Paul Rudd (born April 6, 1969) is an American actor. He was
born to Jewish immigrants from England in Passaic, New Jersey and raised
in Lenexa, Kansas. He attended the University of Kansas.
His credits include Clueless, Wet Hot American Summer, The Cider House
Rules, Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, Romeo and Juliet, Friends
(in the recurring role of Mike Hannigan, who married Phoebe Buffay in
2004), and The 40-Year-Old Virgin.
Biography
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A disarming smile and effortless charm have helped actor Paul Rudd make
his name on the stage and screen as well as to cultivate an avid following
as a sensitive beefcake. Born in New Jersey to British parents, he studied
theater at the University of Kansas before attending Pasadena's American
Academy of Dramatic Arts on a Spencer Tracy Scholarship. He also spent a
semester at Oxford's British Drama Academy, where he appeared as "Hamlet" in
scenes directed by Ben Kingsley. While in England, he also co-produced the
Globe Theatre's production of Howard Brenton's "Bloody Poetry", in which he
starred as Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Returning to the USA in the early 1990s, he began his career billed as Paul
Stephen Rudd to avoid confusion with stage and TV actor Paul Rudd (born
1940), receiving great exposure with his first role as an aspiring filmmaker
married to Reed Halsey (Ashley Judd, later Noelle Parker) on the NBC series
"Sisters", a role he played from 1992 to 1995. He also began appearing in
longforms, including the CBS miniseries "The Fire Next Time" (1993), the
drama "Moment of Truth: Stalking Back" (NBC, 1993) and Joe Dante's "Runaway
Daughters" segment of Showtime's "Rebel Highway" (1994). Displaying his
comic skills, Rudd co-starred as a genial Chicago social worker opposite Tim
Conlan as his raunchy photographer roommate in the short-lived
twentysomethings sitcom "Wild Oats" (Fox, 1994).
Paul Rudd broke through in Amy Heckerling's hit comedy "Clueless" (1995),
playing Alicia Silverstone's
serious, college-aged know-it-all stepbrother and would-be love interest. As
this anchor amid the giggly schoolgirls, he began to ignite the fantasies of
boy-next-door seekers everywhere. That year, he was also the protagonist in
the less impressive "Halloween 6: The Curse of
Michael Myers". (This was actually
his first screen role, but the finished film debuted after "Clueless".) The
following year, he played a jazzed-up Paris (renamed 'Dave Paris') in Baz
Luhrmann's updated, rock 'n' roll version of "William
Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet" and a goofy aspiring filmmaker in the
comedy "The Size of Watermelons" (shown at Cannes). He followed with a
supporting role in the period drama "The Locusts", which reunited him with
Ashley Judd, then played a young man attempting to retrieve a Dear Jane
letter in the middling comedy "Overnight Delivery" (both 1997).
Paul Rudd continued turning heads as a gay man involved with an unwed mother
(Jennifer Aniston) in Nicholas
Hytner's "The Object of My Affection" (1998). Despite the vanilla aspects
attending a contrived romance doomed by its players' inherently different
instinctual drives, Rudd's intelligent portrayal elevated his nice-guy role
above what playwright-screenwriter Wendy Wasserstein had provided for him.
Having made his Broadway debut in Alfred Uhry's "The Last Night of Ballyhoo"
(1997), he initially balked at leaving its cast to make "Affection" but
returned after shooting completed to resume his part as the suitor to a
dissenting member of a Jewish family trying to assimilate in Atlanta in the
1930s. The following year saw him reteam with Hytner, this time on the Great
White Way, as the lovesick Orsino, spouting the Bard's most poetic lines
from "Twelfth Night" alongside Helen Hunt.
After sporting long, pointed sideburns for his role as a recently jilted
lover in "200 Cigarettes", Paul Rudd returned to the stage opposite Calista
Flockhart in "Bash", a trio of one-acts by Neil LaBute. In the evening's
final segment, he and Flockhart portrayed Mormon college students visiting
NYC with Rudd, playing off his boyish charm, delivered a chilling
description of his character's participation in a brutal attack on two gay
men. (He went on to reprise the role in L.A. and London.) Moving back to the
big screen, he co-starred as WWII pilot Wally Worthington in Lasse
Hallstrom's "The Cider House Rules" (both 1999), the first of John Irving's
novels adapted by the writer himself. Unfortunately, the streamlined film
narrative reduced the part dramatically from its prose origins and left Rudd
with little to do. There was no reducing his next roles, however. Rudd
starred opposite Andie MacDowell in "Reaching Normal" (Showtime, 2000),
written and directed by Anne Heche, and traded on his preppy looks to embody
F Scott Fitzgerald narrator Nick Carraway in the 2001 A&E adaptation of "The
Great Gatsby". A deft turn in the uneven but oft-hilarious comedy "Wet Hot
American Summer" (2001) set the stage for one of Rudd's more memorable (and
visible) roles when he landed the plumb part of Mike Hannigan, Phoebe's
straight-laced and level-headed beau, on the hit sitcom "Friends" from
2002-2004. Another key Rudd performance couldn't have been further from the
"Friends" world: Neil La Bute's "The Shape of Things" (2003), another of the
auteur's sharp-edged, harsh looks at the battles of the sexes in which Rudd
played a young man who seemingly makes himself over radically after becoming
involved with a mysterious beauty (Rachel Weisz). He then reversed course
and took a role opposite Will Ferrell in the comedy "Anchorman: The Legend
of Ron Burgandy" (2004), the most effective demonstration of his comedic
skills to date, playing a misogynist expose reporter in 1970s era San Diego
who bolsters news anchor Burgandy's (Ferrell) attempts to freeze out their
station's first female on-air reporter (Christina Applegate).
Paul Rudd's
increasingly deft comic abilities landed him in another major hit comedy
"The 40 Year-Old Virgin" (2005), written and directed by "Anchorman's
producer Judd Apatow and starring Steve Carell, Rudd's co-supporting player
in the earlier film. Rudd played one of the supportive, if sometimes
misguided, co-workers trying to help Carell's character find ways to relieve
himself of his virginity while descending into the depths of depression
himself because he can't get over a short-lived romance.
Film List
This Paul Rudd Biography Page is Copyright The Planets © 2004 - 2006 Chuck Ayoub