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Michael Moriarty

 
Artist: Michael Moriarty

Biography

Michael Moriarty, who made a name for himself as an award-winning actor of stage, screen, and television, is also a skilled jazz pianist and vocalist with a number of recordings to his credit. He has led his own combos and also plays the harmonica, a sample of which can be heard on The Highest Standards album from Plug Records. In addition, he has conducted and recorded a cassette of classical music under the title The Music of Michael Moriarty, which features violinist Nina Beilina. Among his jazz recordings are The Michael Moriarty Quintet Live at Fat Tuesday's April 12, 1992, Sweet 'n Gritty, and Reaching Out.

Despite his soft-spoken manner and innocent-looking features, Moriarty is convincing in all sorts of acting roles, including villains. His 1978 role as a vicious Nazi in Holocaust earned him a Golden Globe. Television audiences also will recall him from the four years he portrayed Ben Stone on the long-running weekly crime drama Law & Order during the early '90s. The actor also has won a Tony, Emmy, Hugo, and Drama Desk awards. Moriarty studied with Stella Adler in London, where he was a Fulbright Scholar at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. Before becoming established in his acting career, he earned a paycheck by waiting tables and working as a salesman of tires and encyclopedias.

Controversy surrounded some of his actions in later years. He attributed his resignation from Law & Order to a recent meeting he'd had with Janet Reno, who was then attorney general of the U.S. Reno spoke against violence on television, while Moriarty's resignation was a stand against censorship. In Canada, where he makes his home in Vancouver, British Columbia, his political activities made headlines as he established the new Republican Party of Canada. An alleged altercation in a bar with a girlfriend also made headlines in 2000. The actor has been married three times. He wed Francoise Martinet in 1966, and the couple divorced in 1978. Moriarty wed Anne Hamilton Martin that same year and they divorced in 1997. His marriage to Suzana Cabrita lasted from 1998 to 1999. ~ Linda Seida, All Music Guide
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Actor: Michael Moriarty
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  • Born: Apr 05, 1941 in Detroit, Michigan
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: Who'll Stop the Rain?, Holocaust, The Last Detail
  • First Major Screen Credit: My Old Man's Place (1971)

Biography

Detroit-born Michael Moriarty was still in his teens when he received a Fulbright Fellowship to study acting at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts. At 22, Moriarty played Octavius Caesar in a New York Shakespeare Festival production of Antony and Cleopatra, the first of many Shakespearean assignments. He made his Broadway bow in Trial of the Catonsville 9 and his film debut in 1972's Hickey and Boggs. In 1973 and 1974, no one was a likelier candidate for big-time stardom than Michael Moriarty. He starred as ingratiatingly egotistical ballplayer Henry Wiggen in theatrical feature Bang the Drum Slowly (1973), earned an Emmy for his portrayal of the Gentleman Caller in a TV adaptation of The Glass Menagerie, and won the Tony award for his work in the Broadway play Find Your Way Home. While his stage career flourished (he'd later star in well-received revivals of The Caine Mutiny Court Martial and My Fair Lady) his movie career was not as successful. It was television that made Moriarty a "name" in the eyes of the public, especially after his chillingly effective Emmy-winning turn as pasty-faced Nazi bureaucrat Erik Dorf in the 1978 miniseries Holocaust. In his film appearances of the late 1970s and early 1980s, Moriarty evinced a preference for working in director Larry Cohen's low-budget horror efforts, which brought little in the way of prestige but which assured him juicy leading roles. He was particularly good in Cohen's Q (1982), as a scuzzy, unprincipled mercenary who becomes the film's hero-by-default. From 1990 to 1994, Moriarty earned three Emmy nominations for his work as Assistant DA Ben Stone in TV's Law and Order; he left the series in 1995, complaining that Attorney General Janet Reno's criticisms of TV violence seriously endangered his ability to perform at fullest capacity. In addition to his considerable acting accomplishments, Moriarty is a superb jazz pianist; he has cut albums with his own jazz trio, and is a frequent performer at Michael's Pub, a New York nitery which occasionally features director Woody Allen on the clarinet. In addition, Michael Moriarty can be seen as the Governor of New Jersey in Crime of the Century, a 1996 TV-movie recreation of the Bruno Richard Hauptmann trial. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Michael Moriarty
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Michael Moriarty
Born April 5, 1941 (1941-04-05) (age 68)
Detroit, Michigan, United States
Occupation Actor/Musician
Years active 1971—present
Spouse(s) Suzana Cabrita (1998-1999) (divorced)
Anne Hamilton Martin (1978-1997) (divorced)
Francoise Martinet (1966-1978) (divorced)
Margaret Brychka (?-present)

