Richard Masur
Richard Masur (born November 20, 1948) is an American character actor recognized for his extensive work in over 80 films and various television series spanning five decades.[1][2] From 1995 to 1999, he served two terms as president of the Screen Actors Guild, advocating for performers' rights during a period of industry transitions.[3][4] Masur's career highlights include memorable supporting roles in films such as Risky Business (1983), where he portrayed the father of Tom Cruise's character, and The Thing (1982) as the station's dog handler Clark, contributing to the ensemble dynamic in John Carpenter's horror remake.[1][5] On television, he gained recognition for recurring appearances in shows like One Day at a Time (1975–1976) as the husband of lead character Ann Romano and earned an Emmy nomination for his portrayal of Aryon Greydanus in the 1984 TV movie The Burning Bed.[6][7] Additionally, Masur transitioned into directing with his 1986 short film Love Struck, which received an Academy Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Film, showcasing his versatility beyond acting.[7]Early life and education
Family background and childhood
Richard Masur was born on November 20, 1948, in New York City to Jewish parents Claire Masur, a high school counselor, and Jesse Masur, a pharmacist.[8][9] The family's middle-class circumstances, supported by his parents' professional occupations in education and healthcare, provided a stable urban upbringing in the city.[5] He has one sister, Judith Masur.[10] Masur attended local public schools during his childhood, including P.S. 28 for elementary education and Walt Whitman Junior High School.[11][12] Growing up in New York City's culturally vibrant environment, which included access to diverse artistic influences inherent to the metropolitan setting, laid the groundwork for his later pivot toward theater, though specific childhood engagements in performing arts are not documented in available records.[4]Academic training and early influences
Richard Masur initially pursued pre-medical studies at the State University of New York at Stony Brook in the late 1960s. Lacking prior acting experience, he became involved in campus theater through an impromptu casting in a production of Our Town, leveraging his physical build, deep voice, and beard for the role. This exposure shifted his academic focus, leading him to change majors first to anthropology and then to theatre arts, as the small theater department—comprising just two faculty members—fostered hands-on learning over formal pedagogy.[13][2] Masur's collegiate performances drew the notice of Robert Brustein, dean of the Yale School of Drama, who invited him to enroll as an acting student circa 1969. At Yale, he engaged in rigorous practical training, appearing in student productions such as Empire Builders that emphasized scene study and ensemble work. Financial pressures prompted him to transition into technical roles like directing while continuing to perform, building foundational skills in character interpretation through direct immersion rather than extended theoretical coursework. Brustein's mentorship proved pivotal, recognizing Masur's raw potential and guiding his entry into more structured dramatic environments.[13][14]Acting career
Breakthrough in television
Masur entered television as a character actor in the early 1970s, gaining initial exposure through guest appearances such as Tom Povich in the October 24, 1974, episode of The Waltons.[15] His breakthrough arrived with recurring roles in sitcoms that showcased his ability to portray relatable everyman characters in domestic settings. In Rhoda, he played Nick Lobo, the building superintendent who becomes Rhoda Morgenstern's second husband, across seven episodes from 1974 to 1977.[16] Similarly, in One Day at a Time, Masur portrayed attorney David Kane, a love interest for the divorced Ann Romano, during the 1975–1976 first season.[13] These comedic roles established Masur's reputation for timing and warmth in family dynamics, leading to further television work. By the early 1980s, amid expanding opportunities in made-for-TV movies, he transitioned to more dramatic parts, including Howard Nichols in the 1981 CBS film Fallen Angel, depicting a softball coach exploiting young girls.[17] This role marked a departure toward complex, antagonistic figures contrasting his earlier supportive personas. Masur's output included frequent guest spots in anthology and procedural series, often as authority figures or paternal types, such as in episodes of MASH* and The Mary Tyler Moore Show.[12] These appearances solidified his versatility as a reliable character actor in an era of growing television production.Key film roles
