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Brion James

 
Actor: Brion James
  • Born: 1945 in Beaumont, California
  • Died: Aug 07, 1999 in Malibu, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '80s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Action, Science Fiction
  • Career Highlights: Cabin Boy, Enemy Mine, The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez (1983)

Biography

Actor Brion James launched his career in television and feature films and on television in the mid '70s. With his piercing eyes and cruel smile, the versatile, 6' 3"James, usually portrays assorted eccentric bad-guys, urban scum, and red-necks. One of his most memorable roles was Leon, an android in Ridley Scott's Blade Runner (1982). As his father owned a movie theater in Beaumont, California, James spent most of his life around movies . Following high school, James moved to New York City where he became a cook and butler for Stella Adler, a renowned drama coach. While in the Big Apple, James also appeared off-Broadway, and as a stand-up comedian. In 1973, he returned to Los Angeles to become a full time actor with the philosophy that he would never turn down a job. James's strategy has worked, and since then he has appeared in over 100 TV shows and 70 features. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Filmography: Brion James
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The Operator

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The King Is Alive

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In God's Hands

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Brown's Requiem

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Killing Jar

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The Fifth Element

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The Setting Son

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Back in Business

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Evil Obsession

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Deadly Ransom

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Heist

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Pterodactyl Woman From Beverly Hills

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American Strays

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Precious Find

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Cyberjack

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Sketch Artist 2: Hands That See

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Steel Frontier

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Scanner Cop

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Cabin Boy

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Radioland Murders

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F.T.W.

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The Companion

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Hong Kong 97

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The Soft Kill

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Brain Smasher: A Love Story

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Future Shock

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Nemesis

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Rio Diablo

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Striking Distance

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Frogtown 2

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Showdown

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Black Magic

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The Player

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Time Runner

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The Amazing World of Marine Mammals

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Another 48 Hrs.

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Beyond the Silhouette

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Enid Is Sleeping

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Mutator

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Street Asylum

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Dead Man Out

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The Horror Show

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Red Scorpion

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Tango & Cash

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D.O.A.

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Dead Man Walking

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Nightmare at Noon

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Red Heat

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The Wrong Guys

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Cherry 2000

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Steel Dawn

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Armed and Dangerous

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Crimewave

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Enemy Mine

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Flesh + Blood

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Silverado

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A Breed Apart

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The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez

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48 Hrs.

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Blade Runner

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Killing at Hell's Gate

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The Postman Always Rings Twice

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Southern Comfort

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Wholly Moses!

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Blue Sunshine

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Corvette Summer

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Harry and Walter Go to New York

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Treasure of Matecumbe

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Wikipedia: Brion James
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Brion James

Brion James in 48 Hours, 1982
Born February 20, 1945
Redlands, California
Died August 7, 1999 (aged 54)
Malibu, California
Occupation Film, television actor
Years active 1975 - 1999

Brion Howard James (February 20, 1945 – August 7, 1999) was an American character actor. Known for playing the character of Leon Kowalski in the movie Blade Runner, James portrayed a variety of colorful roles in well-known American films such as 48 Hrs., Another 48 Hours, Tango & Cash, Silverado, Red Heat and The Player. James' commanding screen presence and formidable physique at 1.91 metres (6.3 ft) tall,[1] usually resulted in his casting as a heavy, appearing more frequently in lower budget horror and action films throughout the 1980s and 1990s. James appeared in more than 100 films before his life was cut short by a fatal heart attack.

Contents

Biography

Early life

James was born in Redlands, California, and spent his early years in Beaumont, California, where his parents, Ida Mae and Jimmy James, owned and operated a movie theater. After graduating from high school in 1962, James attended San Diego State University as a Theater Arts major. James was good friends with actor Tim Thomerson, as both served together as cooks in a tank company while in the Army Reserve in California. After their service, they both went to New York to break into acting. Migrating to New York, James immersed himself in the theater scene, taking on bit roles here and there.

Career

In 1975, James landed a small role in the made for TV movie, The Kansas City Massacre, playing John Dillinger gang member Homer Van Meter. Higher profile roles followed in 1976, with his casting in Nickelodeon and Harry and Walter Go to New York. James also appeared in the acclaimed television miniseries Roots and popular 1970s shows such as Gunsmoke, The Incredible Hulk, Mork and Mindy, Chico and the Man, and CHiPs.

James' career began to take a sharp upturn in the early 1980s with several sharply defined character roles in films such as Southern Comfort and 48 Hrs. (which were both directed by Walter Hill), but it was his performance as Leon Kowalski in the 1982 film Blade Runner that gave him his greatest, most lasting fame. Even though his memorable performance threatened to typecast the intense yet versatile actor as a movie villain for the remainder of the decade, James continued to pile up a prolific acting resume, playing significant roles in Enemy Mine, Flesh + Blood, A Breed Apart, Armed and Dangerous, Red Heat, Steel Dawn, Red Scorpion, Tango & Cash and Showdown (portraying an obnoxious high-school vice-principal, Kowalski, whose name was probably an inside joke inspired by Blade Runner). James continued his strong work on the small screen as well, with guest spots in Benson, The A-Team, Little House on the Prairie, The Dukes of Hazzard, Matlock, Miami Vice, Sledge Hammer!, and Dynasty. In the 90s, he appeared in Highlander: The Series, and as Sheriff Bowman in the Millennium season 2 episode "Luminary". He lent his voice to the character of Parasite in Superman: The Animated Series.

His only starring role was in the low-budget 1989 supernatural horror film The Horror Show (aka House III), where he played serial killer "Meat Cleaver Max" Jenke.

In 1994, he played a grouchy sponsor who became a victim of the gruesome goings-on during a 1939 radio show in the film Radioland Murders. Another of his most memorable roles came near the end of his career; as the amiable General Munro in The Fifth Element (1997), a film that was heavily inspired by Blade Runner.

Concerning his talent for playing villains in films, he stated in an interview in Fangoria magazine, "'I consider myself a classical character actor like Lon Chaney, Wallace Beery, Charles Laughton. I always like to play bad guys. I'm real good at psychotic behavior."[2]

Death

James died in 1999 from a heart attack in Malibu, California. He appeared in five feature films which were released following his death. The last of these was Phoenix Point (2005).

The motion picture The King Is Alive (2000) was dedicated to him.

Partial filmography

Feature

Television

Bibliography

  • James, Brion (interview subject); Craig Edwards (interviewer) (Spring 1995). "Brion James; Interview by Craig Edwards". Psychotronic Video 20: 60–64. 

External links


 
 

 

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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Brion James" Read more