Christopher McDonald
Christopher McDonald
Hollywood character actor Christopher McDonald at first specialized in playing uptight and slightly vexing young urban professionals. When the material demanded it, McDonald occasionally heightened these qualities to the obnoxious level for persuasive villainous portrayals, appearing as philandering husbands, condescending jocks, and manipulative powermongers to tremendous effect. The Manhattan native grew up in Romulus, NY. A Renaissance man and overachiever in high school, McDonald studied dentistry at Hobart College in the upstate New York town of Geneva but soon discovered an enduring passion for drama, studying after his 1977 graduation at London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. When plum adolescent roles in the musical clunkers Grease 2 (1982) and Breakin' (1984) did little to further McDonald's career, he moved to Manhattan and sought tutelage from the legendary acting coach Stella Adler -- with such aggressive determination that he actually convinced the 83-year-old Adler to offer her services in exchange for domestic chores. The actor landed one of his most visible parts circa 1986, in the Bette Midler-Shelley Long female buddy comedy Outrageous Fortune (1987). He also essayed a memorable nice-guy turn opposite Cybill Shepherd and Ryan O'Neal in the first act of the wonderful reincarnation comedy Chances Are (1989). But McDonald's watershed moment came with his portrayal of Geena Davis' browbeating husband, Darryl Dickinson, in Ridley Scott's blockbuster feminist road movie Thelma & Louise (1991). Thanks to the success of that picture, McDonald's screen time escalated, and he began tackling an average of four to six roles per year. He ushered in an outstanding portrayal of Jack Barry, the natty host of Twenty-One, in the Robert Redford-directed Quiz Show (1994); played an abusive golf pro in the Adam Sandler comedy Happy Gilmore (1996); and was suitably annoying as an ignorant dad in John Duigan's suburban drama Lawn Dogs (1997). That same year, McDonald also portrayed Ward Cleaver in the big-screen version of Leave It to Beaver. McDonald resumé during the first several years of the millennium includes such Hollywood blockbusters as 61* (2001) and Spy Kids 2 (2002) and such arthouse hits as Requiem for a Dream (2000) and Broken Flowers (2005). In 2007, McDonald played Boss Hogg in the big-budget sequel The Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning and Marty Schumacher in the Jamie Kennedy vehicle Kickin' It Old Skool. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
Filmography of Christopher McDonald:
- Five Aces with Charlie Sheen
- Player 5150 with Bob Gunton
- Flubber with Robin Williams , Marcia Gay Harden , Clancy Brown , Ted Levine , Edie McClurg
- Grease 2 with Michelle Pfeiffer , Adrian Zmed , Eve Arden , Sid Caesar , Dody Goodman , Tab Hunter , Andy Tennant
- Dutch with Ed O'Neill , JoBeth Williams , Kathleen Freeman
- Awake with Terrence Howard , Lena Olin , Arliss Howard , Fisher Stevens
- Track Down with Donal Logue , Jeremy Sisto , Tom Berenger , Amanda Peet
- SLC Punk with Annabeth Gish , James Duval
- Mad Money with Diane Keaton , Queen Latifah , Ted Danson , Stephen Root
- Dirty Work with Norm MacDonald , Jack Warden , Don Rickles , Chevy Chase , Chris Farley , John Goodman , Adam Sandler
- Grind with Randy Quaid , Dave Foley , Bobcat Goldthwait
- The Faculty with Famke Janssen , Piper Laurie , Bebe Neuwirth , Elijah Wood , Salma Hayek , Jon Stewart , Josh Hartnett
- Celtic Pride with Damon Wayans , Daniel Stern , Dan Aykroyd
- The Hearse with Joseph Cotten , Perry Lang





