entourage as a doctor known for writing prescriptions for medical marijuana.

Balaban owns the rights for any future movie adaptations of the BBC sitcom Red Dwarf.[citation needed]

Balaban is the author of a series of six children's novels featuring a bionic dog named McGrowl.

Balaban is the director of Bernard and Doris.

Bob Balaban Status

Balaban's work in the Christopher Guest Collection provided the inspiration for a tongue-in-cheek fan's argot. A "Bob Balaban" refers to one of the myriad of obscure actors who appear in more than one of Christopher Guest's movies. Some Bob Balabans include but are not limited to: John Michael Higgins, Michael Hitchcock, Don Lake, Jane Lynch, Larry Miller, and Jennifer Coolidge.

An important distinction must be noted that not all Guest staples are classified as Bob Balaban. Certain actor's body of work demand that they be noted above Bob Balaban status. These actors are Michael McKean, Parker Posey, Eugene Levy, Christopher Guest, Catherine O'Hara and of course Fred Willard.

A point of mild controversy surrounds the apportionment of Ed Begley Jr. Critics argue that Begley's work outside of the Guest Collection commands as much name respect as a Michael McKean. While it is certainly conceded that Begley is a tremendous actor with a world class oeuvre, Ed Begley Jr is still generally viewed as a "Bob Balaban".

Further reading

  • Balaban, David. "The Chicago Movie Palaces of Balaban and Katz", Arcadia Publishing, 2006

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Absence of Malice (1981 Drama Film)
Unnatural Pursuits (1991 Comedy Drama Film)
The One with Joey's Bag: Friends (TV Episode) (1999 Comedy TV Episode)

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