Tim Guinee
Timothy S. Guinee (born November 18, 1962) is an American actor recognized for his extensive work in television, film, and stage productions.[1][2] Guinee, raised in Illinois and Texas after his birth in Los Angeles, California, trained at the Houston High School for Performing Arts and earned a BFA from the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, followed by studies at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.[2][3] His breakthrough roles include the recurring portrayal of Tomin in Stargate SG-1 from 2006 to 2007 and the series regular role of railroad magnate Collis Huntington in AMC's Hell on Wheels, which highlighted his ability to embody historical figures with depth.[1][3] He has also appeared in supporting capacities in Marvel Cinematic Universe films as Foggy Nelson in Iron Man (2008) and Iron Man 2 (2010), alongside guest and recurring parts in series such as Homeland, The Good Wife, Elementary, and The Punisher.[4][5] Beyond acting, Guinee has engaged in humanitarian efforts, notably raising $112,000 for Rwandan aid through a poetry reading at Lincoln Center, and serves as a volunteer firefighter while advocating on climate issues.[6][7] Married to playwright Daisy Foote since 1997, he maintains a profile defined by versatile character work rather than lead stardom.[2]Early life and education
Childhood and family background
Timothy Sanders Guinee was born on November 18, 1962, in Los Angeles, California.[4] [8] He spent his early years in a mobile family environment, primarily raised in Illinois and Texas after his birth in California.[2] [1] Guinee grew up as the middle child among five siblings, including three brothers and two sisters.[9] [8] His family background reflects Irish, English, and Scottish ancestry, with paternal lines tracing to Irish immigrants and English-Scottish roots in Tennessee.[10]Formal education and early influences
Guinee attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts in Houston, Texas, during his teenage years, where he developed an early interest in acting.[2][6] Following high school, he founded a theater company in Houston, demonstrating initiative in the performing arts before pursuing further training.[11] He subsequently studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York.[2][6] Guinee then earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of North Carolina School of the Arts (UNCSA) School of Drama, graduating in 1985.[12][2] During his time at UNCSA, he majored in acting while exploring unconventional skills such as beekeeping and wire-walking, which reflected the program's emphasis on diverse experiential learning.[13] These formative experiences, rooted in intensive dramatic training and hands-on theater production, laid the groundwork for his professional career, culminating in his feature film debut shortly after graduation.[2][12]Acting career
Early roles and breakthrough
Guinee made his feature film debut in 1986 as Culum Struan, the son of the protagonist Dirk Struan, in Tai-Pan, an adventure drama directed by Daryl Duke and adapted from James Clavell's 1966 novel of the same name.[12] The production marked the first Western film permitted to shoot primarily in mainland China after the Cultural Revolution, involving extensive location filming in Shanghai and other sites.[4] Released on November 7, 1986, the film featured a cast including Bryan Brown and Joan Chen, though it received mixed reviews and underperformed commercially, grossing approximately $4 million against a $25 million budget.[14] Transitioning to television shortly thereafter, Guinee secured supporting roles in miniseries such as The Kennedys of Massachusetts (1990), where he appeared as a family associate, and Lincoln (1992), portraying a minor historical figure in the NBC production about Abraham Lincoln's life.[15] He also gained early recurring exposure on the CBS crime series Wiseguy from 1987 to 1990, playing a well-intentioned but renegade cop involved in organized crime investigations.[1] These roles, spanning guest appearances and multi-episode arcs, helped establish his presence in ensemble casts during the late 1980s. Guinee's early film work continued with a supporting part as Stanford Chong in George A. Romero's horror-thriller Monkey Shines (1988), where he portrayed a med student aiding the paralyzed protagonist amid a murderous experiment with a trained capuchin monkey. Released on July 29, 1988, the film, based on Michael Stewart's novel, earned cult status for its psychological tension despite initial critical pans, and this role is cited as one of his first significant on-screen opportunities beyond debut supporting parts.[16] Additional 1980s credits included the independent drama American Blue Note (1989), in which he played saxophonist Bobby, contributing to his growing portfolio of character-driven performances in low-to-mid-budget productions.[4] These early endeavors laid the groundwork for steady character actor work, emphasizing versatility in dramatic and genre roles without a singular breakout hit in the decade.Television work
