Rip Torn


Actor
Rip Torn

About

Also Known As
Elmore Rual Torn Jr.
Birth Place
Temple, Texas, USA
Born
February 06, 1931

Biography

One of the most prolific performers on stage, screen and in television since the late 1950s, Rip Torn was a versatile character actor and occasional lead who brought prodigious, often overpowering energy and confidence to every role he embodied - no matter how dramatic or insignificant the project. He left his native Texas in the late 1950s to make his name in show business, but found th...

Photos & Videos

Family & Companions

Ann Wedgeworth
Wife
Actor. Married on January 15, 1955; divorced in 1961; one daughter, Danae; acted together in the feature "Birch Interval" (1975).
Geraldine Page
Wife
Actor. Married from 1961 until her death in 1987; acted together in the films "Sweet Bird of Youth" (1962), "You're a Big Boy Now" (1967, playing husband and wife) and "Nasty Habits" (1976).
Amy Wright
Companion
Actor.

Notes

Torn sued actor Dennis Hopper for defamation after Hopper appeared on NBC's "The Tonight Show" in 1992 and claimed that Torn was replaced in "Easy Rider" when Torn pulled a knife on Hopper. Torn won a six-figure judgment in 1997

January 13, 2004, Torn was arrested for drunk driving after he crashed his car into a taxi in New York's Greenwich Village

Biography

One of the most prolific performers on stage, screen and in television since the late 1950s, Rip Torn was a versatile character actor and occasional lead who brought prodigious, often overpowering energy and confidence to every role he embodied - no matter how dramatic or insignificant the project. He left his native Texas in the late 1950s to make his name in show business, but found the task more daunting than imagined, so he headed for New York to train under Lee Strasberg and soak up experience in theater. His reputation as a formidable talent brought him back to Hollywood, where he essayed a vast array of characters in features ranging from "Sweet Bird of Youth" (1962) and "The Cincinnati Kid" (1965), to experimental features like "Maidstone" for Norman Mailer. Torn worked steadily throughout the 1970s and 1980s, gaining praise for his solid performances and an Oscar nomination for "Cross Creek" (1983), before vaulting to the mainstream with his Emmy-winning turn as the fearsome Artie, producer of "The Larry Sanders Show" (HBO, 1992-1998). The success of that series turned Torn into a go-to for bullish tough-love types in comedies ranging from "Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story" (2004) to "30 Rock" (NBC, 2006-13), all the while solidifying him as one of the most respected and versatile figures in the acting business.

Born Feb. 6, 1931 in Temple, TX, Elmore Rual Torn, Jr. was the son of agriculturalist and economist Elmore Torn and his wife, Thelma Mary Spacek. A cousin from his mother's side of the family, Sissy Spacek, would year later gain entry into the Actors Studio through Torn's sponsorship in the early 1970s. Torn's unusual surname was part of a family tradition passed down to the men of the family, though he also went by "Skippy" as a youth. Torn studied animal husbandry at Texas A&M with the intention of becoming a rancher. He got into acting primarily as a means to acquire the funds to purchase property. He moved to Los Angeles and found work almost immediately in films and television, including Elia Kazan's "Baby Doll" (1956) and "A Face in the Crowd" (1957). However, the roles were minor and even uncredited, and Torn soon realized that his initial view of the acting business as a get-rich-quick scheme would require some modification.

Torn lit out for New York in the late 1950s and began studying under Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio. Roles on stage soon followed, most notably in Tennessee Williams' "Sweet Bird of Youth" in 1959. Torn's on-screen career soon flourished, with roles on countless television series and small but significant parts in features like "Pork Chop Hill" (1959) as the brother-in-law of star Gregory Peck, and "King of Kings" (1961) as Judas Iscariot. The year 1962 saw him reprise his role as the menacing Tom Finley in Richard Brooks' film version of "Sweet Bird;" the success of the film helped to establish Torn as an up-and-coming character actor of note.

