Philip Anthony Mair Heald

Philip Anthony Mair Heald net worth is $2 Million. Also know about Philip Anthony Mair Heald bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Philip Anthony Mair Heald Wiki Biography

Philip Anthony Mair Heald, known professionally as Anthony Heald (born August 25, 1944), is an American actor known for portraying Hannibal Lecter’s jail nemesis, Dr. Frederick Chilton, in The Silence of the Lambs and Red Dragon, and for playing assistant principal Scott Guber in David E. Kelley’s Boston Public.Heald also had a recurring role as Judge Cooper on Kelley’s The Practice and Boston Legal. IMDB Wikipedia $2 million 1944 1944-8-25 5′ 7″ (1.7 m) 8MM (1999) Actor Anthony Heald Net Worth August 25 Boston Public (2000) New Rochelle New York Philip Anthony Mair Heald Red Dragon (2002) Robin Herskowitz The Silence of the Lambs (1991) U.S. Virgo

Philip Anthony Mair Heald Quick Info

Full Name Anthony Heald
Net Worth $2 Million
Date Of Birth August 25, 1944
Place Of Birth New Rochelle, New York, U.S.
Height 5′ 7″ (1.7 m)
Profession Actor
Education Michigan State University, Massapequa High School
Nationality American
Spouse Robin Herskowitz
Children Dylan Heald, Zoe Heald
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0372217
Awards Obie Award for Ensemble Performance, Obie Award for Performance
Nominations Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play, Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actor in a Play, Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Drama Series
Movies The Silence of the Lambs, Deep Rising, Red Dragon, X-Men: The Last Stand, 8mm, The Pelican Brief, The Client, Proof of Life, Kiss of Death, Searching for Bobby Fischer, Outrageous Fortune, A Time to Kill, Bushwhacked, The Ballad of Little Jo, Accepted, Whispers in the Dark, Happy New Year, The Stair…
TV Shows Boston Public

