Thomas Richard McMillen

Thomas Richard McMillen net worth is $20 Million. Also know about Thomas Richard McMillen bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Thomas Richard McMillen Wiki Biography

Thomas Richard McMillen was born on 17 June 1960, in Woodland, California USA, and is a writer, actor, and director, best known for co-starring in the sitcom “Wings”. He’s also been known for his various film roles such as in “Spider-Man 3” in which he played Sandman. All of his efforts have helped put his net worth to where it is today.

How rich is Thomas Haden Church? As of early-2017, sources inform us of a net worth that is at $20 million, mostly earned through a successful career in film; he was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance in “Sideways”. He also ventured into directing with “Rolling Kansas”. As he continues his career, it is expected that his wealth will increase.

Thomas attended Harlingen High School, but left in 1977 to work in Louisiana’s oil fields; he eventually returned and matriculated in 1979, and afterwards attended the University of North Texas. He started off his career in entertainment by doing voice-over work, and also became a radio personality; he adopted the name Haden Church, both names taken from his ancestry. He moved to California to take a role in an independent film, and eventually decided to fully pursue an acting career. In 1990, he became part of the sitcom “Wings” as the aircraft mechanic Lowell Mather, and would stay with the show until the end of its run in 1995, establishing his net worth.

Afterwards, he became part of “Ned & Stacey” for two seasons in a lead role, working with Debra Messing, and would then appear in a string of films mainly as a supporting character; he was a part of “Tombstone”, “The Specials”, and” George of the Jungle”. He started getting known for either being the comic relief or the villain in the film and continued gaining popularity, with his net worth also increasing. He was cast in “Over the Hedge” and “Demon Knight”, before in 2000 deciding to take a break from acting in films. He eventually returned and had small roles in “3000 Miles to Graceland” and “Monkeybone. Then in 2003, he made his directorial debut in “Rolling Kansas”. Aside from these projects, he continued to do voiceover work, mainly for the commercials of Merrill Lynch and Icehouse.

Church was then cast in the film “Sideways” as the selfish best friend Jack; he had to strip naked in the audition scene to fully capture the character’s vulnerability, but earned such acclaim for his performance that he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, and won an IFP Independent Spirit Award. His net worth started increasing significantly at this point.

Since then, he has been cast in “Idiocracy” and the television production “Broken Trail” – for which he won an Emmy Award – and was also cast as the villain Sandman in Sam Raimi’s “Spider-Man 3”.

In 2005, Thomas was invited to become part of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. He appeared in a video of funnyordie.com as “Joe Six-Pack”, and also became part of the web series “Zombie Roadkill”. Most recently he has appeared in the TV series “Divorced” from early 2016.

For his personal life, it is known that Thomas is married to Mia Zittoli, and they have a daughter. He lives on a 2,000-acre ranch in Kerrville, Texas.

IMDB Wikipedia $16 Million $20 million 1.83 m 1960 1960-6-17 20000000 5′ 11¼” (1.81 m) Actor American California Carlos Richard McMillen Cody Cody Haden Church Debra Messing Director Easy A (2010) Gemini Harlingen High School June 17 Maxine Sanders Merrill Lynch Mia Zottoli producer Sideways (2004) Spider-Man 3 (2007) Thomas Haden Church Net Worth Thomas Richard McMillen U.S. University of North Texas Wings (1990) Woodland

Thomas Richard McMillen Quick Info

Full Name Thomas Haden Church
Net Worth $20 Million
Date Of Birth June 17, 1960
Place Of Birth Woodland, California, U.S.
Height 1.83 m
Profession Actor
Education University of North Texas, Harlingen High School
Nationality American
Spouse Mia Zottoli
Children Cody Haden Church
Parents Maxine Sanders, Carlos Richard McMillen
Partner Mia Zottoli, Mia Zottoli, Mia Zottoli, Mia Zottoli
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0002006/
Awards Critics’ Choice Movie Award for Best Acting Ensemble, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie, Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male, Critics’ Choice Movie Aw…
Nominations Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role, Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Miniseries, or Motion Picture Made…
Movies Sideways, Spider-Man 3, All About Steve, We Bought a Zoo, Killer Joe, Easy A, Broken Trail, George of the Jungle, Daddy’s Home, John Carter, Heaven Is for Real, Smart People, Tombstone, Don McKay, Imagine That, Cardboard Boxer, Lucky Them, Max, Charlotte’s Web, Over the Hedge, 3000 Miles to Gracelan…
TV Shows Wings, Divorce, Ned and Stacey

