John Turturro
Born: Feb 28, 1957
Frizzy-haired, nervouslooking, viscerally unappealing actor (with considerable stage experience, including training at the prestigious Yale Drama School) played a series of eccentric bits, in 1980's Raging Bull and throughout the decade in Exterminator II, The Flamingo Kid (both 1984), Desperately Seeking Susan, To Live and Die in L.A (both 1985), The Color of Money, Gung Ho, Hannah and Her Sisters, Off Beat (all 1986) and The Sicilian (1987). He finally caught the attention of critics-and audiences-with his ultracreepy portrayal of a neighborhood nut fixated on Jodie Foster in the urban comedydrama Five Corners (1987). Since that time he's become a favorite of director Spike Lee and producer-director siblings Ethan and Joel Coen, who've cast him in a total of six films between them. His portrayals of extremely unsavory Jewish characters in Lee's Mo' Better Blues and the Coens' Miller's Crossing (1990), and of a thickheaded Italian racist in Do the Right Thing (1989) were controversial, but most of the flak was directed at the filmmakers rather than the actor. He appeared in Dennis Hopper's Backtrack (1989) and a pair of contemporary gangster films, State of Grace (1990) and Men of Respect (1991), and Barton Fink (also 1991; he had starring roles in the last two). That same year he proved he could play sympathetic characters just as well, giving a touching performance as a befuddled but good-hearted spurned boyfriend in Lee's interracial romance-cumpolemic Jungle Fever (also ...[MORE]
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