William Pullman’s net worth is $18 Million. Also know about William Pullman’s bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship, and more …
William Pullman Wiki Biography
- William Pullman was born on December 17, 1953, in Hornell, New York State, USA, to parents of Dutch and English ancestry.
- He is a well-known film and television actor who has appeared in films such as “When You Were Sleeping” (1995), “Casper” (1995), “Independence Day” (1996), and “Lost Highway” (1997).
- Since 1986, Bill Pullman has worked in the film business.
- Bill Pullman’s net worth is estimated to be over $18 million, according to authoritative sources, as of the data presented in the middle of 2016.
- To begin with, Bill is the eldest of seven children, the son of a physicist and a nurse.
- He earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Massachusetts after attending three universities.
- He started his career in the theatre, working with companies such as the Folger Theatre Group in the Los Angeles Theatre Centre, and he later became a three-year professor of film and theatre history at Montana State University.
- In terms of his acting career, Bill Pullman began to get leading roles in films like “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993) starring Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks, “Sommersby” (1993) starring Richard Gere and Jodie Foster, “Malice” (1993) starring Nicole Kidman, and “The Last Seduction” (1994) starring Nicole Kidman after numerous roles in television series, television films, and movies without much critical or commercial effect.
- To date, the latter is his most well-received film.
- He rose to prominence following the box office success of the romantic comedy “While You Were Sleeping” (1995), in which he co-starred with Sandra Bullock and grossed $182 million worldwide; the comedy “Casper” (1995), starring Christina Ricci and produced by Steven Spielberg, which grossed $287 million worldwide; and the blockbuster “Independence Day” (1996), directed by Roland Emmerich and grossing $287 million worldwide.
- They had a major impact on his net worth.
- Following these consecutive successes, the actor appeared in a number of low-budget indie and television films before returning to the big screen with “The Guilty” (2000), in which he co-starred with Devon Sawa.
- In terms of his acting career, he has appeared on Broadway three times, in “The Goat or Who is Sylvia?” (2002), “Oleanna” (2009), and “The Other Place” (2011).
- Finally, in his personal life, the actor married Tamara Hurwitz, a dancer, in 1987, and the couple has three sons.
- Wikipedia $18 Million IMDB Penn, 1600, 1953-12-17, 6′ 112″ (1.87 m) American actor Pullman, Bill Casper’s Net Worth (1995) CinemaCon – The Universe’s Ensemble The 17th Annual CineVegas International Film Festival will take place on December 17th.
- John Cassavetes Award, Denver International Film Festival (2008) Outstanding New Play Director Drama Desk Award (2002) Independence Day in Hornell (1996) Pullman, Jack Pullman, Lewis Highway that was never found (1997) Pullman, Maesa Pulitzer Prize for Drama, New York (2003) Ruthless People Revealed (1986) Spaceballs Sagittarius Soundtrack (1987) Tamara Hurwitz is a writer.
- Tamara Hurwitz is a model and actress.
- The Equalizer is a video game that is based on (2014) Tony Award for Best Play: The Tracey Ullman Show (2002) Western Heritage Award – Television Feature Film – Torchwood United States Voice Actor (2001) When You Were Awake (1995) Pullman, William
William Pullman Quick Info
Full Name | Bill Pullman |
Net Worth | $18 Million |
Date Of Birth | December 17, 1953 |
Place Of Birth | Hornell, New York, United States |
Height | 6′ 1½” (1.87 m) |
Profession | Actor, Voice Actor, Director |
Education | Hornell High School, State University of New York at Delhi (SUNY Delhi), University of Massachusetts Amherst |
Nationality | American |
Spouse | Tamara Hurwitz (m. 1987-) |
Children | Maesa Pullman, Jack Pullman, Lewis Pullman |
Parents | James Pullman, Johanna Pullman |
https://www.facebook.com/public/Bill-Pullman | |
https://twitter.com/billypullman | |
https://www.instagram.com/therealbillpullman/ | |
IMDB | www.imdb.com/name/nm0000597 |
Awards | Tony Award for Best Play (2002), Drama Desk Award Outstanding New Play (2002), Pulitzer Prize for Drama (2003), CineVegas International Film Festival, CinemaCon – Ensemble of the Universe, Denver International Film Festival – John Cassavetes Award (2008), Western Heritage Award – Television Featur… |
Nominations | Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films Award for Best Supporting Actor on Television (2012), Saturn Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor In Television |
Movies | “Ruthless People” (1986), “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993), “Spaceballs” (1987), “While You Were Sleeping” (1995), “Casper” (1995), “Independence Day” (1996), “Lost Highway” (1997) |
TV Shows | “1600 Penn”, “Torchwood”, “The Tracey Ullman Show”, “Revelations” |
William Pullman Trademarks
- Gravelly voice
William Pullman Quotes
- [on hosting tractor square-dancing] It was so gonzo. The men drove and the women carried flags, and they looked like Amazon goddesses coming in.
