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Dylan Baker

Biography

  • Birthplace: Syracuse, New York
  • Birthday: October 7, 1959
This award-winning stage-trained actor has gained a high profile because of his strong performance as the zealous policeman in the riveting drama series "Murder One" (ABC, 1995-96). Baker appeared in regional theater productions as a teenager and pursued a career after graduating from the prestigious Yale School of Drama. He scored onstage in such diverse roles as a yuppie (opposite fellow "Murder One" cast mate Patricia Clarkson) in "Eastern Standard" (1989)--for which he won a Theater World Award--and as the Prince in the modern verse play "La Bete" (1991). Baker won an Obie Award for his performance in the off-Broadway production of “Not About Heroes.” On the big screen Baker has played supporting roles in diverse features including "Planes, Trains and Automobiles" (1987), "The Last of the Mohicans" (1992) and "Disclosure" (1994). Baker perhaps had his best film role playing a tightly-wound psychologist who molests children in Todd Solondz's highly-praised but controversial "Happiness" (1998), for which he earned an IFP Gotham Award and an Independent Spirit Award. That same year he appeared in Woody Allen's "Celebrity" and Tom Hanks' epic HBO miniseries "From the Earth to the Moon."

A string of adroit character turns followed in films such as "Simply Irresistable" (1999), "Random Hearts" (1999), "Oxygen" (1999), "Committed" (2000), "Requiem for a Dream" (2000) and, most visibly, the sci-fi thriller "The Cell" (2000) opposite Jennifer Lopez, but Baker's next breakthrough performance occurred opposite Kevin Costner in the crackling political potboiler "Thirteen Days" (2000) when he played Robert McNamara, John F. Kennedy's Secretary of Defense, as the Kennedy administration wrestled with the historic Cuban Missle Crisis of 1962. The following year Baker was sharp in a recurring role as a senator embroiled in a murder on the legal drama "The Practice" and continued to essay a diverse assortment of character roles--often uptight, blueblood types--in films including "The Tailor of Panama" (2001), "Along Came a Spider" (2001), "Changing Lanes" (2002), "The Laramie Project" (2002) and "The Road to Perdition" (2002). Tackling too-rare leading roles among talented ensembles, Baker played an offbeat criminal pathologist in the surreal horror-comedy "Grasp" (2002) and as an idealistic TV programmer in the earliest days of the medium in director Paris Barclay's TNT telepic "The Big Time" (2002).

Comedy next beckoned Baker, who signed on to play Chris Rock's campaign manager in the presidential comedy "Head of State" (2003) and the actor took the role of the head of the dysfunctial family "The Pitts" (2003) in the short-lived Fox sit-com. After appearing opposite Mandy Moore and Alison Janney in the teen romance "How to Deal" (2003), Baker took on yet another potentially career-defining role as Dr. Curt Conners, the one-armed scientist--who in the comic books ultimately transforms himself into the villainous Lizard--in the sequel "Spider-Man 2" (2004).

Baker has also returned to the stage for Tony Kushner’s off-Broadway play “Homebody/Kabul” and the production of “That Championship Season” at the Second Stage Theatre.

Born

On October 7, 1959 in Syracuse, New York

Job Titles

director, actor

Education

Significant Others

  • Becky Ann Baker
    born on February 17, 1953; married in 1990

TV Listings

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