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Actor:

James Urbaniak

  • Born: 1963
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Henry Fool, American Splendor, Fay Grim
  • First Major Screen Credit: Henry Fool (1997)

Biography

Tall, dark, and scarecrow-thin, James Urbaniak is probably best known to art house audiences for his work in Hal Hartley's Henry Fool (1997) and The Book of Life (1998). Urbaniak, who met Hartley in the mid-1990s, made his film debut courtesy of the director, who cast the actor in his short Comedy Central film Opera No. 1 (1994), which also featured Adrienne Shelly and future Henry Fool co-star Parker Posey.

A product of New Jersey, where he was born in 1963, Urbaniak graduated from high school in 1981. Following a brief stint at community college, he spent the next several years "bumming around" (in his own words) New Jersey, working odd jobs, and doing community theatre. A 1987 introduction to theatre director Karin Coonrod led to the creation of the Arden Party theatre company, which had its debut on the Jersey shore that same year. The company moved to New York the following year and eventually became something of a downtown theatre institution with productions of such works as The Importance of Being Earnest and Romeo and Juliet. In addition to his work as the co-founder of the Arden Party, Urbaniak also performed with a number of other off-off-Broadway theatre companies, and in 1996, he won a Village Voice Obie award for his performance in avant-garde director and playwright Richard Forman's The Universe.

After becoming acquainted with director Hartley, who cast him in his aforementioned 1994 film debut, Urbaniak starred in Henry Fool as Simon Grim, an unassuming and oft-abused garbage man who turns out to be a Nobel Prize-winning literary genius. The film, and Urbaniak's performance, earned a number of positive reviews and a strong art house showing, and the following year the actor could be seen in Hartley's Book of Life, a comedy about Christ's Second Coming that premiered at the Cannes Festival. In addition to his work for Hartley, Urbaniak began appearing in the films of other directors, most notably Hilary Brougher's The Sticky Fingers of Time (1997), which cast him as a 1950s science editor who travels across time; and Woody Allen's Sweet and Lowdown (1999), which featured the actor in a small role as a musician in Sean Penn's band. ~ Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: James Urbaniak
James Urbaniak
Born September 17 1963 (1963--) (age 44)
Bayonne, New Jersey

James Christian Urbaniak (born September 17, 1963) is an American actor. He has been acclaimed for his acting in the film Henry Fool and the play Thom Pain (based on nothing), for which he was nominated for a Drama Desk Award.[1] He provides the voice for Dr. Thaddeus Venture on The Venture Bros., as well as the Doctor's brother, Jonas Jr and the super-villain Phantom Limb.

Urbaniak was born in Bayonne, New Jersey. He lives in Santa Monica, California with his wife Julie and their fraternal twins Severn Jerzy and Esme Maeve.[2] In May of 2007, a facetious comment that Urbaniak made on a journal entry triggered rumors that Urbaniak was going to be replaced on Venture by actor Liev Schreiber.[3] Urbaniak has stated that any rumors of him leaving were false.[4]

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Actor. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "James Urbaniak" Read more

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