Richard Schiff
Richard Schiff (born May 27, 1955) is an American actor and director. He is best known for playing Toby Ziegler on The West Wing, a role for which he received an Emmy Award. Schiff made his directorial debut with The West Wing, directing an episode titled "Talking Points". He is on the National Advisory Board of the Council for a Livable World.[1] He had a recurring role on the HBO series Ballers. Since September 2017 he has had a leading role in ABC's medical drama The Good Doctor, as Dr. Aaron Glassman, president of a fictional teaching hospital in San Jose, California.[2]
Richard Schiff | |
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Schiff at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival premiere of Knife Fight | |
Born | Bethesda, Maryland, U.S. | May 27, 1955
Alma mater | City College of New York |
Occupation | Actor, director |
Years active | 1983–present |
Spouse(s) | |
Children | 2 |
Early life
Schiff was born on May 27, 1955, in Bethesda, Maryland, and was raised in New York City. He is the second of three sons of Charlotte, a television and publishing executive, and Edward Schiff, a real estate lawyer.[3] His early jobs before acting included driving a taxi in New York City and cleaning buses "in the Greyhound terminal on 11th Avenue. It was a Teamster job, from 11pm to 7am. ... We cleaned the grease off bus wheels with diesel fuel. I also laid cable for Manhattan Cable Television. I was a Teamster in the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers."[4] Schiff and his family are Jewish. His grandfather had alleged connections to the Jewish Mafia of New York.[5][6]
Career
Schiff initially studied directing. He directed several off-Broadway plays, including Antigone in 1983 with a just-graduated Angela Bassett. In the mid-1980s Schiff decided to try his hand at acting and landed several TV roles. He was seen by Steven Spielberg in an episode of the TV drama High Incident and was cast in The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) which led to being cast more frequently and eventually to the role as White House Communications Director Toby Ziegler in the television series The West Wing. Schiff became known for his reclusive and intense approach to his craft as well as his low-key delivery style.[7]
In 1995, Schiff portrayed a lawyer in Se7en. In 1996, he guest starred on the TV series ER (Season 2, Episode 17), and appeared in NYPD Blue the following year. In 1996, he portrayed a corrupt probation officer in City Hall along with Al Pacino and John Cusack. Schiff portrayed a doctor alongside Eddie Murphy in the 1998 Dr. Dolittle remake. He also portrayed Col./Brig. Gen. Robert Laurel Smith in the 1998 HBO TV movie The Pentagon Wars, based on the real-life development of the US Army's Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle. That same year, Schiff appeared in the movie Deep Impact. Schiff appeared in one episode of Becker during its first season. In 2001, he acted in the movie What's the Worst That Could Happen? starring Martin Lawrence and Danny DeVito. He played the part of the tough lawyer Mr. Turner in I Am Sam opposite Sean Penn and Michelle Pfeiffer and co-starred in People I Know with Al Pacino.
Schiff appeared in Ray as Jerry Wexler, shaving his beard for the role. After working on The West Wing for six seasons, Schiff chose to leave the series, fulfilling his contractual obligations by appearing in half of the final season's episodes. That same year, he starred alongside Peter Krause in Civic Duty.
Schiff had a cameo appearance as himself in the second-season finale of the series Entourage. The scene has Schiff at lunch with his agent Ari Gold, where he declares a desire to act in action movies. He appeared again as a fictionalized version of himself in Entourage (2015). He also starred in the premiere run of Underneath the Lintel, a one-act, single-character play by Glen Berger, at the George Street Playhouse in New Brunswick, New Jersey. In February 2007, he appeared in the West End production of Underneath the Lintel in the Duchess Theatre[8] in London, England, and appeared on BBC Radio Five Live and talked at length to Simon Mayo about his experiences acting in The West Wing and his new West End production. In 2007, he appeared as Philip Cowen in the season finale of Burn Notice. A radio version of Underneath the Lintel, performed by Schiff, was broadcast by BBC Radio 4 on January 5, 2008. Schiff starred in Lanford Wilson's Talley's Folly at the McCarter Theatre Center in Princeton, New Jersey in the fall of 2008, as accountant Matt Friedman, opposite Margot White as Sally Talley. Later that year Schiff co-starred in Last Chance Harvey with Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson and Another Harvest Moon with Ernest Borgnine and appeared in the season finale of Eli Stone.
Schiff portrayed Charles Fischer in Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles in the Season 2 episode "Complications". The character was a collaborator of Skynet and a traitor to the resistance. He was sent back in time to the present as a reward for his service to Skynet. He played an Orthodox rabbi on an episode of In Plain Sight with former West Wing co-star Mary McCormack. In 2009, he co-starred in the movies Imagine That, with Eddie Murphy, and Solitary Man, with Michael Douglas and Susan Sarandon. Later in 2009, he went back to London to shoot two other movies: The Infidel,[9] in which he starred opposite Omid Djalili, and Made in Dagenham, with Sally Hawkins and Bob Hoskins. Schiff also appeared as a hypnotist in one episode of Monk's seventh season.