Masur's entry into feature films came with supporting roles emphasizing grounded, often antagonistic figures. In the 1978 adaptation of Robert Stone's Dog Soldiers, titled Who'll Stop the Rain, he played Danskin, a psychopathic operative pursuing a Marine veteran and his wife after a botched heroin shipment, delivering a performance marked by cold intensity in key confrontation scenes.[18] The thriller, directed by Karel Reisz, underscored Masur's versatility in ensemble-driven action amid its exploration of Vietnam-era disillusionment. He followed with Cully in Michael Cimino's Heaven's Gate (1980), portraying a resourceful rail worker who aids Wyoming immigrants during the historical Johnson County conflict, providing moral anchorage in the film's sprawling narrative of class warfare.[19] Though the epic's protracted production and initial box-office failure—grossing under $4 million domestically against massive costs—overshadowed individual contributions, Masur's understated reliability fit the director's vision of authentic frontier ensemble.[20] Masur expanded into horror and comedy through pivotal genre roles. As Clark, the argumentative dog handler in John Carpenter's The Thing (1982), he embodied mounting paranoia at an Antarctic outpost infiltrated by an assimilating extraterrestrial, with his character's fatal skepticism heightening the film's isolation-fueled terror.[21] This turn, contrasting his television domesticity, leveraged practical effects and group distrust for lasting impact in sci-fi horror. In Risky Business (1983), Masur's Bill Rutherford, a rigid Princeton recruiter, satirized parental expectations against Tom Cruise's entrepreneurial rebellion, anchoring the comedy's critique of affluent conformity.[22] Later cinematic work included Craig in Billy Crystal's Forget Paris (1995), where Masur joined friends narrating an NBA referee's stormy Paris-sparked romance, his dry delivery enhancing the film's conversational structure on marital strains.[23] These roles affirmed Masur's strength in reactive supporting parts, bolstering commercial successes through credible interpersonal chemistry.Theater work
Masur's early theater experience began during his studies at the Yale School of Drama, where he performed in several productions, including Empire Builders in 1969 and Macbeth at Yale Repertory Theatre in 1970, portraying the 1st Murderer.[14][24] He also appeared in La Turista at Yale Repertory Theatre that same year.[14] These roles provided foundational training in live ensemble work and classical interpretation, demands distinct from the controlled environments of film and television sets. Transitioning to professional regional theater, Masur participated in various plays at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in 1969.[14] His Broadway debut arrived in 1973 as Jack Stringer in David Storey's The Changing Room at the Morosco Theatre, marking an early showcase of his ability to handle intimate, character-driven drama under live audience scrutiny.[25] Following this, Masur largely shifted to screen acting in the ensuing decades, with theater engagements becoming more selective amid his rising television and film profile. Masur returned to Broadway in Michael Frayn's Democracy (2004–2005) at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre, playing Horst Ehmke, Willy Brandt's chief of staff, in a production that ran for 117 performances.[26][27] He reprised Broadway presence in Nora Ephron's Lucky Guy (2013) at the Broadhurst Theatre, assuming the roles of Jerry Nachman and Stanley Joyce during its limited run of 156 performances.[28] Off-Broadway credits in the post-2010 period include Olive and the Bitter Herbs (2011), Fetch Clay, Make Man, The Ruby Sunrise, Sarah, Sarah, Relevance, The Net Will Appear, and Two Jews, Talking.[28][29] In 2024, Masur appeared in the Broadway revival of Joshua Harmon's Prayer for the French Republic at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, contributing to its run from January 9 to March 3.[30] Spanning over five decades from his Yale debut to contemporary productions, Masur's stage work underscores a sustained commitment to theater's improvisational rigor and immediate feedback, skills that enhanced his adaptability in on-camera roles without reliance on retakes.Union leadership
Screen Actors Guild presidency
Richard Masur was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) in 1995, defeating Angel Tompkins in a contest shaped by internal debates over union governance following earlier contract disputes.[31] He secured a first term amid efforts to reform SAG's structure after the 1980s strikes and ongoing factional tensions between reformist and establishment groups. In the 1997 election for his second term, Masur polled 10,371 votes, or 59.3% of ballots cast, outperforming Tompkins' 4,996 votes (28.6%) and minor candidates like Curt Beasor.[32][33] His re-election reflected support for administrative stability amid rising challenges from new media distribution formats. Masur's tenure emphasized operational consolidation, particularly through negotiations aimed at merging SAG with the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) to unify bargaining across overlapping jurisdictions without diluting SAG's core film and TV focus. In November 1996, Masur and AFTRA President Shelby Scott issued a joint statement signaling progress toward merger, highlighting potential efficiencies in contract enforcement. By January 1999, AFTRA members ratified the proposal with over two-thirds approval, but SAG's November 1998 referendum fell short, stalling the effort and preserving separate entities during Masur's leadership.[34][35][36] This outcome underscored persistent member divisions over autonomy versus coordinated leverage in residuals and jurisdictional overlaps.Policy initiatives and achievements