Blessed with an imposing frame and a deep, resonant voice, Torn was ideal as the heavy, such as the oily gambler and blackmailer Slade in "The Cincinnati Kid" (1965). He was also effective in tough authority roles like the gunnery sergeant in Cornel Wilde's surreal World War II drama, "Beach Red" (1965) or the baffled father in Francis Ford Coppola's "You're a Big Boy Now" (1967). Television consumed much of Torn's output until the late 1960s, when he shifted his attention to more experimental feature films. He starred opposite acclaimed author Norman Mailer, who also served as director for two efforts from this period - the largely improvised police drama "Beyond the Law" (1967) and "Maidstone" (1970), which became notorious for a seemingly unrehearsed brawl between actor and director which saw Torn taking a hammer to Mailer's head and the latter biting a chunk from Torn's ear.

Torn strayed even further from the mainstream with "Coming Apart" (1969), an intensely self-reflective drama about a psychiatrist who films his sessions with various women before turning the camera on himself to capture his own breakdown. Critics were particularly unkind to the film, which garnered an X rating for scenes of graphic nudity and sexuality. At the same time, Torn began balancing his arthouse endeavors with more commercial fare, including episodic television and grindhouse fare like the Jim Brown actioner, "Slaughter" (1972).

One significant missed opportunity during Torn's independent phase was "Easy Rider" (1969). Originally cast as lawyer George Hanson in the counterculture drama, Torn allegedly objected to director Dennis Hopper's views of the South and withdrew from the project; Jack Nicholson stepped into the role, which made him a star. The experience reared its head some three decades later when in 1994, Hopper recounted a version of the story for Jay Leno on "The Tonight Show" (NBC, 1957- ) that had Torn pulling a knife on the actor during an argument. Torn filed a defamation suit against Hopper in 1999 that claimed that it was Hopper who pulled the knife on him; a judge found in Torn's favor not once but twice after Hopper attempted to appeal the ruling.

By the early 1970s, Torn seemed to settle into a groove that found him dividing his time equally between character-driven television projects and more intellectual film fare; both of which yielded praise from critics and audiences alike. He was an impressive Henry Miller opposite Ellen Burstyn in "Tropic of Cancer" (1970), and gave a bravura turn as an abusive, drug-addicted country singer in the cult favorite "Payday" (1973). He tempered his volcanic nature to play an introspective scientist who befriends David Bowie's alien in "The Man Who Fell to Earth" (1976) and a taciturn homesteader in "Heartland" (1979), as well as the little-seen Delbert Mann drama "Birch Interval" (1976), which saw him sharing screen time with his first wife, actress Ann Wedgeworth and their daughter, Danae. Other impressive performances during the seventies came as a hell-raising senator in "The Seduction of Joe Tynan" (1979) and as Richard Nixon in the miniseries adaptation of John Dean's memoir, "Blind Ambition" (CBS, 1979).

The 1980s started on a low note for Torn, with thankless roles in exploitation like "A Stranger is Watching" (1982), "Beastmaster" (1982) and the disastrous Bette Midler comedy, "Jinxed" (1982), but the following year, he experienced a career high point with his first Academy Award nomination for "Cross Creek" (1983). Starring as a rough-hewn Florida native whose daughter's relationship with a wild faun inspired Marjorie Kinnan Rawling's novel "The Yearling," Torn impressed critics and fans alike with his performance. He worked steadily on a variety of projects throughout the decade, but his finest work was on television, where he returned to the works of Williams twice; first as Big Daddy in an Emmy-winning production of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" (1985) and later in "Sweet Bird of Youth" (NBC, 1989) as Boss Finley, father of the character that made him famous two decades before. Torn's other TV work in the 1980s included district attorney Lewis Slaton in "The Atlanta Child Murders" (CBS, 1985), Kit Carson in "Dream West" (CBS, 1986) and Lyndon Johnson opposite Treat Williams' "J. Edgar Hoover" in 1987. During this period, Torn also briefly dabbled with directing for the film "The Telephone" (1988), which was envisioned by screenwriters Terry Southern and Harry Nilsson as a dark comedy. The project fell into disarray with the casting of Whoopi Goldberg in the lead, and though an edit approved by Torn and the writers was screened at Sundance, an alternate version was released into theaters, where it was roundly panned.

