Peter Coyote- Biography

Also Credited As:

Peter Cohon, Rachmil Pinchus Ben Mosha Cohon

About Peter Coyote

As a leading man and screen villain, Coyote is best recalled as the object of the competition between Shelley Long and Bette Midler in "Outrageous Fortune" (1987) and as the emotionally abusive expatriate in Roman Polanski's "Bitter Moon" (1994), a role considered by some to be based on Polanski himself.

A self-styled nonconformist who has eschewed the commercial, Coyote (born Peter Cohon) has had three bouts with hepatitis brought on by the intravenous drug use he has conquered. Born in New York and raised in suburban New Jersey and on his family's Pennsylvania farm, he moved to San Francisco in 1963 to attend college, but dropped out of the Masters Degree writing program to pursue work with a radical mime group and in the theater. Coyote had his first taste of show business for real in 1967 when he directed "The Minstrel Show" with Dick Gregory. The show originated in San Francisco, toured the USA and eventually played Off-Broadway where it earned an OBIE Award. Despite this flush of success, Coyote dropped out of both show business and urban life for a 10-year period, during which he traveled cross-country, supporting himself by killing birds and selling their feathers. He also assisted his mother in the operation of the family farm.

After kicking his drug habit and adopting Zen Buddhism, Coyote returned to acting in 1975 with Paul Sills' San Francisco production of "Story Theatre". He continued to act onstage and was appointed by then-governor Jerry Brown to the California Council for the Arts. Within a year he was named co-chair and fought hard to raise its budget from $1 million to $13 million. Coyote finally broke into films with a bit part in "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (1978), but it was not until 1982 that he had a part of note--playing the scientist, Keys, in Steven Spielberg's "E.T. The Extraterrestrial". He was then in demand as a leading man in Hollywood, but seemed awkward opposite Mary Steenburgen in "Cross Creek" (1983). Coyote hit a new stride playing the tenacious prosecutor in "Jagged Edge" (1985) and finally seemed to have found his screen persona, that of the antagonist who may be right. He had such a role alongside Dustin Hoffman and Sharon Stone in Barry Levinson's "Sphere" (1998), played against Robin Williams in the dramedy "Patch Adams" (1998) and opposite Harrison Ford and Kristin Scott Thomas in "Random Hearts" (1999).

Coyote first began appearing in TV-movies and miniseries with "Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking Story" (NBC, 1980), but found better roles as a bizarre, murderous teacher in "Ech s of the Darkness" (CBS, 1987) and as Buffalo Bill Cody in "Buffalo Girls" (CBS, 1995). He played against type as the almost milquetoast husband married to manipulative psychotic Ann-Margret in "Seduced By Madness: The Diane Borchardt Story" (NBC, 1996). Coyote began doing narration and voice work in the 80s, often for projects with adventure, outdoor, wildlife, or Western themes, like the NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC specials "The Grizzlies" (PBS, 1987) and "African Odyssey" (PBS, 1989). An accomplished writer, Coyote had his short fiction "Carla's Story" published in the award-winning "Pushcart Prize" literary anthology in 1993 and has posted other chapters of his work-in-progress, "The Freefall Chronicles", on the Internet at www.diggers.org.

Coyote developed a lucrative side-career as a voiceover artist for many commercials and a narrator for several documentaries. Perhaps his best-known voice work was as the official television announcer for the Academy Awards telecast. But Coyote continued to appear in visible roles in major motion pictures, including "Erin Brokovich" (2002). He was very effective as Mandy Moore's overprotective father in the teen sleeper hit "A Walk to Remember" (2002) and was recruited to play Rebecca Romijn-Stamos' ideal husband in Brian De Palma's neo-noir "Femme Fatale" (2002). After playing the father of a dancer (Larisa Oleynik) who wants to attend Julliard despite having cancer in "A Time for Dancing"(2002), Coyote co-starred in the made-for-TV, "Phenomenon II" (ABC, 2003), the sequel to the feature film starring John Travolta. In "Northfork" (2003), the enchanting and mythic drama from the Polish brothers, Coyote played an FBI man sent to remove hangers-on from a town emptied of its citizens to make room for a massive hydr lectric plant.

