Bruce Weitz

About Bruce Weitz

He made his Broadway debut in a revival of "Death of a Salesman" (1976), starring George C. Scott, and subsequently acted in Broadway productions of "The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel" (alongside Al Pacino) and "Norman, Is That You?". The compact, wiry Weitz also performed in 13 New York Shakespeare Festival productions from 1976-1980 but began making the transition from stage to TV at the end of the 70s, guest-starring on various series including "Quincy", "Kojak", "The White Shadow", "One Day at a Time" and "Lou Grant" while segueing to feature films in "The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover" (1977).

Weitz's big break came when he landed the role of the vaguely maniacal Mick Belker on Steven Bochco's landmark police-drama "Hill Street Blues" (NBC, 1981-87). His scruffy little undercover cop endeared himself to viewers by sometimes biting offenders, barking at dogs or terrorizing surly criminals ("Would you like to sit down, hairball, or would you prefer internal bleeding?"), earning him a 1984 Emmy as Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series as well as five other nominations. Since that series' demise, Weitz has stayed busy primarily on the small screen, acting frequently in movies and episodic TV, although he has occasionally performed on stage as in the Off-Broadway production of "Frankie and Johnny in the Claire de Lune" (1988). He returned as a series regular playing a newspaper columnist for one season (1991-92) on the ABC sitcom "Anything But Love" and reunited with Bochco as a psychiatrist counseling a family transplanted in Hawaii in the short-lived "The Byrds of Paradise" (ABC, 1994). He also appeared in the feature films "Deep Impact" (1998) and "Half Past Dead" (2002).

Partners

Wife

Cecilia Hart. second wife; married in 1973; divorced in 1980; later married actor James Earl Jones

Education

Ransom High School, Miami , Florida

Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania

Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania

Career Milestones

2002

Cast in the action feature "Half Past Dead"

2001

Appeared in the dramatic stage version of "Heaven Can Wait", performed at Westport Country Playhouse

1998

Played Stuart Caley in Mimi Leder's "Deep Impact"

Guest-starred on episodes of "Profiler" (NBC), "Jag" (CBS) and old buddy Bochco's "NYPD Blue" (ABC)

1996

Acted the role of Detective Steve McAdams in "Justice for Annie: A Moment of Truth Movie" (NBC)

1995

Portrayed Robert Shapiro in the Fox TV-movie "The Story of O J Simpson"

1994

Appeared in the regular role of psychiatrist Murray Rubenstein in the short-lived ABC series "The Byrds of Paradise", executive produced by Bochco

1991

Played Manager Miller Huggins in "Babe Ruth", an NBC movie starring Stephen Lang as the Sultan of Swat

Had regular role as Mike Urbanek in the ABC sitcom "Anything But Love"

1989

Received another Emmy nomination for his performance on an episode of "Midnight Caller" (NBC)

1988

Appeared Off-Broadway in Terrence McNally's "Frankie and Johnny in the Claire de Lune"

1988

Earned an Emmy nomination for his work as Rick Whitehead in the ABC two-part docudrama "Baby M"

1983

Hosted both parts of the PBS documentary about drug abuse "The Chemical People"

1981

Played Sergeant Mike Pirelli in "Every Stray Dog and Kid", an unsuccessful NBC pilot executive produced by "Hill Street Blues" executive producer Steven Bochco

Portrayed Detective Mick Belker in critically-acclaimed NBC series "Hill Street Blues"; nominated for six Emmys during its run, winning once in 1984; show executive produced by Steven Bochco

1981

Acted the part of Paul Snider in NBC movie "Death of a Centerfold: The Dorothy Stratten Story"

1977

Feature debut, "The Private Files of J Edgar Hoover"

Appeared in 13 New York Shakespeare Festival Productions

Subsequently appeared in Broadway productions of "The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel" and "Norman, Is That You?"

1976

Broadway debut in "Death of a Salesman", starring George C Scott as Willy Loman

1975

Appeared on the ABC daytime serial, "Ryan's Hope"

Worked at Actors Theatre of Louisville (KY)

1972

Acted in Chicago stage production of "In the Matter of J Robert Oppenheimer"

Performed at Arena Stage, Washington DC

1967

Moved onto the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis, MN

1966

Joined Long Wharf Repertory Theatre in New Haven, CT

1966

Managed a restaurant on the Spanish island Formentera