Guinee's television career began in the late 1980s with guest and recurring roles on series such as thirtysomething and Wiseguy, where he portrayed a recurring renegade cop.[17] [4] He continued with appearances on procedural dramas including Law & Order, The Equalizer, and Cold Case throughout the 1990s and 2000s.[18] [4] In science fiction television, Guinee gained recognition for playing Tomin, a human converted into a Prior of the Ori, in multiple episodes of Stargate SG-1's tenth season from 2006 to 2007.[4] He later took on the series regular role of Collis P. Huntington, the ambitious railroad executive, in Hell on Wheels across all five seasons from 2011 to 2016.[4] Additional recurring work included the private investigator Dylan in The Good Wife (2009–2016) and Scott Turner in Homeland (2014–2018).[17] [4] Guinee appeared as guest characters in shows like Monk, Bones, The Leftovers, and Yellowstone.[19] More recently, he portrayed prosecutor Bill Peterson in the HBO miniseries The Staircase (2022) and Paul in the Netflix series Inventing Anna (2022).[4] Other credits include roles in Tulsa King as A.G. Sackrider (2022–present) and Walker as Rink (2021).[20]Film roles
Guinee debuted in feature films with the historical drama Tai-Pan (1986), directed by Daryl Duke.[4] His early career included supporting parts in romantic comedies like Once Around (1991), opposite Holly Hunter and Richard Dreyfuss, and in Oliver Stone's biographical films The Doors (1991), as Paul A., and Heaven and Earth (1993).[4] He continued with roles in ensemble dramas such as How to Make an American Quilt (1995) and military thrillers including Courage Under Fire (1996), where he supported Denzel Washington and Meg Ryan as a soldier investigating a Medal of Honor case.[4] In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Guinee appeared in horror and action films like John Carpenter's Vampires (1998), as Thomas Beckett, a vampire hunter alongside James Woods. Other credits from this period include Ladder 49 (2004), a firefighting drama with Joaquin Phoenix, and independent features such as Personal Velocity: Three Portraits (2002) and Sweet Land (2005).[4] Guinee gained wider visibility in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, portraying Major Allen, a U.S. Air Force officer involved in Tony Stark's weapons dealings, in Iron Man (2008) and reprising the role in Iron Man 2 (2010). He followed with parts in Synecdoche, New York (2008), Charlie Kaufman's metaphysical drama, and The Private Lives of Pippa Lee (2009), directed by Rebecca Miller.[4] In Water for Elephants (2011), an adaptation of Sara Gruen's novel, Guinee played Diamond Joe, a member of the Benzini Brothers Circus.[21] Later films include Promised Land (2012), a Gus Van Sant environmental drama with Matt Damon, where he portrayed Drew Scott, a corporate executive. In 99 Homes (2014), directed by Ramin Bahrani, Guinee depicted Frank Greene, a morally conflicted real estate attorney aiding a foreclosure victim played by Andrew Garfield. He appeared as Rod in Two Men in Town (2014), a crime drama remake starring Forest Whitaker.[1] More recent roles feature Guinee as Phil, the father of a drug-addicted son, in Ben Is Back (2018) with Julia Roberts; Thomas Garrett, the Quaker abolitionist who supported Harriet Tubman, in Harriet (2019); and James Kittredge in Kevin Costner's Western epic Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1 (2024).[22] [4] These performances often cast him in authoritative or ethical supporting characters across genres from superhero action to historical biography.[5]Stage performances
Guinee's stage career, primarily in Off-Broadway and Shakespeare in the Park productions during the 1980s and 1990s, featured roles in classic and contemporary works, with a later appearance in a 2007 world premiere.[23] His early theater credits included performances at the New York Shakespeare Festival's Delacorte Theatre in Central Park. In 1986, he portrayed Valentine in a production of Twelfth Night at the Delacorte Theatre, running from June 20 to July 20.[24] The following year, Guinee appeared as Benji in Arthur Kopit's Death of a Buick at Manhattan Theatre Club's Stage I.[25] Also in 1987, he played Hotspur in Richard II at the Delacorte Theatre from June 24 to July 19, directed by Joseph Papp.[24][12] Guinee took the role of Tim in Eric Bogosian's subUrbia at Lincoln Center's Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater, which ran from April 20 to August 28, 1994.[24] In 2007, he starred as Erik, a National Transportation Safety Board investigator, in the world premiere of Keith Reddin's Human Error at Atlantic Theater Company's Stage 2, performing from August 1 to 26.[26][27] The one-act play explored personal fallout from a plane crash investigation.[28]Other professional endeavors
Volunteer firefighting
Guinee began serving as a volunteer firefighter in 2004, shortly after portraying a firefighter in the film Ladder 49, during which he sought to continue involvement in fire service beyond acting.[29] He joined the department in Stone Ridge, Ulster County, New York, where he resides in the Hudson Valley.[30] As of 2025, he has maintained this role for 22 years, responding to local emergencies while balancing his acting career.[7] His commitment includes training and active participation in firefighting operations in the region.[29]Environmental presentations and leadership