Michael Moriarty (born April 5, 1941) is a 3 time emmy and tony award winning American-Canadian actor of stage and screen, and a jazz musician. He played Benjamin Stone for four seasons on the TV series Law & Order.

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Early life

Moriarty, an Irish American,[1] was born in Detroit, Michigan, the son of Elinor (née Paul) and George Moriarty,[2] a police surgeon. His grandfather, George Moriarty, was a third baseman, umpire and manager in the major leagues for nearly 40 years. He attended middle school at Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills before transferring to the University of Detroit Jesuit High School for high school.[3] Moriarty then matriculated at Dartmouth College in the class of 1963, where he was a theatre major. After he received his degree, he left for London, England, where he enrolled in the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, after receiving a Fulbright Scholarship.

Acting career

In 1973, Moriarty was cast to play the egocentric Henry Wiggen in Bang the Drum Slowly, a film about friendship between two unlikely baseball teammates – the second being Robert De Niro, a slow thinking catcher who becomes terminally ill. In the same year, Moriarty starred in a TV movie adaptation of Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie with Katharine Hepburn. Coincidentally, the film also featured Sam Waterston, who later replaced Moriarty as the Executive Assistant District Attorney on Law & Order. Moriarty's role in Menagerie (as "Jim," the Gentleman Caller; Waterston played the son "Tom") won him an Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actor of the Year. In 1974 he had a starring role as rookie detective Bo Lockley in the acclaimed gritty police drama Report to the Commissioner.

He won a Tony Award in 1974 for his work in Find Your Way Home. Moriarty's career on the screen was slow to develop, while his theatre career was flourishing. He starred as a German SS officer in the television miniseries Holocaust, which earned him another Emmy. Through the 1980s, Moriarty starred in such Larry Cohen movies as Q, The Stuff, It's Alive 3, and A Return to Salem's Lot (much later, he appeared in Cohen's Masters of Horror episode "Pick Me Up"), as well as Clint Eastwood's Pale Rider and The Hanoi Hilton. In 1986, he starred in the fantasy science fiction movie Troll, playing the role of Harry Potter Sr.[4]

From 1990 to 1994, Moriarty starred as Ben Stone on Law & Order. He left the show in 1994, alleging that his departure was a result of his threatening a lawsuit against then-Attorney General Janet Reno, who had cited Law & Order as offensively violent. Moriarty criticized Reno's comment, and claimed that not only did she want to censor shows like Law & Order but also such fare as Murder, She Wrote. He later accused Law & Order executive producer Dick Wolf of not taking his concerns seriously, and claimed that Wolf and other network executives were "caving in" to Reno's "demands" on the issue of TV violence. Moriarty published a full-page advertisement in a Hollywood trade magazine, calling upon fellow artists to stand up with him against attempts to censor TV show content. He subsequently wrote and published The Gift of Stern Angels, his account of this time in his life.[5]

Wolf and others working on Law & Order tell a different story, however. On November 18, 1993, Moriarty and Wolf, along with other television executives, met with Reno to dissuade her from supporting any law that would censor the show. Wolf said that Moriarty overreacted to any effect the law was likely to have on the show. Law & Order producers claim they were forced to remove Moriarty from the series because of "erratic behavior". One example reportedly happened during the filming of the episode "Breeder" when, according to the episode's director, Arthur Forney, Moriarty was unable to deliver his lines with a straight face. Series and network officials deny any connection to his departure and Janet Reno. Wolf also denies that the show has become less violent, graphic or controversial since 1994.[6]

Moriarty performed in Courage Under Fire, Along Came a Spider, Shiloh, Emily of New Moon and James Dean, for which he won his third Emmy. In 2007 he debuted his first feature-length film as screenwriter and performed the role of a man who thinks he is Adolf Hitler in Hitler Meets Christ.[7]

