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Brad Sullivan

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Occupation
  
Actor

Education
  
Role
  
Actor


Name
  
Brad Sullivan

Years active
  
1972–2000

TV shows
  
Brad Sullivan Brad Sullivan Actor Flickr Photo Sharing

Born
  
November 18, 1931 (
1931-11-18
)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

Died
  
December 31, 2008, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Siblings
  
Marcia Tuttle, Winthrop Sullivan

Movies
  
The Untouchables, Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit, Slap Shot, Bushwhacked, The Prince of Tides

Similar People
  
Michael Ritchie, Greg Beeman, George Roy Hill, Nancy Dowd, Michael Jeter

Brad sullivan 2016 bmx


Bradford E. "Brad" Sullivan (November 18, 1931 – December 31, 2008) was an American character actor on film, stage and television. He was best known for playing George in The Untouchables (1987) and Henry Wingo in The Prince of Tides (1991).

Contents

Brad Sullivan Brad Sullivan stole scenes in everything from SLAP SHOT to

Amazing motocross 200fps profile brad sullivan hd 2015


Early life and career

Brad Sullivan https1bpblogspotcomeIcahucJfEsWC6BJtBX65I

Born in Chicago, Illinois, Sullivan served in the Korean War and then attended the University of Maine. After touring with a stage company, he moved to New York City and studied at the American Theatre Wing. He made his Off-Broadway debut in Red Roses for Me in 1961, and went on to appear in the London company of the musical South Pacific.

Brad Sullivan Brad Sullivan stole scenes in everything from SLAP SHOT to THE

In the 1960s and early 1970s, he appeared in two productions of the New York Shakespeare Festival — Coriolanus at Central Park's Delacorte Theatre (1965), and Václav Havel's The Memorandum — and the David Newbburge-Jacques Urbont musical Stag Movie (1971), in which stars Sullivan, as Rip Cord, and Adrienne Barbeau, as Cookie Kovac, were "quite jolly and deserve to be congratulated on the lack of embarrassment they show when, on occasion, they have to wander around stark naked. They may not be sexy but they certainly keep cheerful", wrote The New York Times theater critic Clive Barnes in an otherwise negative review.

Brad Sullivan Brad Sullivan stole scenes in everything from SLAP SHOT to THE

In 1972, he made his feature film debut in the military drama Parades (1972; re-released as The Line, 1980). This was followed by an appearance in a CBS TV-movie adaptation of David Rabe Sticks and Bones, a black comedy about a Vietnam War veteran. The subject matter proved so controversial that half of the network's affiliates refused to broadcast the telefilm.

Success as character actor

Brad Sullivan Actor Brad Sullivan and Sportswriter Teri Berg The charact Flickr

Sullivan was then featured prominently in director George Roy Hill's hit The Sting (1973), playing Cole, the hired killer who dogs the Robert Redford and Paul Newman characters. Following roles in other productions, Sullivan reteamed with star Newman and director Hill for Slap Shot (1977), a hit comedy about a down-and-out hockey team. In a departure from the stoic, taciturn parts in which he was often cast, Sullivan played a spectacularly vulgar hockey player, Morris "Mo" Wanchuk.

He followed this with his Broadway debut, playing three different military officers in a revival of David Rabe's play The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel (April–September 1977), starring Al Pacino. The following year, Sullivan earned a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical for his performance as steelworker Mike LeFevre in Working (May–June 1978), adapted from the book by Studs Terkel and also starring Patti LuPone and Joe Mantegna.

