James Spader (born February 7, 1960, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.) is an American actor known for playing morally ambiguous, deviant characters. Some of his best-known roles have been in the films Pretty in Pink (1986), Wall Street (1987), and sex, lies, and videotape (1989) and in the television series Boston Legal (2004–08) and The Blacklist (2013–23).
Spader is the youngest of three children born to Jean (née Fraser) Spader and Stoddard Greenwood (“Todd”) Spader. Both his parents were schoolteachers, and Spader and his two sisters grew up in the faculty housing of the preparatory school where his father taught. He was enrolled at the Pike School in Andover, Massachusetts, before transferring to the nearby Phillips Academy. He was not particularly interested in academics, but he had a passion for the theater and performed in many plays in school. He dropped out of high school to pursue acting full-time and moved to New York City when he was 17. To support himself, he took odd jobs—such as shoveling manure at an equestrian stable, teaching yoga, and bussing tables—while taking classes at the Michael Chekhov Acting Studio.
His first film role was a small part in the 1978 high-school sports comedy Team-Mates. Three years later he was cast in Franco Zeffirelli’s teen drama Endless Love, in which he played the brother of Brooke Shields’s character. In 1983 he appeared as Fenwick in the television pilot for Diner—an adaptation of the previous year’s coming-of-age film of the same name—but the series never sold.
Spader landed his first starring role in the 1985 teen dramedy Tuff Turf, in which he played a high-school student who finds himself at the center of gang violence at his new school. The following year, he appeared in John Hughes’s Brat Pack cult classic Pretty in Pink as the elitist, sneering Steff, earning the young actor a wider appeal. In 1987 he had supporting roles in four feature films: Mannequin, Baby Boom, Less Than Zero, and Oliver Stone’s Wall Street. In each of these, he played similarly sleazy, villainous characters.
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The next few years saw Spader’s career take a turn toward more sexually charged roles, which was spurred by his acclaimed performance in Steven Soderbergh’s feature film debut, sex, lies, and videotape. In the film he played an eccentric drifter and voyeur who disrupts the placid suburban existence of a handful of women. The film won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes film festival, where Spader also won an award for best actor. In 1990 he appeared alongside Rob Lowe in the thriller Bad Influence and opposite Susan Sarandon in White Palace, an erotic romance. The next year he starred with John Cusack in the political drama True Colors, but Storyville (1992) and Dream Lover (1993) saw him return to the erotic thriller genre. One of his most commercially successful films of this time was the science-fiction film Stargate (1994). This was followed by David Cronenberg’s art film Crash (1996), in which Spader played one of his strangest and most provocative roles—a man with a car crash fetish.
Spader also had roles in 2 Days in the Valley (1996), Keys to Tulsa (1997), Critical Care (1997), and The Watcher (2000) as well as a guest spot in an episode of Seinfeld. In 2002 he starred with Maggie Gyllenhaal in Secretary, a film based on Mary Gaitskill’s short story from 1988 about a sadomasochistic relationship. The following year he was cast as lawyer Alan Shore in season eight of the legal drama The Practice; he reprised that role in the spin-off Boston Legal. Spader won an Emmy Award in 2004 for The Practice, followed by two more Emmys, in 2005 and 2007, for Boston Legal.
In 2009 he made his Broadway debut in David Mamet’s Race. He returned to television in 2011 as the manipulative salesman (and, later, boss) Robert California in the hit comedy The Office. In 2012 Spader had a supporting role in Steven Spielberg’s historical drama Lincoln. A year later he was cast as criminal mastermind Raymond (“Red”) Reddington in the long-running series The Blacklist, for which he was twice nominated for a Golden Globe Award. He also played the villainous Ultron in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015).