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Politics

R.I.P. Fred Thompson, Actor, Senator, and Republican Presidential Candidate

Peter Suderman | 11.2.2015 4:01 PM

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Hunt for Red October, Paramount Pictures

"How can a president not be an actor?" Ronald Reagan once said when asked how an actor could become president.

I'm reminded of that quote when I think of Fred Dalton Thompson. Thompson was a Watergate lawyer who became an actor who became a Senator and then ran briefly for the GOP presidential nomination in 2008.

He dropped out of the primary after failing to attract much sustained support, but his life and career served as a reminder of the essential link and similarities between politics and entertainment.

After serving as a counsel on the Senate Watergate Committee in the early 1970s, Thompson's acting career began in the late 1980s. He played supporting roles in movies such as No Way Out and Fat Man and Little Boy. 

He went on to play numerous other roles in the following years, including a memorably grave Navy Admiral in The Hunt for Red October and a key supporting part as an air-traffic-control director forced to deal with a chaotic terrorist attack in 1990's Die Hard 2.

Neither of those roles were showy, and you can easily imagine lesser performers disappearing into the parts. But they played to Thompson's strengths; he projected authority, responsibility, and competency, even as everything went to hell around him. You could imagine Thompson'"or at least the character he played'"being in charge, and being good at it.

Thompson went on to serve two terms as a Republican Senator from Tennessee, from 1994 to 2003, easily winning both elections by large margins. The ease with which he appears to have transitioned from life as a working actor to life as a U.S. Senator (after having already gone from being a Senate aide to a screen-actor) probably suggests something about how much the two jobs in common.

He then returned to acting, most notably as District Attorney Arthur Branch on the long-running crime procedural Law & Order as well as several of its spinoffs. It was a supporting role designed largely as a vehicle for the quick delivery of expository plot details, but once again Thompson made it memorable, imbuing the part with a stern sense of command and judgment.

Thompson sought to capitalize on that same impression in his 2008 run for president, but he could never quite pull it off. In the debates, he never seemed quite well enough prepared, and the presidential persona he was obviously aiming for never quite stuck. At heart, Thompson was always a character actor, not a leading man.

At the same time, his unwillingness to dig too deep into the role was unexpectedly endearing. He wanted to be president, but he was not mad for the job or what it might bring. As George Mason Law Professor Ilya Somin said in a Facebook post last night, it may be that Thompson's "most admirable qualification for the presidency was that he clearly did not want the office nearly as much as most other candidates, and largely lacked their obvious lust for power."

Like all politicians, he was an actor playing a part. But unlike so many, he didn't let it consume him. 

Thompson died yesterday in Nashville, TN. He was 73. R.I.P.

  

Correction: In the original version of this post, I stated that Thompson appeared in the 1987 James Bond movie The Living Daylights. That's wrong. He wasn't in the movie. I watched part of the movie over the weekend, confused actor Joe Don Baker for Thompson, and failed to check the credits. I apologize for this easily avoidable error. 

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NEXT: You'll Never Guess Which Presidential Candidate Is Running on Tax Simplification and Deregulation?

Peter Suderman is features editor at Reason.

PoliticsCultureMoviesFred ThompsonObituaries
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  1. Citizen X   10 years ago

    I had almost forgotten about his presidential run. To be fair, it seemed like he did too, about 10 minutes into the first Republican debate.

    1. Lord Humungus   10 years ago

      Back then my wife was a supporter of his, wearing a "I'm with Fred" t-shirt at a 10k run. That got a whole bunch of "who?" from other people. For whatever reason, Fred just seemed to lack name recognition.

  2. Fist of Etiquette   10 years ago

    Who here would not have felt safe and secure with President Fred Thompson in the White House. NONE OF YOU.

    1. Lee G   10 years ago

      I'd be afraid that the situation would get out of control.

      1. MikeP   10 years ago

        And we'd be lucky to live through it.

  3. Warty   10 years ago

    As George Mason Law Professor Ilya Somin said in a Facebook post last night, it may be that Thompson's "most admirable qualification for the presidency was that he clearly did not want the office nearly as much as most other candidates, and largely lacked their obvious lust for power."

    Yes, but the object of power is power.

  4. Heroic Mulatto   10 years ago

    Fuck. Who is going to tell me all about reverse mortgages now?

    1. Lee G   10 years ago

      The Fonz, of course

    2. Mrs. Lemuel Struthers   10 years ago

      *hands HeMo a tissue*

      The good news is William Devane would still like to discuss the benefits of owning gold with you.

      1. Heroic Mulatto   10 years ago

        Thank God! A world where Robert Vaughn can't direct us to legal advice is a world I don't want to live in.

    3. SIV   10 years ago

      Rick Perry needs a job!

    4. James Anderson Merritt   10 years ago

      Perhaps Alex Trebek will see fit to branch out from Term Life Insurance to other financial instruments.

  5. Je suis Woodchipper   10 years ago

    are you confusing Fred with Joe Don Baker in Living Daylights?

    JD also played the CIA role in Goldeneye and Tomorrow Never Dies.

    1. paranoid android   10 years ago

      And of course, who can forget JDB's magnum opus, Mitchell?

