Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

M. Emmet Walsh

 
Who2 Biography: M. Emmet Walsh, Actor
M. Emmet Walsh
Source

  • Born: 22 March 1935
  • Birthplace: Ogsdensburg, New York
  • Best Known As: Co-star of Blood Simple

Name at birth: Michael Emmet Walsh

Walsh is a remarkably busy movie character actor of the 20th and 21st centuries. Beginning with the film Alice's Restaurant in 1969, Walsh has stayed busy, often appearing in six movies per year. Shambling and classically rumpled, he is frequently cast as a corrupt cop, a shady neer-do-well or a lovable redneck of sorts. His best-known role may be that of Bryant, the cynical head cop who strong-arms Harrison Ford in the sci-fi classic Blade Runner (1982). His other films include Blood Simple (1984), Twilight (1998, starring Paul Newman and Susan Sarandon), Snow Dogs (2002, with Cuba Gooding, Jr) and Chasing 3000 (2008).

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Actor: M. Emmet Walsh
Top
  • Born: Mar 22, 1935 in Ogdensburg, New York
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Blood Simple, Blade Runner, Clean and Sober
  • First Major Screen Credit: Straight Time (1978)

Biography

Rarely garnering a lead role, M. Emmet Walsh has become one of the busiest character actors in Hollywood, using his ruddy, seedy appearance to embody countless low-life strangers with unsavory agendas. In his rare sympathetic roles, he's also capable of generating genuine pathos for the put upon plight of struggling small-timers. His effortless portrayals have made him a welcome addition to numerous ensembles, even if many viewers can't match a name to his recognizable mug. In fact, his work is so well thought of that critic Roger Ebert created the Stanton-Walsh Rule, which states that no film featuring either Walsh or Harry Dean Stanton can be altogether bad.

Contrary to his frequent casting as a Southerner, Walsh is a native New Yorker, born on March 22, 1935, in Ogdensburg, NY. As a youth he attended the prestigious Tilton School in New Hampshire, and went on to share a college dorm room with actor William Devane. He graduated from the Clarkson University School of Business, but it was not until his thirties that he discovered his true calling: acting. He first popped up in Midnight Cowboy (1969), and has worked steadily ever since, some years appearing in as many as eight motion pictures, other years focusing more on TV movies.

Working in relative anonymity through the '70s and early '80s, appearing in films ranging from Serpico (1973) to Slapshot (1977) to Blade Runner (1982), Walsh landed his meatiest and most memorable role in Joel and Ethan Coen's remarkable debut, Blood Simple (1984). Without batting an eye, Walsh exuded more casual menace as the amoral private detective doggedly pursuing his own self-interest than a host of typecast villains could muster in their entire careers. His role was key to creating a stylish noir that would launch the careers of two modern masters. It earned him an Independent Spirit Award.

Blood Simple did not markedly alter Walsh's status as a supporting actor, as he went on to appear in this capacity in Fletch (1985), Back to School (1986), and Raising Arizona (1987), his next collaboration with the Coens, in which his bull-slinging machinist scores riotously with less than a minute of screen time. One of the first appearances of the kindly Walsh was in 1988's Clean and Sober, in which he plays a recovering alcoholic helping Michael Keaton through the same struggle.

As he crept into his late fifties and early sixties, the stature of Walsh's films diminished a little, if not his actual workload. Continuing to dutifully pursue his craft throughout the early '90s, Walsh again returned to a higher profile with appearances in such films as A Time to Kill (1996), William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet (1996), and My Best Friend's Wedding (1997). More as a reaction to the ineptitude of the movie than Walsh's performance, Ebert called into question his own Walsh-Stanton Rule in his review of Wild Wild West, the 1999 Will Smith-Kevin Kline debacle in which Walsh is one of the only tolerable elements. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
Filmography: M. Emmet Walsh
Top