- I don’t like this instinct of reality television to wear your lifestyle in public. I’ve always really loved the anonymity of things.
- If I were born in the 1700s, I would look like a rounded man. Jefferson defined a home as being a house and a garden. I think I was born out of my time…Well, maybe the time is coming back to me.
- The thing about acting is it’s the one thing that gets me immersed in other things. I always come back to acting.
- People are always touching different parts of the elephant, and they think they define the elephant. Some people think I’m obsessed with working with old tractors. Others see that in my free time I’m putting on these vaudevilles, and Yung [Chang] gets to think I’m obsessed about fruit.
- (2013, on getting into acting) I was going to college on kind of a vocational program for carpentry, and it was largely an act of rebellion at the time. It was ’71, I didn’t want to go to an Ivy League college, and I was just looking to do something different. But then I went to an audition with a bunch of refrigeration students who were trying out for a play, and I got cast by a guy who became a lifelong friend. I said, “Okay, maybe I’ll do a couple of plays…” And he said, “No, you’re not going to do any of these things you thought you were gonna do. You’re going to the college that I went to and getting a degree in theater. It’s a good life. You’ll like it.” So I did that.
- (2013, on making The Serpent And The Rainbow) That was my third movie, and I thought, “Boy, movies are gonna be so exotic!” Because we went to Haiti and then to the Dominican Republic, and then we had a riot on the set! That movie was such an experience. But I’ve remained friends with Wade Davis, who wrote the original book and who’s almost exactly my age, and I just found that whole world of ethnobotany and the anthropological work, the country, the music… It was all just mesmerizing to me. I still have a lot of artifacts from that set and from that experience in my house. It was a very iconic experience for me.
- (2013, on Zero Effect) That one, I think, is one of my faves, because it was just such an experience. I had met Jake Kasdan when he was 13, on the set of The Accidental Tourist, and I really loved getting to know him. Then later, when I was on Wyatt Earp and he was doing a documentary about the film, I spent time with him there, and he said, “I want to be a writer, and someday I might want to write a script for you.” I said, “Oh, really?” Thinking, “That’ll never happen.” And gosh darn, when he was 21, all of a sudden I get an offer for Zero Effect. I just love his sensibility, and his whole approach. It was a great honor to work with him. That’s another case of working with the father and then the offspring. I feel very rich having been able to do that.
- (2013, on working with John Candy in Spaceballs) I think about him every movie I do, because he was generous and selfless, and in a way that I really don’t run into very much in life. He was so good with the crews and just very generous, giving them things. And I’ve always tried to remember that with every movie and every project.
- (2013, on landing Ruthless People) That movie role happened because the dye job that I had from a play was growing out, and I was unconscious of that. To me, it was just, like, I had to be blond to be this Russian tank commander, and now it’s changing. But the Zucker brothers… I was in for the audition, and they were laughing at weird places, and then they called me back and cast me as Earl. I asked, “What was that all about?” My agent said, “Well, I don’t know what it was, but they love you, and they want you to keep your hair exactly that way.”