During Masur's presidency from 1995 to 1999, the Screen Actors Guild achieved record-high member earnings of $1.63 billion in 1998, marking a 2% increase from $1.598 billion in 1997 despite a 4.2% decline in production days.[37] This growth was driven by a 7% rise in motion picture earnings to $415 million and a 1.6% increase in television earnings to $604 million, alongside a 12.2% uptick for background performers to $71 million overall.[37] Masur attributed these gains to successful contract negotiations, particularly in commercials, which saw prior-year increases of 12.5% contributing to overall momentum.[38] The administration prioritized enhancements to actor residuals and compensation structures, including studies on supporting performer pay and advancements in residual monitoring programs for commercials.[39] These efforts supported residual collections rising 8.1% in motion pictures to $128.9 million in 1998, even as challenges like production slowdowns loomed.[37] Negotiations for television and theatrical contracts in 1998 proceeded without a strike, preserving industry stability and enabling the reported earnings uplift.[40] Masur chaired the Guild's National Health Plan Ad Hoc Committee, advocating for improvements in health and pension benefits amid ongoing contract talks.[2] While specific percentage gains in plan funding during the 1990s are not detailed in contemporaneous reports, his leadership aligned with broader pushes for sustainable performer welfare, including support for pension contributions in industry agreements.[41] On diversity, Masur highlighted encouraging trends in role allocation for African-American performers in television, based on Guild casting data showing competitive employment rates among ethnic minorities relative to other groups.[42] His policy approach emphasized expanding merit-based casting opportunities without imposing quotas, aiming to address underrepresentation through industry dialogue rather than mandates.[43]Internal challenges and criticisms
During Masur's presidency from 1995 to 1999, internal factionalism intensified, with activist groups criticizing his moderate approach to contract negotiations as insufficiently aggressive against producers.[44] Opponents, including members of the emerging Membership First slate, argued that SAG had failed to secure robust protections amid industry pressures like runaway production, pointing to stalled gains in residuals and compensation formulas during talks such as the 1997 commercials contract, where ad negotiators pushed for revamps without a strike under Masur's leadership.[45] While Masur's tenure saw advancements like heightened awareness of economic threats via a 1999 DGA-SAG study estimating $10-15 billion annual losses from offshoring, hardline critics contended these efforts yielded minimal tangible member benefits compared to potential strike leverage, fueling petitions and board challenges that presaged his 1999 electoral defeat.[46][44] A major point of division was Masur's advocacy for merging SAG with the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), which detractors viewed as a distraction from core bargaining priorities.[47] The proposed merger, aimed at unifying performer representation, was rejected by SAG members on January 22, 1999, with 52% voting against it after campaigns highlighting risks to specialized protections, such as those for extras opposed to prior incorporations like the 1992 Screen Extras Guild integration.[2][47] Critics within the guild accused Masur of overemphasizing administrative consolidation over immediate wage and working-condition fights, exacerbating splits between pro-merger moderates and rank-and-file skeptics wary of diluted influence.[47] Election irregularities further eroded trust in Masur's administration, exemplified by the November 1998 national executive committee vote discrepancies.[48] A special investigator, former California Supreme Court Justice Joseph Grodin, found evidence of likely intentional wrongdoing in tally variances reported by tellers, suggesting political motivations amid factional jockeying.[48] Despite this, the national board—chaired under Masur—voted 55-30 on an unspecified Friday in early 1999 to close the probe without penalties, clearing the tellers and drawing accusations of favoritism toward Masur's allies, which amplified dissident calls for reform.[48] Masur defended the resolution as legally prudent to avoid unjust accusations, but the episode underscored persistent infighting that he publicly lamented as diverting energy from existential threats to actors' livelihoods.