Christian Clemenson
| Christian Clemenson | |
|---|---|
![]() Christian Clemenson as Jerry 'Hands' Espenson, on Boston Legal |
|
| Born | March 17 1959 Humboldt, IA, United States |
| Occupation | actor |
| Website | Christian Clemenson at the Internet Movie Database |
Christian Clemenson (born March 17, 1959) is an Emmy Award-winning American film and television actor.
Education
Clemenson spent his childhood in Humboldt, Iowa, as the son of a drug store owner. In his early teens he delivered the Des Moines Register, which had a long tradition of awarding scholarships to top east-coast preparatory schools to a select few "paper boys."[1] Clemenson, a straight-A junior high school student, won a Register scholarship to Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. Upon graduation from Phillips, he entered Harvard College. During many summers he would return to Humboldt to star in (and later direct) local community theatre plays at Humboldt's Castle Theatre.[2]
After graduating from Harvard College and the Yale School of Drama, he moved to Los Angeles.[3]
Roles
Many of Clemenson's early roles in television and film matched his personality as a bright, soft-spoken professional. He was a law student in the television version of "The Paper Chase," Alex Keaton's english teacher in the television show "Family Ties," the bailiff in the Ivan Reitman movie "Legal Eagles," and the flight surgeon in the movie "Apollo 13." While he has been a familiar face for over a decade, until recently his name was not so well-known.
In film, he starred as real-life 9/11 victim Tom Burnett in United 93. On television, he was a regular on The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. and has had recurring roles on Veronica Mars and Boston Legal, as Jerry 'Hands' Espenson. For playing Espenson, he won an Emmy Award for Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series in 2006 and was nominated for the same award in 2007. [1]
Awards
- Emmy Award, 2006, Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series, Boston Legal, as "Jerry Espenson", a brilliant but socially inept lawyer who has Asperger's syndrome.
References
- ^ "Letters to the Editor," TIME Magazine, 1933-8-07.
- ^ "Boston Legal" biography at http://http://www.abcmedianet.com/web/showpage/showpage.aspx?program_id=001654&type=clemenson
- ^ Id.
External links
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)






