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Tim Hutton : ウィキペディア英語版
Timothy Hutton

Timothy Tarquin Hutton (born August 16, 1960) is an American actor and director.
He is the youngest actor to win the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, which he won at the age of 20 for his performance as Conrad Jarrett in ''Ordinary People'' (1980). Hutton has since appeared regularly in feature films and on television, with featured roles in the drama ''Taps'' (1981), the spy film ''The Falcon and the Snowman'' (1985), and the horror film ''The Dark Half'' (1993), among others.
Between 2000 and 2002 Hutton starred as Archie Goodwin in the A&E drama series ''A Nero Wolfe Mystery''. Between 2008 and 2012, he starred as Nathan "Nate" Ford on the TNT drama series ''Leverage''. The final episode aired on December 25, 2012.
==Early life==
Timothy Hutton was born in Malibu, California. His father was actor Jim Hutton; his mother, Maryline Adams (née Poole), was a teacher. His parents divorced when Hutton was three years old, and his mother took him and his older sister, Heidi (born in 1959), with her to Boston. The family returned to California when Hutton was 12.
"A lot of people think that because my father was an actor, I come from this big show-business background," Hutton told Bruce Cook of ''American Film'' magazine in 1981. "But that's not how I grew up at all. My mother took us to Cambridge because she wanted to get her M.A. She wound up teaching in Connecticut, but the way she saw it, after a while, if we all stayed there, my sister and I would just wind up as the proprietors of the local drugstore or something, so that was why she took us to Berkeley – to get us into the world, I guess. Now she's given up teaching and she's into printing miniature books."〔
In 1976 when he was 16, Hutton sought out his father and moved in with him in Los Angeles. (On June 2, 1979, Jim Hutton died in Los Angeles from liver cancer, two days after his 45th birthday. In 1980, Hutton dedicated his Academy Award, which he had won for his role in the movie ''Ordinary People'', to his father.) At Fairfax High School, while playing Nathan Detroit in a school production of ''Guys and Dolls'', he realized he wanted to become an actor. With encouragement from both of his parents, he carefully built himself a career in television.〔Cook, Bruce, "Doing What Comes Naturally." ''American Film'', March 1981, pp. 62–65 and 74.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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