James Woods

Biography: Whether playing a hero or a villain, Woods is a master at making sleaziness seem sexy, and vice versa. Armed with a skinny frame, craggy features and explosive energy, this charismatic player dropped out of MIT to pursue acting. After moving to New York, he dabbled in stage work and debuted on Broadway in a 1970 production of Borstal Boy. As he launched his acting career on the stage, he won a Theatre World Award for his role in the play Moonchildren and an Obie for his performance in an Off-Broadway production of Saved. Although he spent the '70s in small roles, he broke through as a psychotic criminal in the harrowing 1979 drama The Onion Field. It was a testament to his talent that he got typecast as a big-screen baddy: an obsessive cable TV operator in Videodrome (1983), a manipulative drug dealer in Against All Odds (1984), and a Jewish gangster in Once Upon a Time in America (1984). He earned his first Oscar nod for Salvador (1986), as a reckless American journalistWhether playing a hero or a villain, Woods is a master at making sleaziness seem sexy, and vice versa. Armed with a skinny frame, craggy features and explosive energy, this charismatic player dropped out of MIT to pursue acting. After moving to New York, he dabbled in stage work and debuted on Broadway in a 1970 production of Borstal Boy. As he launched his acting career on the stage, he won a Theatre World Award for his role in the play Moonchildren and an Obie for his performance in an Off-Broadway production of Saved. Although he spent the '70s in small roles, he broke through as a psychotic criminal in the harrowing 1979 drama The Onion Field. It was a testament to his talent that he got typecast as a big-screen baddy: an obsessive cable TV operator in Videodrome (1983), a manipulative drug dealer in Against All Odds (1984), and a Jewish gangster in Once Upon a Time in America (1984). He earned his first Oscar nod for Salvador (1986), as a reckless American journalist caught up in the title country's civil unrest. Yet despite his critical accolades, Hollywood didn't view Woods as leading-man material in films. In 1989, he tried to soften up on the silver screen for leading man roles as an adoptive dad in Immediate Family and as a lawyer in True Believer. Neither film drew large audiences, and he spent the next few decades turning in excellent supporting performances on the big screen — a hustler in Diggstown (1992), Sharon Stone's lowlife ex in Casino (1995), and a key player in the Watergate scandal in Nixon (1995). His turn as an unrepentant racist killer in Ghosts of Mississippi (1996) earned him a second Academy Award nomination, and he continued to play scheming types on the silver screen with roles as a calculating commanding officer in The General's Daughter (1999), a football team doctor in Any Given Sunday (1999), and a father in The Virgin Suicides (2000). Concurrently, he essayed larger and less conniving roles on the small screen. He won two Emmys in a pair of TV-movies opposite James Garner — as a schizophrenic in Promise and as the cofounder of Alcoholics Anonymous in My Name Is Bill W. — and he also played New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani in an eponymous, post-9/11 telepic. In 2006, he took on his first series-regular role as a crusading defense lawyer in Shark, but the CBS drama ended and he returned to feature films as the voice of a surf enthusiast in the kid-friendly animated feature Surf's Up (2007). Next, he was cast in the thriller Straw Dogs. Off screen, Woods' personal life has always seemed as intense as his roles. A twice-married ladies' man, he engaged in a very public war with Sean Young, his ex-girlfriend and costar in The Boost, whom he accused of harassment. At age 59, he dated 20-year-old starlet Ashley Madison, the daughter of one of his golfing buddies. In his spare time, he is an avid poker player. Expand

James Woods' Scores

Average career score: 63
Highest Metascore: 75 Ray Donovan: Season 1
Lowest Metascore: 53 Family Guy: Season 1
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 7
  2. Negative: 0 out of 7
7 tv reviews
Title: Year: Credit: User score:
tbd Family Guy: Season 15 Sep 25, 2016 Himself 4.6
75 Ray Donovan: Season 1 Jun 30, 2013 Patrick "Sully" Sullivan (Uncredited) 7.6
56 Coma: Season 1 Sep 3, 2012 Actor 5.4
tbd The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson: Season 8 Aug 23, 2011 Guest tbd
60 Piers Morgan Tonight: Season 1 Jan 17, 2011 Guest tbd
tbd Family Guy: Season 9 Sep 26, 2010 Himself / James Woods 6.4
tbd The View: Season 14 Sep 7, 2010 James Woods / James Woods tbd
tbd Family Guy: Season 8 Sep 27, 2009 Himself / Gen. James Woods 6.2
tbd Shark: Season 2 Sep 23, 2007 Sebastian Stark / Producer / Sebastian Stark tbd
60 Shark: Season 1 Sep 21, 2006 Sebastian Stark / Sebastian Stark 7.9
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 15 Sep 18, 2006 Guest / Guest tbd
73 Entourage: Season 3 Jun 11, 2006 Himself / Guest 8.6
tbd ER: Season 12 Sep 22, 2005 Dr. Nate Lennox tbd
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 14 Sep 19, 2005 Guest tbd
tbd Celebrity Poker Showdown: Season 4 Aug 18, 2005 Guest tbd
63 Family Guy: Season 4 May 1, 2005 Himself 7.1
tbd Jimmy Kimmel Live: Season 3 Jan 1, 2005 James Woods tbd
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 13 Sep 20, 2004 Guest / Guest tbd
tbd Celebrity Poker Showdown: Season 2 Jun 3, 2004 Guest tbd
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 12 Sep 2, 2003 Guest tbd
tbd Jimmy Kimmel Live: Season 1 Jan 25, 2003 James Woods 2.8
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 11 Sep 23, 2002 Guest / Guest tbd
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 10 Sep 24, 2001 Guest / Guest tbd
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 9 Oct 9, 2000 Guest tbd
53 Family Guy: Season 1 Jan 31, 1999 Himself 7.4
tbd The View: Season 4 Jul 28, 1998 James Woods tbd
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 3 Jul 4, 1994 Guest tbd
tbd The Simpsons: Season 5 Sep 30, 1993 Himself 9.5
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 2 Jun 7, 1993 Guest tbd
tbd The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Season 1 May 25, 1992 Guest 3.4