He starred in Past Life. He also had a recurring role in Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior as FBI Director Jack Fickler. Schiff had a recurring role in The Cape.[10] He also has guest starred on Any Human Heart with Jim Broadbent playing the role of a psychiatrist and on White Collar's second-season episode 15. He also played the role of an ex-CIA agent in a terrorist organization in Johnny English Reborn. In April 2011, Schiff returned to the London West End in the play Smash![11] He played opposite Rob Lowe in the drama Knife Fight, and starred opposite Josh Duhamel, Rosario Dawson and Bruce Willis in Fire with Fire. Schiff played an important plot character in three episodes of CBS's NCIS, bridging seasons 9 and 10, as Harper Dearing, the replacement for Osama bin Laden on the Most Wanted Wall for attacks against the United States Navy.
Schiff has been cast to star in the new Showtime series House of Lies, starring Kristen Bell and Don Cheadle. He also stars in the TV movie Innocent with Bill Pullman. He has a recurring guest role in the TV series Once Upon A Time and has joined Helen Hunt and former West Wing star Bradley Whitford in the movie Decoding Annie Parker. Schiff stars in the political series Chasing The Hill.
In late 2012 and early 2013 he portrayed George Aaronow in a Broadway revival of Glengarry Glen Ross. He portrayed Erie Smith in a revival of the Eugene O'Neill play, Hughie, at the Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, D.C., in February and March 2013, and Dr. Emil Hamilton in Zack Snyder's 2013 Superman film, Man of Steel. In September 2014, Schiff returned to the West End in a revival of Speed-the-Plow by David Mamet, co-starring Lindsay Lohan. In 2015, Schiff appeared as Dwayne Johnson's character's boss on HBO's Ballers. Around the same time, he also had roles in the films Kill the Messenger, The Automatic Hate, and Take Me to the River.
Schiff had a regular role on the TNT's newest crime drama Murder in the First as David Hertzberg. The show also starred Taye Diggs, Kathleen Robertson, and Tom Felton.
Personal life
Schiff and actress Sheila Kelley married in 1996.[12] Kelley was cast to play his love interest, and later his wife, on The Good Doctor. They have a son, Gus, born in 1994, and a daughter, Ruby, born in August 2000.[12]
Schiff has supported Democratic candidates, but has said he is not a registered member of the party.[13] He supported Barack Obama in the 2008 U.S. presidential election. Previously, he had endorsed then-Senator Joe Biden, before Biden dropped out. In 2016, Schiff supported Senator Bernie Sanders during the Democratic primaries.[14] He endorsed Cynthia Nixon's bid for Governor of New York in the 2018 election.[15]
In February 2017, Schiff was instrumental in popularizing the moniker "President Bawbag" in relation to President Donald Trump. The term bawbag is Scottish in origin and refers to the scrotum. #PresidentBawbag went viral across social networks after Schiff tweeted several times, encouraging the use of the hashtag.[16]
His brother is film producer Paul Schiff.
On November 10, 2020, Schiff announced that he and his wife Sheila Kelley had tested positive for COVID-19 on Election Day and were quarantining at their home in Vancouver.[17] The following Monday, he announced he was hospitalized, but "showing improvements" while Kelley was at home "doing better", but still sick.[18] On November 19, 2020, Schiff was released from the hospital.[19]
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | Malcolm X | JFK Reporter | |
1992 | Rapid Fire | Art Teacher | |
1992 | The Bodyguard | Skip Thomas | |
1992 | Hoffa | Government Attorney | |
1994 | The Hudsucker Proxy | Mailroom Screamer | |
1994 | Speed | Train Driver | |
1994 | Major League II | Commercial Director | |
1995 | Tank Girl | Trooper in Trench | |
1995 | Rough Magic | Marvin Wiggins | |
1995 | Se7en | Mark Swarr | |
1996 | City Hall | Larry Schwartz | |
1996 | The Arrival | Calvin | |
1996 | The Trigger Effect | Gun Shop Clerk | |
1996 | Michael | Italian Waiter | |
1997 | Touch | Jerry | |
1997 | Volcano | Haskins | |
1997 | The Lost World: Jurassic Park | Eddie Carr | |
1998 | Dr. Dolittle | Gene Reiss | |
1998 | Living Out Loud | Phil "Philly" Francato | |
