J. T. Walsh - Americola, the celebrity encyclopedia
J. T. Walsh
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James Thomas Patrick Walsh (September 28, 1943 – February 27, 1998) was an American actor best known for his roles as "quietly sinister white-collar sleazeballs" (quote from Leonard Maltin) in numerous feature films and "everybody's favorite scumbag" from Playboy Magazine.
Walsh was born in San Francisco, California. After returning from studying at Clongowes Wood College in the Republic of Ireland, Walsh attended the University of Rhode Island, where he starred in many college theater productions. In 1974, he was discovered by a director and began working in off-Broadway shows.
Walsh did not start doing feature films until
1983, where he had a minor role in
Eddy Macon's Run. Over the next 15 years, he played in over 50 feature films, increasingly taking the bad guy role for which he is so well known, e.g. the loudly irascible Sgt. Maj. Dickerson in
Good Morning, Vietnam. Walsh had one of his best roles as Wayne in
Red Rock West (1992). In his last year, he starred in
Hidden Agenda,
Pleasantville, and
The Negotiator. All three of those movies were dedicated to his memory, after he died from a
heart attack on February 27, 1998. In addition,
Jack Nicholson dedicated his
Academy Award for
As Good as It Gets to the memory of Walsh, with whom he had starred in
A Few Good Men and
Hoffa in 1992. The
1997 thriller
Breakdown featured Walsh as the villainous truck driver, which raised his profile to movie audiences. Sadly, it was said that Walsh wanted to show his range as an actor and play good guy parts, which proved slim, although the actor did get to play but a few decent people like the White House Chief of Staff in
Outbreak in an inspired cameo, and Chester Van Damme in
Sniper but even those roles had Walsh putting an amoral streak within his characters. Walsh played a member of
Majestic-12 in the 1996-1997 sci-fi/drama television series
Dark Skies.
Walsh died from a heart attack in La Mesa, California on February 27, 1998.
J.T. Walsh, father of actor
John West, was the inspiration for
Fametracker's
The J.T. Walsh Memorial "Hey! It's That Guy!" feature on
character actors.