Thomas Haden Church Movies
By the time actor
Thomas Haden Church earned an Oscar nomination for his unforgettable supporting role as a womanizing, has-been actor heading out on one last fling before tying the knot in director
Alexander Payne's critically acclaimed road drama
Sideways (2004), many film and television viewers may have assumed (and not without merit) that the former
Wings star had all but abandoned his career in front of the cameras. It had, after all, been nearly a decade since
Church had endeared himself to television viewers as lovably dunderheaded mechanic Lowell Mather on the aforementioned hit television series, and though he did remain fairly active onscreen after
Wings went off the air in 1995, his career took something of a back seat to his familial commitments and life on his Texas cattle ranch. Coupled with a conscious decision to move away from acting and try his talents behind the camera,
Church's fading devotion to acting still made his nomination at the 2005 Oscars feel like something of a comeback even though he had remained fairly active in show business all along.
A Texas native whose early career included a stint as a radio disc jockey and voice-over announcer,
Church first got a taste for acting with an appearance in the independent feature Gypsy Angels, and a move to Los Angeles followed shortly thereafter. It didn't take long for the handsome, young aspiring actor to land his defining role in
Wings, and aside from supporting roles in the features
Tombstone and Tales From the Crypt: Demon Knight, it was his role in
Wings and the subsequent television series
Ned and Stacey for which he was best remembered for some time. Following the cancellation of
Ned and Stacey,
Church turned his attention primarily to feature films with supporting roles in
One Night Stand,
3000 Miles to Graceland,
Monkeybone, and
Lone Star State of Mind serving to at least pay the bills. Dejected by a somewhat stifled acting career and determined to spend more time with his wife and children,
Church opted to step behind the scenes to write and direct the independent comedy
Rolling Kansas. A lighthearted road movie concerning a trio of brothers' quest to find a seemingly-mythical marijuana field in the sprawling plains of Kansas,
Rolling Kansas made a brief appearance at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival before making its debut on Comedy Central the following year.
Just when it seemed that the rest of
Church's onscreen career may have been relegated to appearances in
George of the Jungle sequels, acclaimed independent filmmaker
Payne had recalled his auditions for his previous two films,
Election and
About Schmidt. Though
Church hadn't quite made the cut on either of those films,
Payne had taken note of his talent and thought the former
Wings star the perfect candidate to play a formerly popular television star and down-on-his-luck actor having trouble adjusting to the prospect of marriage in
Payne's upcoming comedy drama
Sideways. Cast opposite
American Splendor's
Paul Giamatti,
Church's alternately desperate and sad performance proved the heart of the film many considered to be the year's -- not to mention director
Payne's -- best. The movie earned Church an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. He followed up that success with appearances in the comedy Idiocracy and the western Broken Trail opposite Robert Duvall. In 2007 he was cast as one of the two-villains in Spider-Man 3, and the year after that he starred in the biting drama Smart People. His deep, recognizable voice led him to voiceover work in a variety of projects such as Aliens in the Attic, Charlotte's Web, and Over the Hedge. In 2010 he had a part in the sleeper hit Easy A, and he played Matt Damon's brother in Cameron Crowe's We Bought a Zoo. In 2012 he was cast in the Disney flop John Carter. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi