Maury Chaykin

A hefty, hirsute character actor with a menacing but still often sympathetic presence, Maury Chaykin has specialized in small but startling appearances in American features, while finding his true niche in Canada, where his lack of physical perfection has not impeded his landing interesting leading roles. The exceptionally versatile player formed a band of traveling performers, the award-winning Swamp Fox Theatre Group, during his undergraduate years at the SUNY, Buffalo and later studied at San Francisco's American Conservatory Theater, working with playwright Samuel Beckett on the only Beckett-approved theatrical adaptation of his novel "The Unnamable". His initial foray to New York theater proved unsuccessful, and Chaykin left after several years to accept a role in Toronto, which has remained his home ever since, although he later returned to NYC, essaying roles in Off-Broadway plays including "Gimme Shelter" (1978) and the musical "Leave It to Beaver Is Dead" (1979).

After acting in the Canadian films "Highpoint" (1979) and "The Kidnapping of the President" (1980), Chaykin made his US debut in "Death Hunt" (1981), but it was a small comedic turn in the hit thriller "WarGames" (1983) that opened Hollywood's eyes to his talent. His towering, glowering performance as the titular not-so-sweet union leader in "Canada's Sweetheart: The Saga of Hal C. Banks" (1986) garnered a Genie Award as Best Actor, as well as a kind of strange stardom in his adopted land. His talent for the outlandish made him right at home in modest-sized but colorful character bits in "The Bedroom Window" (1987) and "Twins" (1988), but it was his especially fine portrayal as the crazed cavalry major who sends Kevin Costner to the frontier before committing suicide in "Dances with Wolves" (1990) that firmly established his reputation as a fine character actor. The following year Chaykin began a collaboration with Canadian director Atom Egoyan in the "En Passant" segment of "Montreal vu par..." and "The Adjuster" (both 1991). In the latter, the actor stood out amidst the superb, eclectic cast as Bubba, a fat, voyeuristic ex-football hero married to an exhibitionist.

Chaykin won a second Genie for his inspired turn in "Whale Music" (1994), playing a child-like musical genius who has retreated from his rock-star life to devote himself to creating a symphonic piece for whales. He proved well-cast as Jessica Tandy's son, a soft core porn movie producer, in 1994's "Camilla" (with Egoyan making an appearance as a film director) and went on to memorable work as a rotund, menacingly depraved politician in "Devil in a Blue Dress" and as one of the crazy uncles in Diane Keaton's "Unstrung Heroes" (both 1995). Under Egoyan's strong direction, Chaykin atypically played a choleric cuckold in "The Sweet Hereafter" before appearing as the owner of the Chez d'Irv diner in "Love and Death on Long Island" (both 1997) and delivering an outstanding turn as a dissipated underworld figure with a monstrous belly in Jon Amiel's "Entrapment" (1999) His role as Nero Wolfe in A&E's "The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery" (2000) gave him a new pastime, driving constantly by the extraordinary billboard on Sunset Boulevard featuring a "humongous photograph of my face." Chaykin received good notices for his wonderfully petulant portrayal of the detective created by Rex Stout, though some fans of the character thought him too svelte for the part of the 300-pounder.

  • Born:
    July 27, 1949 in Brooklyn, New York, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actor
Education
  • State University of New York, Buffalo, Buffalo, New York
  • American Conservatory Theatre, San Francisco, California
Milestones
  • 1968 Formed and ran the Swamp Fox Group with some high school friends while in college at the State University of New York, Buffalo; the troupe toured widely, performing original material, and won an award at the 1969 Yale Drama Festival (dates approximate)
  • 1975 Unable to find show business work in NYC, journeyed to Canada to act in a stage play, Hooray for Johnny Canuck ; subsequently acted in a number of productions at Toronto s Factory Theatre Lab
  • 1978 Returned to NYC, joining the Brooklyn Academy of Music s Dodget Theatre Company to act in a production of Gimme Shelter by Barry Keefe
  • 1979 Acted in Leave It to Beaver Is Dead , an off-Broadway musical play presented by Joseph Papp and the New York Shakespeare Festival
  • 1979 Earliest feature film appearances included a role in the Canadian-made comedy-thriller, Highpoint
  • 1979 Returned to Canada
  • 1980 First US TV-movie, Jimmy B. & Andre (CBS)
  • 1981 US film debut, Death Hunt
  • 1983 Breakthrough role in Hollywood films, WarGames
  • 1983 First film with Canadian producer-director-writer Paul Donovan, Def-Con 4
  • 1986 Played title role in the Canadian-made docudrama feature, Canada s Sweetheart: The Saga of Hal C. Banks
  • 1990 Offered a memorable turn as the suicidal cavalry major who sends Kevin Costner west in Dances with Wolves
  • 1991 Began collaboration with writer-director Atom Egoyan with the En Passant segment of Montreal vu par... and The Adjuster
  • 1992 First TV miniseries, Conspiracy of Silence , which originally premiered on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in December, 1991 and later aired on CBS
  • 1992 Fourth film with Donovan, Buried on Sunday
  • 1992 Portrayed friendly truck driver Leon Crazy-As Pendleton in Edward Zwick s Leaving Normal
  • 1993 First film with director Jon Amiel, Sommersby
  • 1994 Played Jessica Tandy s movie-producer son in Camilla ; Atom Egoyan appeared as a film director
  • 1994 Received second Genie Award for portrayal of a deeply-troubled Brian Wilson-like musician in Whale Music
  • 1995 Played a menacing, rotund, depraved politician in Devil in a Blue Dress
  • 1995 Teamed with Michael Richards as the seriously goofy uncles in Diane Keaton s Unstrung Heroes , directed by Diane Keaton s
  • 1997 Third film with Egoyan, The Sweet Hereafter ; gave an unexpectedly disturbing performance as a choleric, cuckhold
  • 1998 Portrayed the prison warden in The Mark of Zorro
  • 1999 Doubled as a store owner and a wacky, crying lawyer for the dream sequences in Jacob Two Two and the Hooded Fang
  • 1999 Reteamed with Amiel on Entrapment , playing a dissipated underworld figure with a comically monstrous belly
  • 2000 Played Kyra Sedgwick s aging father confronting his daughter s lesbianism when she brings her girlfriend to Thanksgiving dinner in What s Cooking? ; screened at the Sundance Film Festival
  • 2000 Portrayed Nero Wolfe in A&E TV-movie The Golden Spiders: A Nero Wolfe Mystery
  • 2001 Reprised title role in the A&E series Nero Wolfe
  • 2004 Starred in Being Julia, based on the novel Theatre, by W. Somerset Maugham
  • 2005 Cast as mob boss, San Marco in Atom Egoyan s Where the Truth Lies starring Kevin Bacon and Colin Firth
  • Moved to New York after studying at San Francisco s ACT; took various odd jobs to pay the rent
  • Performed in other Off-Broadway theater productions, including Fat Fell Down and A Man s a Man

Yahoo! Movies: In Theaters - Times & Tickets - Trailers - DVD - News & Gossip - Box Office - Browse Movies - more...
Yahoo! Entertainment: Movies - Music - TV - Games - Astrology - more...

Copyright © 2009 AEC One Stop Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Portions of this page Copyright © 2009 Baseline. All rights reserved.