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M. Emmet Walsh
Birthday:
22 March 1935
Birth Name:
Michael Emmet Walsh
Height:
178 cm
Biography
I don't have an ego when I get the work. If I'm playing a doctor I want you to see a doctor. I don't want you to see an Emmet Walsh doctor and that's I think been the confusion with my career. People know my work, but they don't know who I am. I've always had fun hiding in the character.
I don't have an ego when I get the work. If I'm playing a doctor I want you to see a doctor. I don't want you to see an Emmet Walsh doctor and that's I think been the confusion with my career. People know my work, but they don't know who I am. I've always had fun hiding in the character.
I approach each job thinking I may die of a heart attack, so it had better be the best work possible.
I approach each job thinking I may die of a heart attack, so it had better be the best work possible.
I'm being paid for what I'd do for nothing.
I'm being paid for what I'd do for nothing.
M. Emmet Walsh
Wonderfully talented, heavyset character actor (from New York, but regularly playing Southerners) M. Emmet Walsh has made a solid career of playing corrupt cops, deadly crooks, and zany comedic roles since the early 1970s.Michael Emmet Walsh was born in Ogdensburg, to Agnes Katharine (Sullivan) and Harry Maurice Walsh, a customs agent. He is of Irish descent. Walsh first appeared in a few fairly forgettable roles both on TV and onscreen before cropping up in several well remembered films, including a courtroom police officer in What's Up, Doc? (1972), as the weird Dickie Dunn in Slap Shot (1977), and as a loony sniper hunting Steve Martin in The Jerk (1979). On-screen demand heated up for him in the early 1980s with attention-grabbing work in key hits, including Brubaker (1980), Reds (1981), and as Harrison Ford's police chief in the futuristic thriller Blade Runner (1982). Walsh then turned in a stellar performance as the sleazy, double-crossing private detective in the Joel Cohen and Ethan Coen film noir Blood Simple. (1984), and showed up again for the Coens as a loud-mouthed sheet-metal worker bugging Nicolas Cage in the hilarious Raising Arizona (1987). As Walsh moved into his fifties and beyond, Hollywood continued to offer him plenty of work, and he has appeared in over 50 movies since passing the half-century mark. His consistent ability to turn out highly entertaining portrayals led film critic Roger Ebert to coin the "Stanton-Walsh Rule," which states that any film starring Walsh or Harry Dean Stanton has to have some merit. And the "M" stands for Michael!
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M. Emmet Walsh Filmography
M. Emmet Walsh Roles
Coach Turnbull
Machine Shop Ear-Bender
Coleman
Sgt. Dominick Benti
Private Detective Loren Visser
Bryant
George Henderson Sr.
Lew Popper
Detective Jesse Hall
Earl Stutz
Apothecary
C.P. Woodward
Dr. Joseph Dolan
Harv
Joe O'Neal
George
Mr. Saunders
Walt Scheel
Madman
Dr. Williams
Uncle Bub
Lyle Hewes
Cosmic Owl
Col. Fred Patterson
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