Alan Cumming | |
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![]() Cumming promoting Neverwas at the 2005 Toronto Film Festival |
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Born | 27 January 1965 Aberfeldy, Perthshire, Scotland |
Occupation | Actor, director, producer, writer |
Years active | 1980–present |
Spouse | Hilary Lyon (1985–1993) Grant Shaffer (2006–present) |
Website | |
http://www.alancumming.com |
Alan Cumming, OBE (born 27 January 1965) is a Scottish stage, television and film actor, writer, director, producer and author. His roles have included the Emcee in Cabaret, Boris Grishenko in GoldenEye, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler in X2: X-Men United, and Fegan Floop in the Spy Kids trilogy. He has also appeared in independent films like The Anniversary Party, which he co-wrote, co-directed and co-starred in; and Ali Selim's Sweet Land, for which he won an Independent Spirit award as producer. His London stage appearances include Hamlet, Madman in Dario Fo's Accidental Death of an Anarchist, for which he received an Olivier award, the lead in Martin Sherman's Bent, and as Dionysus in The National Theatre of Scotland's The Bacchae. On Broadway he has appeared as Mac the Knife in The Threepenny Opera, the Emcee in Cabaret, for which he won the Tony in 1998, and "Design for Living". Cumming also introduces "Masterpiece Mystery" for PBS. He has also written a novel, Tommy's Tale, had a cable talk show ("Eavesdropping with Alan Cumming") and produced a line of perfumed products labeled "Cumming". He has contributed opinion pieces to many publications and performed a cabaret show I Bought A Blue Car Today. Retaining his British citizenship, Cumming also became a U.S. citizen in November 2008.
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Cumming was born in Aberfeldy, in Perthshire, Scotland, the son of Mary Darling, an insurance company secretary, and Alex Cumming, a forester. He has stated that his father was physically and emotionally abusive towards him.[1][2] He has one older brother, Tom, and a niece. He is bisexual, and has been married to a woman and subsequently to a man. Brought up in Angus, Cumming attended Monikie Primary School and Carnoustie High School and originally aspired to a career in veterinary medicine, but a personality clash with his biology teacher prevented him from taking a related elective and he subsequently set his sights on becoming an actor.[3] Following graduation, he spent a year and a half employed as an editor and columnist for the Scottish pop magazine TOPS before entering the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow. On graduation from Drama school he married fellow student Hilary Lyon; they divorced 8 years later and had no children.
Cumming played Sean Walsh, an unwanted suitor of Minnie Driver's character, in Circle of Friends, an Irish film released in 1995.
In 1995 he played Boris Ivanovich Grishenko in the James Bond film GoldenEye.
Cumming co-wrote, co-directed, co-produced, and co-starred in the ensemble film The Anniversary Party with friend and former Cabaret co-star Jennifer Jason Leigh, in 2001.[4] The two starred in the movie as a Hollywood couple.
Cumming starred in and directed Suffering Man's Charity, later released as Ghost Writer. He had prominent roles in the Spy Kids trilogy, X-Men 2 (as Nightcrawler), and was in Spice World, as well as Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut, Josie and the Pussycats and Son of the Mask, along with acting in the Flintstones movie Viva Rock Vegas. He played Saturninus in the 1999 Julie Taymor film production of Titus
Cumming played a psychotic ex-amusement park employee in David Munro's Full Grown Men, which was shown in theaters throughout the U.S. in summer 2008.
In Gray Matters, a 2007 romantic comedy film directed by Sue Kramer, Cumming plays cab driver Gordy who had a crush on Gray (Heather Graham). It premiered on October 21, 2006 at the Hamptons International Film Festival and had a U.S. theatrical release on February 23, 2007.
In 2010, Cumming will provide the voice of Adolf Hitler in the film Jackboots on Whitehall as well as co-star in "Boogie Woogie".
During his career, Cumming has also directed two short films, Butter and Burn Your Phone. The latter began its life as a one-off drama on BBC Radio 4.
In the mid-1980s Cumming made brief appearances in Scottish television shows including Take The High Road and Taggart. His first major television role was in the Christmas 1991 comedy Bernard and the Genie, a Richard Curtis-scripted one-off show where he starred alongside Lenny Henry and Rowan Atkinson.
Cumming starred as Sebastian Flight in the Scottish sitcom The High Life in 1994-5. The series was written by Cumming and co-star Forbes Masson, continuing an acting-writing partnership the two had developed since their drama school days. Masson and Cumming also formed a cult Kelvinside musical double act "Victor and Barry", which was filmed for an stv show and were nominated for a Perrier Award in the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1988, toured Australia in 1989, playing the Sydney Opera House, released a record ("See Victor and Barry and Faint") but were killed off onstage at the London Palladium in the early 1990s.
In 2001, he guest starred in the HBO comedy Sex and the City as O the designer in the episode, 'The Real Me'. 2003 saw him playing a cameo role in the American sitcom Frasier, playing Niles's yoga instructor. He also guest starred on "3rd Rock from the Sun".
In 2004, he starred in Showtime's Reefer Madness: The Movie Musical in which he played the role of The Lecturer – a versatile character who narrates the story and transforms himself into several other minor characters. Shortly afterwards, he had a short role in Richard Bell's feature film Eighteen. He appeared in BBC show, Shoebox Zoo as the humble, kind-hearted Bruno.
Cumming played the role of Bill Blaikie, a gay drag queen party promoter hired by Kit Porter to manage her café cum nightclub, in season 3 of The L Word, having an affair with Moira/Max, a transgendered character. He appeared in episodes 2 to 7, which originally aired on Showtime in 2006.
In 2007, Cumming played Glitch/Ambrose, an inventor whose brain had been partially removed, in the TV miniseries, Tin Man. He also provided the voice of Chuck Masters, a 50 year-old, paralyzed, HIV-positive gay man in Logo's Rick and Steve, a stop animation sitcom created by Q. Allan Brocka.
He is also the host of the 2008–2010 seasons of the PBS Masterpiece Mystery! series.
Cumming also appeared as the third celebrity hijacker in Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack, giving the housemates a method acting task in which they had to stay in character all day and then produce an improvised play.
In 2010 he plays Eli Gold on the CBS television show The Good Wife, a character who will become a series regular in the show's 2010–2011 season [5], and Desrae, a transvestite, on the British series "The Runaway".
Cumming also hosted short-lived US cable television shows, "Eavesdropping with Alan Cumming," in which he interviewed female co-stars of his movie roles, and "Midnight Snack," where he and his dogs introduced cult movies.
Cumming has also appeared on numerous US, UK and Australian talk shows.
Cumming played the Emcee in the 1998 Broadway revival of Cabaret, for which he won a Tony and NY Drama Critics award.[6] He had previously played the role in a production at London's Donmar Warehouse theatre, for which he had been nominated for an Olivier Award.[6] He recorded the song, "Baby, It's Cold Outside" with Liza Minnelli for the Broadway Cares: Home for the Holidays album in 2001.
Other stage roles have included Otto in the 2001 Broadway production of Design for Living by Noel Coward, Valere in David Hirson's La Bete, the title role in the 1993 English Touring Theatre's Hamlet (playing opposite his then-wife, Hilary Lyon, in the role of Ophelia), and The Madman in the 1990 Royal National Theatre production of Accidental Death of an Anarchist by Dario Fo, for which he won an Olivier Award.[7]
In 2002, Cumming and then-boyfriend British director Nick Philippou formed the production company The Art Party. The company's first and only play was the first English production of Jean Genet's play Elle, which Cumming had adapted from a literal translation by Terri Gordon. The company folded in 2003.
In 2006, Cumming returned to the stage, firstly performing in a poorly-received revival of the Bertolt Brecht-Kurt Weill musical The Threepenny Opera opposite Cyndi Lauper. They later performed at the Tony Awards. In late 2006, he appeared in the West End playing the lead role in Bent, a play about homosexuals in Germany under the Nazis. In 2007 he took the lead role in the National Theatre of Scotland's production of The Bacchae, which premiéred at the Edinburgh Festival in August, transferring to the Lyric Theatre in London and then to Lincoln Center, New York.
Cumming performed alongside Dianne Wiest in Classic Stage Company's production of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull, directed by Viacheslav Dolgachev.
He was optioned to play the Green Goblin in the new musical Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark which has an uncertain start date at the Foxwoods Theatre on Broadway; after negotiating a short extension of the option he then withdrew from the production at its lapse.[8]
Cumming wrote a novel, Tommy's Tale, published in 2002.[9] He has also written articles for magazines, notably as a contributing editor for Marie Claire magazine, writing on the haute couture shows in Paris, as well as what it was like for him dressing as a woman for a day.
Cumming recorded a duet of "Baby, It’s Cold Outside" with Liza Minnelli to raise money for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and the September 11 Fund.
In 2005 he released a fragance called "Cumming," and a related line of scented bath lotion and body wash. They were sold exclusively at Sephora (which did not renew its distribution agreement) and a website which he dismantled in 2009 due to hackers defrauding customers.[10]
Cumming served as a delegate for the Creative Coalition during the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston.[11] and contributed to If You Had Five Minutes with the President, a collection of 55+ essays by members or supporters of The Creative Coalition.[12] He was subsequently widely quoted for stating that he wished to see Obama naked.[13]
On 1 September 2009, Cumming released his first solo album based around his one man show, I Bought a Blue Car Today.[14]
Cumming lives in New York City with his partner (via UK civil partnership), graphic artist Grant Shaffer, and their dogs, Honey and Leon.[15] The couple dated for two years before entering into a civil partnership at the Old Royal Naval College Greenwich on January 7, 2007.[16] After his civil partnership, when asked if he was monogamous, he stated "I don’t believe that monogamy is feasible".[17]
Once described as "a frolicky pansexual sex symbol for the new millennium", Cumming has stated that he considers himself bisexual, "although the pendulum has obviously swung".[18] Prior to the civil union, Cumming dated both men and women. Previous relationships include a two year relationship with actress Saffron Burrows, a six year relationship with theater director Nick Philippou, and a 1985 marriage to actress Hilary Lyon which lasted eight years. [19]
In a profile for The Times, Cumming stated that he "would dearly like to adopt a child" but subsequently stated his life was "too hectic" for children.[20] Once he outed himself as bisexual in 1998, Cumming promoted LGBT rights, emceeing and attending fundraisers for organizations such as the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), as well as several AIDS charities, including the American Foundation for AIDS Research (AMFAR) and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS.