- (2013, on Singles) Well, that was really a surprise all the way along. First I turned down the part, and Bridget Fonda and Cameron Crowe said, “No, you gotta! You really wanna be in this, Bill. It’ll be great!” And I said, “I don’t want to do it! I really don’t want to do it!” And they said, “Why?” And I told my agent, “Don’t tell them anything, just say, ‘No, thank you,’ because I don’t want to make them feel bad that I’m turning them down, but I just can’t.” But they kept asking, “Why?” So I finally explained that it’s because he was a plastic surgeon, and my father was a doctor, and he’d been a blood-and-guts doctor all his life, and he’d always talked about the “vanity surgery” and that it was people making a lot of money off of medicine in a way… He really deeply abhorred the kind of wealth that came to those doctors. So I said, “That’s why.” And I got on the phone with Cameron and explained it, and he said, “Well, everything you’ve said, I want to have in the movie.” So he wrote that into the movie. He ended up slicing [the part] way down, but there was still that thing about, “This is my last time, I’ve gotta get out of this business, I just don’t believe in it, my father was a doctor,” and all that. So it was a really personal thing. And on that note, the other thing about Singles is that my part was quite a bit larger. It was this kind of full romance that we had, as an older guy with a younger girl, and then I’m going through all of this ambivalence about doing that because we’re such different cultures and everything. And then there was a break-up period where I come to the door, and Bridget had been instructed that, if you’re having trouble breaking up with someone or they’re breaking up with you, then just imagine them in a very compromising circumstance. So I did all these scenes where I came to up to the door, and suddenly I was in a clown outfit, or I’m talking to her earnestly about breaking up while I’m covered in slime and dirt. And we shot all these epic things, but then I get a call from him before it was screened, and he said, “Bill, I just want to tell you, I had to cut all that because I was following six characters. Bridget’s one thing, but you come in late, and it was just too much story, so we had to cut it down.” So of course I said, “No problem,” but in a way it actually made the part better. It was a real “less is more” learning moment for me. Because we never have the full-blown affair in the film, but in our behavior around each other in the film, there’s this connection and intimacy and joy of each other’s company that came about.
- (2009) Theater has always been most important to my psyche. It’s what I was trained in. I went out to L.A. to do a film and then got hooked by the adventure. With movies and TV, I’ll take a lot of things, but with theater, I have to make good choices because I’ll end up staying for a long time. When audiences see a bad show, they may say, “I want my two hours back.” I’ve been in plays where I think, I want my six months back.
- (1996, Movieline Magazine) I do take lots of time off between projects, but when the right thing comes along, I don’t like to turn it down, I’ve been doing this for a decade, and I remember what it was like when I started. You spend maybe five percent of your time actually doing it, and the rest of the time, you’re trying to get that five percent. I just wasn’t built for that, the waiting-to-work business. And now, suddenly, I am fully employed. Things are going great. The Last Seduction, Sleepless in Seattle and While You Were Sleeping did a lot to get me noticed for bigger roles. Is this the time for me to take a sabbatical? I think not.
- (1996) When I was in Japan to promote While You Were Sleeping, I went to this screening where they had a thousand Japanese women who’d won tickets in a radio contest. I’ve been around a lot of very successful actors, sex symbols-Brad Pitt, Richard Gere, Alec Baldwin, some others-and I always had a quiet little profile through all that. I’ve seen women go berserk over some of these guys. But I’ll tell you, I never experienced anything like what happened in that Japanese theater. I felt like I was Elvis. They were screaming, the classic thing that you see on documentaries of the Beatles. And I’m standing there and my body feels so strange and I am so embarrassed. And a girl asks a question and the translator talks to her and then the translator turns to me and says, ‘She thinks you’re a very sexy man.’ It’s not even a question! And everyone just starts roaring with laughter. It was not a comfortable situation. I’ll tell you that.
- It’s very curious when you’re an actor and suddenly you’re in the right role, with the right match. Truthfully, I almost avoided While You Were Sleeping, because I find those romantic comedies kind of precious, and they’re full of lines that leave you feeling a little bewildered when you say them. It’s all about first looks and little giggles, and part of me is always thinking, ‘Isn’t there anything else we could be doing with our time right now? Something a little more important?’ But when I was doing it, I really enjoyed it. It was like the air was charged between me and Sandy. From the minute I met her we just clicked. We were totally in tune with each other. Lots of the movie was about us just talking and talking, and I’ll tell you the truth, most actors don’t listen very well, they don’t give it 100 percent. But Sandy and I, we just lived in that rarefied air of the movie, and it worked really, really well.
