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James Brolin

Personal Profile

James Brolin
  • Birth Name:
    Craig Kenneth Bruderlin
  • Nickname:
    Mr. Streisand
  • Date of Birth:
    July 18, 1940
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Cancer
  • Place of Birth:
    Los Angeles, California, USA
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    American

Family

James Brolin
  • Father:
    Henry Bruderlin
  • Mother:
    Helen Sue
  • Spouse:
    Barbra Streisand (1998-present), Jan Smithers (1986 - 1995) (divorced), Jane Cameron Agee (16 October 1966 - October 1986) (divorced)
  • Relation:
    Diane Lan

Career

James Brolin

Trivia

James Brolin
  • Brolin will next be seen in The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard, starring Jeremy Piven, Ving Rhames, Ed Helms, Ken Jeong, and Alan Thicke.
  • Brolin also starred in the lead role in the 2008 Sci-fi Channel movie Lost City Raiders.
  • In 2008, Brolin guest starred on Law & Order: SVU as astronaut Col. Dick Finley.
  • In 2006, Brolin played the Governor of Maine, who in order to get re-elected, opposes the legalization of gay marriage, in the A&E Network movie Wedding Wars.
  • In 2005, Brolin guest starred on the TV series Monk as casino owner Daniel Thorn.
  • In 2002, Brolin played Governor Robert Ritchie of Florida, the Republican opponent of President Jed Bartlet on the TV series The West Wing.
  • In late 2003, Brolin was supposed to play Ronald Reagan in the TV movie The Reagans.
  • Brolin has had a number of supporting roles in major cinema releases since 2000.
  • He is referred to as "PW" and the role of Pee-Wee Herman's girlfriend "Dottie" is played by Morgan Fairchild.
  • In a film within the film, he merged the characters of Bond and Pee-Wee Herman, the "real" version of whom was played by Paul Reubens.

Quotes

James Brolin
  • "My father is so passive and my mother was so aggressive that it became a joke. He'd be watering the plants kind of glassy-eyed; my mother would be screaming some obscenity about something to someone. It became like a Norman Rockwell gone wrong."
  • "I think it was she was avoiding a deer. I was surprised, and oh, I was affected. Yeah, I was really ripped up."
  • "One of the things I love about directing is I love actors, because no matter how complex they are, once you get down to working and talking to them and the toughest guy will want you to open them up and he wants to show you stuff he was afraid to show anybody before."
  • "I think you can have a whole terrific, smart career as a second and third banana and work more and have much less risk than the lead guy. But I like being the lead guy."
  • 'I spent most of the money I made on phone calls."
View all Quotes: James Brolin

Biography

James Brolin
Last Updated: Thursday, August 06, 2009

JAMESWith his 6'4" lanky frame, matinee-idol looks and calm and collected demeanor, James Brolin was the textbook-perfect leading man for TV, and his career in that medium has been extensive, including seven years as Dr. Steven Kiley on "Marcus Welby, M.D." (ABC, 1969-76) and five years as Peter McDemott, the general manager of "Hotel" (ABC, 1983-88).

Brolin was raised in the Westwood area of Los Angeles, not far from 20th Century Fox, the studio where he began in show business, first aspiring to be a cinematographer or director. But the studio soon put him under contract as an actor, and he made his debut in an episode of the TV series "Bus Stop" (ABC, 1961), and in a bit in the feature generational comedy "Take Her, She's Mine" (1963).

He continued in small parts in Fox productions (including a recurring role on the 1966-67 ABC TV series "The Monroes" and as a private in the 1965 Frank Sinatra movie, "Von Ryan's Express") until 1967, when he got his first leading role opposite Jacqueline Bisset in a movie in "The Cape Town Affair", the remake of Sam Fuller's 1953 racially-charged "Pick-Up on South Street".

Brolin's feature career failed to ignite, and he moved to Universal Studios, where he was cast as Dr. Kiley, the highly-trained young physician who dreamed of a high-powered career but ended up sharing a practice with an aging but kindly general practitioner (Robert Young) in the 1969 TV-movie/pilot for "Marcus, Welby, M.D." Brolin won an Emmy for his work in 1970 and became a TV star. He was immediately cast in several TV-movies, including "Short Walk to Daylight" (ABC, 1972) and "Trapped" (ABC, 1973), the latter was the highest-rated TV-movie of that season, thanks in no small measure to Brolin's popularity.

Brolin attempted a feature film career after the demise of the series. It was hoped his big break would be as Clark Gable opposite Jill Clayburgh in "Gable and Lombard" (1976), but his work as "The King" failed to impress critics and did not meet the expectations of Gable's fans. Within a year, Brolin found himself in "The Car" (1977), as a cop battling an automobile possessed by the devil. In 1979, he was in another horror picture, "The Amityville Horror", as the terrorized head of the household. The film became the then-highest-grossing independent feature film to date. His subsequent big screen outings were generally dismissed by both audiences and critics (the exception was Allison Anders' 1992 "Gas Food Lodging").

In 1983, Brolin returned to series TV as Peter McDermott, the general manager of the fictional St. Gregory Hotel in San Francisco on "Hotel". While the ABC series was anthological in nature, McDermott did end up in a romance with his assistant, portrayed by Connie Sellecca. The series had a five-year run, during which Brolin directed many of the episodes. After it was canceled, Brolin hosted the syndicated reality series "Reunion" (1990), in which past loves found each other again. He followed with work on two short-lived series, the primetime soap "Angel Falls" (CBS, 1993) and "Extreme" (ABC, 1995), which had been described in the press as "'Baywatch' on skis." He returned to the small screen as star of the syndicated action series "Pensacola: Wings of Gold" in 1997.

JAMESBrolin has also to appear in longforms, including the 1991 CBS miniseries "And the Sea Will Tell", based on the book by attorney Vincent Bugliosi. Additionally, Brolin directed episodes of the ABC series "The Young Riders", which starred his son, Josh Brolin. The younger Brolin also appeared in his father's feature directorial debut, the direct-to-video release "My Brother's War" (1998), about the Irish Republican Army. Perhaps after rubbing elbows with his wife Barbra Streisand's A-List friends, Brolin's career heated up again.

He played a small but important role in director Steven Soderberg's acclaimed ensemble drama "Traffic" (2000), and appeared as a businessman who gets in the middle of Leonardo DiCaprio's family in "Catch Me If You Can" (2002). He also played against type in wacky comedies, appearing as Dana Carvey super-spy dad in "Master of Disguise" (2002) and playing Selma Blair's shotgun-toting father in "A Guy Thing" (2003).

Filmography

James Brolin

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