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Joe Don Baker

 
Actor: Joe Don Baker
  • Born: Feb 12, 1936 in Groesbeck, Texas
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '70s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Action
  • Career Highlights: Charley Varrick, Fletch, Walking Tall
  • First Major Screen Credit: Bonanza: The Real People of Muddy Creek (1968)

Biography

Veteran character actor Joe Don Baker has been playing rugged good ol' boys since his uncredited role in Cool Hand Luke in 1967. Born in Texas, his Southern drawl and ample proportions made him suitable to play countless numbers of simple-minded sheriffs, cops, and detectives in everything from big-budget blockbusters to low-grade action movies, although he more often appeared in the latter. On TV in the '60s, he guest starred on Bonanza, Gunsmoke, and Mission: Impossible before starring in his own show, the short-lived detective series Eischied. On the big screen, he played the drifter in Sam Peckinpah's Junior Bonner in 1972. He same year he made the "hicksploitation" classic Walking Tall, followed by Charley Varrick, Golden Needles, Framed, and plenty of other poorly made action thrillers that have since gained a small but appreciative audience on home video. The best example is 1975 crime flick Mitchell, which was featured on an important transitional episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000. Baker plays the titular slob detective who goes after drug dealers while drinking a lot of Schlitz malt liquor and eating pork rinds. After this movie, he became something of a legendary figure to a small but loyal fan base, and his persona as a lovable rascal was fixed for the next few decades. In the '80s he appeared in bad comedies (Fletch, Leonard, Part 6) as well as bad action thrillers (Final Justice, Getting Even). In 1989, he returned to television to play acting chief Tom Dugan on In the Heat of the Night and made small appearances in films, like the police chief who drinks Pepto-Bismol in Cape Fear (1991). He did branch out a little in the '90s to play Senator Joseph McCarthy in the made-for-TV movie Citizen Cohn as well as Winona Ryder's yuppie dad in Reality Bites. His later accomplishments include three James Bond appearances, first in Living Daylights as a bad guy, then in Goldeneye and Tomorrow Never Dies as good guy Jack Wade. He returned to his stereotypical roots playing white-trash slobs as Richie's trailer park dad in Mars Attacks! and in an uncredited role in Joe Dirt. In 2003, he appeared with veterans Martin Landau, Martin Sheen, and Edward Asner in The Commisson. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
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Joe Don Baker
Born February 12, 1936 (1936-02-12) (age 73)
Groesbeck, Texas, U.S.
Spouse(s) Maria Dolores Rivero-Torres (1969–present)

Joe Don Baker (born February 12, 1936) is an American film actor, perhaps best known for his roles as a Mafia hitman in Charley Varrick, real-life Tennessee sheriff Buford Pusser in Walking Tall, James Bond villain Brad Whitaker in The Living Daylights, and CIA agent Jack Wade in the James Bond films GoldenEye and Tomorrow Never Dies.

Contents

Biography

Life and career

Baker was born in Groesbeck, Texas, the son of Edna (née McDonald) and Doyle Charles Baker.[1] He got his start in acting as an uncredited character in the 1967 film Cool Hand Luke, but his real beginnings came when he scored the role of Steve McQueen's younger brother in the film Junior Bonner, directed by Sam Peckinpah. He later starred in the 1973 film Walking Tall, directed by Phil Karlson, also starring in the film maker's final work Framed, two years later. Baker was offered a cameo in the remake (which had nothing to do with Sheriff Buford Pusser) but declined the offer.

His work in 1973's Charley Varrick may remain Baker's most memorable success. Baker was praised for a courageous and offbeat portrait of the sadistic hitman Molly. The film starred Walter Matthau as the bank robber Varrick, and won a British Academy Award.

Baker has given many outstanding performances in a career spanning four decades. In 1980, he became the first actor[citation needed] to receive $1,000,000 to star in a television series—the short lived police drama Eischeid where he played Chief Earl Eischeid.

He was "The Whammer," a mighty baseball slugger clearly modeled after Babe Ruth, in the 1984 baseball drama The Natural that starred Robert Redford. In a scene, the Whammer takes three swings at pitches from the young Roy Hobbs to try to impress a mysterious woman they have met on a train.

In 1985, he portrayed the corrupt Chief Jerry Karlin in Fletch. In the UK, Baker is probably best known as CIA agent Darius Jedburgh from the BBC Television drama serial Edge of Darkness. He was nominated for "Best Actor" by the British Academy Television Awards.

Martin Scorsese directed him as a private detective in 1991's Cape Fear, hired by a man (Nick Nolte) whose family is being threatened by a psychopathic ex-convict (Robert DeNiro).

While actor Carroll O'Connor was undergoing heart bypass surgery, Baker took his place on the television series In the Heat of the Night. Baker appeared as Captain Tom Dugan, a retired police captain who filled in while O'Connor's character was away at a police convention.

Baker's films Mitchell and Final Justice were lampooned on the movie-mocking television series Mystery Science Theater 3000. According to the Mystery Science Theater 3000 Amazing Colossal Episode Guide, Baker was angered by the treatment of Mitchell and threatened to physically assault any of the MST3k cast or crew if he ever met them. Kevin Murphy, MST3k's Tom Servo and one of the show's head writers, has suggested that Baker was probably joking, and it did not prevent them insulting Baker and his work further in the later commentary to Final Justice.

James Bond series

In 1987, Baker got the role of the villain Brad Whitaker in the Bond film The Living Daylights, starring Timothy Dalton as James Bond. In 1995 and 1997 Baker returned to the series, this time playing a different character, CIA agent Jack Wade, in GoldenEye and Tomorrow Never Dies with Pierce Brosnan as Bond. This makes Baker one of only two actors to appear as both a Bond ally and a villain, the other being Charles Gray who appeared as 'Henderson' in You Only Live Twice and as 'Blofeld' in Diamonds Are Forever.

The character of Wade is similar to that of CIA agent Darius Jedburgh, played by Baker in the 1985 serial Edge of Darkness. This serial was directed by Martin Campbell, who also cast Baker as Wade in GoldenEye.

Baker was said to have actually tried out for the role of James Bond once for Live and Let Die.[citation needed] Baker also shares a birthday with Bond girl Maud Adams.

In 2009, Baker delivered another performance in The Cleaner on A&E, playing a military veteran, and a drunk, who helps William Banks (played by Benjamin Bratt) start the father of a gay soldier, who was killed in Iraq, back down the road to sobriety.

Filmography

References

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