- Liebestraum was a great experience, a great time, and I have such fond memories about it…It was wild working with Figgis, because he’s very much in possession of himself. Some would say a narcissist, but I think there’s a power in that. I have to admit that I was just dazzled by his absorption with his own instincts and his own ability to pursue things…
- (1996, on Lost Highway) I was brought up in a very small town in upstate New York. We lived on Main Street, and my dad was a doctor. And this idyllic setting held some very dark corners. Working with David Lynch, getting to know his psyche, and getting inside the character in Lost Highway felt so connected up to my past. Benign on the exterior, seething on the interior. My dad was also the town coroner, so we saw all these dead bodies…When I was a teenager my father would bring us along. I remember that when my mother had colon cancer, my father took us down to the basement of the hospital and pulled out a tumor in a jar to show us. And he’s holding it up, he’s kinda laughing, like a scientist. He said, ‘See, it’s kinda like congealed hamburger.’ I mean, that’s like David Lynch, that combination of strange, funny, macabre, all in one. So working with Lynch felt very much like going home.
- [on watching Independence Day with President Bill Clinton] Oh, great. This is going to be like shooting baskets with ‘Magic Johnson’ watching.
William Pullman Important Facts
- Inducted into the Steuben County [New York] Hall of Fame.
- Bill’s father had Northern Irish, English, and Scottish ancestry, partly by way of Canada (Bill’s paternal grandmother was from Toronto, Ontario). Bill’s maternal grandparents, Albertas Blaas and Helena Rookus, were Dutch immigrants.
- Appearing in Edward Albee’s play, The Goat (Winner – Best Play 2002 Tony Awards). [June 2002]
- Considers Liebestraum to be one of his best films.
- His dad was a doctor and city coroner.
- Is the sixth of seven children. His father was a doctor and his mother a nurse.
- Appeared in both Cold Feet (1989) and Bright Angel (1990) during the time he was teaching at Montana State University in Bozeman. “Bright Angel” is one of the few films in which he played a bad guy. “Cold Feet” was shot in Livingston, MT, only 30 miles or so from Bozeman, and “Bright Angel” was shot entirely in and around Billings, MT.
- Attended the State University of New York at Oneonta in the mid-’70s, but did not graduate. However, he was guest speaker for the Oneonta graduating class of 1992.
- Children: Maesa (b. 1988), Jack (b. 1989), Lewis (b. 1993)
- Lost his sense of smell after a head injury and two-day coma.
- Currently co-owns a ranch in Montana with his brother.
- Received an honorary doctorate of fine arts on 24 May 2008 from The University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
- While teaching at Montana State University one of his students was director John Dahl. Later Dahl gave him a role in his film The Last Seduction (1994).
- Brother teaches English at Ithaca High School in Ithaca, NY
- When promoting Independence Day (1996) in South America, some people actually thought he was the President of the United States,
William Pullman Filmography
Title | Year | Status | Character | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bright Angel | 1990 | Bob | Actor | |
Sibling Rivalry | 1990 | Nicholas Meany | Actor | |
The Tracey Ullman Show | 1990 | TV Series | Sheldon Moss | Actor |
Brain Dead | 1990 | Rex Martin | Actor | |
Cold Feet | 1989 | Buck Latham | Actor | |
Home Fires Burning | 1989 | TV Movie | Lt. Henry Tibbetts | Actor |
The Accidental Tourist | 1988 | Julian | Actor | |
Rocket Gibraltar | 1988 | Crow Black | Actor | |
The Serpent and the Rainbow | 1988 | Dennis Alan | Actor | |
Spaceballs | 1987 | Lone Starr | Actor | |
Ruthless People | 1986 | Earl | Actor | |
Cagney & Lacey | 1986 | TV Series | Doctor Giordano | Actor |
The Sinner | 2017 | TV Series | Harry Ambrose | Actor |
Trouble | 2017/I | Ben | Actor | |
The Ballad of Lefty Brown | 2017 | Lefty Brown | Actor | |
