Brad Dourif

Brad Dourif
Born: Mar 18, 1950
Huntington, WV
Career: 1975-2009
Countries: USA
Genre/Type: Drama
Science Fiction
Crime
Horror
Thriller
Biography by Jason Ankeny
Brad Dourif is a quirky character actor whose gallery of killers, sociopaths, and other lost souls brought to life any number of contemporary horror and science fiction projects. Born March 18, 1950, in Huntington, WV, he began his professional acting career after graduating from college, honing his skills during a three-year apprenticeship with New York's Circle Repertory under the celebrated drama coach Sanford Meisner. While appearing off-Broadway in a production of When You Comin' Back, Red Rider?, Dourif was spotted by director Milos Forman, who immediately cast him in his 1975 film adaptation of the Ken Kesey novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Dourif's turn as a suicidal teen asylum inmate was one of the most acclaimed film debuts in memory, earning a Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe as well as an Oscar nomination. However, the performance also typecast him as a talent best suited to idiosyncratic, off-center character roles, a straitjacket he remained unable to break from for the duration of his career. He then did not reappear onscreen for another two years before co-starring in the 1977 West German production Gruppenbild mit Dame.
Dourif's next major performance came in the 1978 Irvin Kershner thriller The Eyes of Laura Mars, followed by a superb starring turn as a damaged war veteran in John Huston's Wise Blood. Upon completing a supporting role in the 1980 television film Guyana Tragedy: The Story of Jim Jones, Dourif next surfaced in Michael Cimino's legendary flop Heaven's Gate, the first in a string of big-budget disasters to which the actor was attached including Forman's Ragtime and David Lynch's Dune. A series of low-budget projects followed before Dourif reunited with Lynch for a small role in the director's 1986 masterpiece Blue Velvet. However, no other offers of a similar caliber were immediately forthcoming, and instead he found himself providing the voice of the evil doll Chuckie in the Child's Play series of slasher movies. In the years which followed, Dourif occasionally reappeared in more substantial projects (including the 1988 Alan Parker film Mississippi Burning, the 1990 Ken Loach picture Hidden Agenda, and Hanif Kureishi's 1991 directorial debut London Kills Me), but he remained primarily confined to low-budget genre work; additionally, he often guest starred on television, appearing in series including The X-Files, Millennium, and Star Trek: Voyager. In 2001, Dourif took a break from low-budget fright flicks to appear in a decidedly more enormous production, director Peter Jackson's eagerly anticipated Lord of the Rings trilogy.

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Filmography

Movie/Film Released Rating Role Buy
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans 2009 Actor [Starring]
Halloween II 2009 Actor [Starring]
My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done 2009 Actor [Starring]
Humboldt County 2008 Actor [Starring]
Halloween 2007 Actor [Starring]
The Wizard of Gore 2007 Actor [Starring]
Touching Home 2007 Actor [Starring]
Deadwood: Season 03 2006 Actor [Starring]
Drop Dead Sexy 2006 Actor [Starring]
Pulse 2006 Actor [Starring]
Sinner 2006 Actor [Starring]
The Boneyard Collection 2006 Actor [Starring]
The List 2006 Actor [Starring]
Deadwood: A Lie Agreed Upon, Part 1 2005 Actor [Starring]
Deadwood: New Money 2005 Actor [Starring]
Deadwood: Season 02 2005 Actor [Starring]
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Videos of Brad Dourif

Back to the topTop Questions about Brad Dourif

That is an incredibly old picture. He was born in 1950 so he is now 59 years old.
Independent Film | Murder | Female Nudity | Cult Favorite more
He gets shot while having a gunfight with Mike in a toy store. Knowing that he is dying, he uses a voodoo ritual to transfer his soul to one of the Good Guy dolls. After that, his body dies.

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Awards

Year Movie/Film Role
1991 Genie Awards Common Bonds Best Actor (Nom)
1976 British Academy of Film and Television Arts One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Best Supporting Actor (Won)
1975 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Best Supporting Actor (Nom)
1975 Hollywood Foreign Press Association One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest New Star of the Year - Male (Won)
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