Thomas Richard McMillen Quotes

  • (On Rolling Kansas) The hardest thing I’ve ever done, and by far the most rewarding. To write something, and then somebody says, “Hey, here’s $3 million. Go make it wherever you want to make it.” I chose Texas, which is very close to where I live. I have a ranch in Texas. It just was so involving, and so complete. It’s the most complete experience. Because at the end of the day, I was responsible for all the decisions. And that was what was most rewarding about it. And I would step into that breach again, if somebody would give me the chance.
  • (On Free Money) At the exact same time I was offered the lead in Free Money with Charlie Sheen and Marlon Brando, I was offered a role in Saving Private Ryan. And I chose to march off to Canada to work with Marlon Brando. And I ran into Steven Spielberg many years later, and we discussed it, and he said, “You know what, if I had a choice between me and him, I would choose him.” I was like, “Thank you for your blessing, my liege.” I had a manager at the time-we were soon parted-but he was like, “You’re gonna go do a movie with Marlon Brando that more than likely no one will see, vs. a really nice role in a movie that’s probably going to win Best Picture next year?” And he was right! But the experience working with Marlon in his penultimate performance was irreplaceable. And I spent 10, 12 weeks with him in Quebec, and it was a remarkable experience, and I wouldn’t trade it for any credit on my resume. He really wanted to kind of nurture Charlie and me. He was in poor health. He had a respiratory infection that I’m not convinced he ever, ever recovered from. Even though he died-I think it was about six and a half years after I worked with him. But he had a respiratory infection that he could not get over. And I knew that he’d been sick for a while before we started shooting. And I know that the bonding company had some problems clearing him for the medical. But other than that… He was wonderfully inventive and improvisational, and seemed wholly disinclined to say the same line twice. He always wanted to change things a little bit, just to keep it fresh and spontaneous.
  • (On working with Mike Figgis on One Night Stand) He has a very cerebral approach to his writing, which is to say, he writes a schematic of what he wants to do. But he was the first director-of course, my film credits were few at that point-but he was the first director, television or film or theater, for that matter, who openly encouraged us to go off the page. To just kind of freestyle, and be footloose, and know what the intent of the character is in the scene. As long as we weren’t fouling the other characters, and what they were doing in the scene, then we were welcome-and I think it’s because foremost, he’s a very accomplished jazz musician. So I think he has a real artistic, musician’s appreciation for that free form, “Let’s just all just become spontaneous and see what comes out of it.” He’s also a very accomplished photographer. Really likes these composite shots that are sort of posed, but not really. Very interesting guy.
  • I left Wings a couple years before it ended, and went on to do Ned And Stacey at Fox. I thought I was very accomplished at that point, and I immensely enjoyed doing that show. But I also became megalomaniacal for those two years, and I think I probably hastened the departure of the show. I was holding on very tightly to what the stories were, and who was cast, and what the other actors were doing. And I was gonna direct, and I was already doing a lot of impromptu writing. And I was probably too immersed in it. I don’t think it was for the good of the show that I was so immersed in it. And I can say that now, 11 years after the show ended. It’s taken me a long time to be able to admit that.
  • Wings was exactly what every actor hopes will happen when you have zero skill sets, zero experience, and you absolutely cannot find your ass with a fork and a knife. I just had no idea what I was getting myself into. I moved to L.A. full time in March of ’89, and I was cast in Cheers in September, and that led to Wings. So six months into my “professional acting career,” I was cast in a pilot that was already picked up for several episodes. And I was convinced that I was going to be found out as an impostor. I was convinced of it. I didn’t know why these people were laughing when I said my dialogue, because I was clueless as to the mechanics of it. I just tried to play it as real as I could. But if you look back at early episodes of Wings, the clumsiness comes through.
  • (On Tombstone) That was my first REAL movie. It was terrific, because it was just a bunch of dudes in the desert. I was young. We shot the whole movie in Tucson and outside of Tucson. And it was just great to go on location for a whole summer. I was on hiatus from Wings, and the movie just fell in perfectly. And I literally was in Arizona the whole summer-June, July, August, even into September. We actually started shooting in May. It took the better part of four months to shoot that movie. I was still such a neophyte. But I felt like I had enough experience moving around the camera, and moving around sets and in rehearsal, knowing professionally what was expected of me. Wings was a filmed show, and I had been on single-camera film projects. But you know, I was a little intimidated. Powers Boothe and Val Kilmer and Kurt Russell. I was fairly intimidated by the environment the first week or so. Because everything was big and fast-moving. And the director got fired. He was the screenwriter. I was there for, like, two weeks, and he got fired and they brought in George Cosmatos. That was a little intimidating also.
  • (On his guest role in 21 Jump Street) That was great. Johnny [Depp] was sort of a mentor. I got to know him pretty well when I worked on it, just over the course of a week. We had similar comedic sensibilities. I remember we flew back from Vancouver to L.A. together when I wrapped the episode. His advice to me was to never do a series, to hold out and try to just get movie roles. And I was immediately cast in China Beach, fired, and then immediately cast in Cheers, and then cast in Wings-which then went on for the next six years of my life-and then cast in Ned And Stacey. So I didn’t necessarily dismiss his advice, I just didn’t apply it for the next decade.
  • (On Gypsy Angels) I did that movie in 1989. I met a casting director, I was living in Dallas, going to school in 1988. My best friend was an actor. I went to this cold-read audition seminar, just on a lark, just because he invited me. It was like, a hundred people. But it was an L.A. casting director, and for whatever reason, he thought I was interesting. He was like, “I’m gonna be back casting a picture that’s going to shoot in Kansas, and we’re gonna read some actors in Dallas,” and I ended up getting a role in it. But the movie, it was a real weird, small independent, financed by a guy-he was like a Pizza Hut franchise king or something. He wanted to star in a movie that he self-financed. I went up to Kansas and shot on it for like, three weeks. But what was great about it is that this L.A. casting director then got me connected to an agent in L.A., William Morris, and I took a shot at L.A. shortly thereafter in the spring of ’89, got signed away to Morris, started working. When I landed in L.A. in early ’89, William Morris decided to take me on to see if I could get any jobs. I was cast in a TV movie called Protected Surf, and made $30,000 in four weeks, and I decided I needed to take acting seriously, because I had never made that much money in a year, much less four weeks. That’s when I decided I thought I could make a career out of it.
  • I am always wondering, ‘Am I doing as much as I can do?’ But then my wife reminds me I run four cattle ranches, a commercial beef operation, and I have an acting career. I think I have made the effort, and it has paid off. I mean, I think I have made the effort. And that effort has paid off…to some extent.
  • “For a while, I was through with acting, and then Alexander Payne called me up and said ‘Hey, Thomas! I have a script I want you to read! It’ll be great; you get to sleep with my wife!'” -referring to Sideways (2004) and his sex scenes with Sandra Oh.
  • Generally, when I meet prospective employers, I tiptoe into that. You don’t want to shove your way through the door. But, if at all possible, you want to exact an invitation to collaborate.