After mourning the death of his longtime spouse and acting peer Geraldine Page in 1987, Torn underwent a sort of career transformation in the early 1990s, thanks to films like "Defending Your Life" (1991). The Albert Brooks comedy, which cast him as a no-nonsense, larger-than-life defense attorney for the recently deceased, led to a long string of film and television comedies for Torn. The best of these was "The Larry Sanders Show," a scathing satire of talk shows and the television industry as a whole, with Garry Shandling as the neurotic titular host of a popular late-night show and Torn as his bullish producer. Based on legendary "Tonight Show" producer Fred De Cordova, Artie seemed to be the perfect summation of Torn's screen persona: alternately terrifying and charming, and perfectly capable of physically threatening the biggest star while pampering the needs of another, all while displaying a wide, crocodilian smile. Torn received mountains of praise for his performance, as well as well an Emmy and American Comedy Award in 1994 and 1996, respectively. While working on "Sanders," Torn made a welcome return to Broadway opposite Shirley Knight in a 1997 production of Horton Foote's "Young Man with a Horn."

The popularity afforded by "Sanders" thrust Torn into the spotlight, where he worked with the pace and fervor of a man half his age for much of the decade and into the new millennium. And if some of the work seemed beneath an actor of his talent - how else to explain "Robocop 3" (1993), "Down Periscope" (1996) and the ghastly Tom Green comedy "Freddy Got Fingered" (2001) - there were also plenty of quality roles for him; most notably as the cheerful Zed, head of the "Men in Black" (1997), the voice of Zeus in Disney's "Hercules" (1997), public relations spinmaster John Scanlon in Michael Mann's "The Insider" (1999) and a well-loved author in the underrated "Wonder Boys" (2000). He briefly returned to television to play Rob Lowe's father in the short-lived "Lyon's Den" (NBC, 2003) before re-assuming his steady diet of theatrical comedies, including the unsung "Eulogy"(2004) and Ben Stiller's slapstick hit, "Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story" (2004).

That same year, the punishing workload seemed to take its toll on Torn when he was arrested for driving while intoxicated. News programs around the country broadcast disheartening footage of the actor berating police officers as he refused to undergo a breathalyzer test. Unfortunately, Torn was later twice arrested on similar charges in 2006 and 2009. Despite these setbacks, Torn continued to deliver memorable performances in films and on television. He was both amusing and imperious as a randy Louis XV in Sofia Coppola's inventive and colorful "Marie Antoinette" (2006), and earned another Emmy nomination in 2008 as Don Geiss, fictitious head of NBC on the critically acclaimed sitcom, "30 Rock." He also shone in the indie "Turn the River" (2008) as the crusty mentor to aspiring pool champ Famke Janssen, and as one of a trio of aging sea captains seeking a bride in "Chatham" (2008). In 2006, Torn made his debut as a producer with the short "The Convention" (2008), which was directed by his son Tony from his marriage to Page; he repeated the role for the feature "Lucky Days" (2008), in which he co-starred with daughter Angelica.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

The Telephone (1988)
Director
Maidstone (1971)
2nd Unit Director

Cast (Feature Film)