Walking Out | 2017 | Clyde | Actor | |
Brother Nature | 2016 | Jerry Turley | Actor | |
LBJ | 2016 | Ralph Yarborough | Actor | |
Independence Day: Resurgence | 2016 | President Whitmore | Actor | |
American Ultra | 2015 | Krueger | Actor | |
The Equalizer | 2014 | Brian Plummer | Actor | |
Cymbeline | 2014 | Sicilius Leonatus | Actor | |
Red Sky | 2014/I | John Webster | Actor | |
Ten X Ten | 2014 | TV Mini-Series | Man 60s | Actor |
1600 Penn | 2012-2013 | TV Series | President Dale Gilchrist | Actor |
May in the Summer | 2013 | Edward | Actor | |
Lola Versus | 2012 | Lenny | Actor | |
Innocent | 2011 | TV Movie | Rusty Sabich | Actor |
Torchwood | 2011 | TV Series | Oswald Danes | Actor |
Bringing Up Bobby | 2011 | Walt | Actor | |
Too Big to Fail | 2011 | TV Movie | Jamie Dimon | Actor |
Nathan vs. Nurture | 2010 | TV Movie | Arthur | Actor |
Rio Sex Comedy | 2010 | William | Actor | |
Peacock | 2010 | Edmund French | Actor | |
The Killer Inside Me | 2010 | Billy Boy Walker | Actor | |
Your Name Here | 2008/I | William J. Frick | Actor | |
Surveillance | 2008/I | Sam Hallaway | Actor | |
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | 2008 | TV Series | Kurt Moss | Actor |
Phoebe in Wonderland | 2008 | Peter Lichten | Actor | |
Bottle Shock | 2008 | Jim Barrett | Actor | |
Nobel Son | 2007 | Max Mariner | Actor | |
You Kill Me | 2007 | Dave | Actor | |
Scary Movie 4 | 2006 | Henry Hale | Actor | |
Alien Autopsy | 2006 | Morgan Banner | Actor | |
Revelations | 2005 | TV Mini-Series | Dr. Richard Massey | Actor |
Dear Wendy | 2004 | Krugsby | Actor | |
The Grudge | 2004 | Peter | Actor | |
Tiger Cruise | 2004 | TV Movie | Cmdr. Gary Dolan | Actor |
Rick | 2003 | Rick O’Lette | Actor | |
29 Palms | 2002 | The Ticket Clerk | Actor | |
Igby Goes Down | 2002 | Jason | Actor | |
Ignition | 2001 | Deputy Marshal Conor Gallagher | Actor | |
Night Visions | 2001 | TV Series | Major Ben Darnell (segment “A View Through the Window”) | Actor |
Lucky Numbers | 2000 | Det. Pat Lakewood | Actor | |
A Man Is Mostly Water | 2000 | Parking Fascist | Actor | |
Titan A.E. | 2000 | Capt. Joseph Korso (voice) | Actor | |
The Guilty | 2000 | Callum Crane | Actor | |
American Masters | 2000 | TV Series documentary | Edward Curtis | Actor |
The Virginian | 2000 | TV Movie | The Virginian | Actor |
History Is Made at Night | 1999 | Harry Howe Ernie Halliday |
Actor | |
Brokedown Palace | 1999 | Hank Greene | Actor | |
Lake Placid | 1999 | Jack Wells | Actor | |
Zero Effect | 1998 | Daryl Zero | Actor | |
Merry Christmas, George Bailey | 1997 | TV Movie | George Bailey | Actor |
The End of Violence | 1997 | Mike Max | Actor | |
Independence Day | 1997 | Video Game | President Thomas J. Whitmore | Actor |
Lost Highway | 1997 | Fred Madison | Actor | |
Mistrial | 1996 | TV Movie | Steve Donohue | Actor |
Independence Day | 1996 | President Thomas J. Whitmore | Actor | |
Mr. Wrong | 1996 | Whitman Crawford | Actor | |
Fallen Angels | 1995 | TV Series | Rich Thurber | Actor |
Casper | 1995 | Dr. James Harvey | Actor | |
While You Were Sleeping | 1995 | Jack | Actor | |
Wyatt Earp | 1994 | Ed Masterson | Actor | |
The Favor | 1994 | Peter Whiting | Actor | |
The Last Seduction | 1994 | Clay Gregory | Actor | |
Phone | 1993 | Short | Actor | |
Mr. Jones | 1993 | Construction Site Foreman (uncredited) | Actor | |
Malice | 1993 | Andy | Actor | |
Sleepless in Seattle | 1993 | Walter | Actor | |
Sommersby | 1993 | Orin | Actor | |
Singles | 1992 | Dr. Jeffrey Jamison | Actor | |
Crazy in Love | 1992 | TV Movie | Nick Symonds | Actor |
A League of Their Own | 1992 | Bob Hinson | Actor | |
Newsies | 1992 | Bryan Denton | Actor | |
Nervous Ticks | 1992 | York Daley | Actor | |
Liebestraum | 1991 | Paul Kessler | Actor | |
Blood Drips Heavily on Newsies Square | 1991 | Video short | Newsreporter | Actor |
Going Under | 1990 | Biff Banner | Actor | |
Night Visions | 2001 | TV Series 1 episode | Director | |
The Virginian | 2000 | TV Movie | Director | |