Coyote hammed it up in "The Hebrew Hammer" (2003), playing the eye-patch-wearing head of the Jewish Justice League who recruits a private investigator (Adam Goldberg) to track down Santa Claus' evil son (Andy Dick) before he destroys Hanukkah forever. After playing a famous American director who arrives in Paris looking for the lead role in his Yiddish adaptation of The Merchant of Venice in the French-subtitled comedy "Le Grand Role" (2003), he was seen in the comedic war epic "Bon Voyage" (2003), also dubbed in French. Segueing back into television, Coyote appeared on episodes of "Deadwood" (HBO, 2004- ), "The 4400" (USA, 2004- ) and "Law & Order: Trial By Jury" (NBC, 2004-2005) before landing a regular part on "The Inside" (Fox, 2004-2005) as the boss of an FBI profiler (Rachel Nichols) who is part of a secret rogue division of the bureau.

Coyote went on to narrate the three-part miniseries "Guns, Germs and Steel (PBS, 2005), a historical documentary based on Jared Diamond's book about how geographical advantage and developed immunity to disease-not race-contributed to Europeans conquering large parts of the world. He also narrated "Enron: The Smartest Guys In the Room" (2005), a documentary that probed the business scandal involving Enron, the energy behemoth that used favorable deregulation laws to bilk California out of billions of dollars only to crumble under the weight of enormous debt hidden in numerous offshore accounts and the hubris of its corporate leadership. Coyote landed another regular television role on "Commander In Chief" (ABC, 2005- ), playing the new vice president of a female president (Geena Davis) sworn into the highest office in the land after her predecessor died in office.

Partners

Wife

Stephanie Pleet. Married in 1998

Ex-Wife

Marilyn McCann. Married from 1977-1991

Family

Father

Morris Cohon. Trained as a rabbi in Russia and fled the Czar's draft

Mother

Ruth Cohon.

Education

San Francisco Actors Workshop, San Francisco , California

Grinnell College, Grinnell , Iowa

San Francisco State University, San Francisco , California

Career Milestones

2010

Played the District Attorney in "Law & Order: Los Angeles" (NBC)

2007

Had a four episode turn as Sally Field's disreputable boyfriend in "Brothers & Sisters" (ABC)

2005

Joined the cast of ABC's "Commander in Chief" as a Vice-Presidential nominee

2005

Narrated the documentary film "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room"

2003

Cast opposite Gérard Depardieu in "Bon voyage"

2003

Featured in the holiday comedy "The Hebrew Hammer"

2002

Cast in the thriller feature "Femme Fatale"

2001

Co-starred with Sissy Spacek in the Lifetime movie "Midwives"

2000

Played Larisa Oleynik's father in "A Time for Dancing"

2000

Selected as the "voice of the Oscars"; serving as announcer for the annual telecast

1998

Had featured role in "Patch Adams"

1998

Narrated the Oscar-nominated short documentary "A Place in the Land"

1998

Co-starred with Dustin Hoffman and Sharon Stone in "Sphere" for Barry Levinson

1996

Narrated "The West" for Ken Burns/PBS

1996

Played doomed husband of Ann-Margret in NBC miniseries "Seduced By Madness: The Diane Borchardt Story"

1994

Published critically-acclaimed short story "Carla's Story"

Played role of Jake in Old Globe pre-Broadway tryout of Neil Simon's "Jake's Women"

1992

Appeared in Roman Polanski's "Bitter Moon"

1987

Began active second career as a documentary narrator with "The Grizzlies" for National Geographic/PBS

1987

Was love object of Shelley Long and Bette Midler in "Outrageous Fortune"

1982

Played first major feature film role as Keys, the scientist on the trail of "E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial"

1980

Originated the role of Austin in Sam Shepherd's "True West" in San Francisco

1980

Made TV longform debut in "Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking Story" (NBC)

1978

Made first screen appearance in "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"

1976

Served as co-chair of the California Arts Council

1975

After a long hiatus, returned to acting in a San Francisco production of Paul Sills' "Story Theatre"

1969

Moved to London

1967

Stage directing debut, "The Minstrel Show" with the San Francisco Actors Workshop

Appeared on stage with the Magic Theatre, and the San Francisco Mime Troupe, in the 1960s

Raised in Englewood, NJ and on his family's farm in Pennsylvania