Philip Baker Hall

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Philip Baker Hall
Born September 10, 1931 (1931-09-10) (age 76)
Toledo, Ohio

Philip Baker Hall (born September 10, 1931) is an American actor.

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[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Hall was born in Toledo, Ohio and attended the University of Toledo.[1] As a younger man, Hall served in the military, started a family and became a high school English teacher. In 1961, he decided to become an actor. He moved to New York, enjoying success in Off Broadway and Broadway productions.

[edit] Career

In 1975, Hall moved to Los Angeles to make a career in television. Since then, he has had over 200 guest roles on television shows.

He starred in many films, including Robert Altman's Secret Honor in which he played Richard Nixon, but had not garnered much recognition for his performances. It was not until Paul Thomas Anderson wrote a role in his film Hard Eight, specifically for Hall, that a cult following arose. (Anderson was a big fan of Hall's work, particularly Secret Honor.) Hall went on to have significant roles in Anderson's two subsequent films, Boogie Nights and Magnolia. He also had a minor role as Captain Diel in the Rush Hour trilogy (though his scenes were cut from the theatrical release of Rush Hour 2).

Additionally, Hall has had roles in Ghostbusters II, Say Anything, The Rock , The Truman Show, Bruce Almighty, In Good Company, Dogville, The Amityville Horror, The Matador and Zodiac. More recently, he played a recurring role in the 2006-07 FOX sitcom The Loop.

Hall is well known to Seinfeld fans as Mr. Bookman, the 'library cop' who tracks Jerry down for a long-overdue library book in "The Library". More recently he appeared as a doctor on Larry David's Curb Your Enthusiasm.

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