Tim Blake Nelson Net Worth

Tim Blake Nelson Net Worth is
$5 Million

Tim Blake Nelson Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Timothy "Tim" Blake Nelson is an American director, writer, and actor.

Full NameTim Blake Nelson
Net Worth$5 Million
Date Of BirthMay 11, 1964
Place Of BirthTulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Height5 ft 4 in (1.651 m)
ProfessionFilm Director, Actor, Screenwriter, Playwright, Film Producer, Singer
EducationHolland Hall, Brown University, Juilliard School
NationalityUnited States of America
SpouseLisa Benavides (m. 1994)
ParentsRuth Kaiser Nelson
NicknamesTimothy Blake Nelson , Time Blake Nelson , Timothy "Tim" Blake Nelson
AwardsGrammy Award for Album of the Year, Satellite Award for Best Ensemble – Motion Picture
NominationsMTV Movie Award for Best On-Screen Duo, Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Ensemble Performance, Independent Spirit Someone to Watch Award, Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Comedy or Musical, Black Reel A...
Movies, Fantastic Four, The Long Home
TV ShowsCHAOS, Z: The Beginning of Everything
Star SignTaurus
#Quote
1(On making Donnie Brasco) That was opposite Paul Giamatti very early in our careers. Now look at Paul. To be in a scene with Paul Giamatti and Johnny Depp...everything was so great and wonderful. I've been extremely lucky. I never fail to recognize that. That was early in my career. I remember vividly Mike Newell walking on to the set and saying, "Everyone's looking at me as though I understand how this scene is to be shot and blocked. I know nothing, I have no idea." I thought, "That is a great leader." Because he had no fear of honesty. He was so confident in his authority on set and in his crew's belief in him that he didn't have to hide his uncertainty. I've taken that with me everywhere since I experienced it. Better to be honest and expose your process than to conceal with bluster.
2(On making The Incredible Hulk) I got that role when Eddie [Norton] and I were planning to do Leaves Of Grass. I thought of it as something that I hoped, and still hope, will inspire sequels, since I had a great time on that movie and I felt particularly lucky to be around Edward on a set, knowing that I'd be acting and directing Edward on Leaves Of Grass within a year. I felt blessed. I always love being in these technically demanding movies because that process is so mystifying to me in that I still go to movies and marvel at how stuff is achieved.
3(On Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed) I had a great time working on that movie. I did it, quite simply, because I was on the phone in my son's room-who was five at the time-when I got the offer and I said to my agent, "Scooby Doo 2?" And my son said, "Scooby Doo 2!" And I was in. My sons were six and two at the time. And we got to be on the set of this movie of an iconic cartoon that still plays constantly in our home. I also got to say, "I would have gotten away with it if it weren't for you meddling kids and your dumb dog!"
4(On making The Good Girl)I finished Good Girl at about midnight the night before I was to be on set on Minority Report. So there was literally a six-hour pause between those two movies in terms of working on them. It was a really lucky summer. [Director] Miguel Arteta has also become a really close friend. The fun of Good Girl was getting to know and work with Miguel, who runs such a low-key, relaxed set that, as an actor, you feel like taking risks and failing is not going to be punishable. The other great joy in that movie was getting to play so many scenes with John C. Reilly, who is probably as funny an actor as I've ever met, just as a scene partner. He's a guy who you just look forward to working with every day because he's smart, he's funny, he's truthful and he makes everyone around him better. I loved being around him. I learned a great deal and also getting to operate inside the world of Mike White, who is an extraordinary voice as a screenwriter. That was a pleasure. When I got that role and told my wife I was going to be having sex with Jennifer Aniston in a movie her response was a derisive, "No you're not!" Then I said I blackmailed her into doing it so she said, "Oh, now I get it."
5(On making Minority Report) That came out of the blue. And I met Steven [Spielberg] the day that I went to shoot. As with the Coen's all you want to do is please this person and give him exactly what he wants. Steven had seen O Brother and just gave me this role. The day I met him was the day I showed up. What was difficult about that role, and delightfully challenging at the same time, was that I had these long monologues to Tom Cruise. That's pretty much the sum total of what the part is about. And I worked and worked and worked to memorize them so that they were word perfect. Because, again, like a Coen Brothers script it was clear rhythmically that the way this guy spoke was something that Steven wanted to be very specific and to be achieved with little deviation. Steven wanted Tom Cruise to be burrowing through this world populated by a lot of weird eccentric characters and I was to be one of those and the rhythm of the dialogue was quite specific so I learned it and took great pains to do so. Then I arrived on set and was summoned to Tom Cruise's trailer. To Tom Cruise's bus, which was more like a shopping mall. It was just enormous, so I went in and made my way past the Foot Locker and the Body Shop and found Steven and Tom in the food court, and they both had these yellow legal pads and I quickly realized that they were going through the speech and changing words and phrases here and there in almost every sentence. I suddenly felt like I was on this cliff and I was going to plummet into the abyss of disappointing Steven Spielberg. So I got all these changes and I went back and started desperately trying to learn them. Then I got back on set with Steven. And he wasn't happy with what I was doing and it wasn't that I hadn't fully memorized this script. He just said, "I want an extreme character here." And I thought, "Well, my God, how extreme should I go?" Then he said, "Do a Boston accent." It seemed so arbitrary but it was really a brilliant piece of direction because everything suddenly started to click. Not only did it click in terms of pushing me to an extreme that he would appreciate and would work for his movie but every single change they made suddenly made sense rhythmically. Then we went off and started shooting. The other remarkable thing about Steven is that he can do pretty much everyone's job on a movie set. He doesn't want to, and he doesn't try to, but he can do it. That man could literally operate the camera, set dolly tracks, flag lights, sew costumes, design costumes, work the soundboard. He can put a lav mic on an actor. I wouldn't be surprised if he could do my makeup. He knows every single facet of a movie set. It's utterly remarkable and therefore it's no accident that he accomplishes what he does.
6O Brother, Where Art Thou? was this role that utterly fell into my lap and changed my life. I was making O as a director and Joel (Coen) sent me the script along with a letter saying that he wanted me to read it and get some advice from me. And I thought, well maybe he wants to talk about the transposition from The Odyssey to this Depression-era story. Me, because I was a classics major, I read it, and then he offered me the role of Delmar and I was so surprised that I actually said that I needed a day to think about it because Joel and I were already friends and what I didn't want to do was get on set without even auditioning for this role and disappoint him because he'd never heard me utter a word of the dialogue. And so I said let me make sure that I'm not going to disappoint you, let me try this on for a few days. I quickly got off the phone and started figuring out in a very casual and shallow way an approach to the role and figured that I had an in. And I said I would do it and subsequently had one of the great summers of my life. This was like going to film school. On that movie I think I worked 51 out of 54 days of the shoot and I got to be around these absolute masters of the craft, which so interests me. And they're so completely true to their own aesthetic and so confident in it that as an actor you just feel that there's no way you can go wrong so you can try anything. So really nothing you can do is wrong in an environment that allows that much risk taking. For gargoyle actors like me who happen to be their favorite type of actors-George Clooney and Brad Pitt aside-that makes for an experience like none other.
7(On making The Thin Red Line) That was like film school for me. So many of us in that movie ended up barely being in the movie even though we spent five and a half months in Australia with Terrence Malick. It became obvious early on that Terry had really brought a group of us over there to pull from and improvise on a daily basis what his movie was going to be. So you really never knew when you were going to be on set or when you were going to have a day off, when you were going to be on camera when you were going to be in the furthest reaches of the background. So because I had just directed my first film and was eager to direct my next one I just decided that I needed to leave my actor's ego at the door and try my best to embrace the experience as a film school. And so what that role became for me and what that experience became for me was about watching Terry and learning from Terry because he has an utterly unique approach to how to make a movie in which the script is really something that's handed into the studio to get them to agree to give him the money to then go and make a movie which is really going to be written as he makes it, rather than using the script as a clear blueprint for what the movie will be. If you were to read the Thin Red Line script and use it to try and follow the movie you would be utterly lost. You would imagine that you had the wrong script.
#Fact
1Tim Blake Nelson has acted with George Clooney in 2 movies: Oh Brother Where Art Thou & Syriana.
2His father was of Russian Jewish descent, and his maternal grandparents were German Jews.
3Born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
4It is Tim Blake Nelson's voice in the film and on the Soundtrack for "O Brother, Where Art Thou" singing "In the Jailhouse Now".
5He is not only an accomplished actor, but a seasoned director, singer, and playwright.
6Graduated Holland Hall School, 1982
7Graduate of Brown University

