Jeff Daniels Movies
Though he has never achieved the high profile or widespread acclaim of a
Robert De Niro,
Jeff Daniels ranks as one of Hollywood's most versatile leading men and over his career he has played everything from villains and cads to heroes and romantic leads to tragic figures and lovably goofy idiots, in movies of almost every genre.
Daniels has also worked extensively on television and stage, where he first distinguished himself by winning an Obie for a production of Johnny Got His Gun.
Blonde, cleft-chinned, and handsome in a rugged all-American way,
Daniels made his screen debut playing PC O'Donnell in
Milos Forman's
Ragtime (1981). His breakthrough came when he was cast as
Debra Winger's inconstant husband in
Terms of Endearment (1983).
Daniels has subsequently averaged one or two major feature films per year with notable performances, including: his memorable dual portrayal of a gallant movie hero/self-absorbed star who steps out of celluloid to steal the heart of lonely housewife
Mia Farrow in
Woody Allen's
Purple Rose of Cairo (1984); his turn as a man terrified of spiders who finds himself surrounded by them in the horror-comedy
Arachnophobia; and his role as Union officer Colonel Joshua Chamberlain, who led his troops into doom in
Gettysburg (1993).
In 1994,
Daniels took a radical turn away from drama to star as one of the world's stupidest men opposite comic sensation
Jim Carrey in the
Farrelly brothers' hyperactive
Dumb and Dumber. This lowest-common-denominator comedy proved one of the year's surprise hits and brought
Daniels to a new level of recognition and popularity. Since then,
Daniels has alternated more frequently between drama and comedy. His television credits include a moving portrayal of a troubled Vietnam vet in a Hallmark Hall of Fame production,
Redwood Curtain.
Daniels still maintains his connection to the stage and manages his own theatrical company. Before launching his acting career, he earned a degree in English from Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant, MI.
The later '90s found
Daniels turning homeward and venturing into new territories through his labor of love, the Purple Rose Theater. Located in the small town of Chelsea, MI, the bus garage turned playhouse was designed to give Midwestern audiences the opportunity to enjoy entertainment generally reserved for big-city dwellers. Though he continued to appear in such films as
Fly Away Home (1996) and
Pleasantville (1998),
Daniels made his feature directorial debut with the celluloid translation of his successful Yooper stage comedy
Escanaba in da Moonlight (2000). Set in the Michigan's Upper Peninsula (U.P., hence "Yooper"), the tale of redemption by means of bagging a buck mixed the regionally accented humor of
Fargo with the eccentricities inherent to northerners and served as an ideal directorial debut for the Michigan native. A modest regional success,
Daniels would subsequently appear in such wide releases as Blood Work and The Hours (both 2002) before returning to the director's chair for the vacuum-salesman comedy Super Sucker (also 2002). Later reprising his role as Lt. Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain from
Gettysburg,
Daniels once again went back in time for the Civial War drama Gods and Generals (2002). In 2004 he appeared in the adaptation of fellow Michigander Mitch Albom's best-seller The Five People You Meet in Heaven, and the next year he earned rave reviews for his role as a self-absorbed academic and terrible father in The Squid and the Whale. He continued to work steadily in a variety of projects including the Robin Williams vehicle RV, the indie thriller The Lookout, and Away We Go. He portrayed a Senator in the American remake of the British miniseries State of Play in 2009, and three years later he was cast as the lead in Aaron Sorkin's first cable series, The Newroom, playing the host of a cable news program who decides to tell it like it really is. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi