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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Ryan Gilbey

William Hurt obituary

William Hurt in Broadcast News, 1987. He perfected the art of playing men demonstrably less intelligent than he was.
William Hurt in Broadcast News, 1987. He perfected the art of playing men demonstrably less intelligent than he was. Photograph: Archive Photos/Getty Images

As the blockbuster continued its unstoppable ascent in the 1980s, an antidote of sorts could be found in many of the films of the actor William Hurt, who has died aged 71 of cancer. With his floppy blond hair, high forehead and droll, methodical voice, he exhibited a cerebral presence and an enviable range. He could seem erudite, threatening or suave, though he was at his most interesting playing men who were demonstrably less intelligent than he was.

These included a dim-witted but charismatic TV anchor in Broadcast News (1987) and a brutish gangster hunting his own brother in A History of Violence (2005).

He was Oscar-nominated for both those films, as well as for his performance as a teacher at a school for deaf students in Children of a Lesser God (1986). He won the best actor award only once, for playing an extravagantly camp gay inmate spinning stories in a South American prison in Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985). His victory left him feeling torn. “When they called my name out, I really thought, ‘Oh no, no, no, no, don’t put that target on my chest, don’t do this,’” he said in 2010.

William Hurt and Marlee Matlin in Children of a Lesser God, 1986.
William Hurt and Marlee Matlin in Children of a Lesser God, 1986. Photograph: Paramount Pictures/Allstar

Having established himself in the 70s as a stage actor, Hurt initially turned down all movie offers. This inbuilt reluctance made his film work, when it finally came, feel fascinatingly conflicted, as though he was regarding the medium itself with scepticism. Reviewing his debut film, Altered States (1980), in which he starred as a scientist dabbling in genetic regression experiments, the critic Pauline Kael identified his “cool, quivering untrustworthiness… [he plays] the kind of cunning maniac who’s always watching to see how people react to his mania.”

As he matured, his appearance changed from preppy to professorial, and he became a regular fixture in the sorts of films to which he had once provided an alternative. If younger modern audiences knew him at all, it was from his recurring role as a US general in Marvel superhero adventures such as Captain America: Civil War (2016), Avengers: Infinity War (2018), Avengers: Endgame (2019) and Black Widow (2021).

He was born in Washington DC, to Claire (nee McGill), a business manager at Time, and Alfred Hurt, a diplomat who worked in US foreign assistance. After the couple divorced when William was six (his mother remarried in 1960, becoming Claire McGill Luce), he travelled with his father during his various postings, living in cities including Khartoum and Mogadishu. He was educated at the Middlesex school in Massachusetts, where he first began acting, then at Tufts University in the same state, and the Juilliard School in New York, where he studied drama.

William Hurt in Kiss of the Spider Woman, 1985, for which he won an Oscar.
William Hurt in Kiss of the Spider Woman, 1985, for which he won an Oscar. Photograph: Photos 12/Alamy

His work with that city’s Circle Repertory Company, where he was a performer from 1977 until 1982, brought him special acclaim. It was in 1978 that he happened to bump into the producer Howard Gottfried, who was having trouble finding an actor to play the lead in a film that Paddy Chayefsky had written about a scientist obsessed with the origins of life. After intensive meetings with the director Arthur Penn, Hurt eventually agreed to take on the part in Altered States.

By the time shooting began, Penn had been replaced by the controversial British film-maker Ken Russell; relations between Russell and Chayefksy became so volatile that the writer took his name off the film. Nevertheless, Hurt’s intensity provided the movie with an emotional grounding during its more outlandish passages.

He quickly became the face of the slow-burning, adult-oriented thriller. He was a lawyer drawn into a passionate affair with a woman (Kathleen Turner) who persuades him to murder her husband in the modern noir Body Heat (1981). He was superb as an orderly who lies about his proximity to a murder in order to ingratiate himself with a TV journalist (Sigourney Weaver) in Eyewitness (1981), which was released in the UK as The Janitor.

In the sombre cold war mystery Gorky Park, scripted by Dennis Potter, he was a Russian police inspector. He had a chance to show a lighter side in The Big Chill (also 1983), an ensemble comedy-drama about a group of former college activists (the cast also included Glenn Close, Jeff Goldblum and Tom Berenger) who have fallen short of their youthful ideals.

Lawrence Kasdan, who directed Body Heat and The Big Chill, cast Hurt in two further films: The Accidental Tourist (1988), where he was a grieving travel writer reawakened by his relationship with a dog-trainer (Geena Davis), and the slapstick comedy I Love You to Death (1990), in which he and Keanu Reeves played the stoners hired to kill a philandering restaurateur (Kevin Kline).

Hurt also continued working in theatre. He received a Tony nomination for his performance in Mike Nichols’s 1985 production of David Rabe’s Hurlyburly, and returned to the Circle Repertory Company in 1989 for the first time in seven years to star in Joe Pintauro’s play Beside Herself.

William Hurt and Kathleen Turner in the modern noir Body Heat, 1981.
William Hurt and Kathleen Turner in the modern noir Body Heat, 1981. Photograph: Warner/Sportsphoto/Allstar

Once that decade was over, Hurt’s lustre seemed to fade. He had a small role in Woody Allen’s Alice (1990) and took the lead in Wim Wenders’s sprawling science-fiction odyssey Until the End of the World (1991). He was ideally cast as Mr Rochester in Franco Zeffirelli’s 1996 adaptation of Jane Eyre, but Nora Ephron’s sentimental fable Michael (also 1996), in which he was a journalist sent to report on a real-life angel (John Travolta), was a misstep.

He looked out of place in the intergalactic romp Lost in Space (1998) but did sympathetic work as a paternal scientist in Steven Spielberg’s AI Artificial Intelligence (2001). He was intriguing and faintly sinister as a pastor visited by the son he disowned in The King. His Oscar nomination for A History of Violence heralded a comeback: he appeared with George Clooney and Matt Damon in the political drama Syriana (also 2005), with Damon again in Robert De Niro’s thriller The Good Shepherd (2006) and as the father of a young man who goes off-grid in Sean Penn’s Into the Wild (2007).

He had a recurring role in 2009 on the legal drama Damages. In the same year, he starred in the television film Endgame as the philosophy professor Willie Esterhuyse, who was instrumental in secret talks to end apartheid in South Africa. “He hits the half notes in a role that could too easily have been conventionally righteous,” said the New York Times. Later films included Ridley Scott’s version of Robin Hood (2010) starring Russell Crowe.

Hurt was honest about his struggles with alcoholism earlier in his life, and did not dispute the allegations of physical and sexual abuse made against him by Marlee Matlin, his former partner and co-star in Children of a Lesser God, in her 2009 autobiography I’ll Scream Later. “I did and do apologise for any pain I caused,” he said.

However, he denied similar allegations made by an earlier partner, the dancer Sandra Jennings. He married Mary Beth Supinger (the actor Mary Beth Hurt) in 1971; they divorced in 1982. His second marriage, in 1989, to Heidi Henderson ended in divorce in 1992.

He is survived by his four children: Alexander, from his relationship with Jennings; William Jr and Samuel, from his marriage to Henderson; and Jeanne, from his relationship with the actor Sandrine Bonnaire.

• William McChord Hurt, actor, born 20 March 1950; died 13 March 2022

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