[43] In reflections after his term, Masur highlighted the cyclical nature of SAG's internal strife, critiquing successors like William Daniels for perpetuating divisions that undermined bargaining power, as in a 2001 plea to end feuding post-Daniels' heated 1999 victory over Masur.[49] By 2008-2009, amid stalled contract talks and leadership purges, Masur likened ousters of negotiators to McCarthy-era blacklists, arguing such tactics echoed the very cautiousness he had been faulted for while warning against self-sabotage in economic downturns.[50] These views, shared via open letters and board advocacy, illustrated enduring tensions between strategic restraint and militancy, with data from subsequent strikes—like the 2000 commercials walkout yielding mixed gains—lending credence to debates over Masur-era trade-offs without resolving them.[44][45]Directing and other contributions
Short films and television direction
Masur's directorial debut came with the short film Love Struck (1986), a 23-minute production he wrote and directed featuring John Simon Jones as an awkward young woman pursuing her crush, alongside Joanna Kerns, Judge Reinhold, and Joe Spano.[51][1] The film, centered on themes of unrequited romance and personal vulnerability, earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Film in 1987. Transitioning to television, Masur directed the ABC Afterschool Special episode "Torn Between Two Fathers" (also known as "Stepfather"), which aired on April 20, 1989, and portrayed a teenage daughter's custody struggle amid her parents' divorce.[8][52] This family drama marked his initial foray into episodic television direction and garnered a Directors Guild of America Award nomination for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Children's Programs.[53] Masur's behind-the-camera work in shorts and television proved selective, with these projects highlighting his capacity for intimate, character-focused storytelling informed by decades of on-screen experience.[3] No additional short films or television episodes under his direction have received comparable recognition.[4]Advocacy beyond acting
Following his tenure as Screen Actors Guild president, Masur testified before the U.S. Advisory Committee on Telecommunications Development and Research (TDRC) on March 13, 2000, advocating for improved disability access in the entertainment industry, particularly emphasizing opportunities for performers with disabilities in digital media and broadcasting.[54] In his remarks, he highlighted the need for inclusive casting practices and technological adaptations to ensure equitable participation, drawing from his prior experience as SAG's liaison to the Committee for Performers with Disabilities.[55] Masur has maintained long-term engagement with disability advocacy, including over 25 years of involvement with the deaf community, during which he learned American Sign Language and supported initiatives like the inclusion of Phylis Frelich as the first deaf SAG board member.[55] He has emphasized contract provisions requiring producers to audition actors with disabilities for relevant roles, stating, "Our contract language says that if you have a character with a disability, indicated in the script, then you have an affirmative responsibility to audition actors who have that disability," a policy modeled on the Americans with Disabilities Act to promote access without quotas.[55] This stance extends to broader efforts, such as encouraging high-profile figures like Christopher Reeve to take visible roles post-injury to normalize opportunities for disabled performers.[55] In the 2010s, Masur contributed to discussions on performers' rights in emerging media, including a 2013 article advocating for stronger copyright protections for audio and audiovisual performers to secure residuals amid digital distribution shifts, arguing that without such measures, actors' economic interests would erode in streaming platforms.[56] As a trustee for SAG-AFTRA health plans, he addressed funding shortfalls partly attributable to inadequate streaming residuals, publicly noting in 2021 that promised increases in fixed residuals had not materialized sufficiently to offset benefit cuts.[57] Masur has served on boards supporting arts initiatives, including the Research Center for Arts and Culture, where his involvement aligns with promoting data-driven research on cultural access and education, reflecting his Yale School of Drama background.[58] These efforts underscore pragmatic, industry-focused advocacy rather than high-profile political campaigns.Personal life
Marriages and family
Richard Masur was first married to film producer Fredda Weiss from September 1976 until their divorce in July 2004.[59][5] In 2004, Masur married Eileen Henry on August 7, and the couple remains together as of recent records.[60][5] Masur has no children from either marriage.[5]Public persona and later years