Brad Sullivan Going Going Gone Brad Sullivan dies at 77

Sullivan's other feature film credits include Walk Proud (1979), The Island (1980); Ghost Story (1981); Tin Men (1987); The Untouchables (1987); Funny Farm (1988); Dead Bang (1989); The Dream Team (1989); The Abyss (1989); Guilty by Suspicion (1991); True Colors (1991), The Prince of Tides (1991); Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit (1993); The Fantasticks (made 1995, released 2000); The Jerky Boys: The Movie (1995); Canadian Bacon (1995); and Bushwhacked (1995). Of his role as a harsh husband in The Prince of Tides, in which his unwary character is given dog food to eat and consumes it with gusto, Sullivan told an interviewer he was never quite sure if the contents of a can served him by Kate Nelligan, who played his wife, was actually dog food. He added, however, that as an actor he did not believe in questioning a director, and that whatever it was tasted fine.

On television, Sullivan portrayed Artemas Ward in the 1984 miniseries George Washington, and Judge Roy Bean in the 1991 television movie The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw. Additional television credits include Miami Vice, The Equalizer, Against the Law, and Best of the West. He had recurring roles on I'll Fly Away, as Mr. Zollicofer Weed, the ex-Marine turned wrestling coach, and NYPD Blue, as Patsy Ferrara. As a cast-member of the drama Nothing Sacred (1997–1998), he played Father Leo, the older priest who helps guide his younger colleagues. His final TV role was on a 2000 episode of Law & Order.

His theater work includes Michael Weller's The Ballad of Soapy Smith (1984) and Neal Bell's Cold Sweat (1988) Off-Broadway; and, on Broadway, Beth Henley's Wake of Jamey Foster (October 1982), with Holly Hunter; a Circle in the Square revival of The Caine Mutiny Court Martial (May–November 1983); Peter Hall's revival of Tennessee Williams's Orpheus Descending (September–December 1989), as Jabe Torrance opposite Vanessa Redgrave's Lady Torrance in Orpheus Descending (both recreating their roles in the TNT cable network's adaptation); and a stage version of the movie On the Waterfront (May 1995).

Personal

Sullivan retired in 2000, and lived on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. He died December 31, 2008, aged 77, of liver cancer.

