Daniel J. Travanti

Daniel J. Travanti

actor, soundtrack

Daniel J. Travanti was born on Mar 07, 1940 in USA. Daniel J. Travanti's big-screen debut came with Who Killed Teddy Bear directed by Joseph Cates in 1965, strarring Carlo (as Dan Travanty). Daniel J. Travanti is known for Boss directed by Jean de Segonzac, Kelsey Grammer stars as Mayor Tom Kane and Connie Nielsen as Meredith Kane. Daniel J. Travanti has got 6 awards and 14 nominations so far. The most recent award Daniel J. Travanti achieved is Wild Rose Independent Film Festival. The upcoming new movie Daniel J. Travanti plays is One Small Hitch which will be released on Feb 14, 2015.

The highly regarded actor Daniel J. Travanti was born Danielo Giovanni Travanty in the southeastern part of Wisconsin on March 7, 1940, but raised for a time in Iowa before returning to his native state. The youngest son of an American Motors auto worker, he showed both athletic and academic prowess in high school on both the football and debate teams.It was during the course of his studies at the University of Wisconsin that Dan first developed a strong, abiding interest in drama, appearing in many college plays while there. He, in fact, turned down top football scholarships in order to pursue his acting dream. Following training at the Yale School of Drama, he was glimpsed on stage as a messenger (billed as Dan Travanty) in the New York Shakespeare Festival's production of "Othello" starring James Earl Jones. The following year he co-starred as Nick with Colleen Dewhurst in a touring company of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" in 1965 and he was off and running. He later returned to Shakespeare in a much bigger role in 1977 as Petruchio in "The Taming of the Shrew." National tours of "Twigs" (1972, opposite Sada Thompson) and "I Never Sang for My Father" (1987, opposite Harold Gould and Dorothy McGuire) would highlight his theatrical career.The following year Travanti relocated to Los Angeles, appearing in scores of TV roles as assorted buddies and villains while still billing himself under his actual last name of Travanty (until the early 1970s). Starting with his film debut in the sordid stalker drama Who Killed Teddy Bear (1965) starring Sal Mineo and Juliet Prowse, he found a sturdy, if routine, niche in drama with supporting roles in the films L'organisation (1971) and Monsieur Saint-Ives (1976), and TV guest spots on Les accusés (1961), Perry Mason (1957), Judd for the Defense (1967), Sur la piste du crime (1965), Mannix (1967), Cannon (1971), and Barnaby Jones (1973).A consummate professional and chronic overachiever, he quickly approached burnout when he obtained only a measure of the success he expected of himself. Travanti turned to drinking to combat his career dissatisfaction. He finally was forced to seek professional help in 1973 after a collapse and breakdown on stage during the middle of a show in Indianapolis.Following extensive treatment, Travanti did an about-face. In 1978 he earned a master's degree in English literature at Loyola of Marymount in Los Angeles and the following year nabbed a six-month stint on the ABC daytime soap Hôpital central (1963). This renewed resurgence came to a peak came after being cast as the serious, somber-looking Capt. Frank Furillo for six seasons on the classic drama Capitaine Furillo (1981). The actor not only won both Emmy (twice) and Golden Globe awards, but developed unlikely sex-symbol status at the age of 41.This major showcase led to a host of highly acclaimed TV mini-movie parts, notably that of John Walsh, the father who turned activist after his child was murdered, in Adam (1983) and its sequel, Adam: His Song Continues (1986), and the title role of broadcast journalist Edward R. Murrow in Murrow (1986), earning a Cable ACE award nomination. Other penetrating TV-movies starring or co-starring Travanti included A Case of Libel (1983), L'Affaire Howard Beach (1989), Eyes of a Witness (1991), Pleure pas ma belle (1992), In the Shadows, Someone's Watching (1993),Une femme en péril (1994), To Sir, with Love II (1996) and Si près de moi! (2006).Avoiding the limelight and focusing on theater endeavors, he found major stage roles both in London ("Les liaisons dangereuses" (1990), "The Aspern Papers") and here ("Wicked Songs (2000), All My Sons" (2002), "Major Barbara" (2003), "The Last Word..." (2007), The Touch of the Poet (2008)). Daniel eventually returned to guest dramatics on both TV crimers ("Prison Break," "Criminal Minds" and "The Defenders") and medical shows ("Grey's Anatomy," "Chicago Med").Travanti returned to series TV sporting a police badge briefly on Missing Persons (1993), and had recurring roles on Poltergeist, les aventuriers du surnaturel (1996), Boss (2011) and NCIS: Los Angeles (2009). Sporadic filming in later years has included the moving drama Something Sweet (2000), the dark-edged dramedy Design (2002) and the romantic film comedy Petit mensonge et grand mariage (2013).

  • Birthday

    Mar 07, 1940
  • Place of Birth

    Kenosha, Wisconsin, USA
  • Also known

    -

Known For

Awards

6 wins & 14 nominations

Wild Rose Independent Film Festival
2014
Supporting Actor - Feature Film
Winner - Distinctive Achievement Award
Chicago Comedy Film Festival
2013
Best Ensemble Cast
Winner - Festival Award
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Movies & TV Shows

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Movies
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