Zero Effect | 1998 | writer: “Let’s Run Off and Get Married”, “Cold and Dark in My Heart” | Soundtrack | |
Casper | 1995 | performer: “Jailhouse Rock” | Soundtrack | |
Newsies | 1992 | performer: “KING OF NEW YORK”, “ONCE AND FOR ALL” | Soundtrack | |
The Virginian | 2000 | TV Movie producer | Producer | |
The Cove | 2009 | Documentary thanks | Thanks | |
The Good Life | 2007 | producers gratefully acknowledge the valuable assistance of | Thanks | |
Starting Out in the Evening | 2007 | thanks | Thanks | |
The Last Seduction: The Art of Seduction | 2006 | Video documentary short special thanks | Thanks | |
Spaceballs: The Documentary | 2005 | Video documentary short special thanks | Thanks | |
John Candy: Comic Spirit | 2005 | Video documentary short special thanks | Thanks | |
Land of Plenty | 2004 | special thanks | Thanks | |
The Thin Red Line | 1998 | thanks | Thanks | |
Made in Hollywood: Teen Edition | 2016 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Made in Hollywood | 2016 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Talk | 2016 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Another Day: The Making of ‘Independence Day: Resurgence’ | 2016 | Video documentary | Himself – ‘President Whitmore’ | Self |
In Character With… | 2016 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Independence Day: A Legacy Surging Forward | 2016 | Video documentary short | Himself – ‘President Thomas J. Whitmore’ | Self |
The Making of ‘The Serpent and the Rainbow’ | 2016 | Video documentary short | Himself | Self |
Skavlan | 2015 | TV Series | Himself – Guest | Self |
Parables of War | 2014 | Documentary short | Himself | Self |
Denzel Washington: A Different Kind of Superhero | 2014 | Video short | Himself | Self |
Equalizer Vision: Antoine Fuqua | 2014 | Video short | Himself | Self |
Inside ‘The Equalizer’ | 2014 | Video short | Himself | Self |
The Broadway.com Show | 2014 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Making of ‘Lake Placid’ | 2014 | Video short | Himself | Self |
American Masters | 2013 | TV Series documentary | Himself | Self |
The Unbelievers | 2013 | Documentary | Himself | Self |
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson | 2005-2013 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Larry King Now | 2013 | TV Series | Himself – Guest | Self |
The Fruit Hunters | 2012 | Documentary | Himself | Self |
The Stages of Edward Albee | 2012 | Documentary | Himself | Self |
Kingdom Come | 2011 | Documentary | Himself | Self |
Breakfast | 2011 | TV Series | Himself – Actor | Self |
Working in the Theatre | 2009 | TV Series documentary | Himself | Self |
Tavis Smiley | 2009 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Up Close with Carrie Keagan | 2008-2009 | TV Series | Himself – Guest / Himself | Self |
Chelsea Lately | 2008 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Bonnie Hunt Show | 2008 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Surveillance: The Watched Are Watching | 2008 | Video documentary short | Himself | Self |
Speechless | 2008 | TV Movie documentary | Himself | Self |
Broadway Beat | 2007 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Moving Image Salutes Will Smith | 2007 | TV Movie | Himself | Self |
The Young Hollywood Awards | 2006 | TV Special | Himself | Self |
The Last Seduction: The Art of Seduction | 2006 | Video documentary short | Himself | Self |
Biography | 2005 | TV Series documentary | Himself / Jack Callaghan | Self |
Live with Kelly and Ryan | 2005 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Spaceballs: The Documentary | 2005 | Video documentary short | Himself | Self |
John Candy: Comic Spirit | 2005 | Video documentary short | Himself | Self |
Why Shakespeare? | 2005 | Video short documentary | Himself | Self |
Letters to Dear Wendy | 2005 | TV Special documentary | Himself / Krugsby | Self |
A Powerful Rage: Behind ‘The Grudge’ | 2005 | Video documentary | Himself | Self |
Tussen de sterren | 2003 | TV Series documentary | Himself | Self |
Igby Goes Down: In Search of Igby | 2003 | Video documentary short | Himself | Self |