Filmography

Actor
1991
Law & Order (TV Series) as
Tommy Brannigan / Joe Anson
- Amends (2000) - Tommy Brannigan
- Mushrooms (1991) - Joe Anson
2000
The Fantasticks as
Hucklebee
1997
Nothing Sacred (TV Series) as
Father Leo
- Felix Culpa (1998) - Father Leo
- Sleeping Dogs (1998) - Father Leo
- Sex, God and Reality (1998) - Father Leo
- Holy Words (1998) - Father Leo
- HIV Priest! Film at Eleven (1998) - Father Leo
- The Coldest Night of the Year (1998) - Father Leo
- Kindred Spirits (1998) - Father Leo
- A Nun's Story (1998) - Father Leo
- Signs and Words (1998) - Father Leo
- Hodie Christus Natus Est (1997) - Father Leo
- House of Rage (1997) - Father Leo
- A Bloody Miracle (1997) - Father Leo
- Speaking in Tongues (1997) - Father Leo
- Calling (1997) - Father Leo
- Spirit and Substance (1997) - Father Leo
- Roman Catholic Holiday (1997) - Father Leo
- Parents and Children (1997) - Father Leo
- Mixed Blessings (1997) - Father Leo
- Song of Songs (1997) - Father Leo
- Proofs for the Existence of God (1997) - Father Leo
1995
NYPD Blue (TV Series) as
Patsy Ferrara
- Hearts and Souls (1998) - Patsy Ferrara
- Brother's Keeper (1998) - Patsy Ferrara
- Top Gum (1998) - Patsy Ferrara
- Aging Bull (1995) - Patsy Ferrara
1997
In the Line of Duty: Blaze of Glory (TV Movie) as
Mike LaSalle
1995
Bushwhacked as
Jack Erickson
1995
Canadian Bacon as
Gus
1995
The Jerky Boys as
Detective Robert Worzic
1993
Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit as
Father Thomas
1993
Big Wave Dave's (TV Series) as
Captain Wally
- Him (1993) - Captain Wally
1993
South Beach (TV Series) as
Jessie
- Wild Thing (1993) - Jessie
1993
Double Deception (TV Movie) as
C.T.
1991
I'll Fly Away (TV Series) as
Coach Zollicofer Weed
- Comfort and Joy (1992) - Coach Zollicofer Weed
- Since Walter (1992) - Coach Zollicofer Weed
- All in the Life (1992) - Coach Zollicofer Weed
- The Slightest Distance (1992) - Coach Zollicofer Weed
- Not Buried (1992) - Coach Zollicofer Weed
- The Kindness of Strangers (1992) - Coach Zollicofer Weed
- All God's Children (1991) - Coach Zollicofer Weed
1992
Teamster Boss: The Jackie Presser Story (TV Movie) as
Dickerson
1991
The Prince of Tides as
Henry Wingo
1991
The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw (TV Movie) as
Judge Roy Bean
1991
In the Line of Duty: Manhunt in the Dakotas (TV Movie) as
Dan Krebs
1991
Guilty by Suspicion as
Congressman Velde
1991
True Colors as
FBI Agent Abernathy
1990
Against the Law (TV Series) as
Police Captain
- We, the Jury (1990) - Police Captain
1990
Judgment (TV Movie) as
Kenneth Loring
1990
Orpheus Descending (TV Movie) as
Jabe Torrance
1990
H.E.L.P. (TV Series) as
Daly
- Fire Down Below (1990) - Daly
1989
The Abyss as
Executive
1989
Signs of Life as
Lobsterman
1989
The Dream Team as
Sgt. Vincente
1989
Dead Bang as
Chief Hillard
1986
The Equalizer (TV Series) as
Luther Munson / Joshua
- Past Imperfect (1989) - Luther Munson
- Nocturne (1986) - Joshua
1989
Home Fires Burning (TV Movie) as
Fog Martin
1988
Crossbow (TV Series) as
Rafe
- The Emperor: Part 2 (1988) - Rafe
1988
Funny Farm as
Brock
1988
Blood Money (TV Movie) as
Gen. John Anson
1988
The Red Spider (TV Movie) as
Colonel Claymore
1988
Superman 50th Anniversary (TV Movie documentary) as
The Thugs
1987
The Untouchables as
George
1987
Tin Men as
Masters
1987
Miami Vice (TV Series) as
Jack Colman
- Duty and Honor (1987) - Jack Colman
1986
A Winner Never Quits (TV Movie) as
Taylor
1985
Search for Tomorrow (TV Series) as
Harry Maxwell
- Episode #1.8656 (1985) - Harry Maxwell
- Episode #1.8655 (1985) - Harry Maxwell (uncredited)
- Episode #1.8653 (1985) - Harry Maxwell (credit only)
1985
The New Kids as
Colonel Jenkins
1984
George Washington (TV Mini Series) as
Gen. Artemus Ward
1982
The Neighborhood (TV Movie) as
Foreman
1982
Cold River as
Reuban Knat
1981
Ghost Story as
Sheriff Hardesty
1981
Best of the West (TV Series) as
Lance
- Pilot (1981) - Lance
1980
The Island as
Stark
1979
Walk Proud as
Jerry Kelsey
1977
Slap Shot as
Wanchuk
1975
Movin' On (TV Series) as
Lt. Hardacre
- From Baltimore to Eternity (1975) - Lt. Hardacre
1974
The Law (TV Movie) as
Officer Newberg
1974
The Migrants (TV Movie) as
Johnson
1973
The Sting as
Cole
1973
Sticks and Bones (TV Movie) as
Father Donald
1972
Parades as
Sergeant Hook
1968
N.Y.P.D. (TV Series) as
Rocky
- 'L' Is for Love and Larceny (1968) - Rocky
Soundtrack
2000
The Fantasticks (performer: "Never Say No", "The Abduction Song", "Happy Ending", "This Plum Is Too Ripe")

References

Brad Sullivan Wikipedia