William Petersen

Handsome, athletic and wiry, this veteran of the Chicago stage entered movies convincingly playing edgy, implacable pursuers but soon seemed just as credible in sports dramas and light comedies. Petersen simmered as the morally ambiguous protagonist of William Friedkin's scalding crime drama, "To Live and Die in L.A." (1985). Sporting alarmingly tight pants and a bad attitude, he was a Secret Service agent who lavishly breaks the law to snare a master counterfeiter (Willem Dafoe). The following year, Petersen brought a nearly palpable confusion and anxiety to his portrait of a burned out FBI agent who hunts down a serial killer in Michael Mann's disquieting "Manhunter" (retitled "Red Dragon: The Pursuit of Hannibal Lecter" for TV).

A football player in college, Petersen has been well cast as screen sportsmen. He made his TV debut playing a womanizing team manager in "Long Gone" (HBO, 1987), a highly regarded cable telefilm set in the world of minor league baseball. Petersen subsequently acted in several mild comedies including "Cousins" (1989), "Hard Promises" (his producing debut) and the dark comedy "Passed Away" (both 1992). A youth spent in rural Idaho served him well as he played a classic Western law man, Sheriff Pat Garrett, pursuing Emilio Estevez's Billy the Kid in "Young Guns II" (1990). Petersen donned cowboy duds again for the popular TV miniseries sequel, "Return to Lonesome Dove" (CBS, 1993).

Petersen has remained active on the stage, particularly with Chicago's Remains Theatre, an avant-garde company which he and several others formed in 1979 as Ix. His several Joseph Jefferson Awards for work in Chicago theater include honors for "In the Belly of the Beast" and "Tooth of Crime". Petersen made his Broadway stage debut in a 1996 production of Tennessee Williams' "Night of the Iguana".

Generally shying away from the spotlight, Petersen assumed a higher profile after forming a film and TV production company, High Horse Films, with his partner Cindy Chvatal in 1986. He has been producing works of a more literary nature than the norm for Hollywood. A case in point was "Keep the Change" (TNT, 1992), a thoughtful TV-movie based on a Tom McGuane, in which Petersen starred as an emotionally conflicted California artist who returns to the sanctuary of his native Montana. He has also been popping up in more commercial fare on film and TV. Petersen battled a mysterious sea creature in the Peter Benchley miniseries "The Beast" (NBC, 1996) and announced plans to star in an hour-long drama series on NBC that would be co-produced by High Horse Films. On the big screen, he attempted to protect his teen-aged daughter from a psychopathic Mark Wahlberg in the James Foley-helmed thriller "Fear" (1996).

  • Also Credited As:
    William L. Petersen
  • Born:
    February 21, 1953 in Evanston, Illinois
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Producer
Family
  • Daughter: Maite Petersen. born c. 1975; mother, Joanne Brady
Significant Others
  • Wife: Joanne Brady. married in 1974; divorced in 1981
  • Companion: Amy Morton. no longer together
  • Companion: Gina Cirone. together since c. 1993; announced engagement in February 2002
  • Companion: . divorced
Education
  • Idaho State University, Pocatello, Idaho
Milestones
  • 1963 Cast as John the Baptist in a Christmas pageant staged at his sister's all-girls high school
  • 1979 Helped found Ix, an ensemble acting group now called the Remains Theatre
  • 1981 Feature debut (as William L Petersen), Michael Mann's "Thief"
  • 1985 First feature starring role, Friedkin's "To Live and Die in L.A."
  • 1986 Formed film production company called High Horse Productions with producer Cynthia Chvatal
  • 1987 TV debut, starring as Cecil 'Stud' Cantrell in "Long Gone", an HBO baseball movie
  • 1989 First credit as William Petersen, "Cousins", an American remake of the 1977 French comedy "Cousin, Cousine"
  • 1990 Network TV debut, playing the young Joseph P Kennedy Sr in "The Kennedys of Massachusetts", an ABC miniseries
  • 1992 Feature producing debut (also first film produced by High Horse Productions), "Hard Promises" (also starred)
  • 1992 TV producing debut, "Keep the Change", a TNT TV-movie (also starred)
  • 1996 Broadway debut, as Shannon in revival of Tennessee Williams' "Night of the Iguana"
  • 2000 Co-starred in the fall CBS drama "C.S.I.: Crime Scene Investigation"; also served as a producer
  • 2003 Received a golden globe nomination for best actor in a lead dramatic role, for his work in "CSI"
  • Acted in various stage productions in Chicago and elsewhere
  • Chicago theater debut, "Canticle of the Sun"
  • Played Stanley Kowalski in "A Steetcar Named Desire" in the Stratford Festival in Ontario, Canada; "discovered" by William Friedkin

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