Dan Hedaya


Daniel G. Hedaya is an American actor. He established himself as a supporting actor, often playing sleazy villains or wisecracking supporting characters. He has had supporting roles in films such as True Confessions, The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension, Tightrope, Blood Simple, Commando, Wise Guys, Joe Versus the Volcano, The Addams Family, Rookie of the Year, Boiling Point, Clueless, The First Wives Club, Daylight, Marvin's Room, Alien Resurrection, A Civil Action, A Night at the Roxbury, The Hurricane, Dick, Shaft, The Crew, Swimfan, Robots, and Strangers with Candy.

Life and career

Hedaya was born in Brooklyn, New York, to a Sephardic Jewish family from Aleppo, Syria. His father emigrated from Aleppo. Hedaya was raised in Bensonhurst. While a student at Tufts University, he began performing at the campus theater. He worked as a junior high school teacher for many years before deciding to pursue acting full-time. He studied acting at HB Studio in New York City.
Alongside a successful career in the movies, Hedaya has appeared in several TV roles, including Carla Tortelli's ex-husband Nick on the sitcom Cheers and its short-lived spinoff The Tortellis. He played the estranged father of Mallory Keaton's boyfriend, Nick, on the sitcom Family Ties. More recently, he played an Italian-American priest in the controversial and quickly cancelled NBC series The Book of Daniel. Adding to his list of television credits is his performance as the long-lost father of Adrian Monk on Monk. He also guest starred in 1997 and 2005 as a wisecracking lawyer on the medical drama ER.
In films, Hedaya has played the evil dictator Arius in 1985's Commando and Mel Horowitz, the father of Alicia Silverstone's Cher, in the 1995 film Clueless. He played Julian Marty, a cuckolded husband who plots his wife's murder in the first Coen Brothers film, Blood Simple. His resemblance to Richard Nixon led to his being cast as the former president for the film Dick. Hedaya appeared in several episodes of the television series Hill Street Blues as a corrupt, bigamist cop during the series' first season. During the 1980s Hedaya also appeared in the television series Miami Vice.

Filmography

Film

Television