Timothy Busfield is an actor known for his role in the hit TV series ‘Thirtysomething’
@Film & Theater Personalities, Family and Childhood
Timothy Busfield is an actor known for his role in the hit TV series ‘Thirtysomething’
Timothy Busfield born at
Timothy Busfield has been married three times. His first marriage, to actress and director Radha Delamarter, took place in 1981. She gave birth to their son Wilson (Willy). The couple divorced in 1986.
He then married fashion designer Jennifer Merwin on September 11, 1988. They have two children together, Daisy and Samuel. That marriage ended in 2008.
In January 2013, a representative for Busfield told the reporters that the veteran actor had proposed to actress Melissa Gilbert over the holiday season and that she had accepted. They wed on April 24, 2013 in a private ceremony at San Ysidro Ranch in Santa Barbara, California. The couple presently resides in Howell, Michigan.
Timothy Busfield was born on June 12, 1957 in Lansing, Michigan, as one of the four children of Roger and Jean Busfield. His father was a drama professor while his mother was a secretary. He has a brother, Buck, and two sisters, Terry and Julia.
He attended the East Lansing High School and later enrolled at the East Tennessee State University. Soon after receiving his degree, he joined a production company as a theatre professional.
Timothy Busfield made his screen debut in 1981 in the Bill Murray and Harold Ramis starrer ‘Stripes’; he was credited simply as the “Soldier with Morter.” Two years later, in 1983, he landed his first significant role in ABC’s sitcom ‘Reggie’. Playing the recurring character Mark Potter, he made appearances in six episodes in total.
In the 1984 cult classic ‘Revenge of the Nerds’, he was given the chance to portray the first major role of his career as Arnold Poindexter. He returned in 1987 to reprise his character in the sequel ‘Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise’.
Busfield got his first big role on television in 1984. He starred as Dr. John 'J.T.' McIntyre, the son of the titular character in ‘Trapper John, M.D.,’ the spin-off series of the film ‘MASH’. He then portrayed multiple characters between 1984 and 1986 in NBC’s sitcom ‘Family Ties’.
He acted in the 1989 fantasy-drama sports film ‘Field of Dreams’ which was directed by Phil Alden Robinson and starred Kevin Costner, Amy Madigan, James Earl Jones, Ray Liotta, and Burt Lancaster alongside Busfield. It received three Oscar nominations and in 2017, was picked to be preserved in the United States Nation Film Registry by the Library of Congress as it was considered “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". In the film, Busfield’s urban and pragmatic portrayal of Mark serves as a perfect foil for Costner’s rural and idealist Ray Kinsella.
He played a disgruntled lawyer in the 1991 made-for-television horror film ‘Strays’. This was his first telefilm. He followed it up with a string of other television roles. He portrayed Elfred Schultz, the husband of the real-life murderer Laurie Bembenek, in ‘Calendar Girl, Cop, Killer? The Bambi Bembenek Story’ (1992); Del Calvin, a psychology professor who studies human behavior in ‘Fade to Black’ (1992); and investigative lawyer John Thorn in ‘Murder Between Friends’ (1994).
Over the years, Busfield has garnered immense recognition as a stage actor and director. On Broadway, he appeared in the productions of ‘A Few Good Men’ and ‘Brighton Beach Memoirs’. Off-Broadway, he collaborated with Circle Repertory Company in 1982.
Busfield and his brother, Buck, set up the B Street Theater in Sacramento, California, where he is still active as a stage director and actor. They also co-founded Fantasy Theatre, a travelling troupe which focuses on content for children. He regularly contributes to the troupe as a playwright.