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Nick Turturro

Nick Turturro

Born in Queens, NY Nicholas Turturro, Jr. was the youngest of three children born to carpenter Nicholas Turturro, Sr. and his wife, Katherine. Following in his brother John's footsteps, Turturro majored in theater at Adelphi University but dropped out after two years to marry the mother of his child. While working as a hotel doorman in the late 1980s, Turturro was introduced by his brother John to Spike Lee, while the soon-to-be-famous director was shooting "Do the Right Thing." Taking a liking to the young actor, Lee wrote the younger Turturro a part alongside his brother John in his next project, "Mo' Better Blues" (1990). Lee would subsequently hire both the Turturro brothers for his next two follow-up projects, the controversial "Jungle Fever" (1991) and the well-received biopic "Malcolm X" (1992). The actor's greatest success, however, would come on television. In 1993, Turturro won the role of the good-natured Detective James Martinez on "NYPD Blue." Though originally written for a Latino actor, the Italian-American Turturro made the character his own; immersing himself deeply in the "Nuyorican" (slang for New Yorkers of Puerto Rican descent) culture and adopting mannerisms appropriate for the character. Paired alongside Gordon Clapp's bumbling Detective Greg Medavoy, Turturro and Clapp brought the usually somber "NYPD Blue" a welcome lightness and spark of humor. A tough cop with a true heart of gold, Turturro's quiet and dependable performance earned the actor two Emmy nods - first in 1994; then again in 1997 - for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series. In 2000, however, Turturro decided that the Martinez character had run its course. Written out of the show with an off-screen promotion, Turturro left "NYPD Blue" after its seventh season; while, leaving the door open for a possible return.Post-"Blue," Turturro remained quite busy with steady, if unremarkable work as a guest star on such shows as "The Twilight Zone" (UPN, 2002-03), "Tremors: the Series" (Sci-Fi Channel, 2003-04) and "Third Watch" (NBC, 1999-2005). In 2006, Turturro revealed his ruthlessly competitive side when he appeared as a contestant on "Celebrity Fit Club" (VH1, 2005-10). Later that year, Turturro returned to the big screen with a feature role in director Oliver Stone's "World Trade Center" (2006). Turturro popped up the following year with a turn in the fireman-posing-as-gay-couple comedy "I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry (2007). After a small appearance in the Ice Cube-Tracy Morgan comedy "First Sunday" (2008), the actor played the trainer of controversial boxing legend Sonny Liston (Ving Rhames) in the sports biopic "Phantom Punch" (2008). For a more personal project, Turturro co-wrote and starred in the immigration comedy-drama "The Deported" (2009) alongside his young son, Nicholas Turturro III. There was another supporting role in the heist movie "Takers" (2010), in addition to portraying Sgt. Anthony Renzulli, the partner of rookie cop Jamie Reagan (Will Estes) in the police-drama series "Blue Bloods" (CBS, 2010-). Turturro turned in a pair of quick cameos for his pal in the Sandler produced comedies "Zookeeper" (2011) and "Bucky Larson: Born to be a Star", then joined the cast of the slasher flick "Nurse 3D" (2012), starring Paz de la Huerta as a dedicated by deadly caregiver.
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