|
|
|
|
|
|
David Keith (born May 8, 1954 in Knoxville, Tennessee) is an American actor
and director. He supported Richard Gere in An Officer and a Gentleman, held
a prominent supporting role in U-571 opposite Matthew McConaughey, and
starred in The Lords of Discipline and White of the Eye. He directed The
Curse and The Further Adventures of Tennessee Buck.
Tennessee-born and bred with a handsome broad face and solid build, David
Keith has frequently excelled playing virile, Southern characters at home in
his own native idiom. He began his career as a member of the Clarence Brown
Theatre Company at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, where he earned
his Equity card appearing in musicals like "Brigadoon" and "The Music Man".
***
***
After graduation, Keith moved to NYC and acted at Connecticut's Goodspeed
Opera House in the country and western musical "The Red Bluegrass Western
Flyer Show" (1977). Relocating to L.A., he landed a guest shot on the
popular ABC sitcom "Happy Days" in 1978 and then co-starred in the extremely
short-lived sitcom "Co-Ed Fever" (CBS, 1979), a knock-off of the hit feature
"Animal House" that aired only once. Keith appeared in support of Carol
Burnett and Ned Beatty in the award-winning drama "Friendly Fire" (ABC,
1979) and starred as an American athlete romancing a Soviet gymnast (Stephanie
Zimbalist) in the 1980 NBC miniseries "The Golden Moment--An Olympic Love
Story".
Registering strongly in his feature debut as a bodyguard to Bette Midler's
rock star in "The Rose" and in his follow-up as a bigoted redneck in "The
Great Santini" (both 1979), Keith went on to play a prisoner who trusts too
much in the system in "Brubaker" (1980), a childhood friend of Robert Hays
in the witless "Take This Job and Shove It" (1981) and a mechanic romancing
Kathleen Quinlan in "Independence Day" (1982). His breakout performance came
that year as Richard Gere's seemingly stalwart buddy Sid Whorley in Taylor
Hackford's "An Officer and a Gentleman", after which he starred as the nice
guy cadet who wants to end the hate at a South Carolina military academy in
"The Lords of Discipline" (1983). A government experiment led to his
acquiring psychokinetic powers that were not quite the equal of his daughter
(Drew Barrymore) in "Firestarter" (1984), but he and the all-star cast
played second fiddle to the real star of this Stephen King adaptation, the
special effects.
Keith made an auspicious feature directorial bow with "The Curse/The Farm"
(1987), a horror film about a meteorite that lands on a Tennessee farm
causing the food and water to become contaminated. He also helmed and
starred in the Indiana Jones knock-off "The Further Adventures of Tennessee
Buck" (1988), as well as the music video for Patty Loveless' "Blame It on
Your Heart" (1992). A fine singer who had once considered a career in music
before a string of film and TV assignments altered his course, he
contributed vocals to the soundtrack of "The Curse" and picked up his first
screen credit as song performer on Donald Cammell's bizarre thriller "White
of the Eye" (also 1987), in which he starred as the psycho husband of Cathy
Moriarty. Keith then had a blast as Elvis Presley in the whimsical "Heartbreak
Hotel" (1988), singing for the 'King' on a number of his famous tunes,
including the title song, "How Great Thou Art" and "That's All Right", among
others. As a songwriter, he collaborated with Leon Russell on the theme for
the short-lived sitcom "Flesh 'n Blood" (NBC, 1991), in which he also
starred.
Keith won critical acclaim for his titular turn in the CBS miniseries "Guts
& Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver North" (1989) but reverted to mostly
supporting roles in diverse feature fare like "The Two Jakes" (1990), David
S Ward's baseball comedy "Major League II" (1994) and the children's movies
"The Indian in the Cupboard" and "Gold Diggers: The Secret of Bear Mountain"
(both 1995). After he starred in the ABC movie "Whose Child Is This? The War
for Baby Jessica" (1993) and garnered praise as Jim Bowie in the ABC
miniseries "James Michener's Texas" (1994), the chance to work with co-creator
and executive producer Steven Spielberg lured him back as a series regular
on the ABC police drama "High Incident" (1996-97), although the result was
the same as his earlier forays to episodic TV. Following B-features like "Judge
and Jury" (1996) and a steady diet of made-for-TV movies, Keith finally
surfaced in two mainstream pictures in 2000, portraying a gung-ho marine
leading a mission to capture spy secrets from a German submarine in "U-571"
and joining Robert De Niro and Cuba Gooding Jr for "Men of Honor", the
inspirational true-life story of Carl Brashear, the Navy's first African-American
Master Diver. Keith kept busy in supporting roles and television fare such
as the ABC TV re-make of Steven King's classic horror novel "Carrie" (2002)
and Sci-Fi's original cable telepic "Sabretooth", then tackled another high-profile,
big screen supporting outing as boxer Jack 'The Devil' Murdock, a down-and-out
prizefighter whose tragic fate inspires his blind-but-gifted son to become
the comic book super hero "Daredevil" (2003). Vastly different in direction
was his role in the Hilary Duff melodrama "Raise Your Voice" (2004) as a
father reluctant to let his talented daughter attend a performing arts
school in Los Angeles. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
DAVID KEITH PICTURES |
|
|
Warning: include() [function.include]: URL file-access is disabled in the server configuration in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/d/david-keith/david-keith-biography.htm on line 126
Warning: include(http://www.123celebs.net/footer.htm) [function.include]: failed to open stream: no suitable wrapper could be found in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/d/david-keith/david-keith-biography.htm on line 126
Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening 'http://www.123celebs.net/footer.htm' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home/iguazufa/public_html/123celebs.net/d/david-keith/david-keith-biography.htm on line 126
|