Joseph Culp
Joseph Culp | |
---|---|
Born |
Los Angeles, California | January 9, 1963
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1983–present |
Joseph Culp (born January 9, 1963) is an American actor. He is the son of actor Robert Culp[1] and his second wife, Nancy Ashe.[2]
Joseph Culp appeared in a recurring role as Archie Whitman, the depression-era father of Jon Hamm's character Don Draper in the critically acclaimed AMC series Mad Men. He was the first actor ever to play Doctor Doom in the first, and most faithful to the source, film version of Marvel Comics' The Fantastic Four. He also narrated a film called: September 11-The New Pearl Harbor made by Massimo Mazzucco.[3]
Culp also featured in the neo-noir detective video game, L.A. Noire, as Walter Robbins in the homicide case "The Studio Secretary Murder".
He co-founded the Walking-In-Your-Shoes technique with Joseph Cogswell, a body-mind approach.[4][5] In 1992, he and Cogswell founded the Walking Theatre Group based in Los Angeles.[6]
References
- ↑ Santa Monica Mirror interview
- ↑ "IMDb Joseph Culp Biography". IMDb. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
- ↑ Internet Movie Database
- ↑ Walking-In-Your-Shoes history
- ↑ “Walking-In-Your-Shoes: Toward Integrating Sense of Self with Sense of Oneness” 1993 article by John Cogswell, Journal of Humanistic Psychology
- ↑ Walking Theatre Group bio
External links
- Official Joseph Culp website
- Walking in Your Shoes: Walking is Understanding by Christian Assel (Author), Joseph Culp (Foreword)
- Walking Theater Group
- Walking-In-Your-Shoes™
- Joseph Culp at the Internet Movie Database