The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn | 2002 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The 56th Annual Tony Awards | 2002 | TV Special | Himself – Presenter | Self |
The Rosie O’Donnell Show | 1996-2002 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
The Directors | 1999-2001 | TV Series documentary | Himself / Himself – Guest | Self |
Opening the Tombs of the Golden Mummies: Live | 2000 | TV Movie | Co-Host | Self |
The Quest for the Titan | 2000 | TV Movie documentary | Himself / Korso (voice) | Self |
Late Night with Conan O’Brien | 2000 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Late Show with David Letterman | 1995-2000 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Hollywood Salutes Jodie Foster: An American Cinematheque Tribute | 1999 | TV Movie | Himself | Self |
HBO First Look | 1996-1999 | TV Series documentary short | Himself | Self |
The 24th Annual People’s Choice Awards | 1998 | TV Special | Himself – Presenter: Favorite Dramatic Motion Picture | Self |
Bravo Profiles: The Entertainment Business | 1998 | TV Mini-Series documentary | Himself | Self |
Nulle part ailleurs | 1998 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Master of Desaster: Roland Emmerich – eine Hollywoodkarriere | 1998 | TV Movie documentary | Himself (uncredited) | Self |
To the Galaxy and Beyond with Mark Hamill | 1997 | TV Movie documentary | Himself | Self |
Pretty as a Picture: The Art of David Lynch | 1997 | TV Movie documentary | Himself | Self |
3rd Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards | 1997 | TV Special | Himself | Self |
The Making of ‘Independence Day’ | 1996 | TV Short documentary | Himself | Self |
Saturday Night Live | 1996 | TV Series | Himself – Host | Self |
Mundo VIP | 1996 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Independence Day: The ID4 Invasion | 1996 | TV Movie documentary | Himself / President Whitmore (footage from ‘Independence Day’) | Self |
The Annual Artists Rights Foundation Honors Martin Scorsese | 1996 | TV Movie | Himself | Self |
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno | 1995 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Showbiz Today | 1995 | TV Series | Himself | Self |
Extra | 2016 | TV Series | Himself | Archive Footage |
Welcome to the Basement | 2012 | TV Series | Fred Madison | Archive Footage |
President Hollywood | 2008 | TV Movie documentary | President Thomas J. Whitmore (uncredited) | Archive Footage |
It’s Like Life | 2004 | Video documentary short | Julian | Archive Footage |
The Making of the Last Seduction | 1994 | Video documentary short | Himself | Archive Footage |
Madonna: This Used to Be My Playground | 1992 | Video short | Bob Hinson | Archive Footage |
William Pullman Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie | Category |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | CinemaCon Award | CinemaCon, USA | Ensemble of the Universe | Independence Day: Resurgence (2016) | Won |
2016 | Excellence Award | Locarno International Film Festival | Won | ||
2008 | Special Jury Prize | CineVegas International Film Festival | Your Name Here (2008) | Won | |
2008 | John Cassavetes Award | Denver International Film Festival | Won | ||
2008 | Master of Cinema | RiverRun International Film Festival | Won | ||
2001 | Bronze Wrangler | Western Heritage Awards | Television Feature Film | The Virginian (2000) | Won |
2016 | CinemaCon Award | CinemaCon, USA | Ensemble of the Universe | Independence Day: Resurgence (2016) | Nominated |
2016 | Excellence Award | Locarno International Film Festival | Nominated | ||
2008 | Special Jury Prize | CineVegas International Film Festival | Your Name Here (2008) | Nominated | |
2008 | John Cassavetes Award | Denver International Film Festival | Nominated | ||
2008 | Master of Cinema | RiverRun International Film Festival | Nominated | ||
2001 | Bronze Wrangler | Western Heritage Awards | Television Feature Film | The Virginian (2000) | Nominated |