Thomas Richard McMillen Important Facts

  • His ancestry includes English, Norwegian, Danish, Scottish, and German.
  • “The voice of your TV” on Direct TV commercials. [June 2010]
  • Currently the voice of Bus, the red 1963 VW Microbus in the VWoA “Meet the Volkswagens” ad campaign. [May 2009]
  • Supplied voice to Cartoon Network short, Bagboy! (2002). [July 2002]
  • Did not start acting until he was 28 years old.
  • Was born Thomas Richard McMillen, the third of six children, in Yolo, California, to an army officer/health care worker father and homemaker mother. He was raised, however, under his stepfather’s surname, “Quesada”, and later changed his surname to “Haden Church,” both names of which he states are in his family tree.
  • Raised in Laredo, Texas, he graduated from Harlingen High School, Harlingen, Texas in 1979 and attended the University of North Texas.
  • Began working on a cattle ranch at age 13.
  • Director Sam Raimi thanked him for doing Spider-Man 3 (2007) by giving him a copy of Amazing Spiderman #4, the comic book issue that featured the first appearance of his Sandman character.
  • Turned down the role, which eventually went to Greg Kinnear, in Little Miss Sunshine (2006), a decision he later regretted.
  • Engaged to actress Mia Zottoli. They have a daughter, Cody (b. 2004).
  • In the last episode of Ned and Stacey (1995), he said that he intended to spend the next time on a farm in Texas — which he did in real life.
  • His breakthrough was Sideways (2004), which led to a role in Spider-Man 3 (2007).
  • At director Sam Raimi’s request, Church worked out in a gym for more than thirteen months and put on more than twenty pounds of muscle to play the lead villain Flint Marko/Sandman in Spider-Man 3 (2007).
  • Graduated from high school in 1979 in Harlingen, Texas, and worked at KBFM, a local radio station, for a time.
  • Invited to join AMPAS in 2005.
  • Says he had pretty much retired from acting and was spending most of his time on his ranch in Texas when Alexander Payne asked him to star in Sideways (2004).