Guinee trained as a Climate Reality Leader through Al Gore's Climate Reality Project in Denver, Colorado, in 2017.[31] Following this, he delivered presentations on the climate crisis across the United States, Canada, and North Africa, targeting diverse audiences including underserved communities, conservative fire departments, oil-industry executives in Houston, and inmates in maximum-security prisons.[32][33] Notable presentations include a December 2, 2017, lecture at the Hudson River Maritime Museum titled "Climate Change and the Hudson Valley," where he discussed scientific findings relevant to regional impacts.[34] In January 2020, he hosted "Climate Change, Hope, and the Acting Community" for Broadway Green Alliances, focusing on sustainability in the performing arts.[35] Additional events encompass a December 13, 2022, lecture at SUNY Ulster on climate topics alongside Samrat Pathania, and a keynote address at SUNY Ulster's commencement on May 20, 2023.[36][37] In leadership capacities, Guinee founded Climate Actors, an organization mobilizing performers for environmental advocacy.[38] He serves on the leadership council of Riverkeeper, a Hudson River protection group, and the board of the Ashokan Center, New York's oldest environmental education facility.[39] Additionally, he acts as co-chair of the Climate Reality Project's Hudson Valley Chapter, climate liaison for Marbletown with Climate Mayors, and legislative director for the Climate Reality New York State Chapters Coalition.[31][7]Activism and public views
Climate change advocacy
Tim Guinee became a trained presenter with Al Gore's Climate Reality Project following completion of its leadership training program.[32] He has delivered climate presentations throughout the United States, as well as in Canada and North Africa, often targeting skeptical or underserved audiences such as conservative fire departments, Houston oil executives, and maximum-security prison inmates.[32] [38] Guinee founded The Climate Actors, an organization mobilizing actors to address climate issues, and established the Climate Reality Project's Hudson Valley and Catskills Chapter.[40] He serves as president of Climate Action Now, legislative-action director for the Climate Reality Project's New York State Chapters Coalition, and co-chair of its Hudson Valley chapter.[32] [7] In these capacities, he has advocated for policies including renewable energy siting reforms in New York and reductions in fossil fuel infrastructure, such as critiquing gas stove emissions' health impacts in public webinars.[41] [42] Additionally, Guinee has acted as a volunteer lobbyist for the Sierra Club in Washington, D.C., and holds advisory roles with organizations including Riverkeeper and the Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter.[34] [32] He functions as the official climate change liaison for the town of Marbletown, New York, with the Climate Mayors initiative, and joined the board of the Climate Reality Action Fund to prioritize climate in political agendas.[32] [33] In 2020, Al Gore awarded him the Alfredo Sirkis Memorial Green Ring for his contributions.[32] [7]Political and social commentary
Guinee has expressed strong criticism of former President Donald Trump, describing him as the "King of Cancel Culture" in a September 2025 social media post and accusing him of bloviating "with little regard for the truth" ahead of a September 2024 debate.[43][44] He has also faulted Trump for policies favoring fossil fuels, such as declaring an "energy emergency" while halting a near-complete offshore wind project, and issuing an executive order for the Constitution Pipeline, which Guinee called a "flagrant attack" on New York's environmental protections.[45][46] In electoral contexts, Guinee endorsed Democratic Senator Jon Tester in Montana's 2024 Senate race, highlighting scrutiny over his Trump-backed opponent's comments on Native Americans.[47] He has voiced support for the Harris-Walz ticket, contrasting it with what he termed Trump's "pet eating hysteria" lacking substantive policy.[48] Guinee has critiqued Republican lawmakers broadly, noting in 2025 that the 35 richest Republican members of Congress hold a collective net worth of $2.5 billion, implying influence from wealth in policy decisions.[49] Guinee advocates for engagement across political divides, stating in a 2015 interview that individuals should "stand up for" their beliefs "whatever your politics are" to foster conversation.[50] He has participated in discussions emphasizing activism regardless of "what side of the political spectrum," as noted in a 2014 panel with actor Bruce Greenwood.[51] In 2020, he highlighted speaking "across issue and party lines" in climate-related forums.[52] On social issues, Guinee has lamented social media's role in amplifying divisions, particularly in climate discourse, arguing in 2019 that it has been a "disaster" and that artists can counter this through empathy rather than confrontation.[53] His commentary often ties environmental concerns to broader societal stability, warning in a 2019 opinion piece of climate-induced threats like flooding in Iran exacerbating political instability globally.[54]Personal life
