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This son of noted character actor Lloyd Bochner made his film debut as the
oldest son of George C Scott in "Islands in the Stream" (1976), adapted from
the unfinished Hemingway novel. His chiseled good looks, thick dark hair and
soulful brown eyes made him a natural to play charming cads, and Hart
Bochner began honing that screen persona as the preppie nemesis to Dennis
Christopher in the Oscar-nominated sleeper "Breaking Away" (1979). Along
those same lines, he went on to portray Doc, the sinister and scheming
medical student in the Canadian thriller "Terror Train" (1980) before "Rich
and Famous" (1981), George Cukor's remake of 1943's "Old Acquaintance",
allowed him to display a sexier side as the journalist lover of the slightly
older Jacqueline Bisset. Unfortunately, "Supergirl" (1984) reduced him to
beefcake, and his other film that year, "The Wild Life", was an unsuccessful
attempt to clone "Fast Times at Ridgemont High" and did nothing for his
career.
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Bochner found success and more varied roles on the small screen, making his
TV-movie debut in "Haywire" (CBS, 1979) as Bill Hayward, the troubled son (and
the picture's grown-up producer) of theatrical agent-producer Leland Hayward
and his wife Margaret Sullavan. He also grew a beard for his role as the
younger husband of a female bigamist (Dyan Cannon) in the hilarious "Having
It All" (ABC, 1982), a great vehicle for Cannon's talent and charm. However,
his most notable TV appearances came opposite Jane Seymour in three
miniseries outings. He first played her adult son in ABC's "John Steinbeck's
'East of Eden'" (1981), but in "Ernest Hemingway's 'The Sun Also Rises'"
(NBC, 1984) they appeared as the star-crossed lovers Lady Brett Ashley and
Jake Barnes, who had been left impotent by a war wound. The pair later
teamed as a husband and wife separated by WWII in the epic miniseries "War
and Remembrance" (ABC, 1988-89).
Back on the big screen, Bochner acted in "Making Mr. Right" (1987), then
delivered a brief, yet memorable turn as an unethical, opportunistic
businessman who flirts with the wife of Bruce Willis' character and pays the
ultimate price for his treachery in "Die Hard" (1988). Teaming with
Argentinean writer-director Martin Donovan, he tackled his first leading
role in a feature, offering an arresting turn as a sexually ambiguous
roommate of a Buenos Aires movie theater owner (Colin Firth) in "Apartment
Zero" (also 1988). His role as an assassin-turned-serial killer, considered
by many to be his best, courted controversy in an Argentina still reeling
from the political turmoil that saw thousands of people disappear. 1990's "Fellow
Traveller" (released theatrically in Europe and shown on HBO in the USA)
proved a worthy follow-up, casting him as a dashing movie star who runs
afoul of the blacklist during the McCarthy era, but he returned to playing
the bad guy as a sleazy executive in that year's "Mr. Destiny", which teamed
him for the first time with Jon Lovitz. For his second film with Donovan, he
managed to get by on unshaven-hunk appeal in the little seen "Mad at the
Moon" (1992).
Although he continued to appear in such TV fare as "Children of the Dust"
(CBS, 1995), Bochner began to move toward a career behind the camera. In
1992, he wrote, produced and directed the short "The Buzz", starring Lovitz.
Two years later, he tackled his first feature, "PCU", a boisterous though
flawed look at "political correctness" on college campuses that featured
Jeremy Piven, David Spade and Megan Ward. His sophomore effort, "High School
High" (1996), penned by David Zucker, Robert N LoCash and Pat Proft,
reunited him with Lovitz who played an idealistic teacher working in a
run-down, urban bastion of education. While there were some funny gags, the
script veered between realism and farce and proved ultimately unsatisfying.
With no directing projects forthcoming, Bochner stepped before the camera as
Bridget Fonda's abusive husband in "Break Up" (Cinemax, 1999) and was back
in his best beefcake mode as Susan Sarandon's younger lover in "Anywhere But
Here" (also 1999). He followed with a turn as Professor Solomon in John
Ottman's directing debut, "Urban Legends: The Final Cut" (2000).. |
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