Cumming is a patron of Scottish Youth Theatre, Scotland's National Theatre 'for and by' young people. He is also a patron of NORM-UK, an English-registered charity against circumcision; he has revealed that he is uncircumcised.[21][22]
In March 2005, Cumming received the Vito Russo Award at the 16th Annual GLAAD Media Awards for outstanding contributions toward eliminating homophobia.[23] In July of the same year he was also presented with the HRC's Humanitarian Award in San Francisco, also for his LGBT public stance.
In November 2006, Cumming received a Doctor of Arts honorary degree from the University of Abertay Dundee.
Cumming was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2009 Queen's Birthday Honours List for services to film, theatre and the arts and activism for LGBT rights.[24][25][26]
On November 7, 2008, Cumming became a dual-national and was sworn in as a citizen of the United States of America at a ceremony in New York City.[27][28]
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
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1987 | Shadow of the Stone | Tom Henderson | TV Series |
1991 | Bernard and the Genie | Bernard Bottle | TV Movie British Comedy Award for Best TV Comedy Newcomer |
1992 | Prague | Alexander Novak | |
1993 | Micky Love | Greg Deane | TV Movie |
Mr. Bean | Bachelor #2 | Uncredited TV Series |
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1994 | Second Best | Bernard | |
Black Beauty | Black Beauty | Voice | |
1995 | Circle of Friends | Sean Walsh | |
GoldenEye | Boris Ivanovich Grishenko | ||
The High Life | Sebastian Flight | TV Series | |
1996 | Emma | Mr. Elton | |
3rd Rock From The Sun | Season 5, Episode 18 Dick and Harry Fall Into a Hole | as Angus "The Hole" McDuff- Hole expert | |
1997 | Romy and Michele's High School Reunion | Sandy Frink | |
Spice World | Piers Cuthbertson-Smyth | ||
Buddy | Dick Croner, Trudy's Assistant | ||
1999 | Titus | Saturninus | |
Plunkett & Macleane | Lord Rochester | ||
Eyes Wide Shut | Hotel Desk Clerk | ||
Annie | Rooster | ||
2000 | Urbania | Brett | |
God, the Devil and Bob | The Devil | TV Series | |
The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas | Mick Jagged/Gazoo | ||
Get Carter | Jeremy Kinnear | ||
2001 | The Anniversary Party | Joe Therrian | Writer/Producer/Director Nominated — Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature shared with Jennifer Jason Leigh Nominated — Independent Spirit Award for Best First Screenplay shared with Jennifer Jason Leigh |
Sex and the City | O | TV Series | |
Investigating Sex | Sevy | ||
Josie and the Pussycats | Wyatt Frame | ||
Spy Kids | Fegan Floop | ||
Company Man | General Batista | ||
2002 | Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams | Fegan Floop | |
Nicholas Nickleby | Mr. Folair | National Board of Review Award for Best Cast | |
Foyle's War | host (himself) | TV series | |
2003 | X2 | Kurt Wagner / Nightcrawler | |
Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over | Fegan Floop | ||
2004 | Shoebox Zoo | Bruno the Bear | TV Series |
Garfield: The Movie | Persnikitty | Voice | |
Eighteen | Father Chris | ||
2005 | Son of the Mask | Loki | Nominated – Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Actor |
Reefer Madness | Lecturer/Goat-Man/FDR | ||
Ripley Under Ground | Jeff Constant | ||
Neverwas | Jake | ||
Sweet Land | Frandsen | Producer Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature |
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2006 | The L Word | Billie Blaikie | TV Series |
Full Grown Men | The Hitchhiker | Co-Producer | |
2007 | Gray Matters | Gordy | |
Suffering Man's Charity (aka Ghost Writer) |
John Vandermark | Executive Producer | |
Tin Man | Glitch | TV miniseries | |
2009 | Boogie Woogie | Dewey | |
Dare | Grant Matson | ||
PoliWood | Himself | Documentary | |
2010 | The Tempest | Sebastian | |
Jackboots on Whitehall | Adolf Hitler | Voice | |
The Good Wife | Eli Gold | TV Series | |
Riverworld | Judas Caretaker | ||
Burlesque | Alexis |
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