Relationships and family
Guinee married actress and playwright Daisy Foote in 1997.[55] [1] The couple met during the production of the 1996 Showtime television film Lily Dale, adapted by Daisy's father, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Horton Foote, in which Guinee starred as Horace.[56] [57] Guinee and Foote have kept details of their family life private, with no public disclosure of children or other personal matters.[3] Guinee was born in Los Angeles, California, to parents whose names are not publicly detailed, and raised alongside siblings in Illinois and Texas.[8]Hobbies and personal interests
Guinee has developed hobbies including beekeeping and wire-walking, which he attributes to opportunities encountered through his acting roles.[58] He acquired wire-walking skills while filming a movie in Thailand, describing it as one of several "quirky" interests gained professionally.[58] These activities reflect a pattern of exploring unconventional skills beyond his primary career.[3]Filmography
Film credits
Tim Guinee debuted in feature films with a role in Tai-Pan (1986).[4] His subsequent credits encompass supporting parts in historical dramas, action films, and independent productions, often portraying authoritative or everyday figures.[5]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1986 | Tai-Pan | (role unspecified)[4] |
| 1991 | Once Around | (role unspecified)[5] |
| 1991 | The Doors | (role unspecified)[4] |
| 1993 | Heaven & Earth | (role unspecified)[4] |
| 1994 | How to Make an American Quilt | (role unspecified)[5] |
| 1996 | Courage Under Fire | (role unspecified)[4] |
| 1996 | Beavis and Butt-Head Do America | (role unspecified)[5] |
| 1998 | Blade | (role unspecified)[5] |
| 1998 | Vampires | (role unspecified)[4] |
| 1999 | The Young Girl and the Monsoon | Jack[5] |
| 2001 | Impostor | Dr. Carone[5] |
| 2002 | Personal Velocity: Three Portraits | Lee (Greta's husband)[5] |
| 2004 | Ladder 49 | Tony Corrigan[5] |
| 2004 | A Hole in One | Tom[5] |
| 2005 | Sweet Land | Olaf[5] |
| 2007 | Broken English | Mark Andrews[5] |
| 2008 | Iron Man | Major Allen[4] |
| 2008 | Synecdoche, New York | (role unspecified)[4] |
| 2008 | Winged Creatures | Aaron[5] |
| 2009 | The Private Lives of Pippa Lee | (role unspecified)[4] |
| 2010 | Iron Man 2 | (role unspecified)[21] |
| 2011 | Water for Elephants | Diamond Joe[5] |
| 2012 | Just Like a Woman | George[5] |
| 2012 | Promised Land | Drew Scott[5] |
| 2013 | The Pardon | Norman Anderson[5] |
| 2014 | 99 Homes | Frank Greene[4][5] |
| 2014 | Two Men in Town | Rod[5] |
| 2015 | About Scout | Ray[5] |
| 2018 | Ben Is Back | Phil[5] |
| 2019 | Harriet | Thomas Garrett[5] |
| 2019 | Ash | Stan[5] |
| 2024 | Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1 | James Kittredge[5] |
| 2024 | Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 2 | James Kittredge[5] |
Television credits
Guinee's early television work included a recurring role as a renegade cop in the CBS series Wiseguy (1987–1990).[5][1] He appeared in guest roles on shows such as The Equalizer, Law & Order, Karen Sisco, and Tarzan.[18] In the mid-2000s, Guinee portrayed Tomin in three episodes of Stargate SG-1 (2006–2007).[19] He played Charlie Filbert across three episodes of Ghost Whisperer (2006).[59] Additional credits from that period include three episodes of In Justice (2006) and Father Frank Berlin in an episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2006).[59] Guinee had a series regular role in the first season of Showtime's Homeland (2011).[4] He recurred as a private investigator in The Good Wife (2009–2016).[5] Guest appearances encompassed episodes of Criminal Minds (season 5, episode 11), Lie to Me (season 1, episode 1), The Mentalist (season 1, episode 1), Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (season 13, episode 8), Fringe, Elementary (as NSA Agent McNally), NCIS, Blue Bloods, and Nurse Jackie.[15][60][61] More recent roles include A.G. Sackrider in Tulsa King and Rink in Walker.[20] In 2022, he portrayed Bill Peterson in HBO's The Staircase and Paul in Netflix's Inventing Anna.[4]| Year(s) | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1987–1990 | Wiseguy | Recurring renegade cop | CBS series |
| 2006–2007 | Stargate SG-1 | Tomin | 3 episodes |
| 2006 | Ghost Whisperer | Charlie Filbert | 3 episodes |
| 2006 | In Justice | Unspecified | 3 episodes |
| 2006 | CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | Father Frank Berlin | 1 episode |
| 2011 | Homeland | Scott Ryan | Series regular (season 1) |
| 2009–2016 | The Good Wife | Private investigator | Recurring |
| 2022 | The Staircase | Bill Peterson | Miniseries |
| 2022 | Inventing Anna | Paul | Miniseries |
| Recent | Tulsa King | A.G. Sackrider | Recurring |
| Recent | Walker | Rink | Guest |