Michael Moriarty


Actor

About

Birth Place
Detroit, Michigan, USA
Born
April 05, 1941

Biography

A stage, screen and TV actor, Michael Moriarty came to prominence with his sensitive performance as baseball pitcher Henry Wiggen in the acclaimed 1973 drama, "Bang the Drum Slowly." Not all of Moriarty's subsequent work has lived up to that early promise, nor has he proven to be "box office," yet he has remained in demand for stage and TV roles. Additionally, he has branched out as a co...

Photos & Videos

Bang the Drum Slowly - Movie Poster

Family & Companions

Francoise Martinet
Wife
Married in 1966; divorced; mother of Matthew.
Anne Hamilton Martin
Wife
Divorced.
Suzana Cabrita
Wife
Met during the filming of the TV-movie "Calm at Dawn"; married in October 1988; separated.
Margaret Brychka
Companion
Common-law wife; Moriarty reportedly assaulted her in an incident that occurred in 2000.

Biography

A stage, screen and TV actor, Michael Moriarty came to prominence with his sensitive performance as baseball pitcher Henry Wiggen in the acclaimed 1973 drama, "Bang the Drum Slowly." Not all of Moriarty's subsequent work has lived up to that early promise, nor has he proven to be "box office," yet he has remained in demand for stage and TV roles. Additionally, he has branched out as a composer and jazz pianist.

Moriarty has worked extensively on the stage, beginning soon after his graduation from Dartmouth in 1963. He was Octavius Caesar in the New York Shakespeare Festival production of "Antony and Cleopatra," then went to London to study acting on a Fulbright Scholarship at LAMDA. On his return, Moriarty did additional Shakespearean roles, and won a Tony for originating the role of the homosexual Julian Weston in "Find Your Way" (1974). By that time, he had established himself in films on TV, earning an Emmy Award as Jim, the gentleman caller, in Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie" (ABC, 1973), starring Katharine Hepburn. While most of his other feature film roles have generally been in forgettable films, save "Report to the Commissioner" (1975), Moriarty has excelled on TV. He is remembered as Erik Dorf, the unemployed German who becomes a Nazi to feed his family and evolves into the administrator of the extermination policies in "Holocaust" (NBC, 1978). He was Wilbur Wright in "The Winds of Kitty Hawk" (NBC, 1978), Major Daniels in "Tailspin: Behind the Korean Airliner Tragedy" (HBO, 1989) and won kudos opposite Blythe Danner in "Too Far to Go" (NBC, 1979), based on the John Updike stories that traced the dissolution of a marriage over twenty years. In 1990, Moriarty became a series regular for the first time as Ben Stone, deputy district attorney of "Law & Order" (NBC), but was fired from the series in 1994, a year before the end of his contract. Moriarty claimed his outspoken attack on US Attorney General Janet Reno's attempts to curb violence and, in Moriarty's view, "censor" Hollywood contributed to his departure from the series. He immediately bounced back replacing Richard Chamberlain as Henry Higgins in the ill-fated Broadway revival of "My Fair Lady" and starring in the Civil Rights miniseries "Children of the Dust" (CBS, 1995). He also returned to features after a six year absence in "Courage Under Fire" (1996), as Denzel Washington's superior officer.

Moriarty is also a playwright; his "Flight to the Fatherland" was produced in Rochester, NY, in 1982, the same year The New York Shakespeare Festival offered a production of his "The Ballad of Dexter Creed." He has pursued a music career more diligently. A jazz pianist with his own group that has performed in New York City, he has also contributed a songs to the films "Q" (1982) and "The Secret of the Ice Caves" (1990) and his "Symphony for String Orchestra" has been performed publicly. Moriarty also released jazz albums in 1990 and 1991.

n 2001, Moriarty returned to acting with two back-to-back father roles. In "Along Came a Spider," he portrayed a US Senator desperately searching for his abducted daughter and in the TNT biopic "James Dean," he was cast as James Dean's father, Winton -- a role which earned him a 2002 Emmy nomination.