1998 | Deep Impact | Don Beiderman | |
1998 | The Pentagon Wars | Col. Smith | |
1999 | Forces of Nature | Joe | |
1999 | Crazy in Alabama | Norman | |
2000 | Gun Shy | Elliot | |
2000 | Whatever It Takes | P.E. Teacher | |
2001 | I Am Sam | Mr Turner | |
2001 | What's the Worst That Could Happen? | Walter Greenbaum | |
2002 | People I Know | Elliot Sharansky | |
2004 | Ray | Jerry Wexler | |
2004 | With It | Virgil LaRocca | Short film |
2006 | Civic Duty | Tom Hilary | |
2007 | Waiting | John | Short film |
2007 | Martian Child | Mr Lefkowitz | |
2009 | Imagine That | Carl Simons | |
2009 | Solitary Man | Steve Heller | |
2009 | Another Harvest Moon | Jeffery | |
2010 | The Infidel | Lenny Goldberg | |
2010 | Made in Dagenham | Robert Tooley | |
2011 | Johnny English Reborn | Titus Fisher | |
2012 | Knife Fight | Dimitris Vargas | |
2013 | Decoding Annie Parker | Mr Allen | |
2013 | The Frozen Ground | Roy Hazelwood | |
2013 | Man of Steel | Emil Hamilton | |
2014 | Kill the Messenger | Richard Zuckerman/Walter Pincus | |
2014 | The Gambler | Jeweler | |
2014 | Before I Disappear | Bruce Warham | |
2015 | The Automatic Hate | Ronald Green | |
2015 | Entourage | Himself | |
2015 | Take Me to the River | Don | |
2016 | American Fable | Jonathan | |
2017 | Alien Code | Miles Driskoll | AKA The Men |
2017 | Shock and Awe | The Usual | |
2017 | Geostorm | Senator Thomas Cross | |
2019 | Clemency | Marty Lumetta | |
2019 | After Class | Jeff Cohen | |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1988 | Cheers | Tourist | Episode: "One Happy Chappy in a Snappy Serape" |
1990 | Tales from the Crypt | Lester Middleton | Episode: "Korman's Kalamity" |
1992 | Picket Fences | Joey Fero | Episode: "Pilot" |
L.A. Law | Dog Pound Operator | Episode: "Helter Shelter" | |
1993 | South of Sunset | Bobby Bruck | Episode: "Dream Girl" |
Doogie Howser, M. D. | Billy Tishler | Episode: "What Makes Doogie Run" | |
1994 | The John Larroquette Show | Wilson | Episode: "Don't Drink and Drive Nuclear Waste" |
Murphy Brown | Mel Woodworthy | Episode: "Anything but Cured" | |
Saved by the Bell: Wedding in Las Vegas | Deputy Dano | Television film | |
Thunder Alley | Pat Perkins | Episode: "Blood Suckers" | |
Love & War | Lester Michaels | Episode: "The Bum" | |
1995 | Maybe This Time | Pearlman | Episode: "Snitch Doggy-Dogg" |
NYPD Blue | Vartan Illiescu | Episode: "Bombs Away" | |
Murder One | Prof. Stanley Fletcher | Episode: "Chapter Nine" | |
1996 | ER | Mr. Bartoli | Episode: "The Match Game" |
Chicago Hope | Mark Sarison | Episode: "Quiet Riot" | |
Special Report: Journey to Mars | Eric Altman | Television film | |
1996–1997 | Relativity | Barry Roth | Main 17 episodes |
1997 | NYPD Blue | Steve Cameron | Episode: "Is Paris Burning?" |
1998 | The Practice | Bob Show | Episode: "Trees in the Forest" |
Brooklyn South | Chris McIntrick | Episode: "Cinnamon Buns" | |
Ally McBeal | Bernie Gilson | Episode: "These Are the Days" | |
The Pentagon Wars | Lt. Colonel/Brigadier General Robert Laurel Smith | Television film | |
The Taking of Pelham One Two Three | Mr. Green | Television film | |
1999–2006 | The West Wing | Toby Ziegler | Main 141 episodes Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series (2000) Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series (2001–02) Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series (2001–02) Nominated—Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series (2003–06) |
1999 | Becker | Barry | Episode: "Truth and Consequences" |
Roswell | Agent Stevens | Recurring 3 episodes | |
2005 | Entourage | Himself | Episode: "The Abyss" |
2007 | Burn Notice | Phillip Cowan | Recurring 2 episodes |
2008 | Eli Stone | David Green | Episode: "Soul Free" |
Monk | Dr. Lawrence Climan | Episode: "Mr. Monk Gets Hypnotized" | |
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles | Charles Fischer | Episode: "Complications" | |
2009 | In Plain Sight | Samuel Garfinkel | Episode: "Aguna Matatala" |
2010 | Past Life | Dr. Malachi Talmadge | Recurring 9 episodes |
Svetlana | Dr. Lawrence | Episode: "Eco-Shlong" | |
Any Human Heart | Dr. Byrne | Recurring 2 episodes | |
2011 | The Cape | Patrick Portman | Recurring 3 episodes |
White Collar | Andrew Stanzler | Episode: "Power Play" | |
Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior | Jack Fickler | Recurring 4 episodes | |
Up All Night | Dr. Dean Chafin | Episode: "Parents" | |
2012–2016 | House of Lies | Harrison 'Skip' Galweather | Recurring 9 episodes |
2012 | Once Upon a Time | King Leopold | Recurring 2 episodes |
The Mindy Project | Doctor | Episode: "Pilot" | |
NCIS | Harper Dearing | Recurring 3 episodes | |
2013 | Bones | Professor Leon Watters | Episode: "The Spark in the Park" |
2014 | Murder in the First | David Hertzberg | Recurring 10 episodes |
Key and Peele | Ambassador | Episode: "Sex Addict Wendell" | |
2014–2015 | Manhattan | Occam | Recurring 9 episodes |
2015–2017 | Rogue | Marty Stein | Main 22 episodes |
2015–2019 | Ballers | Brett Anderson | Recurring 26 episodes |
2015 | Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp | Dean Fairchild | Episode: "Auditions" |
2015–2019 | The Affair | Jon Gottlief | Recurring 12 episodes |
2016 | The Grinder | Gordon Stutz | Recurring 2 episodes |
Mom | Robert | Episode: "Pure Evil and a Free Piece of Cheesecake" | |
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency | Detective Zimmerfield | Recurring 5 episodes | |
2017 | When We Rise | Judge Vaughn Walker | Recurring 2 episodes |
Chicago Justice | Frank Linden | Episode: "Tycoon" | |
Jean-Claude Van Johnson | Alan Morris | Recurring 2 episodes | |
2017–present | The Good Doctor | Dr. Aaron Glassman | Main |
2018 | Castle Rock | Warden Porter's superior (voice) | Episode: "Harvest" |
2018–2019 | Counterpart | Roland Fancher | Recurring 7 episodes |
2020 | Psych 2: Lassie Come Home | Dr. Hirsch | Television film |
References
- "Board". Council for a Livable World. Council for a Livable World.
- Denise Petski (March 13, 2017). "'The Good Doctor': Richard Schiff Cast In ABC Medical Drama Pilot". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
- Richard Schiff Biography (1955-)Archived from the original on January 23, 2013.
- Cutler, Jacqueline (January 14, 2019). "7 Questions With Richard Schiff of ABC's 'The Good Doctor'". Channel Guide Magazine. Archived from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
- "Infidel actor Richard discovered drama in his family's history". The Jewish Telegraph. jewishtelegraph.com Published 2010. Accessed February 12, 2016.
- "Celebrities: Richard Schiff". Jewish United Fund/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago. juf.org. Accessed February 12, 2016.
- Schiff, Richard. "Richard Schiff bio". Retrieved 7 July 2016.
- Caesar, Ed (8 February 2007). "Richard Schiff: Life after 'The West Wing'". The Independent. London. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- "The film that changed my life: Richard Schiff". The Guardian. London. 25 April 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- What's Behind the Cape? on Parallel Universe on MSN: Features. Last accessed 28th November 2013
- "Richard Schiff stars in the new West End play Smash!". BBC Website. BBC News: Entertainment and the Arts. April 13, 2011. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- Lynch, Jason (April 23, 2001). "First, Family". People. 55 (16). Archived from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved September 18, 2014.
- Larry King interview, 2016
- "'West Wing' Actor Richard Schiff Stresses Importance of Voting for Hillary Clinton: 'This Is the Last Battle of the Civil War'". The Hollywood Reporter. November 7, 2016. Retrieved July 27, 2018.
- "Richard Schiff on Twitter". Twitter. August 12, 2018.
- "West Wing Actor Richard Schiff Got #PresidentBawbag Trending And It Was Amazing". The Huffington Post. 2017-02-12. Retrieved 2017-02-16.
- Ausiello, Michael (November 10, 2020). "Good Doctor's Richard Schiff Reveals COVID-19 Diagnosis: 'This Is Tough'". TVLine. Retrieved November 16, 2020.
- Ausiello, Michael (November 16, 2020). "Ailing Good Doctor Star Richard Schiff Shares COVID-19 Update From Hospita". TVLine. Retrieved November 16, 2020.
- Andreeva, Nellie (November 19, 2020). "'The Good Doctor' Star Richard Schiff Released From Hospital After COVID-19 Treatment: "I Realize How Lucky I Am" – Update". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
External links
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