Thomas Richard McMillen Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Crash Pad 2017 post-production Grady Actor
Divorce 2016 TV Series Robert Actor
Cardboard Boxer 2016 Willie Actor
Daddy’s Home 2015 Leo Holt Actor
Max 2015/I Ray Wincott Actor
Heaven Is for Real 2014 Jay Wilkins Actor
Lucky Them 2013 Charlie Actor
Whitewash 2013/I Bruce Landry Actor
Regular Show in Space 2012 TV Series Quillgin Actor
John Carter 2012 Tal Hajus Actor
We Bought a Zoo 2011 Duncan Mee Actor
Killer Joe 2011 Ansel Smith Actor
Another Happy Day 2011 Paul Actor
Zombie Roadkill 2010 TV Series short Ranger Chet Masterson Actor
Easy A 2010 Mr. Griffith Actor
All About Steve 2009 Hartman Actor
Aliens in the Attic 2009 Tazer (voice) Actor
Imagine That 2009 Johnny Whitefeather Actor
Don McKay 2009 Don McKay Actor
Smart People 2008 Chuck Wetherhold Actor
Spider-Man 3 2007 Video Game Flint Marko
Sandman (voice)
Actor
Spider-Man 3 2007 Sandman
Flint Marko
Actor
Charlotte’s Web 2006 Brooks the Crow (voice) Actor
Idiocracy 2006 Brawndo CEO Actor
Broken Trail 2006 TV Mini-Series Tom Harte Actor
Over the Hedge 2006 Dwayne (voice) Actor
Spanglish 2004 Mike – Realtor Actor
Sideways 2004 Jack Actor
Serial Killing 4 Dummys 2004 Vince Grimaldi Actor
Teen Titans 2004 TV Series Killer Moth Actor
George of the Jungle 2 2003 Video Lyle Van de Groot Actor
Lucky 2003 TV Series Bobby Blaine Actor
Rolling Kansas 2003 Agent Madsen / Trooper (uncredited) Actor
Miss Match 2003 TV Series Andrew Horn Actor
The Badge 2002 David Hardwick Actor
Lone Star State of Mind 2002 Killer Actor
Going to California 2001 TV Series Schwee Actor
The Cartoon Cartoon Show 2001 TV Series Doo Dah Actor
Monkeybone 2001 Death’s Assistant (uncredited) Actor
3000 Miles to Graceland 2001 Quigley Actor
Gary & Mike 2001 TV Series Additional voices Actor
The Specials 2000 The Strobe Actor
Goosed 1999 Steven Troy Actor
Free Money 1998 Larry Actor
Susan’s Plan 1998 Dr. Chris Stillman Actor
Mr. Murder 1998 TV Movie Drew Oslett Jr. Actor
Ned and Stacey 1995-1997 TV Series Ned Dorsey Actor
One Night Stand 1997 Don Actor
George of the Jungle 1997 Lyle Van de Groot Actor
Partners 1995 TV Series Ned Actor
Wings 1990-1995 TV Series Lowell Mather Actor
Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight 1995 Roach Actor
Tombstone 1993 Billy Clanton Actor
Fugitive Nights: Danger in the Desert 1993 TV Movie Nelson Hareem Actor
Flying Blind 1992 TV Series Jonathan Actor
Ys: Book 1&2 1990 Video Game Goban Toba (English version, voice, as Thomas H. Church) Actor
Booker 1989 TV Series Leon Ross Actor
China Beach 1989 TV Series Jack Daniels Actor
Cheers 1989 TV Series Gordie Brown Actor
21 Jump Street 1989 TV Series Tony Actor
Protect and Surf 1989 TV Movie Dwight Jesmer Actor
Gypsy Angels 1980 Roomate (1989 version) (uncredited) Actor
Don McKay 2009 executive producer Producer
Scotch and Milk 1998 executive producer Producer
Rolling Kansas 2003 Director
Rolling Kansas 2003 writer Writer
Ned and Stacey 1995 TV Series executive consultant Miscellaneous
HBO First Look 2011 TV Series documentary special thanks – 1 episode Thanks
Made in Hollywood 2014-2015 TV Series Himself Self
Late Show with David Letterman 1995-2014 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself Self
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 1994-2014 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Jimmy Kimmel Live! 2004-2012 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Conan 2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Easy A: The School of Pop Culture 2010 Video short Himself Self
The Making of Easy A 2010 Video short Himself Self
