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Timothy Hutton
Published in : 2007-03-03 in the category: Actors

After winning an Academy Award®, Golden Globe and Los Angeles Film Critics award for his performance in Robert Redford’s Ordinary People, Timothy Hutton went on to star in numerous films.

Including Taps, Daniel, The Falcon and the Snowman, Made in Heaven, Q&A, The General’s Daughter, French Kiss, Beautiful Girls, Sunshine State and Kinsey. 

With Taps, Hutton received his second Golden Globe Award nomination.  Hutton was recently seen in Columbia Pictures’ Secret Window, directed by David Koepp with Johnny Depp and John Turturro, and Last Holiday, opposite Queen Latifah.

As a member of New York’s Circle Repertory Company, Hutton originated the lead role in the Broadway Production of Craig Lucas’ Prelude to a Kiss and starred in Babylon Gardens with Mary-Louise Parker. 

In addition, Hutton appeared in the Los Angeles stage production of A Texas Trilogy: The Oldest Living Graduate, opposite Henry Fonda, which was later broadcast live on NBC.  Hutton also directed Nicole Burdette’s Busted for the New York-based theater company Naked Angels.

On television, Hutton produced and starred in Showtime’s Mr. & Mrs. Loving, written and directed by Oscar®-nominated Richard Friedenberg, starred as the title character in the acclaimed Aldrich Ames: Traitor Within, also for Showtime, and the docudrama WWIII for Fox. 

After starring in A&E’s highly successful A Nero Wolfe Mystery: The Golden Spiders, the network went back to Hutton, who agreed to executive-produce, direct and star in several additional Nero Wolfe adaptations. 

These highly acclaimed films premiered in Spring 2001 on A&E—with a repertoire of actors who co-star with Hutton and Maury Chaykin—and ran for two years.  Most recently, Hutton was a series regular on NBC’S Kidnapped, playing the powerful but ultimately distraught father of a kidnapped teenager.

Working behind the camera, Hutton has directed a number of music videos, including “Drive” by the Cars, “Not Enough Love in the World” by Don Henley, and the Neil Young concert film Freedom, as well as an episode of Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories, entitled “Grandpa’s Ghost,” from a story he wrote.

Hutton’s feature film directorial debut, Digging to China, premiered at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival to a standing ovation. 

This offbeat coming-of-age story starred Kevin Bacon and Mary Stuart Masterson, and introduced 10-year-old Evan Rachel Wood; the film was seen in limited release in fall 1998.

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