In his later years, Richard Masur has demonstrated a sustained commitment to acting, accumulating over 20 credits in television and film since 2010, including recurring and guest roles on series such as Orange Is the New Black (five episodes as Bill Montgomery, 2015), Transparent (two episodes as Buzzy Rackless, 2015), The Equalizer (as Rabbi Alton, 2021 and 2023), and Bull (as Dr. Declan Mittman, 2022).[61] These appearances, alongside films like Hudson (as Jerry, 2019) and Before/During/After (as Stan, 2020), reflect his adaptability amid industry shifts toward streaming and episodic television, where character actors often navigate typecasting and reduced feature opportunities.[1] Masur has also re-engaged with theater in the 2020s, starring in the Off-Broadway world premiere of Dirty Laundry at WP Theater, which ran from September 21 to October 20, 2024.[62] In a 2021 interview, he described his approach to late-career work as pragmatic and collaborative, emphasizing serendipity, flexibility in supporting emerging directors, and the value of independent projects distributed via platforms like Amazon Prime and Apple TV, rather than seeking control in a changing landscape dominated by shorter production cycles and digital access.[13] Born on November 20, 1948, Masur turned 76 in 2024 and remains active without public disclosures of significant health challenges, prioritizing passion-driven roles over retirement narratives in an industry that frequently sidelines veterans.[63][1] His public persona conveys resilience, rooted in an "accidental" entry into acting via 1960s theater and a focus on adding value through ensemble contributions, eschewing complacency amid Hollywood's evolution.[13]Recognition
Awards and nominations
In 1985, Masur received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Special for his performance in the television film The Burning Bed.[64][6] Masur's short film Love Struck (1986), which he wrote and directed, earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Film at the 59th Academy Awards.[6] For his direction of the ABC Afterschool Specials episode "Torn Between Two Fathers" (1989), Masur was nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award in 1990 for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Dramatic Shows - Daytime.[6][65] No wins or additional major nominations in acting, directing, or theater—such as Drama Desk Awards—were documented across verified industry records.[28][6]Industry impact
Masur established himself as a quintessential supporting actor during the 1980s and 1990s, embodying reliability in ensemble-driven films and television that prioritized character interplay over individual stardom, such as his roles in The Thing (1982) and My Girl (1991). This archetype influenced casting norms by demonstrating how understated performances could anchor genre pieces, from horror to family comedies, fostering deeper narrative cohesion in an era of blockbuster ensembles. His genre-spanning work—evident in over 80 film appearances—empirically countered rigid typecasting by maintaining employability across disparate styles, though systemic industry emphasis on lead actors constrained him to secondary parts, limiting broader emulation of his model.[2] In union leadership, Masur's two-term SAG presidency (1995–1999) focused on structural reforms for long-term performer viability, notably spearheading merger negotiations with AFTRA that, despite a 1999 membership rejection amid factional opposition, laid foundational agreements and constitutional drafts enabling the 2012 SAG-AFTRA unification. This effort causally bolstered bargaining leverage, preserving and enhancing residual payment systems that sustain actors post-initial runs, as evidenced by ongoing contract provisions for royalties in rebroadcasts and streaming. Additionally, his tenure as chair of the Government Affairs Committee and service on over two dozen panels advanced policy advocacy and trusteeship of SAG pension and health plans, directly contributing to financial safeguards that outlasted his ouster following merger setbacks, though critics attributed internal guild turmoil partly to his priorities.[66][2][36]Filmography
Feature films
Richard Masur appeared in more than 55 feature films over his career, often portraying supporting roles such as fathers, colleagues, or authority figures.[67] The following table enumerates selected verified credits chronologically, focusing on theatrical releases.[1][68]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1978 | Who'll Stop the Rain | Turner |
| 1979 | Hanover Street | 2nd Lieut. Jerry Cimino |
| 1979 | Scavenger Hunt | Georgie Carruthers |
| 1980 | Heaven's Gate | Cully |
| 1982 | I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can | Josh |
| 1982 | The Thing | Clark |
| 1983 | Risky Business | Mr. Rutherford |
| 1983 | Under Fire | Hub Kittle |
| 1983 | Nightmares | Steven Houston |
| 1986 | Heartburn | Douglas |
| 1988 | License to Drive | Mr. Anderson |
| 1991 | My Girl | Phil Sultenfuss |
| 1992 | Encino Man | Mr. Fiedler |
| 1993 | The Man Without a Face | Mr. Cooper |
| 1993 | Six Degrees of Separation | Lyle |
| 1994 | My Girl 2 | Phil Sultenfuss |
| 1995 | Forget Paris | Jack |
| 1996 | Multiplicity | Ted |
| 1999 | Play It to the Bone | Frankie |
| 2004 | Palindromes | Steve Pine |