Lucky Days (2010)
The Golden Boys (2009)
American Cowslip (2009)
Happy Tears (2009)
The Afterlight (2009)
Three Days to Vegas (2008)
August (2008)
Bee Movie (2007)
Turn the River (2007)
Zoom (2006)
Marie Antoinette (2006)
Forty Shades of Blue (2005)
Yours, Mine & Ours (2005)
The Sisters (2005)
Rolling Kansas (2004)
Welcome to Mooseport (2004)
Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004)
Eulogy (2004)
Love Object (2003)
Mr Novak
Men in Black II (2002)
Freddy Got Fingered (2001)
Wonder Boys (2000)
Q [Quentin Morewood]
A Vision of Murder: The Story of Donielle (2000)
The Insider (1999)
Balloon Farm (1999)
Passing Glory - Part 2 (1999)
Passing Glory (1999)
The Almost Perfect Bank Robbery (1999)
Passing Glory - Part 1 (1999)
Senseless (1998)
Hercules (1997)
Voice
Trial and Error (1997)
Men in Black (1997)
The Mouse (1996)
Down Periscope (1996)
Letter to My Killer (1995)
Russell Vanik
For Better or Worse... (1995)
She Stood Alone: The Tailhook Scandal (1995)
Canadian Bacon (1995)
General Panzer
How To Make An American Quilt (1995)
Beyond the Law (1994)
Heart of a Child (1994)
Where the Rivers Flow North (1993)
Noel Lord
Robocop 3 (1993)
A Mother's Right: The Elizabeth Morgan Story (1992)
Dead Ahead: The Exxon Valdez Disaster (1992)
T-Bone N Weasel (1992)
Fires of Kuwait (1992)
Narrator
Dolly Dearest (1992)
Dr Karl Resnick--Archaeologist
Another Pair of Aces: Three of a Kind (1991)
Jack Parsons
Beautiful Dreamers (1991)
Walt Whitman
My Son Johnny (1991)
Death Hits the Jackpot (1991)
Leon Lamarr
Defending Your Life (1991)
By Dawn's Early Light (1990)
Pair of Aces (1990)
Captain Jack Parsons
None So Blind (1990)
Silence Like Glass (1989)
Dr Markowitz
Hit List (1989)
Tennessee Williams' Sweet Bird of Youth (1989)
Tom "Boss" Finley
Cold Feet (1989)
Blind Curve (1988)
Frank Maheu
April Morning (1988)
Nadine (1987)
Buford Pope
J. Edgar Hoover (1987)
Destination: America (1987)
The King of Love (1987)
J S Kraft
Extreme Prejudice (1987)
Laguna Heat (1987)
Manhunt For Claude Dallas (1986)
The Execution (1985)
Summer Rental (1985)
Scully
Beer (1985)
Buzz Beckerman
City Heat (1984)
Songwriter (1984)
When She Says No (1984)
Stuart Blankfort
Flashpoint (1984)
Misunderstood (1984)
Cross Creek (1983)
The Beastmaster (1982)
Airplane II: The Sequel (1982)
Jinxed! (1982)
Harold
A Stranger Is Watching (1981)
Artie Taggart
First Family (1980)
One-Trick Pony (1980)
Sophia Loren: Her Own Story (1980)
Carlo Ponti
Rape and Marriage:The Rideout Case (1980)
A Shining Season (1979)
Heartland (1979)
The Wobblies (1979)
Voice
The Seduction Of Joe Tynan (1979)
Steel Cowboy (1978)
K W Hicks
Betrayal (1978)
Coma (1978)
The Private Files Of J. Edgar Hoover (1977)
Dwight Webb
Nasty Habits (1977)
Birch Interval (1976)
The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976)
The President's Plane Is Missing (1973)
Crazy Joe (1973)
Slaughter (1972)
[Dominick] Hoffo
Payday (1972)
Maury Dann
Maidstone (1971)
Raoul Rey O'Houlihan
One American Movie/1 A.M. (1971)
Himself
Tropic of Cancer (1970)
Henry Miller
Coming Apart (1969)
Joe Glazer
Beyond the Law - Blue (1968)
Popcorn
Sol Madrid (1968)
Dano Villanova
Beach Red (1967)
Sergeant Honeywell
You're a Big Boy Now (1966)
I. H. Chanticleer
One Spy Too Many (1966)
Alexander
The Cincinnati Kid (1965)
Slade
Critic's Choice (1963)
Dion Kapakos
Hero's Island (1962)
Nicholas
Sweet Bird of Youth (1962)
Thomas J. Finley, Jr.
King of Kings (1961)
Judas
Pork Chop Hill (1959)
Lt. Walt Russell
A Face in the Crowd (1957)
Barry Mills
Time Limit (1957)
Lt. [George] Miller

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

One American Movie/1 A.M. (1971)
Other

Cast (Special)

The Freddy Got Fingered Movie Special (2001)
Clint Eastwood: Out of the Shadows (2000)
Disney's Hercules: From Zero to Hero (1997)
Voice
Canned Ham: Trial and Error (1997)
Interviewee
The 51st Annual Tony Awards (1997)
Presenter
The Second Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (1996)
Presenter
18th Annual Cable Ace Awards (1996)
Presenter
The Late Show With David Letterman Video Special 2 (1996)
The 16th Annual Cable ACE Awards (1995)
Presenter
James Dean: A Portrait (1995)
Narrator
The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1995)
Presenter
45th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1993)
Presenter
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1984)
Song of Myself (1976)
Walt Whitman
Twenty-Four Hours in a Woman's Life (1961)
Paul Winter
Johnny Belinda (1958)

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

Seasons of Love (1999)
Spence Vitt
John Jakes' Heaven and Hell: North and South, Part III (1994)
Dream West (1986)
The Atlanta Child Murders (1985)
The Blue and the Gray (1982)
Blind Ambition (1979)
Attack on Terror (1975)