Vocabulary of Hilarity 2010 Video short Himself Self
With Great Power: The Stan Lee Story 2010 Documentary Himself Self
Texas Monthly Talks 2010 TV Series Himself – Interviewee Self
The Bonnie Hunt Show 2010 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
All About ‘All About Steve’ 2009 Video short Himself Self
Hollywood Dish with Mena Micheletti 2009 Video short Himself Self
The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien 2009 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Up Close with Carrie Keagan 2007-2009 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
CMT Insider 2006-2009 TV Series Himself Self
The 2009 Independent Spirit Awards 2009 TV Special Himself Self
Shootout 2005-2008 TV Series Himself Self
Ellen: The Ellen DeGeneres Show 2005-2008 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Spider-Man 3: Webisodes 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Villains of ‘Spider-Man 3’ 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
The 59th Primetime Emmy Awards 2007 TV Special Himself – Winner: Oustanding Supporting Actor in Miniseries or Movie Self
Spider-Man 3: UK Premiere Special 2007 TV Short documentary Himself Self
Xposé 2007 TV Series Himself Self
Charlotte’s Web: Making Some Movie 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
Charlotte’s Web: Some Voices 2007 Video documentary short Himself Self
13th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2007 TV Special Himself Self
The 64th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2007 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television Self
Meet the Cast of ‘Over the Hedge’ 2006 Video documentary short Himself Self
Late Night with Conan O’Brien 1997-2006 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Broken Trail: The Making of a Legendary Western 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
HBO First Look 2006 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The 11th Annual Critics’ Choice Awards 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Making of ‘Sideways’ 2005 Video short Himself Self
The 77th Annual Academy Awards 2005 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Supporting Actor Self
The 20th IFP Independent Spirit Awards 2005 TV Special documentary Himself Self
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson 2005 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
11th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2005 TV Special Himself – Winner: Outstanding Performance by a Cast of a Motion Picture / Nominee: Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role Self
The 62nd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2005 TV Special documentary Himself – Nominee: Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture Self
The Tony Danza Show 2005 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The 10th Annual Critics’ Choice Awards 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
McEnroe 2004 TV Series Himself Self
The View 2004 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn 2004 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
George of the Jungle 2: Behind the Trees 2003 Video short Himself Self
The Making of ‘Tombstone’ 2002 Video documentary short Himself – ‘Billy Clanton’ Self
The Daily Show 1997 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Starck Club 2016 Documentary post-production Himself Self
Good Morning America 2016 TV Series Himself Self
Entertainment Tonight 2016 TV Series Himself Self
50 premios Sant Jordi de cinematografía 2006 TV Special Jack (uncredited) Archive Footage
El Magacine 2005 TV Series Archive Footage