Musical career

In addition to his acting career, Moriarty is a semi-professional jazz pianist and singer, as well as a classical composer. He has recorded three jazz albums (though the first, Reaching Out, went unreleased), and has performed live regularly in both New York and Vancouver, with a jazz trio and quintet. In a 1990 concert review, New York Times reviewer Stephen Holden called Moriarty "a jazz pianist of considerable skill, an oddball singer with more than one vocal personality, and a writer of eccentric, jivey jazz songs".[8]

Personal life

Shortly after leaving Law & Order, Moriarty moved to Canada, declaring himself a political exile. He lived for a time in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he was granted Canadian citizenship, and Toronto, Ontario before settling in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Moriarty lives in Maple Ridge, British Columbia, where he still acts, writes and plays music. On the blog Enter Stage Right Moriarty writes that he was a "very bad drunk", but that as of February 1, 2004, he had been sober for three years.[9]

Politics

Moriarty is politically active, describing himself as a "centrist", and sometimes as a "realist".[10] He has written extensively on his opposition to abortion. For example, in response to a recent interview question as to what the most pressing issue facing the nation was, he said:

We will find abortion and the despotic Roe v. Wade decision revealing itself as a virtual burning of the Declaration of Independence and our "inalienable right to life…when created"… not gestated. So the pressing issue will, inevitably, be the Third Millennium's version of American slavery: ABORTION.[11]

Moriarty announced his intention to run for President of the United States in 2008 in an interview in the November 2005 issue of Northwest Jazz Profile, but never formally declared his candidacy.[11][12] He later endorsed fellow former Law & Order actor Fred Thompson for the presidency.[13] He also has been a frequent contributor of numerous political columns to the ESR (Enter Stage Right) online Journal of Conservativism.

A website devoted to Moriarty, MMUUUHP (the "Michael Moriarty Unofficial, Unauthorized, Unsanctioned Home Page"), contains editorials by Moriarty, and these, in addition to posts on ESR, contain scathing denunciations of an eclectic array of targets, including Bill Clinton, Thanaticism, abortion, embryonic stem cell research, anti-Catholicism, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, George W. Bush, both major U.S. political parties, Halliburton, the College of Cardinals, Islam, and most of Catholic theology. Historically, he has been a supporter of the Republican Party.[14] A recent interview contains the following quotes by Moriarty:

Like the collaborating Vichy government in France under the Nazis, America will surrender to laws and ideologies that contradict the American Constitution and the most simple Human Rights. The Supreme Court took a once individually free nation and corrupted it by the lie of Science that fetuses are, in their first two trimesters, no more than egg yolk. Ultimately, our American Intellectual Supremacists bought the "Population Problem," in the same way Europe fell under the thrall of the so-called "Jewish Problem."

and

Islam, in and of itself... is an Allah-worshipping, Kamikaze Nation, exactly like pre-World War II Imperial Japan. Its Bible, the Koran, can be read like Hitler's Mein Kampf. It demands to rule the entire human race. Islam's only idea of freedom of religion is the freedom of Islam to rule everything. Islamic Political Parties should be no more trusted than neo-Nazi, White Supremacists and David Duke of the Ku Klux Klan have been trusted. Tragically, the only language Islam, like Hirohito's Japan, understands is violence. The measures Harry Truman took to end the war with Japan may prove tragically necessary with Islam.[15]

However, he later recanted his previous hatred towards Islam, deeming that Osama Bin Laden preached a perverted, traitorous form of Islam:

Allah is plumbing your depths. The fear you're now beginning to feel is only the beginning. As you shut walls between your terror and your evil missions, Allah is exuding His presence within every true Muslim. The eyes and ears of Islam are hearing their God and, with all their eyes on you, Osama, witness the clarity of their adoration begin to cloud with the smoky mists of Allah. Merely a wisp of doubt in your followers will grow to a puff of occasional anger, then a stare of growing revelation, and finally, when they again turn their eyes on you, they will see Islam's greatest traitor, Allah's most evil son, and Mohammed's certain enemy.[16]

See also

Notes

External links



 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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