Life Events

1955

Broadway debut as understudy and replacement for Alex Nicol (as Brick) in the original production of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"

1956

Made film debut in Elia Kazan's "Baby Doll"

1958

Earliest TV appearance, the NBC anthology series, "The Alcoa Hour"

1958

Appeared in the Tennessee Williams dramas, "Orpheus Descending" and "Sweet Bird of Youth" (as Tom Finley Jr.), earned a Tony nomination for Featured Actor in a Play for the latter

1959

Earliest prominent feature supporting role in "Pork Chop Hill" as the brother-in-law of Gregory Peck's character

1962

Recreated his stage role in Tennessee Williams's "Sweet Bird of Youth" for the film version

1965

Played a sleazy New Orleans blackmailer opposite Steve McQueen and Karl Malden in "The Cincinnati Kid"

1968

First top billed role in the feature, "Beyond the Law"; directed by Norman Mailer

1968

Made stage directing debut with "The Beard"

1970

Starred in another Norman Mailer (also acted) directed film, "Maidstone"

1972

Received rave reviews for his portrayal of a country & western singer in the cult film "Payday"

1976

Starred in the cult classic science fiction movie "The Man Who Fell to Earth"

1980

Returned to Broadway for the short-lived comedy, "Mixed Couples"

1983

Received an Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actor for his role in "Cross Creek"

1988

Made feature film directorial debut with the offbeat comedy "The Telephone" starring Whoopi Goldberg

1990

Played the ultra-hawkish Colonel Fargo in the HBO Original Movie "By Dawn's Early Light"

1992

Cast as talk show producer and TV veteran Artie in "The Larry Sanders Show" (HBO), earned six consecutive Emmy (1993-1998) nominations as Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

1993

Played the OCP CEO in the science fiction film, "Robocop 3"

1997

Played the gruff boss Agent Zed in "Men in Black" opposite Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones

1997

Hosted the syndicated series "Ghost Stories"

1997

Returned to Broadway to co-star with Shirley Knight in Horton Foote's "The Young Man From Atlanta"

1997

Voiced Zeus in Disney's animated feature "Hercules"

1999

Starred as Father Robert Grant in the TNT movie "Passing Glory"

2000

Reprised the role of Agent Zed in "Men in Black II"

2000

Featured in "Wonder Boys" opposite Michael Douglas and Tobey Maguire

2003

Cast in a recurring role as Senator Turner on the NBC drama, "The Lyon's Den"

2004

Appeared in the black comedy "Eulogy"

2004

Cast with Ben Stiller and Vince Vaughn in the comedy "Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story"

2004

Featured in the Comedy "Welcome to Mooseport"

2005

Played an aging music producer in Ira Sachs' independent film "Forty Shades of Blue"

2006

Starred as France's Louis XV in Sofia Coppola's "Marie Antoinette"

2006

Co-starred with Tim Allen and Courteney Cox in the family comedy "Zoom"

2007

Played the recurring role of Don Geiss, the CEO and Jack's boss, on the NBC sitcom "30 Rock"; earned an Emmy nomination in 2008 for Guest Actor in a Comedy Series

Photo Collections

Sweet Bird of Youth - Publicity Stills
Here are some publicity stills taken for Sweet Bird of Youth (1962), starring Paul Newman and Shirley Knight. Publicity stills were specially-posed photos, usually taken off the set, for purposes of publicity or reference for promotional artwork.

