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With lean hangdog looks that make him a natural for the criminals and fringe
dwellers he usually plays, Tim Roth has the uncanny and incredibly effective
ability to make sleaze look sexy, or at least raggedly photogenic. Since his
debut in the made-for-TV Made in Britain at the age of 18, Tim Roth has joined
fellow Briton Gary Oldman as one of the leading interpreters of society's
underbelly. His ability has been particularly appreciated by director Quentin
Tarantino, who helped to propel Roth to international recognition with prominent
roles in Resevoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction in the early '90s. Since then, Tim Roth
has continued to portray a variety of gritty characters, occasionally making
room for the odd sympathetic or lighthearted role.
Tim Roth Born in London on May 14, 1961, to a journalist father and landscape
painter mother, Roth initially wanted to become a sculptor. After an education
at London's Camberwell School of Art, he decided to try his hand at acting,
first appearing in a production of Jean Genet's The Screens. Roth's television
debut in the 1981 film Made in Britain garnered critical raves for the actor,
who portrayed a poverty-stricken juvenile delinquent with profanity-spewing
gusto. The same year, he appeared with Gary Oldman in Mike Leigh's Meantime, a
made-for-TV movie that was eventually released theatrically, but Roth's bona
fide screen debut didn't come until 1984, when Tim Roth played an apprentice
hitman in Stephen Frears' The Hit. Co-starring Terence Stamp and John Hurt, the
film did moderately well and earned Roth an Evening Standard Award for Most
Promising Newcomer. Thanks to such positive notices, the young actor continued
to find work throughout the rest of the decade, making appearances in a variety
of films, including former Kinks frontman Ray Davies' 1985 musical Return to
Waterloo.
In 1990,Tim Roth began to enjoy a limited amount of international attention,
thanks to two starring roles, his acclaimed portrayal of Vincent Van Gogh in
Robert Altman's Vincent and Theo and a title role in the critically lauded film
adaptation of Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead. Starring
opposite Gary Oldman, Tim Roth made an impression on many a filmgoer, including
Quentin Tarantino. Tarantino cast Roth as undercover policeman Mr. Orange in his
1992 ensemble piece Resevoir Dogs, a film that allowed the actor to prove he
could do an American accent and bleed to death convincingly. The success of
Resevoir Dogs paved the way for more Hollywood work for Roth. In a drastic
departure from his previous work, he next starred in the 1993 comedy Bodies,
Rest & Motion alongside Bridget Fonda, Phoebe Cates, and Eric Stoltz.
The following year, Tim Roth returned to more familiar territory, as a hit man
in Little Odessa and as one of the robbers who catalyzes the action of
Tarantino's Pulp Fiction. After the enormous success of the latter film, the
actor appeared the same year in the psychologically terrifying TV adaptation of
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness alongside John Malkovich, who played the
unhinged Kurtz. After a disastrous third collaboration with Tarantino, the
critically and commercially disemboweled Four Rooms (1995), Roth had
significantly greater success portraying an ominously prissy English nobleman in
Rob Roy, winning a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for his work, along
with a Golden Globe nomination and a British Academy Award.
Staying true to his habit of jumping from genre to genre, Tim Roth next appeared
as a convict with a jones for Drew Barrymore in Woody Allen's musical comedy
Everyone Says I Love You (1996) before playing a mobster in 1930s Harlem in
Hoodlum (1997). Roth remained in a down and dirty milieu for Tim Roth's next
film, Vondie Curtis-Hall's Gridlock'd, which featured the actor, as well as
Thandie Newton and Tupac Shakur, as modern-day heroin addicts. Although the film
received critical praise, it failed to make a significant impression at the box
office. Roth's subsequent films unfortunately suffered from similarly lackluster
performances: 1998's Liar went straight to video and the actor's film with
Cinema Paradiso director Giuseppe Tornatore, La Leggenda del Pianista
Sull'Oceano, remained mired in obscurity. However, Roth continued to keep busy
with other projects, appearing in the 1998 Sundance entry Animals (And the
Tollkeeper) and making his directing debut the same year with The War Zone.
Though it gained positive critical notice for its' downbeat story of a
disfunctional family skidding towards oblivion, the subject matter found the
film getting little exposure even though it won multiple film festival awards.
Tim Roth's next turn as the menacing General Thade in Tim Burton's Planet of the
Apes (2001) would be arguably his most mainstream, prolific and scenery-chewing
role to date. As the sinister simian on an obsessive quest to kill Mark
Wahlberg's Capt. Leo Davis at any cost, Roth provided more than enough gusto to
adequately fill the film's evil villian quota. While the film was a box-office
hit, Tim Roth opted to follow it up by returning to more obscure films. However,
his visibility was raised considerably in 2004 by a pair of projects. First,Tim
Roth acted alongside the likes of Oscar-winners Chris Cooper and Richard
Dreyfuss in director John Sayles' highly-anticipated political film Silver City
and then showed up opposite Jennifer Connelly and John C. Reilly in Dark Water.
Credit:
netglimse.com
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