Philip Anthony Mair Heald Quotes

  • You know, I became an actor because I love solving problems. I’m a big crossword puzzle person. I love doing research. One of the reasons I became Jewish is because I love text study. I love going into rehearsals day after day for three, four weeks, trying stuff, coming back the next day, building on that. So many times I’d drive home from the studio [after] shooting and I’d be thinking about a certain moment, and I’d think, “Oh, I know what to do!” And I never get a chance to visit that moment again. But in theater, I get to visit it every performance. You learn the vocabulary, you know what the parameters are, so then play with it. You can say, “I’m going to take this pause a little longer this time.” It’s thrilling! Live performance, there’s nothing like it.
  • (On Red Dragon) They recreated the ginal] set [of Silence Of The Lambs]. They had to make a whole wig for me. I had a buzz cut, because I was still doing Boston Public. We had our first meeting in Dino De Laurentiis’s office. When I walked in, Tony [Hopkins] saw me and he started dancing across the room, singing, “We get to do it again! We get to do it again!” He’s so silly. It was wonderful having the opportunity to work with Tony again. He actually had me come into the set while he was filming something of his and had me feed him the lines. He was very reassuring… But the movie was really problematic, I thought. Because Manhunter is such a good film of that book, and what made it a good film is the guy who played the FBI guy, William Petersen, brought the weight of the world: a man who had seen the underbelly of society and had been deeply affected by it and changed by it. Whereas in Red Dragon, you had Ed Norton, who looks like he just graduated from high school. He’s got this exuberant, youthful, optimistic kind of demeanor. So I didn’t buy his character’s dilemma.
  • (On Deep Rising) It’s a film that takes place in 24 hours, and like with any movie, you’re shooting out of sequence. You shoot what set you’re in. My very first day in Vancouver, we shot the scene in which my character dies. The very last day, 17 weeks later, we shot the scene that leads up to that. My character went through a very minutely detailed deconstruction as the movie went on. His hair started to get mussed, he lost his tie, his shirt got ripped, his glasses got broken. And I sat down with the continuity person and we worked out a chart, so we knew exactly how that deconstruction was going to happen, and then tried to stay with that so that it made sense. I developed a very serious infection, a staph infection in my foot that I got from my infant daughter, and so I was laid up for a good portion of time. I would have to have a nurse come to my apartment every eight hours, or to the set, and give me antibiotics intravenously. And I was not allowed to go out and socialize, and this was right at the key time when everybody in the cast was bonding. So I felt extremely isolated. I was inactive, so I was ballooning in weight. So it ended up not being a terrific experience. I was excited about doing it because it was more money than I’d ever been paid, before or since, for a single project. And then it ended up being a movie that just did not get seen. It was about a cruise ship disaster, and it opened a month after Titanic. Nobody cared.
  • (On Outrageous Fortune) It was a great object lesson, because Shelley Long was the kind of actress-and there are a lot of performers like this-who make decisions about how to play things at night, alone, in front of their mirror. Then they come in and do those things. Then there are other actors who make no decisions about how to play something until they’re in the moment, looking into their scene partner’s eyes. So they’re completely available for whatever happens. And those are actors who tend to avoid getting into patterns. Bette [Midler] totally personified that kind of acting. Arthur Hiller would do 15 takes of the same thing, and he would print all of them. So you’d watch the dailies the next day-he always encouraged the actors to come watch the dailies-and you’d see Shelley do take after take after take after take, exactly the same. Down to the millimeter. The hand movements, everything. Bette would do it angry, happy, sad, giggly. A million different adjustments. Every take was different… When you do that, you give the director and the editor huge resources with which to assemble a performance. Because our job as actors, especially in front of a camera, is almost like textile artists. We spend so much time getting the right texture of yarn, and working out the color scheme, and binding off the weave, and making it just right, and we do that and that’s our work that we’ve done and then they take it and they cut it up and stretch it and dye it and put it into a tapestry. And nothing bears any resemblance to what you thought it was going to be. Your performance is no longer yours.
  • (On The Client) The real joy of that situation was getting to work with J.T. Walsh. I had worked with him early in my career [in The Beniker Gang, 1985], and he was drinking at the time, and he was a terrible person to be around. By the time we did The Client, he’d achieved sobriety, and he was the most wonderful, gracious-just a true prince.
  • (On Silence of the Lambs) I was working at the Berkshire Theatre Festival, doing Betrayal, and I got a call from my agent that Jonathan Demme wanted to see me for Silence Of The Lambs. The agent said, “Read the book.” So I went to the drugstore and got a paperback of Silence Of The Lambs. Read it in one sitting. Sat up all night. Then I drove down to New York the next day, went into Jonathan’s office, and he greeted me like and old friend and he said, “You know, I’m a New Yorker and I see theater all the time. I’ve seen everything you’ve done, and I really love your work. I’m very anxious to work with you. I want you to be in this movie.” You never have an audition like that! He said, “What do you want to play? You know the book?” I said, “Yeah. I’d love to play Dr. Chilton.” He said, “Well, Chilton needs to be in his late 50s, so we’re going a good deal older than you. Is there anything else?” I said, “One of the Smithsonian bug guys, that’d be great fun.” So, a couple weeks later, I get news. We’re going to do a reading. Jodie Foster has been hired as Clarice, and Gene Hackman has been hired as Hannibal. The day before the reading, I get a call from Jonathan: “Gene Hackman has dropped out. His daughter doesn’t think it’s the right role for him. So we don’t have a Hannibal. But we still want to do the reading. Jodie is flying in. This is not an audition, I would not cast you in this role, but to help us out, would you, tomorrow, at the reading, read the part of Hannibal Lecter?” Sure! So the first time we read the script, I was sitting across the table from Jodie Foster and I was playing Hannibal. I just had a great time. After the reading Jonathan took me aside and said, “You can play Chilton. You convinced me.” A few weeks later, we’re going to do another reading. We now have the person who’s going to play Hannibal Lecter: Robert Duvall. Well, that fell through, and finally it’s going to be Tony Hopkins. And I thought, “Tony Hopkins?” Because his film career was in the toilet. Then we did a reading and I sat watching him doing it and I thought, “He’s terrible. He’s terrible! That’s not the way to do it!” Because he wasn’t doing it anything like the way I did it. Then during the shooting of it, I kept-I loved him. I found him a beautiful person to be around. But I just thought he was so wrong for the role. And I had a great time doing the movie, but when I saw the screening, I thought, “This is a disaster. They’re all so excited about this film, but it’s not scary to me, it’s not believable.” I still don’t like it as much as everybody else. It was the reactions of other people that made me realize that maybe it was better than I thought.

Philip Anthony Mair Heald Important Facts

  • He’s often confused with Nick Nolte by many audiences. He appeared with Nolte in Teachers (1984).
  • Appearing in Oregon Shakespeare Festival productions of Tartuffe and The Cherry Orchard [March 2007]
  • Filming Red Dragon with Brett Ratner
  • Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland performing in Music Man and Henry VIII [August 2009]
  • Currently appearing again, at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in The Further Adventures of Hedda Gabler and Our Town. [June 2008]
  • Summer 2010 – Once again performing in Oregon Shakespear Festival. Anthony appears in Merchant of Venice and Henry IV, Part One. [July 2010]
  • Has appeared in several TV shows written by David E. Kelley.
  • Was twice nominated for Broadway’s Tony Award: in 1988, as Best Actor (Featured Role – Musical), for a revival of “Anything Goes”; and in 1995, as Best Actor (Featured Role – Play), for Terrence McNally’s “Love! Valour! Compassion!”.
  • May 28, 1991: Starred in the first production of Terrence McNally’s play “Lips Together, Teeth Apart” with Nathan Lane, Christine Baranski, and Swoosie Kurtz.
  • Resided in Montclair, NJ. Now lives in Seattle.
  • Attended Michigan State University in the 1960s, where he worked with a street theater group.

