Tim Robbins Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Family, Movies, TV Shows

Tim Robbins net worth

Read the complete write-up of Tim Robbins net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, music, movies, tv shows as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Tim Robbins is an American actor, filmmaker, and musician. He is best known for portraying Andy Dufresne in the film The Shawshank Redemption and has won an Academy Award and two Golden Globe Awards for his roles in the films The Player (1992) and Mystic River (2003).

Robbins’s other roles include starring as Lt. Samuel “Merlin” Wells in Top Gun (1986), Nuke LaLoosh in Bull Durham (1988), Erik in Erik the Viking (1989), Ed Walters in I.Q. (1994), Nick Beam in Nothing to Lose (1997) and Senator Robert Hammond in Green Lantern (2011). He also directed the films Bob Roberts (1992) and Dead Man Walking (1995), both of which were well received. He received an Academy Award nomination for Best Director for Dead Man Walking.

Early life

NameTim Robbins
Net Worth$70 million
OccupationActor, Filmmaker, Musician
Height1.96m
Age63 years
Ex-wifeGratiela Brancusi
Ex-girlfriendSusan Sarandon
Tim Robbins net worth 2022

Timothy Francis Robbins was born on October 16, 1958 (age 63 years) in West Covina, California, and raised in New York City. His parents were Mary Cecelia Bledsoe, a musician and Gilbert Lee Robbins, a singer, actor, and manager of The Gaslight Cafe. Robbins has two sisters, Adele Robbins and Gabrielle Robbins, and a brother, composer David Robbins. He was raised Catholic.

Robbins moved to Greenwich Village with his family at a young age while his father pursued a career as a member of a folk music group called The Highwaymen. Robbins started performing in theater at age twelve and joined the drama club at Stuyvesant High School (Class of 1976). He spent two years at SUNY Plattsburgh and then returned to California to study at the UCLA Film School, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Drama in 1981.

Career

Tim Robbins’s acting career began at Theater for the New City, where he spent his teenage years in their Annual Summer Street Theater and also played the title role in a musical adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s The Little Prince. After graduation from college in 1981, Robbins founded the Actors’ Gang, an experimental theater group, in Los Angeles with actor friends from his college softball team, as well as John Cusack.

Robbins appeared as domestic terrorist Andrew Reinhardt in three episodes of the television program St. Elsewhere in 1982. In 1985, he guest-starred in the second episode of the television series Moonlighting, “Gunfight at the So-So Corral”. He also took parts in films, such as the role of frat animal “Mother” in Fraternity Vacation (1985) and Lt Sam “Merlin” Wells in the fighter pilot film Top Gun (1986).

He appeared on The Love Boat, as a young version of one of the characters in retrospection about the Second World War. His breakthrough role was as pitcher Ebby Calvin “Nuke” LaLoosh in the baseball film Bull Durham (1988), in which he co-starred with Susan Sarandon and Kevin Costner.

Check Out: Susan Sarandon net worth

Tim Robbins’s amoral film executive in Robert Altman’s film The Player (1992) was described by Peter Travers in Rolling Stone as “a classic performance, mining every comic and lethal nuance in the role of his career”. He won the Best Actor Award at Cannes. He made his directorial and screenwriting debut with Bob Roberts (also 1992), a mockumentary about a right-wing senatorial candidate.

Todd McCarthy in Variety commented that the film is “both a stimulating social satire and, for thinking people, a depressing commentary on the devolution of the American political system”. Tim Robbins then starred alongside Morgan Freeman in The Shawshank Redemption (1994), which was based on Stephen King’s novella.

Robbins has written, produced, and directed several films with strong social content, such as the capital punishment saga Dead Man Walking (1995), starring Sarandon and Sean Penn. The film earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Director. According to Roger Ebert in early 1996: “With this film, he leaps far beyond” Bob Roberts “and has made that rare thing, a film that is an exercise of philosophy. This is the kind of movie that spoils us for other films because it reveals so starkly how most movies fall into a conventional routine, and lull us with the reassurance that they will not look too hard, or probe too deeply, or make us think beyond the boundaries of what is comfortable”.

His next directorial effort was Depression-era musical Cradle Will Rock (1999). Robbins has also appeared in mainstream Hollywood thrillers, such as Arlington Road (also 1999) as a suspected terrorist and Antitrust (2001) as a malicious computer tycoon, and in comical films such as The Hudsucker Proxy (1994), Nothing to Lose (1997), and High Fidelity (2000). Robbins has also acted in and directed several Actors’ Gang theater productions.