Thomas Richard McMillen Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2007 Primetime Emmy Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Movie Broken Trail (2006) Won
2007 OFTA Television Award Online Film & Television Association Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture or Miniseries Broken Trail (2006) Won
2007 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Outstanding Television Feature Film Broken Trail (2006) Won
2005 Critics Choice Award Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2005 Critics Choice Award Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Best Acting Ensemble Sideways (2004) Won
2005 COFCA Award Central Ohio Film Critics Association Best Supporting Performance Sideways (2004) Won
2005 DFWFCA Award Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2005 Independent Spirit Award Independent Spirit Awards Best Supporting Male Sideways (2004) Won
2005 IFC Award Iowa Film Critics Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2005 NSFC Award National Society of Film Critics Awards, USA Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2005 OFTA Film Award Online Film & Television Association Best Breakthrough Performance – Male Sideways (2004) Won
2005 OFCS Award Online Film Critics Society Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2005 Golden Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Comedy or Musical Sideways (2004) Won
2005 Actor Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Sideways (2004) Won
2004 ACCA Awards Circuit Community Awards Best Cast Ensemble Sideways (2004) Won
2004 BSFC Award Boston Society of Film Critics Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 BSFC Award Boston Society of Film Critics Awards Best Ensemble Cast Sideways (2004) Won
2004 CFCA Award Chicago Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 FFCC Award Florida Film Critics Circle Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 KCFCC Award Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 LAFCA Award Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 NYFCO Award New York Film Critics, Online Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 PFCS Award Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role Sideways (2004) Won
2004 PFCS Award Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards Best Ensemble Acting Sideways (2004) Won
2004 SFFCC Award San Francisco Film Critics Circle Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 Seattle Film Critics Award Seattle Film Critics Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 SEFCA Award Southeastern Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2004 SLFCA Award St. Louis Film Critics Association, US Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Won
2007 Primetime Emmy Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Movie Broken Trail (2006) Nominated
2007 OFTA Television Award Online Film & Television Association Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture or Miniseries Broken Trail (2006) Nominated
2007 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Outstanding Television Feature Film Broken Trail (2006) Nominated
2005 Critics Choice Award Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 Critics Choice Award Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Best Acting Ensemble Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 COFCA Award Central Ohio Film Critics Association Best Supporting Performance Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 DFWFCA Award Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 Independent Spirit Award Independent Spirit Awards Best Supporting Male Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 IFC Award Iowa Film Critics Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 NSFC Award National Society of Film Critics Awards, USA Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 OFTA Film Award Online Film & Television Association Best Breakthrough Performance – Male Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 OFCS Award Online Film Critics Society Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 Golden Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Comedy or Musical Sideways (2004) Nominated
2005 Actor Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 ACCA Awards Circuit Community Awards Best Cast Ensemble Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 BSFC Award Boston Society of Film Critics Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 BSFC Award Boston Society of Film Critics Awards Best Ensemble Cast Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 CFCA Award Chicago Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 FFCC Award Florida Film Critics Circle Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 KCFCC Award Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 LAFCA Award Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 NBR Award National Board of Review, USA Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 NYFCO Award New York Film Critics, Online Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 PFCS Award Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 PFCS Award Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards Best Ensemble Acting Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 SFFCC Award San Francisco Film Critics Circle Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 Seattle Film Critics Award Seattle Film Critics Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 SEFCA Award Southeastern Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated
2004 SLFCA Award St. Louis Film Critics Association, US Best Supporting Actor Sideways (2004) Nominated