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Long Home2017post-production
Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk2016post-productionWayne Foster
Bukowski2015completedHenry Bukowski
The Confirmation2015completedVaughn
Fantastic Four2015completedHarvey Elder
For Justice2015TV MovieOchs Rainey
Anesthesia2015Adam Zarrow
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt2015TV SeriesRandy
Black Dog, Red Dog2015Bob
Rickover: The Birth of Nuclear Power2014Admiral Rickover
Kill the Messenger2014Alan Fenster
The Sound and the Fury2014Father
The Homesman2014Freighter
Klondike2014TV Mini-SeriesMeeker
Snake and Mongoose2013Mike McAllister
Child of God2013Sheriff Fate
As I Lay Dying2013Anse
Blue Caprice2013Ray
Lincoln2012Richard Schell
Adventures in the Sin Bin2012Officer Totsch
Big Miracle2012Pat Lafaytette
The Big Year2011Fuchs
Modern Family2011TV SeriesHank
Chaos2011TV SeriesCasey Malick
Detachment2011Mr. Wiatt
Yelling to the Sky2011Coleman
Flypaper2011Peanut Butter
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation2009TV SeriesPaulie Krill
Leaves of Grass2009Bolger
Saint John of Las Vegas2009Militant Ned
Possible Side Effects2009TV MovieBuzz
American Violet2008David Cohen
The Incredible Hulk2008Video GameSamuel Sterns (voice)
The Incredible Hulk2008Samuel Sterns
The Astronaut Farmer2006Kevin Munchak
Fido2006Mr. Theopolis
Hoot2006Curly
The Darwin Awards2006Perp
Come Early Morning2006Uncle Tim
Syriana2005Danny Dalton
Stella2005TV SeriesMountain Man
The Big White2005Gary
Warm Springs2005TV MovieTom Loyless
Crazy for Love2005Doctor, Chief Nakahoma, Minister, Roger Bob
The Amateurs2005Barney Macklehatton
Meet the Fockers2004Officer LeFlore
Bereft2004Dennis
The Last Shot2004Marshal Paris
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed2004Jacobo
Wonderland2003Billy Deverell
Holes2003Dr. Pendanski
A Foreign Affair2003Jake Adams
Minority Report2002Gideon
Cherish2002Daly
The Good Girl2002Bubba
O Brother, Where Art Thou?2000Delmar O'Donnell
Hamlet2000Flight Captain
The Thin Red Line1998Pvt. Tills
Prix Fixe1997ShortBusboy
Donnie Brasco1997FBI Technician
Joe's Apartment1996Cockroach (voice)
Dead Man's Walk1996TV Mini-SeriesJohnny Carthage
House of Buggin'1995TV SeriesKidnapper
Heavy Weights1995Roger Johnson
Amateur1994Young Detective
Motel Blue 191993Adult Luther (voice, uncredited)
This Is My Life1992Dennis