Philip Anthony Mair Heald Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
The Stairs 2016/II Short Alden Actor
Sam & Cat 2014 TV Series Dr. Slarm Actor
Monday Mornings 2013 TV Series Mitch Tompkins Actor
Laid Off 2012 TV Series Giacomo Actor
Boston Legal 2005-2008 TV Series Judge Harvey Cooper Actor
Accepted 2006 Dean Richard Van Horne Actor
The Closer 2006 TV Series Howard Pierce Actor
X-Men: The Last Stand 2006 FBI Mystique Interrogator Actor
Crossing Jordan 2006 TV Series Attorney McBride Actor
According to Jim 2005 TV Series Reverend Steven Actor
NCIS 2005 TV Series Guyman Purcell Actor
Numb3rs 2005 TV Series Walt Merrick Actor
Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman 2004 TV Movie Simon (uncredited) Actor
Boston Public 2000-2004 TV Series Scott Guber Actor
Red Dragon 2002 Dr. Frederick Chilton Actor
Benjamin Franklin 2002 TV Mini-Series documentary Jonathan Austin Actor
The Ruby Princess Runs Away 2001 Short King Regal Actor
The Practice 2000-2001 TV Series Judge Wallace Cooper
Scott Guber
Actor
Proof of Life 2000 Ted Fellner Actor
Frasier 2000 TV Series Corkmaster Actor
The X-Files 2000 TV Series Harold Piller Actor
8MM 1999 Daniel Longdale Actor
Deep Rising 1998 Simon Canton Actor
Liberty! The American Revolution 1997 TV Mini-Series Philip Vickers Fithian Actor
Cosby 1997 TV Series President’s Aide Actor
A Time to Kill 1996 Dr. Wilbert Rodeheaver Actor
Poltergeist: The Legacy 1996 TV Series Damon Ballard Actor
New York News 1995 TV Series Actor
Bushwhacked 1995 Reinhart Bragdon Actor
Kiss of Death 1995 Jack Gold Actor
Law & Order 1991-1994 TV Series Councilman Spencer Talbert / Ian O’Connell Actor
Under Suspicion 1994 TV Series Martin Fox Actor
Murder, She Wrote 1994 TV Series Bob Kendall Actor
The Client 1994 Trumann Actor
The Pelican Brief 1993 Marty Velmano Actor
The Ballad of Little Jo 1993 Henry Grey Actor
Searching for Bobby Fischer 1993 Fighting Parent Actor
Cheers 1993 TV Series Kevin Actor
Class of ’96 1993 TV Series Professor Davis Actor
Whispers in the Dark 1992 Paul Actor
The Super 1991 Ron Nessim Actor
CBS Schoolbreak Special 1991 TV Series Dr. Gil Morris Actor
The Silence of the Lambs 1991 Dr. Frederick Chilton Actor
Against the Law 1990 TV Series Grainger Actor
Postcards from the Edge 1990 George Lazan Actor
Orphans 1987 Man in Park Actor
Happy New Year 1987 Dinner Guest Actor
Crime Story 1987 TV Series Roger Jankowski Actor
Outrageous Fortune 1987 Weldon Actor
Fresno 1986 TV Mini-Series Kevin Kensington Actor
Kay O’Brien 1986 TV Series Bert Hammond Actor
A Case of Deadly Force 1986 TV Movie Dave O’Brian Actor
Tales from the Darkside 1986 TV Series Englebert Ames Actor
The Beniker Gang 1985 Mr. Uldrich Actor
Miami Vice 1985 TV Series Commander René Actor
Spenser: For Hire 1985 TV Series The Doorman Actor
Teachers 1984 Narc Actor
Silkwood 1983 2nd Doctor at Union Meeting Actor
Judge Horton and the Scottsboro Boys 1976 TV Movie Lawyer Crony Actor
One Life to Live 1968 TV Series Sidney Fox (1990) Actor
Another World 1964 TV Series Marvin Griff (1993) Actor
Terrence McNally: Every Act of Life 2017 Documentary post-production Himself Self
Old?! 2014 Documentary Self
The Broadway.com Show 2014 TV Series Himself Self
Meeting with Chekhov 2008 Documentary short Himself Self
Page to Screen 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Inside the Labyrinth: The Making of ‘The Silence of the Lambs’ 2001 Video documentary Himself Self
The 49th Annual Tony Awards 1995 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Featured Actor in a Play Self
The 42nd Annual Tony Awards 1988 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Featured Actor in a Musical Self
The X-Files 2002 TV Series Harold Piller Archive Footage

Philip Anthony Mair Heald Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2004 Golden Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Drama Boston Public (2000) Won
2003 Golden Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Drama Boston Public (2000) Won
2001 OFTA Television Award Online Film & Television Association Best Actor in a New Drama Series Boston Public (2000) Won
2004 Golden Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Drama Boston Public (2000) Nominated
2003 Golden Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Drama Boston Public (2000) Nominated
2001 OFTA Television Award Online Film & Television Association Best Actor in a New Drama Series Boston Public (2000) Nominated