Jeremy Piven Movies
Classically trained character actor
Jeremy Piven shot to stardom as
Ellen DeGeneres' unforgettable, sharp-witted cousin Spence on the ABC sitcom Ellen. Born in New York City on July 26, 1965,
Piven is the son of actors
Byrne and
Joyce Piven. He grew up in Evanston, IL, where his parents founded the Piven Theater Workshop. He studied theater at his parents' school alongside
Lili Taylor,
Rosanna Arquette, and pal
John Cusack. The longtime friends, who began by performing
Chekhov at age eight, have collaborated on several films -- including
One Crazy Summer (1986),
Say Anything (1989),
The Grifters (1990),
Floundering (1994),
Grosse Pointe Blank (1997), and
Serendipity (2001). They also co-founded the New Criminals Theater Company in 1989, which is now New Crime Productions, the company behind
Grosse Pointe Blank and the
Cusack vehicle
High Fidelity (2002).
A former member of the Second City National Touring Company,
Piven made his small-screen debut on
Carol Burnett's short-lived variety show Carol and Company in 1990. He went on to play a writer on HBO's
The Larry Sanders Show and to appear on Seinfeld before starring as an unemployed father on the short-lived series Pride & Joy. Disney, who produced Pride & Joy, then created a role for him on Ellen. After the sitcom's cancellation in April 1998,
Piven landed his own show, the offbeat ABC comedy-drama
Cupid. Also starring
Piven's real-life neighbor
Paula Marshall,
Cupid followed the infamous matchmaker after he had been thrown out of heaven for bad behavior and attempted to earn his reentry by uniting 100 couples in true love without using his otherworldly powers. The series won critical acclaim and earned
Piven quite a following. Yet, as with many of the network's more innovative shows, ABC mishandled
Cupid, shuffling it in and out of prime time until its inevitable cancellation. Undaunted,
Piven returned to television a year later to guest star on
Will & Grace.
While
Piven's film career has suffered the same ups and downs as his time on television, it is marked by numerous scene-stealing supporting performances. After making his feature-film debut in
Lucas (1986), the actor appeared in
Robert Altman's
The Player (1992),
Cameron Crowe's
Singles (1992), and
Tim Robbins'
Bob Roberts (1992). He fell into a slump with failures like
Judgment Night (1993) and
Car 54, Where are You? (1994), but became a cult favorite for his portrayal of a campus misfit in
P.C.U. (1994). Standout roles opposite
Sarah Jessica Parker in
Miami Rhapsody (1995),
Robert De Niro in
Heat (1995),
Bill Murray in
Larger Than Life (1996), and
Morgan Freeman in
Kiss the Girls (1997) quickly followed. He then proved to be the only good thing in
Peter Berg's
Very Bad Things (1998), before playing
Nicolas Cage's best friend in
The Family Man (2000).
Piven took a respectable dramatic turn as a doomed helicopter pilot in
Ridley Scott's award-winning
Black Hawk Down, but returned to comedy for Old School (2003), a film by the makers of
Road Trip (2000).
Piven continued his work in entourage and took a starring role in Chappelle's Show director Neal Brennan's farcical comedy The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard in 2009. 2011 found the actor playing the dreaded Timekeeper in Spy Kids: All the Time in the World, he would portray another villain, this time in a voice role, for the children's adventure The Pirates! Band of Misfits in 2012.
Then, in 2005,
Piven scored the iconic role of Ari Gold on the HBO series Entourage. The show turned out to be a massive success, and
Piven's profile was raised considerably, making him more of a household name, and helping him to score more interesting roles outside the show, like washed-out magician Buddy Isreal in the 2006 over-the-top action blow-out Smokin' Aces, and Damon Schmidt in the 2007 political thriller The Kingdom. In 2008, he joined the cast of the Guy Ritchie London crime movie RocknRolla. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, Rovi