His career is impressive, the list of the films he made unforgettable with his presence is long. He had starring roles in films like Ridley Scott’s “The Duellists”, Alan Rudolph’s “Choose Me” and Louis Malle’s “Pretty Baby” before he even turned 30.
Keith has stage-blood in his veins, his family is Hollywood royalty. He does not lack the right pedigree. His father was John Carradine, one of John Ford’s favorite actors. His half-brother David had a meteoric rise to fame as Caine in the legendary television series “Kung Fu”, while his younger brother Robert and half-brother Michael Bowen also have put in decades on screen and television. His oldest daughter Martha Plimpton is an accomplished actress, other two children, Cade and Sorel, are not far behind.
Apart from his roles for Alan Rudolph in the 80s, he starred in Walter Hill’s “Long Riders” and “Southern Comfort”, Samuel Fuller’s “Street of No Return” and Simon Callow’s “The Ballad of the Sad Café”. On television, he has played parts in some of the best series in recent memory, including a full season as Special Agent Frank Lundy on “Dexter”, as Lou Solverson on “Fargo” and the president of the United States in “Madam Secretary”.
In each of these roles Keith Carradine has delivered bravura performances. He stays true to being a performer. In an interview with the New York Times he once said: „People think I'm really a cad’, jokingly alluding to the difficulty of differentiating between his roles and the real Keith Carradine. The duality, which is a blessing and a curse in his profession. It’s the biggest compliment an actor can receive, even though many don’t get it.
And so it’s one of the typical Hollywood-ironies that he was never honored for his haunting, subtle presence on the screen, but calls an Academy Award his own. He won it as the songwriter of “I’m Easy” from Robert Altman’s “Nashville, the film that contributed slightly to people’s dearly-held belief that, like Tom Frank, he might really be a sensitive cad.
Keith Carradine will be our guest in Oldenburg from Sept 12-16, 2018. He will not only present the European Premiere of “Ray Meets Helen”, which is his sixth collaboration with director Alan Rudolph, but also three of his classic films. Robert Altman’s »Nashville«, Ridley Scott’s superb directorial debut »The Duellists« and Alan Rudolph’s »Trouble in Mind« will be screened within the scope of this year’s program
13.09.2018 | Oldenburg Film Festival's blog
Cat. : PEOPLE