Videos

Movie Clip

Coma (1978) -- (Movie Clip) Open, It's All Politics Opening in Boston, Genevieve Bujold is surgical resident Susan Wheeler, Harvard-trained MD turned novelist Michael Crichton in his third film as a director, shooting exteriors at Boston City Hospital where he did clinical rotations, and we learn Michael Douglas as Dr. Bellows is also her love interest, in the hit medical thriller Coma, 1978.
Cincinnati Kid, The -- (Movie Clip) Not Ready For Me Steve McQueen, title character, meets a friend, leading into the famous jazz-funeral opening credit sequence, in Norman Jewison's The Cincinnati Kid, 1965, also starring Tuesday Weld and Ann-Margret.
Sol Madrid (1968) -- (Movie Clip) Best Witness Since Joe Valachi David McCallum (title character) shown spy footage by the chief (Robert Rockwell) of his un-named U.S. agency, featuring Stacey (Stella Stevens), the runaway gal of Mafia don Villanova (Rip Torn), whom we join at a meeting, grilled by capo Riccione (Paul Lukas), early in Sol Madrid, 1968.
You're A Big Boy Now (1966) -- (Movie Clip) International Harvester With buddy Raef (Tony Bill), New York Public Library employee Bernard (Peter Kastner) is summoned by his father (Rip Torn), who holds a portentous library title, and his neurotic mother (Geraldine Page), with Karen Black just glimpsed, early in Francis Ford Coppola's You're A Big Boy Now, 1966.
Beach Red -- (Movie Clip) God Awful Scared Internal monologue of producer, director and star (as Captain MacDonald) Cornel Wilde, and introduction of soldiers including Colombo (Jaime Sanchez) and Honeywell (Rip Torn), the first scene of the low-ish budget anti-war film Beach Red, 1967.
Beach Red -- (Movie Clip) My Enemy And I Much sonic contrast and watercolors, title song performed by Jean Wallace, all reflecting the unique sensibility of star, producer and director Cornel Wilde, opening Beach Red, 1967.

Trailer

Songwriter - (Original Trailer) Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson team up to stop a crooked promoter in Alan Rudolph's Songwriter (1984).
Face in the Crowd, A - (Original Trailer) Television turns a folk-singing drifter (Andy Griffith) into a media celebrity in Elia Kazan's A Face in the Crowd (1957).
Critic's Choice - (Original Trailer) Bob Hope and Lucille Ball star in the movie Critic's Choice (1962) based on Ira Levin's Broadway comedy hit.
Coma - (Original Trailer) A doctor (Genevieve Bujold) investigates a series of strange deaths and disappearing bodies at her hospital in Coma (1978).
King of Kings (1961) - (Original Trailer) Nicholas Ray (Rebel Without a Cause) tells the life of Jesus Christ in King of Kings (1961).
One Spy Too Many - (Original Trailer) The Men from U.N.C.L.E. try to keep Rip Torn from conquering the world in One Spy Too Many (1965).
Sol Madrid - (Original Trailer) David McCallum is an undercover agent pursuing heroin smugglers in Sol Madrid (1968) co-starring Telly Savalas.
Cincinnati Kid, The - (Original Trailer) Card sharks try to deal with personal problems during a big game in New Orleans in The Cincinnati Kid (1965), starring Steve McQueen.
Time Limit - (Original Trailer) An officer is court-marshaled under suspicion of collaborating with the North Koreans in Time Limit (1957) directed by Karl Malden.
Sweet Bird of Youth - (Original Trailer) A young gigolo returns to his Southern hometown in search of the lost love of his youth in Sweet Bird of Youth (1962) starring Paul Newman and Geraldine Page.

Family

Elmore Torn
Father
Thelma Torn
Mother
Danae Torn
Daughter
Mother, Ann Wedgeworth.
Angelica Torn
Daughter
Actor. Born in 1964; mother, Geraldine Page; appeared in "Nobody's Fool"; was married 1983-89; ran catering firm.
Tony Torn
Son
Actor; director. Born in 1965; mother, Geraldine Page; twin brother of Jonathan.
Jonathan Torn
Son
Born in 1965; mother Geraldine Page; twin brother of Anthony.
Katie Torn
Daughter
Born c. 1982; mother Amy Wright.
Claire Torn
Daughter
Born February 6, 1992; mother Amy Wright.
Sissy Spacek
Cousin
Actor. First cousin of Torn.

Companions

Ann Wedgeworth
Wife
Actor. Married on January 15, 1955; divorced in 1961; one daughter, Danae; acted together in the feature "Birch Interval" (1975).
Geraldine Page
Wife
Actor. Married from 1961 until her death in 1987; acted together in the films "Sweet Bird of Youth" (1962), "You're a Big Boy Now" (1967, playing husband and wife) and "Nasty Habits" (1976).
Amy Wright
Companion
Actor.

Bibliography

Notes

Torn sued actor Dennis Hopper for defamation after Hopper appeared on NBC's "The Tonight Show" in 1992 and claimed that Torn was replaced in "Easy Rider" when Torn pulled a knife on Hopper. Torn won a six-figure judgment in 1997

January 13, 2004, Torn was arrested for drunk driving after he crashed his car into a taxi in New York's Greenwich Village