      1. paranoid android   10 years ago

        Servo: Who's the puffy guy who's a big blurry sex machine?
        Joel, Crow: Mitchell!
        Servo: That Mitchell is one fat s?
        Joel, Crow: Shut yo' mouth!
        Servo: I'm just talkin' 'bout Mitchell!

        1. Hugh Akston   10 years ago

          Mitchell: Even his name says 'is that a beer?'

      2. toolkien   10 years ago

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXOGtt7OB94

        JDB's best role, supporting though it is.

        And yes, they cropped the thing probably to circumvent copyright...

        The production was pretty much a Clint Eastwood movie without Eastwood - all of his stock players, Seigel directing, music, writing. He obviously couldn't have been Varrick.

        And where the whole pliers and blowtorch meme got its start...

  6. GILMORE?   10 years ago

    He taught the world to never take a dump without a plan

  7. Hugh Akston   10 years ago

    He was like a rich man's Joe Don Baker.

    1. LoneWaco   10 years ago

      Do you expect me to talk?

      No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to live in your home with the help of a reverse mortgage.

  8. GILMORE?   10 years ago

    Zee Germans und Der Secretenplannen Hoodwinken Amerikaner Ermissiontestin

  9. toadboy65   10 years ago

    I was disappointed when he started selling scammy reverse mortgages.

    1. LoneWaco   10 years ago

      nothing scammy about a loan that charges interest, although for some reason heirs seem to hate them.

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   10 years ago

      Like all exotic loan types, many have a legitimate purpose for the right group.

  10. Agile Cyborg   10 years ago

    Fred's digital avatar or anonymous moniker has been left to exist somewhere on this web indefinitely. Probably had a few places he'd post some shit under Battleship_America_Man or CrimeStalkerAK47 or FuckYou4EvA_Sinners. Brain crumbs from a dead Fred people will respond to perhaps in 2017 or 2020 on fucking Disqus. Dead man conversing.

  11. tarran   10 years ago

    What kind of asshole wears CNT's out at sea?

  12. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   10 years ago

    Rip, Fred. I always liked you.

    If this doesn't simultaneously make you laugh, cry, and scratch your head, you're asleep.

    If you follow through the link, you'll get to read a wonderful passage about how America's thinnest-skinned mayor whinges about why hillary hasn't asked him to the dance.

    http://blog.seattlepi.com/seat.....didnt-ask/

    "Murray is one of the two highest-profile LGBT majors in America. The other, Annise Parker of Houston, graced Clinton's announcement by saying: "She has an emotional connection to the American people and how difficult it is for the average family to make ends meet."

    Mayor Bill De Blasio of New York was less gushy: "She's very cold-eyed, and that's what you want in a president.""

  13. Knarf Yenrab!   10 years ago

    and the underrated Timothy Dalton-era James Bond installment The Living Daylights, which cast him as Bond's arms-dealer nemesis, gleefully declaring the glories of advanced military weaponry while blasting away at the famous fictional spy. Thompson slightly overplayed the part, but watching the film now you can tell he's having fun, and his obvious sense of enjoyment at playing a villain in a Bond film is pleasantly infectious.

    Oh, Suderman.

    How you write a whole paragraph about this without doing a 10-second IMDB search is beyond me.

  14. Knarf Yenrab!   10 years ago

    Fred was my sort-of Senator at the time along with Frist, and the world has had worse than either. Like the two jackassses currently serving as TN Senators.

    Anyway, it was always fun to point Fred out to political naifs in DH2 and Hunt.

  15. UCrawford   10 years ago

    It's Joe Don Baker who appeared in all three Bond films, not Thompson.

    http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000833/

  16. Juice   10 years ago

    I remember back in 08 when I got excited about Ron Paul and even did some grassroots stuff for a very short while, which I now regret because I felt really stupid doing it. Anyway, there was this girl in the group of people handing out flyers and CDs and such who told me, "If Ron Paul drops out I'm supporting Fred Thompson." It was like a slap in the face. Do you not at all understand who and what you are supporting here? WTF?

  17. The Unknown Pundit   10 years ago

    Thompson's first role was playing himself in the 1985 movie Marie starring Sissy Spacek. That movie dramatized the corruption in the Blanton (D) admin in Tennessee. Blanton and his cronies were granting clemencies and reduced sentences for inmates, for a price naturally. IIRC, Thompson was a US Atty when the corruption came to light and played a role in ending the corruption (it's been some time since I saw the movie so the details are fuzzy). It was playing himself in that movie that first put him if front of the camera and paved the way for his move to acting a few years later.

  18. Princess Trigger   10 years ago

    I first noticed him in the under-rated 'Wiseguy'.
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092484/?ref_=nv_sr_1
    He played a sleazy white supremacist leader/grifter. Just a few episodes, but made an impression.

  19. JoWaDat889   10 years ago

    Sounds like a rock solid plan dude.

    http://www.CompletePrivacy.tk

    1. MikeP   10 years ago

      His wing man kept requesting permission to fire. Somebody messes up, we'll be in the biggest naval battle since the Jutland.

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