Director

TitleYearStatusCharacter
ZeldaTV Movie pre-production
Anesthesia2015
Leaves of Grass2009
Haskett's Chance2006TV Movie
The Grey Zone2001
O2001
Kansas1998Short
Eye of God1997

Writer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Anesthesia2015writer
Leaves of Grass2009written by
The Grey Zone2001play "The Grey Zone" / written by
Kansas1998Short written by
Eye of God1997written by
Hardcore TV1992TV Series

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Anesthesia2015producer
Leaves of Grass2009producer
A Foreign Affair2003executive producer
The Grey Zone2001producer

Editor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Grey Zone2001

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
O Brother, Where Art Thou?2000performer: "You Are My Sunshine" 1940, "In the Jailhouse Now" 1928

Thanks

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Don Jon2013the producers would like to thank
Return2011thanks
Behind the Scenes with 'The Amateurs'2008Video documentary short thanks
Southland Tales2006thanks
The Slaughter Rule2002thanks

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Gold Rush: The Dirt2014TV SeriesHimself
Misfire: The Rise and Fall of the Shooting Gallery2013DocumentaryHimself
Invitation to World Literature2010TV Series documentary
Media City2010TV SeriesHimself
SXSW Flashback 20102010TV MovieHimself
Sundance Directors Lab2009TV Series documentaryHimself
Behind the Scenes with 'The Amateurs'2008Video documentary shortHimself - 'Barney'
Making of 'Fido'2007Video documentary short
Dinner for Five2005TV SeriesHimself
Once Upon a Time in Utah, Sundance2003TV Movie documentaryHimself
Charlie Rose2000-2002TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Nightline Up Close2002TV SeriesHimself
The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn2002TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Daily Show with Jon Stewart2001-2002TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Rosie O'Donnell Show2002TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Late Night with Conan O'Brien2001TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Down from the Mountain2000DocumentaryHimself
Inside Look: Down from the Mountain2000TV Short documentaryHimself

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Dianne Crittenden on 'The Thin Red Line'2010Video documentary shortHimself

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2004German Independence Honorary AwardOldenburg Film Festival
2002GrammyGrammy AwardsAlbum of the YearO Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)
2001Golden Space Needle AwardSeattle International Film FestivalBest DirectorO (2001)
1999Special Achievement AwardSatellite AwardsOutstanding Motion Picture EnsembleThe Thin Red Line (1998)
1997American Independent AwardSeattle International Film FestivalEye of God (1997)
1997Bronze AwardTokyo International Film FestivalEye of God (1997)

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2013Gold Derby AwardGold Derby AwardsEnsemble CastLincoln (2012)
2010Audience AwardSXSW Film FestivalSpotlight PremiereLeaves of Grass (2009)
2005Gold Derby TV AwardGold Derby AwardsTV Movie/Mini Supporting ActorWarm Springs (2005)
2005Satellite AwardSatellite AwardsOutstanding Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TelevisionWarm Springs (2005)
2001CFCA AwardChicago Film Critics Association AwardsMost Promising Actor
2001MTV Movie AwardMTV Movie AwardsBest On-Screen TeamO Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)
2001Golden SeashellSan Sebastián International Film FestivalThe Grey Zone (2001)
2001Golden Satellite AwardSatellite AwardsBest Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role, Comedy or MusicalO Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)
2001Tokyo Grand PrixTokyo International Film FestivalO (2001)
1998Someone to Watch AwardIndependent Spirit AwardsEye of God (1997)
1997Grand Jury PrizeSundance Film FestivalDramaticEye of God (1997)

2nd Place Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2013COFCA AwardCentral Ohio Film Critics AssociationBest EnsembleLincoln (2012)
Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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