Kurtwood Smith

A character player of stage, TV and film, best known as the sadistic killer Clarence Botticker in "Robocop" (1988) and the domineering, inflexible father in "Dead Poets Society" (1989), Kurtwood Smith is also an award-winning stage actor. His work in TV and motion pictures has often been in WASPy roles or as uptight, even villainous, individuals.

Born in Wisconsin and raised in California, the actor honed his craft for many years on stage as a member of the California Actors Theatre. In 1981, he received three DRAMA-LOGUE awards for his performances in "Billy Budd", "The Idiot's Delight" and "Green Grow the Lilacs". Despite his inroads in film and TV, Smith has continued to appear in theatrical productions, including as a doctor treating AIDS patients in the 1996 production of "A Quiet End".

Smith first appeared in features in the small role of a security guard in "Roadie" (1980). In 1983, he was cast against what would become his type, playing a choreographer putting John Travolta through his moves in "Staying Alive". Balding, with a steel gaze, Smith has carved a career playing parents, officious professionals or military types. He was the father in "Homesick" (1988), which dealt with a child longing for his grandfather who was confined to a nursing home. Other notable roles have included the district attorney sparring with James Woods in "True Believer" (1989), the Federation President in "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" (1991) and Nicole Kidman's white bread father in "To Die For" (1995). More recently, he and Mary Kay Place were a Christian Right couple who open their home to an unwed pregnant woman addicted to inhalants (Laura Dern) in Alexander Payne's "Citizen Ruth" (1996).

On the small screen, Smith appeared in the TV-movie "Murder in Texas" (NBC, 1981) and played Col. Berdan in "North & South: Book II" (ABC, 1986) in his first miniseries. He also portrayed Josef Goebbels in "The Nightmare Years" (TNT, 1989). Smith has also been a regular on several failed TV series: as Captain Joseph Scanlon, who doesn't believe a bunch of gangbangers can become undercover cops in "Renegades" (ABC, 1983); the villainous Dr. Sue in "The New Adventures of Beans Baxter" (Fox, 1987-88); and a freeloader named Jack Lord at a Hawaiian surf shop in "Big Wave Dave's" (CBS, 1993). He finally found steady employment when he landed the role of 'Red' Forman, the father of the central teenager, on the popular Fox sitcom "That '70s Show" (1998- ).

  • Also Credited As:
    Kurtwood Larson Smith
  • Born:
    July 3, 1942 in New Lisbon, Wisconsin, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Acting teacher
Family
  • Child: Shannon Smith. mother, Cecilia Souza
  • Daughter: Laurel Smith. mother, Cecilia Souza
  • Father: George Smith.
  • Mother: Mabel Annette Lund.
Education
  • San Jose State College, San Jose, California, BA, 1966
  • Stanford University, Stanford, California, drama, MFA, 1969
Milestones
  • 1969 Taught acting at Canada College in Redwood, California
  • 1980 Made screen debut as a security guard in Roadie
  • 1981 TV-movie debut, Murder in Texas (NBC)
  • 1983 Appeared as skeptical police captain on ABC series The Renegades
  • 1986 Made miniseries debut in North and South: Book II (ABC)
  • 1988 Had key villainous role in Robocop
  • 1989 Played anal retentive father to Robert Sean Leonard in Dead Poets Society
  • 1993 Was regular on Big Wave Dave s (CBS)
  • 1995 Portrayed Nicole Kidman s father in To Die For
  • 1998 Cast as Red Forman on the popular Fox sitcom That 70s Show
  • 1999 Played a psychiatrist in Girl, Interrupted
  • Performed leading roles with California Shakespeare Festival (including Hamlet and The Taming of the Shrew )
  • Played the diabolical Mr. Sue on The New Adventures of Bean Baxter (Fox)
  • Raised in San Fernando Valley
  • Was a company member of the California Actors Theatre in Los Gatos, California

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