Racing Stripes

Buy this Movie

Snow Dogs

Buy this Movie

Poor White Trash

Buy this Movie

Jack of Hearts

Buy this Movie

Wild Wild West

Buy this Movie

The Iron Giant

Buy this Movie

Chairman of the Board

Buy this Movie

Twilight

Buy this Movie
Show More Movies

Me and Will

Buy this Movie

Killing Jar

Buy this Movie

My Best Friend's Wedding

Buy this Movie

Retroactive

Buy this Movie

Albino Alligator

Buy this Movie

A Time to Kill

Buy this Movie

William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet

Buy this Movie

Portraits of a Killer

Buy this Movie

Panther

Buy this Movie

Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home

Buy this Movie

Camp Nowhere

Buy this Movie

Relative Fear

Buy this Movie

The Glass Shield

Buy this Movie

Dead Badge

Buy this Movie

Bitter Harvest

Buy this Movie

Equinox

Buy this Movie

Four Eyes and Six Guns

Buy this Movie

The Music of Chance

Buy this Movie

Wilder Napalm

Buy this Movie

Killer Image

Buy this Movie

White Sands

Buy this Movie

The Flash

Buy this Movie

Narrow Margin

Buy this Movie

Sundown

Buy this Movie

The Brotherhood of the Rose

Buy this Movie

Catch Me If You Can

Buy this Movie

Chattahoochee

Buy this Movie

The Mighty Quinn

Buy this Movie

Red Scorpion

Buy this Movie

Thunderground

Buy this Movie

War Party

Buy this Movie

Clean and Sober

Buy this Movie

The Milagro Beanfield War

Buy this Movie

Sunset

Buy this Movie

Harry and the Hendersons

Buy this Movie

No Man's Land

Buy this Movie

Raising Arizona

Buy this Movie

Abduction

Buy this Movie

Back to School

Buy this Movie

The Best of Times

Buy this Movie

Critters

Buy this Movie

The Deliberate Stranger

Buy this Movie

Rich Hall's Vanishing America

Buy this Movie

Wildcats

Buy this Movie

Fletch

Buy this Movie

Blood Simple

Buy this Movie

Grandview, U.S.A.

Buy this Movie

Missing in Action

Buy this Movie

The Pope of Greenwich Village

Buy this Movie

Scandalous

Buy this Movie

Silkwood

Buy this Movie

The Woman Who Willed a Miracle

Buy this Movie

Blade Runner

Buy this Movie

Cannery Row

Buy this Movie

The Escape Artist

Buy this Movie

Fast-Walking

Buy this Movie

Back Roads

Buy this Movie

East of Eden

Buy this Movie

Reds

Buy this Movie

Brubaker

Buy this Movie

City in Fear

Buy this Movie

High Noon, Part Two: The Return of Will Kane

Buy this Movie

Ordinary People

Buy this Movie

Raise the Titanic

Buy this Movie

The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh

Buy this Movie

The Jerk

Buy this Movie

Dear Detective

Buy this Movie

A Question of Guilt

Buy this Movie

Airport '77

Buy this Movie

Red Alert

Buy this Movie

Slap Shot

Buy this Movie

Bound for Glory

Buy this Movie

Mikey and Nicky

Buy this Movie

The Gambler

Buy this Movie

The Prisoner of Second Avenue

Buy this Movie

Serpico

Buy this Movie

What's Up, Doc?

Buy this Movie

Get to Know Your Rabbit

Buy this Movie

Cold Turkey

Buy this Movie

Escape from the Planet of the Apes

Buy this Movie

They Might Be Giants

Buy this Movie

Little Big Man

Buy this Movie

Alice's Restaurant

Buy this Movie

Midnight Cowboy

Buy this Movie
Show Fewer Movies
Wikipedia: M. Emmet Walsh
Top
M. Emmet Walsh

Walsh at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival
Born Michael Emmet Walsh
March 22, 1935 (1935-03-22) (age 74)
United States Ogdensburg, New York, U.S.

Michael Emmet Walsh (born March 22, 1935) is an American actor who has appeared in over 100 film and television productions.

Contents

Life and career

Walsh, an Irish American,[1][2] was born in Ogdensburg, New York, the son of Agnes Kathrine (née Sullivan) and Harry Maurice Walsh, Sr., a customs agent.[3] He was raised in a rural area of Vermont.[1] After attending college at Clarkson University, he came to prominence in the 1978 crime drama, Straight Time, in which he played a sadistic parole officer. One of his most acclaimed roles was as Bryant in Ridley Scott's cult classic Blade Runner. Another notable role is as the double crossing private detective in Blood Simple (1984) for which he won the 1986 Independent Spirit Award for Best Male Lead. Walsh made occasional guest appearances on Home Improvement as Tim Allen's father-in-law. In 1992 he appeared as a powerful US Senator in David Winning's Killer image, playing Michael Ironside's brother. In Christmas with the Kranks, he played one of Allen's neighbors. He also appeared as Alex Lembeck, a motorcycle cop who appointed himself as Sandy Stockton's (Sandy Duncan) chaperone/ protector on The Sandy Duncan Show in 1972.

According to Roger Ebert's Stanton-Walsh Rule, "no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad." Ebert later conceded that this rule was broken by 1999's Wild Wild West.

Filmography

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Monster (1999 Film)
The Refuge: The Outer Limits (TV Episode) (1996 Science Fiction TV Episode)
Bully for Martin: Frasier (TV Episode) (2001 Comedy TV Episode)

What creature is an emmet? Read answer...
Where Was Emmet Born? Read answer...
Rosalie and emmet? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What is emmet's power?
Who is emmet kelly?
What is emmets power?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the M. Emmet Walsh biography from Who2.  Read more
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 "M. Emmet Walsh" Read more