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Neverwas (2007)
12 Hours to Live (2006)
Swimming Upstream (2004)
Along Came a Spider (2001)
House of Luk (2001)
Mindstorm (2001)
James Dean (2001)
Children of My Heart (2001)
Rodrigue Emyard
Becoming Dick (2000)
Bad Faith (2000)
Children of Fortune (2000)
Out of Line (2000)
The Art of Murder (2000)
Woman Wanted (1999)
Shiloh 2: Shiloh Season (1999)
Major Crime (1998)
Gordan Tallas
The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg (1998)
Himself
Managua (1997)
Calm at Sunset (1996)
Crime of the Century (1996)
Cagney & Lacey: True Convictions (1996)
Matthew Wylie
Courage Under Fire (1996)
Shiloh (1996)
Ray Preston
Born Too Soon (1993)
Odd Birds (1993)
Brother T S Murphy
Full Fathom Five (1990)
The Secret of the Ice Caves (1990)
Manny Wise
Tailspin: Behind the Korean Airliner Tragedy (1989)
Major Hank Daniels
Dark Tower (1989)
Dennis Randall
Nitti: The Enforcer (1988)
It's Alive III: Island of the Alive (1987)
The Hanoi Hilton (1987)
A Return To Salem's Lot (1987)
Troll (1986)
The Link (1985)
Dr Craig Mannings; Keith Mannings
The Stuff (1985)
David "Mo" Rutherford
Pale Rider (1985)
Hull Barret
Q (1982)
Renacida (1981)
Too Far to Go (1979)
Richard Maple
The Winds of Kitty Hawk (1978)
Wilbur Wright
Who'll Stop The Rain? (1978)
John Converse
The Deadliest Season (1977)
Gerry Miller
Report To The Commissioner (1975)
Shoot It: Black, Shoot It: Blue (1974)
Herbert G Rucker
A Summer Without Boys (1973)
The Glass Menagerie (1973)
Bang The Drum Slowly (1973)
The Last Detail (1973)
Marine Duty Officer

Music (Feature Film)

The Secret of the Ice Caves (1990)
Song
The Secret of the Ice Caves (1990)
Song Performer ("Let Us Join Hands")
Q (1982)
Song

Cast (Special)

Galileo: On the Shoulders of Giants (1998)
The Living Cathedral: Saint John the Divine (1994)
In a New Light '94 (1994)
Diamonds on the Silver Screen (1992)
Family of Faiths (1989)
Host
Family of Faiths (1989)
Narration

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

Steven Spielberg Presents: Taken (2002)
Living With The Dead (2002)
Earthquake in New York (1998)
Children of the Dust (1995)
Windmills Of The Gods (1988)
Holocaust - The Story of the Family Weiss (1978)

Life Events

1963

Stage debut as Octavius, "Antony and Cleopatra" at the New York Shakespeare Festival

1971

Film debut, "Glory Boy"

1973

Henry Wiggen in "Bang the Drum Slowly"

1973

TV movie debut, "A Summer Without Boys"; Jim in "The Glass Menagerie"

1974

Julian Weston, "Find Your Way Home", Brooks Atkinson Theatre, NY

1978

Erik Dorf, "Holocaust" miniseries

1979

Debut as playwright, "Flight to the Fatherland"

1982

Contributed song, "Evil Dream" to feature "Q"

1984

Symphony for String Orchestra" performed in NY

1990

Album "Reaching Out" released

1990

Starred as Ben Stone in "Law & Order"

1994

Replaced Richard Chamberlain as Henry Higgins in revival of "My Fair Lady" on Broadway

1995

Starred in miniseries, "Children of the Dust"

1996

First feature in six years, "Courage Under Fire"

1996

Wrote and acted in one-person show, "Special Providence"

1997

Joined the cast of the synidcated series "The PSI Factor"

2001

Cast as James Dean's father in the TNT biopic "James Dean"

2002

Cast in the television miniseries "Living With The Dead"

Photo Collections

Bang the Drum Slowly - Movie Poster
Here is the American one-sheet movie poster for Bang the Drum Slowly (1973), starring Robert De Niro and Michael Moriarty. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.

Family

George Moriarty
Father
Elinor Paul Moriarty
Mother
Matthew Christopher Moriarty
Son

Companions

Francoise Martinet
Wife
Married in 1966; divorced; mother of Matthew.
Anne Hamilton Martin
Wife
Divorced.
Suzana Cabrita
Wife
Met during the filming of the TV-movie "Calm at Dawn"; married in October 1988; separated.
Margaret Brychka
Companion
Common-law wife; Moriarty reportedly assaulted her in an incident that occurred in 2000.

Bibliography