R.I.P. Philip Baker Hall, Beloved Actor in Seinfeld and Paul Thomas Anderson Films Dead at 90

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The post R.I.P. Philip Baker Hall, Beloved Actor in Seinfeld and Paul Thomas Anderson Films Dead at 90 appeared first on Consequence.

Philip Baker Hall, legendary character actor and frequent collaborator with Paul Thomas Anderson, is dead at the age of 90, his neighbor Sam Farmer confirmed.

“My neighbor, friend, and one of the wisest, most talented and kindest people I’ve ever met, Philip Baker Hall, died peacefully last night,” Farmer wrote on Twitter. “He was surrounded by loved ones. The world has an empty space in it.” Hall had been suffering from emphysema for several years.

Hall appeared in Anderson’s first three feature films, starring in Hard Eight and joining memorable ensembles in Boogie Nights and Magnolia. He also booked one of the most memorable guest parts in Seinfeld history as library cop Lt. Joe Bookman, and had scene-stealing roles as a doctor in Curb Your Enthusiasm and a grouchy neighbor on Modern Family.

Born September 10th, 1931, Hall served as an Army translator in Germany, where a theater troupe director encouraged him to pursue his passion for acting. He made his feature film debut in 1970’s Cowards, and had intermittent success throughout the next decade and a half.

“If I had known who I was as an actor back then, my career probably would have been more successful,” Hall told The Washington Post in 2017. “You keep getting cast in a certain kind of role. It’s hard to break out of that.”

Hall caught his big break in his mid-50s after he was cast as Richard Nixon in Robert Altman’s classic film, Secret Honor. The one-man film followed the disgraced former president as he dictated for 90 minutes into a tape recorder. “Nixon is portrayed by Philip Baker Hall, an actor previously unknown to me, with such savage intensity, such passion, such venom, such scandal, that we cannot turn away,” Roger Ebert wrote at the time. “Hall looks a little like the real Nixon; he could be a cousin, and he sounds a little like him. That’s close enough. This is not an impersonation, it’s a performance.”

Hall had small parts on M.A.S.H. and Murder, She Wrote, and played a police commissioner in 1989’s Ghostbusters II. In 1991, he co-starred in one of the most cherished Seinfeld episodes, “The Library,” warning Jerry, “I’ll be all over you like a pit bull on a poodle.” The library cop was such a fan-favorite that he returned for “The Finale.”

By this time Hall had discovered what worked for him: “Men who are highly stressed, older men, who are at the limit of their tolerance for suffering and stress and pain,” he said. “I had an affinity for playing those roles.”

In 1993, Hall starred in the Paul Thomas Anderson short Cigarettes and Coffee, helping launch the young director’s career while kicking off one of the most fertile collaborations in film history. He mentored a then-unknown John C. Reilly in Hard Eight, pushed for porn to shoot on video tape as Floyd Gondolli in 1997’s Boogie Nights, and in 1999’s Magnolia, gave a heartbreaking performance as children’s television host Jimmy Gator.

One of the most prolific character actors in Hollywood, Hall also appeared in The Truman Show, Rush Hour, Rush Hour 2, and Rush Hour 3, Dogville, Bruce Almighty, The Amityville Horror, Zodiac, and Argo. Among his leading roles, 2005’s Duck is often cited as a favorite.

Check out a collection of clips from his storied career below.

R.I.P. Philip Baker Hall, Beloved Actor in Seinfeld and Paul Thomas Anderson Films Dead at 90
Wren Graves

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