Tim Robbins won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar and the SAG Award for his work in Mystic River (2003), as a man traumatized from having been molested as a child. He followed his Oscar-win with roles as a temporarily blind man who is nursed to health by a psychologically wounded young woman in The Secret Life of Words (2005) and an apartheid torturer in Catch a Fire (2006). As of 2006, he was the tallest Academy Award-winning actor at 6 feet 5 inches (1.96 m).

In early 2006, Tim Robbins directed an adaptation of George Orwell’s novel 1984, written by Michael Gene Sullivan of the Tony Award-winning San Francisco Mime Troupe. The production opened at Actors’ Gang, at their new location at The Ivy Substation in Culver City, California. In addition to venues around the United States, it has played in Athens, Greece, the Melbourne International Festival in Australia and the Hong Kong Arts Festival. Robbins was soon considering a film adaptation.

Tim Robbins appeared in The Lucky Ones, with co-star Rachel McAdams as well as City of Ember (both 2008). Robbins’ next film role was as Senator Hammond, the disapproving father of the film’s villain Hector Hammond, in the superhero film Green Lantern (2011).

Robbins released the album Tim Robbins & The Rogues Gallery Band (2010), a collection of songs written over the course of 25 years that he ultimately took on a world tour. He was originally offered the chance to record an album in 1992 after the success of his film Bob Roberts, but he declined because he had “too much respect for the process”, having seen his father work so hard as a musician, and because he felt he had nothing to say at the time.

He directed two episodes of the HBO series Treme. The series follows the interconnected lives of a group of New Orleanians in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He helmed the episodes “Everything I Do Gonh Be Funky” in Season 2 (2011) and “Promised Land” in Season 3 (2012). Tim Robbins became interested in the show while staying in New Orleans during the filming of Green Lantern. “I had the unique experience of watching Treme with locals.

It resonated for me immediately, and it resonated for them as well, because they have seen their town get misinterpreted and represented in ridiculous ways,” he told The Times-Picayune in 2011. “Something about this show was different for them. I appreciated that. I loved the writing and the actors. I loved the environment it’s set in. I watched the whole first season in New Orleans, and got in touch with David Simon and said, ‘If you guys need a director next year, I’d be happy to do an episode.'” In 2013, he was a member of the jury at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival.

Political views

Tim Robbins supported Ralph Nader’s 2000 presidential campaign and appeared on stage in character as Bob Roberts during the “Nader Rocks the Garden” rally at Madison Square Garden. In December 2007, Robbins campaigned for Senator John Edwards in the 2008 U.S. presidential election. He made critical statements against Hillary Clinton and the DLC while introducing Bernie Sanders at a 2016 campaign stop.

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Robbins opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq. In 2003, a 15th-anniversary celebration of Bull Durham at the National Baseball Hall of Fame was canceled by Hall of Fame President Dale Petroskey. Petroskey told Robbins that his stance helped to “undermine the U.S. position, which could put our troops in even more danger.” Durham co-star Kevin Costner defended Robbins and Sarandon: “I think Tim and Susan’s courage is the type of courage that makes our democracy work. Pulling back this invite is against the whole principle about what we fight for and profess to be about.”

Wife

Tom Robbins was married to Gratiela Brancusi, they had their wedding on February 1, 2017, and they split on July 1, 2020. News of the marriage was kept private until Robbins filed for divorce in January 2021. However, in 1988, Tim Robbins began a relationship with actress Susan Sarandon, whom he met on the set of Bull Durham. They have two sons: John “Jack” Henry (born May 15, 1989) and Miles Robbins (born May 4, 1992). Sarandon, like Robbins, is a lapsed Catholic, and they share liberal political views. Robbins’ relationship with Sarandon ended in December 2009.

Tim Robbins net worth

How much is Tim Robbins worth? Tim Robbins net worth is estimated at around $70 million. His main source of income is from his career as an actor, filmmaker and musician. Tim Robbins’ successful career has earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. He is one of the richest and influential actors in the United States. However, on television, Robbins played Secretary of State Walter Larson in the HBO comedy The Brink (2015), and in Here and Now (2018) portrayed Greg Boatwright.